The Civil War and its aftermath significantly slowed the progress of women's suffrage for nearly 60 years. During this period, the focus shifted to the rights of formerly enslaved men, leading to the passage of the 15th Amendment in 1870, which granted voting rights to Black men but excluded women. This diversion created divisions within the women's suffrage movement, as some activists prioritized racial equality over gender rights, delaying the unified push for women's voting rights until the early 20th century.
Eva Peron was the first lady of Argentina. She fought for women's suffrage. She and her husband, Juan Peron, were nearly inseparable since the day that they met.
See the Web Links to the left of this answer for a brief history of the field of chemistry, which is nearly 400 years old!
It's just history now; nearly half a century has passed for many of the participants.
In 1913, the total area of British colonies was approximately 37 million square kilometers (about 14.3 million square miles). This extensive empire spanned various continents, including territories in Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the Pacific. The British Empire was the largest empire in history at that time, covering nearly a quarter of the world's land area.
The definition of diplomacy is the art or practice of conducting international relations, as in negotiating alliances, treaties, and agreements, or tact and skill in dealing with people. If you look at major suffragists, you will see they fit into these definitions nearly exactly. They were constantly petitioning to Congress to get an Amendment giving women the right to vote added to the U.S. Constitution. Women like Susan B. Anthony were constantly participating in debates and giving speeches defending their stance on Women's Suffrage. They were trying to persuade many people to pressure Congress into adding an Amendment supporting Women's Suffrage to the Constitution. For more information check out womenshistory.about.com. I hope this helped
18th
The 18th amendment *Edit* The Eighteenth Amendment is prohibition and has nothing to do with suffrage. This answer is wrong.
12,000,000 Africans were brought to the Americas. Nearly 95% of them went to the Spanish colonies in Latin America and the remainder to the United States.
precambrian time
Eva Peron was the first lady of Argentina. She fought for women's suffrage. She and her husband, Juan Peron, were nearly inseparable since the day that they met.
A. The African population nearly doubled, the Native American population dropped greatly, and millions of Europeans were sent to the Americas as slaves. B. The Native American population nearly doubled, the African population dropped greatly, and millions of Europeans were sent to Africa. C. The African population nearly doubled, the European population dropped greatly, and millions of Native Americans were sent to Europe as slaves. D. The European population nearly doubled, the Native American population dropped greatly, and millions of Africans were sent to the Americas as slaves.
Bullfighting has a long and complicated history, too much information to include in a short answer. It is believed that a form of bullfighting was introduced to Spain during the reign of Roman Emperor Claudius nearly 2000 years ago. Over the centuries the practice evolved into what we know today. When the Spanish conquered and colonized an area they introduced the spectacle, especially in parts of the Americas.
The Nearly Complete and Utter History of Everything - 1999 TV was released on: USA: 31 December 1999 UK: 2 January 2000
Not nearly enough
See the Web Links to the left of this answer for a brief history of the field of chemistry, which is nearly 400 years old!
DS was a highly successful military campaign that was near perfect in it's execution, nearly perfect in destroying enemy forces, and nearly perfect in that it had one of the lowest US & coalition casualty rates in US history. Those facts, in themselves, made history.
* Longest international highway: the Pan-AmericanHighway, which connects many countries in the Americas, is nearly 48,000 kilometres (29,826 mi) long as of 2005.