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History

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

“The concept of laissez faire was very important to American history from 1865 to 1900.  It had a key role in determining what happened during both Reconstruction and industrialization.”  Questions:  What was the concept of laissez faire?  What five factors made it such a popular philosophy during these years?  How did laissez faire effect Reconstruction? How did laissez faire effect the Gilded Age?  Use specific information to support your answer.

Select four of the following options and write a short response explaining what it is and why it is significant. Be sure to use the significance specifically discussed in lecture. (60 points total/15 points each).

  1. Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
  2. Ida B. Wells
  3. Interstate Commerce Act, 1887
  4. Omaha Platform, 1892
  5. Upton Sinclair
  6. Anthracite Coal Strike, 1902

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Summary of World War 1

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

I must tommorow in school stand in front of my class and talk about World War 1, so please if someone do this essay writte it in a clear and easy way to understand it. Beacuse the i must talk about it the world war 1 in a way that they will understand it, not difficult. (A easy clear summary)

Like for example: The world war 1 began 1984 in…………. and so on.

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History homework help

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

There were many empires that rose and fell between 2300 B.C. and 334 B.C. write a brief essay that compares and contrasts the Babylonian and Hittle empires. In what ways were they alike, and how were they different?

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homework

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

I need a 350-word minimum reflection on the MIDDLE and HOMEWARD PASSAGE and address the question, “How does learning about the Transatlantic better our understanding of the formation of colonial America?”

 

1) Read the provided YAWP readings.

2) Read pages 24 – 27, 76 – 78, and 95 – 97 of the US History online text.

3) Review the videos and presentation provided.

4) Read the following: From the Zinn Education Project, posted November 29, 2017:

“On Nov. 29, 1781, on a ship heading for Jamaica, the Zong massacre occurred. The captain gave the order to throw 54 enslaved Africans overboard. Another 78 were drowned over the next two days. By the time the ship had reached the Caribbean, 132 persons had been murdered. When the ship returned to England the owners wished to be compensated the full value for each enslaved African lost. The claim might have been honored if it had not been Olaudah Equiano (also known as Gustavus Vassa), who had once been enslaved. While living in England, he learned of the tragedy and alerted an abolitionist friend. The case went to court. At first the jury ruled in favor of the ship’s owners. Since it was permissible to kill animals for the safety of the ship, they decided, it was permissible to kill enslaved people for the same reason. The insurance company appealed, and the case was retried. This time the court decided that the Africans on board the ship were people.”

 

Consult the sources provided and take detailed notes. In your notes, answer the following questions:

1.    Where did this portion of the Transatlantic slave trade occur?

2.    What occurred during the portion of the Transatlantic Slave Trade?

3.    Who was involved?

https://fod-infobase-com.occc.idm.oclc.org/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=58757&loid=270377

http://www.viewpure.com/3NXC4Q_4JVg?ref=search

https://fod-infobase-com.occc.idm.oclc.org/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=58556&loid=278031

http://www.americanyawp.com/reader/british-north-america/olaudah-equiano-describes-the-middle-passage-1789/

http://www.americanyawp.com/reader/british-north-america/rose-davis-is-sentenced-to-a-life-of-slavery-1715/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oo-0ZzUADI

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essay 2

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

How does Rama’s dharma, as expressed in the Ramayana, differ from Yuddhistira’s dharma, as expressed in the Mahabharata? For EACH character (Rama and Yudhishtira), describe ONE example that illustrates his dharma AND indicate the significance of the KARMA related to the events you describe. In other words, what is the significance of the examples you describe in terms of each epic?

 

 

450 word

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M448

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

M448: Mission Command-Command

Learning Activity, “OPERATION NASHVILLE”

Mission Command Case Study Analysis Handout

 

1. Instructions:

 

a. Read the Learner Handout “OPERATION Nashville” Case Study, and as a group be prepared to present your findings.

 

b. During your analysis, refer to the “Senior NCO’s Mission Command Support Role” slide.

 

2. Answer the following questions:

 

a. How did LTC Benchoff’s build cohesive teams?

b. Which factors of Mission Command were supported by the senior NCO’s in Operation NASHVILLE in support of Operation DRAGON STRIKE?

 

 

 

 

Combat Studies Institute Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

UNCLASSIFIED

 

Victory on Highway 1:

Breaking the Taliban’s Stranglehold in Kandahar

In July 2010, GEN David Petraeus, the commander of the International Security

Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, designated the 2d Brigade Combat Team (2 BCT),

101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) as ISAF’s main effort. Commanded by COL Arthur

Kandarian, the brigade was responsible for conducting offensive operations in Kandahar

Province’s Zhari District, the birthplace of the Taliban. Since 2006, when a Canadian-led task

force defeated a large concentration of Taliban fighters preparing to assault nearby Kandahar

city, the Taliban had reasserted control over Zhari. They assassinated key tribal elders,

established a shadow government, erected the Taliban’s de facto “Supreme Court,” and

persecuted political prisoners in torture compounds. Economically, the Taliban had a

stranglehold over commerce. On Highway 1, the major thoroughfare connecting Helmand

Province to the west with the city of Kandahar to the east, the Taliban set up illegal checkpoints

throughout Zhari, stopping traffic and demanding exorbitant tolls. Drivers who refused to pay

were swiftly ambushed by insurgents staging out of the jungle-like terrain south of the highway.

