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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 2131 - 2140 of 7307 matching essays
- 2131: Broken Spears
- ... book are priests, wise men and regular people who survived the killings. These stories represent the more realistic view of what really happened during the Spanish conquest. Most of the history about the Aztec Empire was based on Spanish accounts of events, but Leon-Portilla used writings from actual survivors to illustrate the true history from the Indians’ point of view. The book focuses on how the Spanish slowly exploited the Aztec resources to the point where they started killing people for no reason but ...
- 2132: Slavery
- ... Harper & Row, 1969. Franklin, John. From Slavery to Freedom. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1994. Genovese, Eugene D. The Political Economy of Slavery. New York: Pantheon Books, 1965. Gray, Lewis Cecil. History of agriculture in the southern United States to 1860 . Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1958. Hopkins, James F. A History of the Hemp Industry in Kentucky. Louisville: University of Kentucky Press, 1998. Journal of the State Convention. “A Declaration of the Immediate Causes which Induce and Justify the Secession of ...
- 2133: The Steam Engine
- ... were. The steam engine used in means of travel revolutionized the transportation of goods, as well as the importing and exporting of them. “The steam-powered railroad changed geography and history. When grain merchants transported their goods by horsepower, they could go only so far before the horse consumed more than it could carry.” (Gordon) In this aspect, the steam engine ... 24-99. Johnson, Brian. Steam Traction Engines, Wagons and Rollers. London: Blandford Press, 1971. Lord, John. The Penetration of Industry by Steam-Power. 12-2-1996. Online. Available: http://www.history.rochester.edu/steam/lord/8.htm. 11-24-99. Siegel, Beatrice. Inventions that Changed our Lives: The Steam Engine. New York: Walker Publishing Company, 1986. Sproule, Anna. James Watt. Great ...
- 2134: Papyrus
- ... to the house"" (the bureaucracy of ancient Egypt). Papyrus is a triangular reed that used to grow along the banks of the Nile, and at an early stage of their history the Egyptians developed a kind of writing material made out of the pith within the stem of the papyrus plant. At the same time they developed a script that ultimately ... papyri, moreover, have come abundant new works of religious literature not only for Judaism and Christianity but also for traditional Greek and Roman cults, for Manicheism, and for the early history of Islam. The papyri are also our most important source for the actual working of law in ancient societies. . In addition to the papyri, the Michigan collection contains other writing ...
- 2135: Orphan Trains
- ... New York City and put on trains to rural America. A traffic in immigrant children were developed and droves of them teamed the streets of New York (A People's History of the United States 1492-present, 260). The streets of NYC were dirty, overcrowded, and dangerous. Just as street gangs had female auxiliaries, they also had farm leagues for children ... a Baptist, because I believe in immersing the Indians in our civilization and when we get them under holding them there until they are thoroughly soaked" ( Carlisle Indian Industrial School History,2). The Children in this school had their entire identity transformed. The boys had their hair cut and both boys and girls were given new names. Richard Pratt knew that ...
- 2136: Hitler Youth
- ... proud to be Germans. While also being able to lay down their lives for their country. When in the classroom the teachers taught their curriculum to emphasize Nazi themes and history. In every classroom hung a portrait of Hitler and some of the students even prayed to him. The curriculum even included how to spot a Jew, and if there was ... and that from age ten on they will be apart of some type of Hitler’s organizations, "and they will never be free again as long as they live."(The History Place,www.historyplace.com)
- 2137: Hundreds Years War
- ... Rule is that those with the gold make the rules. In other words, those with the gold have the power as well as those with the power have the gold. History books will discuss the general reasons for war such as freedom from adversity or freedom from religion. But the real issue for any war is the thirst for power and ... a hundred years to have control of the Channel trade routes. 1 This century of warring was known as The Hundred Years' War and is the longest war in record history. It began in 1337 when King Edward III invaded Normandy and ended in 1453 when France won the Battle of Bordeaux. However, it was not a hundred years of constant ...
- 2138: Gothic Cathedrals
- ... an arched bridge above the aisle roof that extends from the upper nave wall, where the lateral thrust of the main vault is greatest, down to a solid pier.” [Jansen, History of Art, p. 407]. The effect is to add structural strength and solidity to the building. The visual appearance of changes from the Early and Later or High Gothic are ... became larger to allow more space for stained glass. T Sources: · Encyclopedia Britannica ’97. CD-ROM · “Gothic Architecture and Art”. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition Copyright ©1993 · Janson and Janson. “History of Art”.
- 2139: Aeschylus
- ... a favorable wind to Troy, and Clytemnestra murders him to avenge her death. Tragedies were Athenian, reflecting the taste and intellectual climate of mid fifth century Athens. The weight of history and heritage becomes a major theme of the play, and indeed of the entire trilogy, for the family it depicts cannot escape the cursed cycle of bloodshed from its past ... the plays; in order to do this, we would need to educate ourselves(like above) of fifth century life, placing ourselves in a “virtual” Athens. With the knowledge of world history and study, I feel that the relationship with the thirteen colonies represented by Argos, Athens and Thessaly corresponding to Sparta Palmieri 5 acting as Britain clearly displays a perfect spot ...
- 2140: The Art Of Torture
- ... name can torture be seen as an art, were these people mentally ill?” well it was, but I talk about that later, let me tell you a little about the history of torture. Torture has been around since the times of Ancient Greece and is still around today, usually in the Mafia. Other than the mob, torture isn’t very common ... the victim is pulled through the opening. This is one of the few tortures still used today, this technique is usually used by mobs. To conclude this paper on the history, art, and tools of medieval torture, all I can say is that the Middle Ages were a time were crime was not tolerated. Punishments were sever and done to keep ...
Search results 2131 - 2140 of 7307 matching essays
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