Answer: Bronislaw Malinowski
Explanation:
Bronislaw Malinowski was a Polish anthropologist whose field researches influenced the discipline of the anthropology. He believed that in order to undestand another culture you needed to be inside that culture. For example, he went to the Trobriand Islands, in Melanesia and he stayed for several years, studying the indigenous culture.
When the Pilgrims, whom were mostly Puritans (wanted to purify the church of England), arrived to Plymouth they formed their own colony. Because they did not agree with the Anglican Church of England and felt that they were being persecuted for their beliefs, they came to the New World where they could worship freely. I believe they took the Bible literal.
Those who didn't agree went and formed their own colonies, such as the Catholics(Maryland...I believe) and the Quakers (Pennsylvania).
Hopefully this helps.
Answer:
The largest desert in the world, the Sahara covers an area slightly smaller than the United States. Its name comes from the English translation of the Arabic word for desert. To its north lies the Mediterranean Sea and to the south lies the savanna, which gives way to the Congo River Basin.
The first inhabitants of the Sahara region lived along the Nile River and were generally cattle herders. Cities were established as time progressed. The Phoenicians eventually set up a number of trading posts on the northern edge of the desert along the shores of the Mediterranean. These port cities remained the major means of trading until the arrival of the camel from Saudi Arabia. The use of camels to transport goods quickly affected the Saharan trade. Camels can go two weeks without water and four weeks without food, making them the ideal mode of transportation through desert regions. Large groups of camels would be fattened up and then sent in caravans of more than a thousand to faraway lands in the west, such as Ghana and Mali. Later, with the advent of sailing vessels that could travel around the continent, camel caravans took on less importance.
Explanation:
Hope this helped!
Answer:
In the 1770s, there were two main political groups in the Thirteen Colonies: the Patriots and the Loyalists.
Explanation:
-The Patriots were the pro-independence inhabitants of the Thirteen Colonies who rebelled against British control of the country during the American Revolution. Their rebellion was based on the philosophy of republicanism, expressed by men like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and Thomas Paine. It is estimated that at least 45% of the population of the Thirteen Colonies supported the rebellion for independence against the British.
-Loyalists were the American colonists who remained loyal to the Kingdom of Great Britain and the British monarchy during the American Revolution. Some historians have estimated that 15-20% of the white population was loyalist (between 450,000 and 600,000 inhabitants of the Thirteen Colonies).
False