With a growing insurgency on its western doorsteps, the second largest city in Afghanistan

teetered on the brink of anarchy, political instability, and economic uncertainty.

In order to break the insurgency’s iron grip on Highway 1, COL Kandarian planned a

series of synchronized offensive operations south of the highway. Christened as Operation

DRAGON STRIKE, the plan involved the 2 BCT’s two organic maneuver battalions (1st

Battalion, 502d Infantry Regiment [1-502 IN] and 2d Battalion, 502d Infantry Regiment [2-502

IN]) and its Reconnaissance, Surveillance and Target Acquisition (RSTA) squadron (1st

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 2

Squadron, 75th Cavalry Regiment [1-75 CAV]) clearing the insurgent-dominated terrain south of

Highway 1. During the three-month combined arms operation, Kandarian expected his

subordinate commanders to take bold action, exercise disciplined initiative, and accept prudent

risks. Laying out these principles, his commander’s intent was to “defeat the insurgency in Zhari

… in order to secure the people, ensure Afghan FOM [freedom of movement] on Highway 1 and

improve governance and development.” Based on a rigorous pre-deployment training regimen,

Kandarian developed agile leaders that he trusted to independently fulfill his intent. LTC Peter

Benchoff, the 2-502 IN commander, described Kandarian’s command style as “draw[ing] a circle

[on a map], tell[ing] us task and purpose, and then let[ting] us go out there and achieve that intent

… it was very empowering.” Kandarian’s subordinate commanders were free to design schemes

of maneuver tailored to their tactical environments and unforeseen contingencies.

LTC Benchoff’s 2-502 IN served as the main effort of Operation DRAGON STRIKE.

Encompassing the western third of Zhari District, the battalion’s area of operations (AO)

included the Taliban’s birthplace and was described as “the most volatile and kinetic area in

southern Afghanistan.” The AO’s naturally defensible terrain favored insurgents. Eight-foot tall

earthen grape rows, marijuana and wheat fields, tree-lined irrigation canals, and abandoned two-

story mud huts facilitated insurgent cover and concealment south of the Highway. MAJ Curt

Rowland, the 2-502 IN operations officer (S3), stated that the irrigation canals were similar to

“World War I, trench style type defenses.” Running parallel to Highway 1, three canals provided

insurgents with east-west linear freedom of movement and positions to fire 82 millimeter

recoilless rifles at Highway 1. Even worse, the Taliban had prepared extensive improvised

explosive device (IED) belts on every north-south route connecting to Highway 1.

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 3

In mid-September 2010, LTC Benchoff planned Operation NASHVILLE, 2-502 IN’s

first offensive effort of DRAGON STRIKE. The plan’s objective was to clear “Objective

Nashville,” a kilometer-long corridor south of Highway 1 in the vicinity of Forward Operating

Base (FOB) Howz-e-Madad. By establishing a foothold south of the Highway, the battalion

would reduce violence on Highway 1 and secure the violence-plagued villages of Baluchan and

Pulchakhan, meeting two objectives in COL Kandarian’s intent. On 22 September, Benchoff

finalized his mission statement. It stated: 2-502 IN “clears the vicinity of Objective

NASHVILLE beginning on 25 Sep 10 in order to hold, creating freedom of movement along

Highway 1 … and safeguarding the people immediately south of Highway.”

NASHVILLE’s scheme of maneuver included air assaults and road cutting operations,

which were designed to bypass the impassible north-south routes. LTC Benchoff selected CPT

David Yu’s Bravo Company as his main effort. The operation involved Yu’s company air

assaulting into the village of Baluchan at night, seizing two objectives, searching compounds,

meeting village elders, and collecting the biometric data of fighting age Afghans. Two

kilometers to the west, two platoons from CPT David Forsha’s Alpha Company would stage out

of Strong Point (SP) Pulchakhan and moved dismounted towards Baluchan, clearing compounds,

and establishing temporary SPs. To the east of Bravo Company, two platoons from CPT

Timothy Price’s Delta Company, along with a company of British Armored engineers, would cut

a new road (Route TENNESSEE) running southwest from SP Spin Pir on Highway 1 to an

abandoned compound designated as Outpost (OP) Dusty. Benchoff intended to air assault CPT

William Faucher’s scout platoon into OP Dusty, located a kilometer southeast of FOB Howz-e-

Madad. Cutting the new road proved critical in diverting insurgents away from Baluchan,

trapping them to the north, and bypassing the dangerous north-to-south routes.

