Answer:
The answer to the question would be: factory system.
Explanation:
In 1790, given the changes in Europe and the force of industrialization, the United States also recognized the need for technological advancement and industrial evolvement. It was around this time that Samuel Taylor brought with him the knowledge he had acquired in England about textile manufacturing and built the first textile factory in Rhode Island, using a water-powered cotton spinning mill. Later on, in 1793, with the advent of the cotton gin, created by Eli Whitney, this new factory system, and the need for further organization, increased and even more new techology began to be developed. This burst in manufacturing also pushed forward the need for new roads, transport and connections, which further pushed the development of the country at the time.
b. Viceroys communicated the colonists' concerns to the king.
c. Viceroys protected the Indians and represented them in court.
d. Viceroys enforced the king's trade laws to ensure that products from the Americas were easy to sell in Spain.
a. Viceroys did the will of the king, protected his territories, and worked to gain wealth for the crown
b) Sidhartha Guatema adopted Buddhism during a journey to his homeland
c) Siddhartha guatema encountered a monk whose life persuaded him that the way to enlightenment was to abandon material wealth and embrace a life of religious pursuit
d) Siddhartha guatema decided to introduce Judaism as an alternative to Hinduism because Jewish society was much more equal and just than Hindu society
Answer:
The answer is below
Explanation:
Age of Exploration is the period in the European past that occurred around the fifteenth century to the seventeenth century.
This period could be considered a “game-changer” in history due to the following reasons:
1. It led to the discovery of America and other more areas outside of Europe.
2. It is considered to be the beginning of globalization
3. It resulted in the surge of growth of colonialism.
4. It also resulted in the intercontinental slave trade across the globe.
Both geographically and culturally, the middle colonies stood between New England and the South, blending their own influences with elements derived from the older regions on either side. In so doing, they more completely reflected the diversity of colonial life and more fully foreshadowed the pluralism of the American nation than the other regions did. By 1790, German, Scots-Irish, Welsh, and Irish immigrants had settled in the middle colonies, along with members of religious groups such as Quakers, Jews, Huguenots, and Mennonites. By the mid-eighteenth century, the middle colonies were the fastest growing area in North America.