the Americans
the British
Answer: British
Explanation:
After a siege that began on April 2, 1780, Americans suffer their worst defeat of the revolution on this day in 1780, with the unconditional surrender of Major General Benjamin Lincoln to British Lieutenant General Sir Henry Clinton and his army of 10,000 at Charleston, South Carolina.
Answer:
The Americans
Explanation:
The Americans won an important victory here :) Hope this is correct!
Answer:
Like the Chinese calendar, the Jewish calendar is lunar, with each month commencing with the new moon.
Explanation:
The Battle of Poitiers, also known as the Battle of Tours, was a significant military engagement that took place in 732 AD between the Frankish forces led by Charles Martel and the Umayad Caliphate's army led by Emir Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi.
The battle occurred near the city of Tours (in present-day France), hence its alternative name.
During the 8th century, the Umayad Caliphate, based in the Iberian Peninsula, had been expanding its territories into Europe. In 732 AD, an Umayad army under the command of Emir Al Ghafiqi advanced northward into the Frankish Kingdom, seeking to extend their control.
The Frankish forces, led by Charles Martel, confronted the Umayad army near Poitiers.
Learn more about Battle of Poitiers here:
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Answer:
The event that started "Bleeding Kansas" was the passing of the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.
Explanation:
At the heart of the conflict between pro and anti slavery sides was the question of whether Kansas, until then a single Territory, would enter the Union as a "free" state or, on the contrary, as a slave state. In this sense, Bleeding Kansas was a proxy dispute between Northerners and Southerners around the issue of slavery on the territory of the United States.
The United States Congress had long struggled to maintain a delicate balance between slavers and abolitionists. The events that would go down in history as Bleeding Kansas were triggered in 1854 by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, canceling the Missouri Compromise (which had until then guaranteed a balance between supporters and opponents of the slavery) and proclaiming that the status of the new state of Kansas would be determined by popular sovereignty.
This decision provoked the massive arrival on Kansas of activists of both sides who clashed violently, in the guerrilla mode, for the control of it. On November 21, 1855 the Wakarusa War began when an anti-slavery was killed by a pro-slave. On May 21, 1856, a group of Border Ruffians sacked Lawrence, a small town with anti-slavery theses. The next day, in the Senate, Preston Brooks, a Democrat from South Carolina, knocked out Charles Sumner, a Massachusetts senator and supporter of abolition. On the night of May 24, 1856, John Brown, who arrived in Kansas in October 1855 to fight slavery, slaughtered at Pottawatomie Creek a group of alleged slavers. On June 2, Brown captured about 30 slavery supporters at the Battle of Black Jack. In August 1856, thousands of slavery supporters, organized as armies, invaded Kansas. John Brown and his followers fought a part of it at the Battle of Osawatomie. Hostilities continued for two months until Brown and his followers left Kansas. A total of 56 people were killed in the Bleeding Kansas events.
The decline of the Persian Empire was caused by unstable political structure, shifting societal dynamics and religious preferences, and the disruption caused by the arrival of the Arab-Muslims.
Several factors led to the decline of the Persian Empire. One of the key reasons was the complex and unstable political structure of the empire. The empire encompassed a vast and geographically diverse territory which resulted in the Sasanian nobility gaining independence from the central government. This led to the Arab-Muslims having to negotiate with local rulers and elites for surrendering their territories.
Additionally, social dynamics between the Sasanian nobility and the lower classes began to change. Outside of the elite circle, Zoroastrianism, the traditional Persian religion, had long been declining in popularity while other religions like Nestorian Christianity and Manichaeism grew.
The collapse of the Sasanian ruling family, and a period of civil war and power transition following the Byzantine victory further contributed to Persia's decline. The arrival of the Arab-Muslims with their cultural practices and the religion of Islam expedited these changes, adding to the decline.
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Hello, the answer is A. Metallic