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 4

LTC Benchoff fully expected his subordinate commanders and senior noncommissioned

officers (NCOs) to take bold action and exercise disciplined initiative within the limits of his

 

Map 1: Objective NASHVILLE

intent. In addition to having previous combat experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, Benchoff’s

subordinates had trained rigorously using the battalion commander’s tactical standard operating

procedure (TACSOP) as a guide. Benchoff described the TACSOP as his “commander’s intent

for the close infantry fight.” By training his subordinate commanders and NCOs on the same

TACSOP, Benchoff fostered mutual trust and small unit cohesiveness. The restrictive Zhari

terrain put a premium on flexible and opportunistic small unit leadership and decentralized

command and control. “In difficult terrain where you have isolated units,” Benchoff stated,

“you’ve got to have that leadership with the drive and motivation and understanding of the

intent, and the desire to seek out opportunities to make success.”

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 5

On the night of 26 September 2010, the operation kicked off. CPT Yu’s Bravo Company

air assaulted just to the northwest of Baluchan. During the next two days, Bravo Company

searched compounds, spoke with village elders, cleared footpaths and dust trails, and scanned the

biometric data of Afghan males into the Biometric Automated Toolset-Handheld Interagency

Identity Detection Equipment (BAT-HIIDE). Remarkably, insurgent resistance was negligible.

CPT Forsha’s two Alpha Company platoons also faced minimal insurgent resistance as they

moved dismounted from SP Pulchakhan towards the east.

As Alpha and Bravo Companies cleared their objectives, CPT Faucher’s scout platoon air

assaulted into OP Dusty before sunrise. The scouts used C4 demolition charges to clear the

compound of IEDs and set up claymore mines on its perimeter. Encircled by a four-meter high

mud wall, the elevated compound offered a panoramic view of the surrounding terrain and

nearby roads. Comprised of three reconnaissance teams of five or six soldiers and a sniper

section divided into three teams of three Soldiers (a spotter, a sniper, and a security man),

Faucher’s team also included a seven-man Afghan National Army (ANA) reconnaissance

platoon.

Unlike Alpha and Bravo Companies, the scouts faced an immediate insurgent onslaught.

Concealed in Zhari’s maze of tree-lined irrigation canals, grape rows, and abandoned mud

compounds, insurgents on 26 September initiated eight coordinated attacks, using machine gun

fire and rocket propelled grenades (RPGs). CPT Faucher tried to regain the initiative by radioing

for multiple close combat attack (CCA) helicopter gun runs, two dozen 120 millimeter mortar

strikes, and thirteen 155 mm artillery strikes. Air Force F-16s also dropped 3 Guided Bomb Unit

(GBU) 38 Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs) and 5 GBU 12s, all within 300 meters of the

OP. At 1600, a Black Hawk helicopter delivered a resupply of ammunition. On the next day,

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 6

Faucher lost track of the number of coordinated attacks. Undeterred by the massive firepower

raining down on them, insurgents maintained the fight’s intensity.

As the scouts slugged it out at OP Dusty, CPT Price moved his team out. Leaving SP

Spin Pir before sunrise on 26 September, CPT Price’s command included 1LT Kyle Snook’s 1st

Platoon, 1LT Sayre Payne’s 2d Platoon, a company-sized element of British Armored engineers,

and a handful of sappers. Price’s objective was to blaze a new route through the jungle-like

terrain, opening up a line of communication between OP Dusty and Highway 1.

In the vanguard were the British sappers, followed in order by 2d and 1st Platoons. The

British sappers used two Trojan Armored Engineer Vehicles to bulldoze Route TENNESSEE.

As the Trojans smashed through the dense foliage, insurgents concealed in nearby irrigation

canals and tree lines blistered CPT Price’s soldiers with machine gun fire and RPGs. The IED

threat and thick terrain slowed down the operational tempo, making it dangerous to close with

and kill the enemy. Undeterred, Price’s team called in several CCA missions by Kiowas and

Apaches. “The way I saw my role was to keep [the insurgents] pinned down,” explained 1LT

Payne. The platoon leader worked feverishly to “pinpoint exactly those muzzle flash[es] … [and

relay them] to the aviation assets, to the helicopters. And they [were] my maneuver element,

because they can sweep across the objective.” By the end of 26 September, Price’s team

bivouacked for the night at the first irrigation canal south of Highway 1. They had sustained just

a single casualty: 1LT Snook triggered a pressure plate IED that ripped off one of his feet,

requiring a medical evacuation (MEDEVAC).

