How did cities influence colonial life?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: The cities influenced colonial life in a variety of ways. Firstly the cities were the main center for trade and commerce. Many industries also developed in the cities. The colonial people would come to the cities for their jobs in the factories that came up. It improved their lives financially. Also as trade and commerce took place in the cities, the colonial people learned about the culture of people living in faraway places. This influenced their cultural life immensely. Also they shared their life style and art with people that came to the cities for selling arts and crafts.


Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

The colonial people would come to the cities for jobs in factories. their lives improved financially. AND as trade and commerce took place in the cities colonial people learned about people living in far away places.

Explanation:


Related Questions

How do I get better grades
What occurred on July 4, 1776?
Describe the precedents by George Washington 1) Cabinet2) Two Term Tradition 3) Neutrality
How did Siddhartha Gautama become the Buddha?
The words steam shovel should have a hyphen? True or false

A crack or fracture in the earths surface

Answers

A crack or fracture in the earths' surface is called FAULT.

Faults are fractures on Earth's crust where rocks on either side of the fractures have slid past each other. Some faults are tiny, mainly cracks on the surface, but they can also be hundred of miles long. An example of a fault line that is hundred of miles long is the San Andreas Fault located in California.

There are three types of Faults.
1) strike-slip faults - rocks are sliding past each other in a horizontal motion. e.i. San Andreas Fault, Anatolian Fault
 
2) normal faults - create space. two blocks of crust pull apart, stretching the crust into a valley. ei. The Basin and Range Province ; East African Rift Zone

3) reverse faults - also called thrust faults. slide one block of crust on top of another. found in collision zones of tectonic plates. ei the Himalayas, the Rocky Mountains

British columbia's geography, ethnic diversity and trade link the province to

Answers

They link the Province to pacific rim

the lands around the rims of pacific ocean

What marked the begining of the new stone age

Answers

The main difference between the newer and older stone age was that in the newer one, crop growing and domestication of different types of animals was becoming more and more common in different villages or societies. This was not the case in the older stone age. 

Why did world war 1 start

Answers

Started with the assassination of Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand. 
The first world war began in August 1914. It was directly triggered by the assassination of the Austrian archduke, Franz Ferdinand and his wife, on 28th June 1914 by Bosnian revolutionary, Gavrilo Princip.

This event was, however, simply the trigger that set off declarations of war. The actual causes of the war are more complicated and are still debated by historians today.

Alliances
An alliance is an agreement made between two or more countries to give each other help if it is needed. When an alliance is signed, those countries become known as Allies.

A number of alliances had been signed by countries between the years 1879 and 1914. These were important because they meant that some countries had no option but to declare war if one of their allies. declared war first.
Imperialism
Imperialism is when a country takes over new lands or countries and makes them subject to their rule. By 1900 the British Empire extended over five continents and France had control of large areas of Africa. With the rise of industrialism countries needed new markets. The amount of lands 'owned' by Britain and France increased the rivalry with Germany who had entered the scramble to acquire colonies late and only had small areas of Africa.

Militarism
Militarism means that the army and military forces are given a high profile by the government. The growing European divide had led to an arms race between the main countries. The armies of both France and Germany had more than doubled between 1870 and 1914 and there was fierce competition between Britain and Germany for mastery of the seas. The British had introduced the 'Dreadnought', an effective battleship, in 1906. The Germans soon followed suit introducing their own battleships. The German, Von Schlieffen also drew up a plan of action that involved attacking France through Belgium if Russia made an attack on Germany.

Nationalism
Nationalism means being a strong supporter of the rights and interests of one's country. The Congress of Vienna, held after Napoleon's exile to Elba, aimed to sort out problems in Europe. Delegates from Britain, Austria, Prussia and Russia (the winning allies) decided upon a new Europe that left both Germany and Italy as divided states. Strong nationalist elements led to the re-unification of Italy in 1861 and Germany in 1871. The settlement at the end of the Franco-Prussian war left France angry at the loss of Alsace-Lorraine to Germany and keen to regain their lost territory. Large areas of both Austria-Hungary and Serbia were home to differing nationalist groups, all of whom wanted freedom from the states in which they lived.

Moroccan Crisis
In 1904 Morocco had been given to France by Britain, but the Moroccans wanted their independence. In 1905, Germany announced her support for Moroccan independence. War was narrowly avoided by a conference which allowed France to retain possession of Morocco. However, in 1911, the Germans were again protesting against French possession of Morocco. Britain supported France and Germany was persuaded to back down for part of French Congo.

Bosnian Crisis
In 1908, Austria-Hungary took over the former Turkish province of Bosnia. This angered Serbians who felt the province should be theirs. Serbia threatened Austria-Hungary with war, Russia, allied to Serbia, mobilised its forces. Germany, allied to Austria-Hungary mobilised its forces and prepared to threaten Russia. War was avoided when Russia backed down. There was, however, war in the Balkans between 1911 and 1912 when the Balkan states drove Turkey out of the area. The states then fought each other over which area should belong to which state. Austria-Hungary then intervened and forced Serbia to give up some of its acquisitions. Tension between Serbia and Austria-Hungary was high.

Does Alexander the Great deserve to be called Great?
This is just your opinion.

Answers

No lol i think it is just considered to be his name :)

PLEASE HELP!!!!What was the most immediate obstacle to the formation of Israel?
A) Palestinians who lived there
B) Rule by Arab nations
C) Legacy of ottoman control
D) Scarcity of water and other resources

Answers

the answer is A) Palestinians who lived there
A) Palestinians who lived there