St.Petersburg
Cardiff, Swansea, Bangor, Aberystwyth,
gayland upthebuttland and marylandisgayland
Chicago, New York City, and Detroit.
Memphis Knoxville Bristol Nashville (no clue on others)
There are exactly 104 major cities in Europe.
Some of the major industrial regions of the world include the Rust Belt in the United States, the Rhine-Ruhr region in Germany, the Kanto region in Japan, and the Pearl River Delta in China. These regions are known for their concentration of manufacturing industries, infrastructure, and skilled labor force.
If you mean just two major cities in Europe, and two major cities in Asia, here are examples: Europe - Moscow & London Asia- Shanghai & Tokyo If you mean two cities that span the continents of Europe and Asia, two examples are Istanbul & Orenburg.
Paris and Rome
It was the concentration of workers in urbans areas.
u give me the answer
its tokyo in japan and delhi in india.
In 1840 there were very few 'major industrial nations' in Europe. * Britain was easily the leading industrial country. * Belgium, though small, was industrializing fast at the time. * France (Possible candidates in Central Europe in 1840 might have included Saxony and Bohemia, but they had only just started to industrialize).
Some major industrial regions of the world include the Rust Belt in the United States, the Ruhr Valley in Germany, the Kanto region in Japan, the Pearl River Delta in China, and the Mumbai-Pune region in India. These areas are known for their high concentration of industrial activity, manufacturing plants, and infrastructure.
The "silk" road.
It is the plains.
The availability of industrial jobs.