The intensity of the fighting along Route TENNESSEE and at OP Dusty surprised LTC

Benchoff. The battalion commander anticipated that the heaviest resistance would occur at

Baluchan in Bravo Company’s AO. Responding to the enemy’s actions, Benchoff shifted a

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 7

section of M1128 Mobile Gun System (MGS) Stryker variants from 3d Squadron, 2d Stryker

Cavalry Regiment (3-2 SCR) to CPT Price. (LTC Bryan Denny’s 3-2 SCR had been assigned to

2 BCT for Operation DRAGON STRIKE.) Armed with 105-millimeter cannons, the MGSs

carried eighteen rounds and had the ability to apply overwhelming precision firepower in support

of dismounted infantrymen. Knowing that Price had served as a Stryker platoon leader during a

combat tour in Iraq, Benchoff gave him complete freedom of action to employ the two MGSs in

fulfilling his intent.

As soon as the MGS section arrived on scene, CPT Price briefed the MGS commanders

of his intent. Under a continuous hail of gunfire on the second day, the advance of the British

engineers and CPT Price’s dismounted elements had slowed to a crawl. Machine gun fire from

dozens of insurgents perched in nearby wood lines repeatedly pinned down the engineers and

infantrymen. Price directed the MGSs to fire canister round volleys into the wood lines,

decisively tilting the battle in favor of US Soldiers. Crammed with 1,000 steel chunks that

fanned out in a shotgun-like pattern, the canister rounds flattened tree lines, hacking insurgents to

pieces and prompting others to leave the battlefield.

After gaining the upper hand, CPT Price was forced to make another crucial command

decision. Word arrived that the situation with CPT Faucher’s scout platoon during the morning

had “escalated and they basically became pinned down” at OP Dusty. Price realized that unless

the dozens of Taliban fighters surrounding OP Dusty were defeated, the battalion’s ability to

clear the kilometer-wide foothold south of Highway 1 would be compromised or delayed.

Weighing his options, CPT Price settled on a bold solution. He decided to launch a hasty

and unplanned “thunder run” down Route TENNESSEE with the MGS section flanking his M-

ATV, trapping or killing the insurgents surrounding Dusty. As the vehicles rumbled towards the

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 8

OP, CPT Faucher radioed the location of six insurgent positions that were in heavy contact with

the scout platoon. The dense vegetation negated the MGS’s thermal imaging technology,

preventing the MGS commanders from pinpointing the location of insurgents. In response, Price

ordered his crew to mark the locations of the insurgent firing positions with the M-ATV’s .50

caliber machine gun. He then ordered the MGS commanders to conduct a movement to contact

in a dramatic “show of force.”

The two MGSs raced towards the compounds as the dismounted soldiers remained in the

rear. Upon arriving outside the OP, the two MGSs unleashed a punishing barrage of High

Explosive Anti-Tank (HEAT) and High Explosive Plastic (HEP) rounds. Armed with AK-47s

and RPGs, the insurgents’ will to fight crumbled in the face of the overwhelming firepower. On

CPT Price’s order, the MGS crews methodically moved from compound to compound, flattening

doors and blasting holes through mud walls at point blank range. The carnage ended when the

MGS crews ran out of ammunition. Inside of the walled compounds, fresh blood splatter and

blood trails indicated the fate of many Taliban fighters. “Needless to say, the arrival of the MGS

on scene in the vicinity of OP Dusty completely ended the engagement and resulted in the enemy

withdrawing from the immediate area,” Price explained. His bold decision to seek out an

opportunity for success paid off. NASHVILLE culminated with “secur[ing] a foothold [south of

Highway 1] that we would maintain the entire deployment.”

LTC Benchoff stated that the intense fighting during Operation NASHVILLE killed at

least 20 insurgents, wounded dozens more, and nearly eliminated violence on Highway 1 in the

battalion’s AO. NASHVILLE was just one of dozens of operations launched by 2 BCT during

Operation DRAGON STRIKE. Yet its decisiveness struck a major tactical and symbolic blow to

the Taliban—especially because of the area’s proximity to Mullah Omar’s home village. Indeed,

 

 

UNCLASSIFIED

UNCLASSIFIED 9

by mid-October, Taliban commanders complained to New York Times correspondents that the 2

BCT’s deliberate combined arms breach south of Highway 1 had “routed” their fighters and

eliminated the insurgency’s Highway 1 stranglehold. Tactical victories do not always produce

strategic success, but NASHVILLE showed that a light infantry unit, led by empowered leaders

willing to take bold action and independently seek out opportunities for success, could triumph

against a determined adversary in difficult terrain.

 

 

 

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Help

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

Answer both questions in seperate essays 500 words each minimum

 

Use more than 3 sources  must include the assigned readings in at least one source.

 

1.     Please explain how the Constitution provides for a system of separation of powers and checks and balances. Provide a fully developed essay of at least 500 words, and cite sources used.

 

 

 

2.       Describe how a bill becomes a law at the national level, in a fully developed essay of at least 500 words. Support your work with cited sources, references to Lecture Notes, or URLs where you obtained your information.

