Help Please
By: Xman
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Filed under History by on Jan 28th, 2010.
By: kooltiffrocks
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Filed under History by on Jan 23rd, 2010. 1 Comment.
By: ilovejoejonas617
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Read more on What are some major impacts flappers had on society?…
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By: AI FBI
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Filed under History by on Jan 4th, 2010. 1 Comment.
I am so lost!
I have a few ideas as of what the impact he had on society today and during the Renaissance but i would also LOVE and would EXTREMELY appreciate it if you could help me get some more ideas!
Thanks a bunch!
I know he was not the most influential, but if you could, could you please tell me at least a little about the impact he had?
By: jimjamtart
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Filed under History by on Dec 29th, 2009. 3 Comments.
To be an agricultural member means you live in one place and you uphold yourself by growing your own food and for meat growing your own livestock. The nomads traveled with their food and had no stable residence in one place for thousands of years. Where they hunted and gathered depended on the nature of weather in specific areas. Some animals or plants only like warmer or colder weather so they had to adjust where they went according to that. Both societies felt a strong abhor for each other, but had a need for each other’s support.
The nomadic civilization originated in the Middle East. They lived in this manner for thousands of years. This was including Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Iran, and Iraq. The men hunted for their food and the women gathered natural things like vegetables, plants, herbs, and fruit. The agricultural society obtained their food by growing it themselves from animals to berries. The nomads felt that the agricultural society was pampered and had to do little work, but this can easily be proved as something fallacious.
To be part of the agricultural society required diligence and urgency. Their strong work ethics proved this factual. They ran their farms, managed their crops, and took care of their house, and many children. All of these things were important for our interminable need for food. Nomads were often on the move and the agricultural society did not feel this was correct and their way to feed their families was more productive. Neither nomads nor the agricultural revolution liked each other but most of their accusations were maliciously false.
The agricultural revolution grew their food and lived in one place they felt this practice was best and did not like the way of roving with your food source. Without thinking, we impose our ideas as being right on other people, the nomads and agricultural revolution did just that. Their lives were hard worked. They felt this conflict towards each other but without them, the whole trading industry would crash.
As a human population, they were pretty much the same. They both had a need for each other in business. The two cultures traded items and received gifts for help. They both have a struggle for their natural necessities of life. Moreover, both have the same ideas for survival. The agricultural populace and the nomadic society needed to come to an agreement that without each other their existence is devastated.
if there is anything changeable let me know
sry i could not fit that in before
By: ♪♫♪♫Sophie
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Filed under History by on Dec 27th, 2009. 1 Comment.
By: Skyla
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Filed under History by on Dec 26th, 2009. 1 Comment.
This is the full question…
When people speak about domestic programs that changed our country, two terms almost always come up: The New Deal and The Great Society. In a paragraph or two, describe LBJ’s Great Society and compare/contrast it to FDR’s New Deal. How are they similar? Different?
By: toke
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Filed under History by on Dec 24th, 2009.
By: AIKItrue
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