Opium
how have ideas from the past shaped the western hemisphere today
The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.The spread of Christianity matters because it was one of the factors that shaped our western culture.
During the 5th century, significant events such as the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the rise of the Byzantine Empire, the spread of Christianity, the invasion of the Huns, and the beginning of the Dark Ages shaped the course of history.
Chinese checker board
Mao Ze Dong
Abutilion or Chinese Lanterns.
The Vietnamese country was totally infiltrated by the Chinese and the Chinese ambitions to have Vietnam as their seaport. That's why the Vietnam War began --to contain Chinese influence.
It strongly shaped the western civilization
dy the chinese people
She shaped history by being the first woman to fly almost all the way around the world solo.
The Chinese are famous for their ceramics. The Ming and Tang dynasty were especially famous for their ceramics.
The Monroe Doctrine was primarily used to justify U.S. involvement in Latin America and the Caribbean. It asserted that any European intervention in the Americas would be viewed as a threat to U.S. security, leading to actions such as the U.S. intervention in Cuba during the Spanish-American War and the establishment of the Roosevelt Corollary, which allowed for increased U.S. intervention in the region. This doctrine shaped American foreign policy and reinforced the idea of the Western Hemisphere as a sphere of U.S. influence.