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Witches

September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

3 Witches on Trial

Hundreds of legal documents have survived from the Salem witch hunt of 1692. These fall into three principal categories: (1) transcripts of pre- liminary examinations conducted by magistrates following the arrest of suspects; (2) depositions both for and against the accused; and (3) formal documents that n1ark the progress of individual cases. The formal docu- ments include complaints against suspected individuals, arrest warrants, mittimus1 warrants that ordered a prison keeper to hold prisoners incus- tody until delivered by due process of law, indictments (formal charges), subpoenas2 summoning witnesses to court, and execution warrants. Many of the examination transcripts and depositions were recorded by individ- uals who were known to sympathize with the accusers, not least Samuel Parris-a sobering reminder that in 1692 our modern commitment to avoiding conflicts of interest had yet to become an established judicial principle. The official transcripts of examinations included not only ques- tions and answers but also the observations and comments of the writer. The trial records themselves do not survive, but we do know from con- temporary accounts that the magistrates and jurymen heard from three groups hostile to the accused: (1) the afflicted girls, who often experi- enced yet more torments in the courtroom; (2) those who had already confessed and who now accused other defendants of belonging to the witch conspiracy; and (3) neighbors who had witnessed incidents that seemed to incriminate the accused (such as arguments and angry curses followed by mysterious ailments or mishaps).

Magistrates John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin began their pre- liminary examinations of witch suspects in Nathaniel Ingersoll’s tavern, but they soon shifted them to the village meetinghouse, which would ac- commodate a larger crowd of observers. (Hathorne and Corwin had de- cided to disregard the usual practice of questioning suspects in private.)

1 Latin for “we send.” 2 Latin for “under penalty.”

66

.>

;__’-:’

~i

SARAH GOOD 67

The meetinghouse was the largest building in the village, a wooden struc- ture of thirty-four feet by twenty-eight feet, with rows of benches on the ground floor and two galleries above. The magistrates sat behind a large communion table; the accused stood before them. This was the same space in which Samuel Parris continued in his sermons to denounce the servants of Satan who were, he claimed, conspiring against God and his own ministry. The actual trials took place in Salem Town at the court- house there.

This section contains documents from six cases targeting Sarah Good (Documents 14-27), Tituba (Documents 28-32), John Proctor (Docu- ments 33-41), Bridget Bishop (Documents 42-51), Dorcas Hoar (Docu- ments 52-61), and George Burroughs (Documents 62-75). The cases are arranged in order of arrest; the documents for each case appear in chronological order. Due to limitations of space, some of the more repet- itive depositions have been omitted, along with most of the procedural documents. A sample arrest warrant, indictment, and death warrant are included for Sarah Good; these are almost identical to the procedural documents that survive from other witch prosecutions that year. 3

SARAH GOOD

Sarah Good was one of the first three individuals to be accused, the other two being Sarah Osborne and Tituba. Warrants went out for their arrest on February 29, 1692. After several days of examination, mag- istrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne gave orders for all three women to be committed to the jail in Boston. Osborne, who was ill at the time of her arrest, died of natural causes in prison on May 10 and so never stood trial; she had maintained her innocence throughout the

3 Many of these documents were first published in an 1864 two–volume compilation. A fuller and more accurate version of the surviving legal records emerged from a project undertaken in the late 1930s that was funded by the Works Progress Administration (a New Deal work relief agency). Almost forty years later, historians Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum prepared a new and improved version of that WPA transcript for publication in a three-volume work, published in 1977. That edition became the authorita- tive source for scholars working on Salem until the publication in 2009 of an ambitious new compilation, edited by Bernard Rosenthal. This latest version contains new docu- ment~ and corrects many errors that crept into previous editions of the transcripts. Instead of organizing the documents case by case, Rosenthal presents the documents chronologically, which helps us to understand the crisis as it unfolded in ways that older editions inadvertently obscured. Yet some historians have pointed out that presenting the documents case by case best enables us to understand the individual stories and tragedies that lie at the center of the witch hunt I share that concern and have accord- ingly organized the documents below as a series of case studies.

‘””””‘~”-‘”‘-‘-·”‘·” ~’·–·~-·~·

 

 

68 WITCHES ON TRIAL

examinations. Sarah Good also denied that she was a witch, but she was brought to trial on June 28, convicted, and hanged on July 19.

Sarah Good’s father had been a prosperous innkeeper. At his death he left a substantial estate, but the man whom her mother subsequently married never handed over Sarah’s rightful share of that estate. Her first husband, Daniel Poole, was a former indentured servant; he died only a few years after they married, leaving Sarah nothing but his debts. Her sec- ond husband, William Good, was described in the records sometimes as a weaver and sometimes as a laborer. William and Sarah ended up home- less, destitute, and reliant upon local residents for food and shelter.

