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Yes there were civilian passenger ships that traveled across the Atlantic Ocean during World War 2. Unfortunately during this time there were many civilian passenger ships that never reached their destinations due to disaster striking during their sail.
The Front.
it was to get points across to the people and try to get the people involved
because lives are lost during wars making families upset across any country and nothing can replace that, so if everyone is miserable after or during a war there is no peace
There were no transport aircraft during World War I, so the only means of crossing the sea was in ships.
False.
It spreaded across a bridge
West
Nothing describes the Pax Mongolica. Pax Mongolica is a descriptive term. The term Pax Mongolica has been coined by historians, modelling it on the original phrase Pax Romana. It is used to refer to the stabilisation of the territories conquered by the Mongols Empire, and the period of relative peace which the conquests and a unified administration, together with improvements in communications and trade helped to create.
he was just as bad as his father was (ghengis khan). the whole world was afraid of them. if a mongol soldier were to come across someone that was not a mongol, the non-mongol would obey or run for their lives.
By camel caravan.
Actually they did not buy from the merchants they had bought everything across the seas.
in caravans
The founder of the Mongol Empire is Genghis Khan. He united the Mongol tribes in the 12th and 13th centuries and successfully expanded the empire across Asia and Europe. Genghis Khan is known for his military tactics and his ability to establish a vast empire.
This period in history is known as the Pax Romana.
A type of "train" called a camel train.
Mongol empire extended from Russia and eastern Europe in west to Mesopotamia as far as Egypt in the south across the Caspian Sea region and the Asiatic steppes to include all of China.