Sarah Good did not hold back her feelings of bitterness and resent- ment in the face of her declining fortunes. Her reluctance to accept God’s will doubtless shocked pious neighbors, and such outspokenness was particularly disturbing when coming from a woman. Good also had a reputation for holding a grudge and for muttering curses against those who crossed her, which would have alarmed her neighbors, not least because many people believed that such curses could work. The deposi- tions against Good illustrate vividly how interpersonal conflicts could accumulate and fester in tiny communities like Salem Village. They also show how easily people could become convinced that hostile neighbors were wielding occult forces against them. Personal animosity, inexpli- cable misfortunes, and belief in witchcraft combined in a lethal cocktail to bring about Sarah Good’s death.

14

Arrest Warrant for Sarah Good February 29, 1692

To Constable George Locker Whereas Masters joseph Hutcheson, Thomas Putnam, Edward

Putnam, and Thomas Preston, yeomen4 of Salem Village in the county

4 A yeoman owned and cultivated a small piece of land; he w&s of respectable standing but not affluent

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 4, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

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EXAMINATION OF SARAH GOOD (AS RECORDED BY EZEKIEL CHEEVER) 69

of Essex, personally appeared before us and made complaint on behalf of their Majesties against Sarah Good, the wife of William Good of Salem Village abovesaid, for suspicion of witchcraft by her committed, and thereby much injury done to Elizabeth Parris, Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam, and Elizabeth Hubbard, all of Salem Village aforesaid, sundry times within this two months and lately also done at Salem Village, con- trary to the peace of our Sovereign Lord and Lady, William and Mary, King and Queen of England, etc., you are therefore in their Majesties’ names hereby required to apprehend and bring before us the said Sarah Good, tomorrow about ten of the clock in the forenoon at the house of lieutenant Nathaniel Ingersoll in Salem Village, or as soon as may be, then and there to be examined relating to the abovesaid premises. And hereof you are not to fail at your peril.

15

John Hathorne Jonathan Corwin

Examination of Sarah Good (as Recorded by Ezekiel Cheever)

March 1, 1692

Hathorne: Sarah Good, what evil spirit have you familiarity with? Good: None. Hathorne: Have you made no contract with the Devil? Good: No. Hathorne: Why do you hurt these children? Good: I do not hurt them. I scorn it. Hathorne: Who do you employ, then, to do it? Good: I employ nobody. Hathorne: What creature do you employ, then? Good: No creature, but I am falsely accused. Hathorne: Why did you go away muttering from Mr. Parris’s house? Good: I did not mutter, but I thanked him for what he gave my child.

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 11, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

 

 

70 WITCHES ON TRIAL

Hathorne: Have you made no contract with the Devil? Good: No.

Mr. Hathorne desired the children, all of them, to look upon her and see if this were the person that had hurt them and so they all did look upon her and said this was one of the persons that did torment them. Pres- ently they were all tormented.

Hathorne: Sarah Good, do you not see now what you have done? Why do you not tell us the truth? Why do you thus torment these poor children?

Good: I do not torment them. Hathorne: Who do you employ, then? Good: I employ nobody. I scorn it. Hathorne: How came they thus tormented? Good: What do I know? You bring others here and now you charge me

with it. Hathorne: Why, who was it? Good: I do not know, but it was some you brought into the meeting

house with you. Hathorne: We brought you into the meeting house. Good: But you brought in two more. Hathorne: Who was it, then, that tormented the children? Good: It was Osborne. Hathorne: What is it that you say when you go muttering away from

persons’ houses? Good: If I must tell, I will tell. Hathorne: Do tell us, then. Good: If I must tell, I will tell: it is the commandments. I may say my

commandments, I hope. Hathorne: What commandment is it? Good: If I must tell you, I will tell: it is a psalm. Hathorne: What psalm?

After a long time she muttered over some part of a psalm.

Hathorne: Who do you serve? Good: I serve God. Hathorne: What God do you serve? Good: The God that made heaven and earth (though she was not willing

to mention the word God).

Her answers were in a very wicked, spiteful manner, reflecting and re- torting against the authority with base and abusive words, and many

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ELIZABfl.TH HUBBARD AGAINST SARAH GOOD 71

lies she was taken in. It was here said that her husband had said that he was afraid that she either was a witch or would be one very quickly the worse. Mr. Hathorne asked him his reason why he said so of her, whether he had ever seen anything by her. 5 He answered no, not in this nature, but it was her bad carriage to him. “And indeed,” said he, “I may say with tears that she is an enemy to all good.”

5 In other words, had he seen her do anything that might lead him to believe that she was a witch?

16

Elizabeth Hubbard against Sarah Good March 1, 1692

The deposition of Elizabeth Hubbard, aged about seventeen years, who testifieth and saith that on February 26, 1692 I saw the apparition of Sarah Good who did most grievously afflict me by pinching and pricking me and so she continued hurting of me till March 1, being the day of her examination, and then she did also most grievously afflict and torture me also during the time of her examination. And also several times since she hath afflicted me and urged me to write in her book. Also on the day of her examination, I saw the apparition of Sarah Good go and hurt and afflict the bodies of Elizabeth Parris, Abigail Williams, and Ann Putnam, Jr., and also I have seen the apparition of Sarah Good afflicting the body of Sarah Bibber.

Also in the night after Sarah Good’s examination, Sarah Good came to me bare foot and bare legged6 and did most grievously torment me by pricking and pinching me; and I verily believe that Sarah Good hath bewitched me. Also that night, Samuel Sibley that was then attending me struck Sarah Good on her arm.

6 Many Puritans would have considered such a state of undress to be indecent. According to Document 26, Elizabeth Hubbard claimed that Good’s breasts were also uncovered and called her “nasty slut.”

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 20, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusdts.

 

 

17

Ann Putnam ]r. against Sarah Good March 1, 1692

The deposition of Ann Putnam, Jr., who testifieth and saith that on Feb- ruary 25, 1692 I saw the apparition of Sarah Good which did torture me most grievously, but I did not know her name till February 27, and then she told me her name was Sarah Good and then she did prick me and pinch me most grievously, and also since several times, urging me vehemently to write in her book. And also on March 1, being the day of her examination, Sarah Good did most grievously torture me and also several times since. And also on March 1, 1692 I saw the apparition of Sarah Good go and afflict and torture the bodies of Elizabeth Parris, Abigail Williams, and Elizabeth Hubbard. Also I have seen the appari- tion of Sarah Good afflicting the body of Sarah Bibber.

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 19, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

18

William Allen, john Hughes, William Good, and Samuel Braybrook against Sarah Good,

Sarah Osborne, and Tituba March 5, 1692

William Allen saith that on March 1 at night he heard a strange noise not usually heard, and so [it] continued for many times so that he was affrighted, and coming nearer to it he there saw a strange and unusual beast lying on the ground, so that going up to it the said beast vanished

Essex County Court Archives, vol 1, no. 29, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

72

WILLIAM ALLEN, JOHN HUGHES, WILLIAM GOOD, AND SAMUEL BRAYBROOK 73

away and in the said place started up two or three women and flew from me, not after the manner of other women, but swiftly vanished away out of our sight, which women we took to be Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba. The time was about an hour within night and I, John Hughes, saith the same, being in company then with said Allen, as witness our hands.

William Allen further saith that on March 2 the said Sarah Good vis- ibly appeared to him in his chamber, said Allen being in bed, and [she] brought an unusual light in with her. The said Sarah came and sat upon his foot; the said Allen went to kick at her, upon which she vanished and the light with her.

William Good saith that the night before his said wife was examined, he saw a wart or teat a little below her right shoulder which he never saw before and asked Goodwife Ingersoll whether she did not see it when she searched her.

John Hughes further saith that on March 2, coming from Goodman Sibley’s about eight of the clock in the night, he saw a great white dog whom he came up to, but he [the dog] would not stir, but when he [Hughes] was past, he, the said dog, followed him about four or five poles7 and so disappeared. The same night, the said John Hughes being in bed in a closed room and the door being fast so that no cat nor dog could come in, the said John saw a great light appear in the said cham- ber, and rising up in his bed he saw a large grey cat at his bed’s foot.

[On] March 2 Samuel Braybrook saith that, carrying Sarah Good to Ipswich, the said Sarah leapt off her horse three times, which was between twelve and three of the clock of the same day [on] which the daughter of Thomas Putnam declared the same at her father’s house. The said Braybrook further saith that said Sarah Good told him that she would not own herself to be a witch unless she is proved one; she saith that there is but one evidence, and that’s an Indian, and therefore she fears not, and so continued railing against the magistrates and she endeavored to kill herself.

7 One pole equaled 51h yards.

 

 

19

Abigail Williams against Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba

May23, 1692

Abigail Williams testifieth and saith that several times last February she hath been much afflicted with pains in her head and other parts and often pinched by the apparition of Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba Indian, all of Salem Village, and also excessively afflicted by the said apparition of said Good, Osborne, and Tituba at their examination before authority [on] March 1, 1692. Further the said Abigail Williams testifieth that she saw the apparition of said Sarah Good at her examina- tion pinch Elizabeth Hubbard and set her into fits and also Elizabeth Parris and Ann Putnam.

Essex County Court Archives, voJ. 1, no. 31, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

20

Indictment against Sarah Good for Afflicting Sarah Bibber8

june 28, 1692

Anno [Regni] Regis et Reginae Willm et Mariae nunc Angliae etc. Quarto [in the fourth year of the reign of William and Mary, King and Queen of England, etc.]

[In] Essex [County 1

s Almost identical indictments accused Sarah Good of using witchcraft to afflict Elizabeth Hubbard and Ann Putnam Jr.

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 3, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

74

SARAH BIBBERAGAINST SARAH GOOD 75

The Jurors for our Sovereign Lord and Lady, the King and Queen, pre- sent that Sarah Good, wife of William Good of Salem Village in the county of Essex, husbandman,9 [on] May 2 in the fourth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord and Lady, William and Mary, by the grace of God of En- gland, Scotland, France, and Ireland King and Queen, Defenders of the Faith, etc., and [on] diverse other days and times as well before as after, certain detestable arts called witchcrafts and sorceries wickedly and felo- niously hath used, practiced, and exercised at and within the township of Salem in the county of Essex aforesaid, in, upon, and against one Sarah Bibber, wife of John Bibber of Salem aforesaid, husbandman, by which said wicked arts she, the said Sarah Bib her, [on] the said May 2 in the fourth year abovesaid and diverse other days and times as well before as after, was and is tortured, afflicted, pined, consumed, wasted, and tor- mented, and also for sundry other acts of witchcraft by said Sarah Good committed and done before and since that time against the peace of our Sovereign Lord and Lady, the King and Queen, their crown and dignity, and against the form of the Statute in that case made and provided.

9Farmer.

21

Sarah Bibber against Sarah Good june 28, 1692

The deposition of Sarah Bibber, aged about thirty-six years, who testifieth and saith that since I have been afflicted I have often seen the apparition of Sarah Good, but she did not hurt me till May 2, 1692, though I saw her apparition most grievously torture Mercy Lewis and John Indian at Salem on Aprilll, 1692. But on May 2, 1692 the apparition of Sarah Good did most grievously torment me by pressing my breath almost out of my body; and also she did immediately afflict my child by pinching of it [so] that I could hardly hold it, and my husband seeing of it took hold

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 26, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

 

 

76 WITCHF-‘i ON TRIAL

of the child, but it cried out and twisted so dreadfully by reason of the torture that the apparition of Sarah Good did afflict it withal that it got out of its father’s arms too. Also several times since, the apparition of Sarah Good has most grievously tormented me by beating and pinching me, and almost choking me to death, and pricking me with pins after a most dreadful manner.

22

Sarah Cadge and Thomas Cadge against Sarah Good

june 28, 1692

The deposition of Sarah Gadge, the wife of Thomas Gadge, aged about forty years: this deponent testifieth and saith that about two years and a half ago Sarah Good came to her house and would have come into the house, but said Sarah Gadge told her she should not come in for she was afraid she had been with them that had the smallpox, and with that she [Good] fell to muttering and scolding extremely, and so told said Gadge [that] if she would not let her in she should give her something; and she answered she would not have anything to do with her; and the next morning after, to said deponent’s best remembrance, one of said Gadge’s cows died in a sudden, terrible, and strange, unusual manner, so that some of the neighbors and said deponent did think it to be done by witchcraft, and [she] farther saith not

And Thomas Gadge, husband of said Sarah, testifieth that he had a cow so died about the time above mentioned, and though he and some neighbors opened the cow, yet they could find no natural cause of said cow’s death, and [he] farther saith not

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 15, from the Records of the Court of Oyer

I and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

. . . . l

23

joseph Herrick Sr. and Mary Herrick against Sarah Good

june 28, 1692

The deposition of Joseph Herrick, Sr., who testifieth and saith that on March 1, 1692, I being then Constable for Salem, there was delivered to me by warrant from the worshipful John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin, Esquires, Sarah Good for me to carry to their Majesties’ jail at Ipswich. And that night I set a guard to watch her at my own house, namely Samuel Braybrook, Michael Dunell, [and] Jonathan Baker. And the aforenamed persons informed me in the morning that that night Sarah Good was gone for some time from them, both bare foot and bare legged. And I was also informed that that night Elizabeth Hubbard, one of the afflicted persons, complained that Sarah Good came and afflicted her, being bare foot and bare legged, and Samuel Sibley, that was one that was attending of Elizabeth Hubbard, struck Good on the arm, as Elizabeth Hubbard said, and Mary Herrick, wife of the above said Joseph Herrick, testifieth that on March 2, 1692 in the morning, I took notice of Sarah Good in the morning and one of her arms was bloody from a little below the elbow to the wrist, and I also took notice of her arms on the night before and there was no sign of blood on them.

Essex County Court Archives, vol 1, no. 16, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

77

 

 

24

Samuel Abbey and Mary Abbey against Sarah Good june 29, 1692

Samuel Abbey of Salem Village, aged forty-five years or thereabouts, and Mary Abbey, his wife, aged thirty-eight years or thereabouts, deposeth and saith that about this time three years past, William Good and his wife Sarah Good, being destitute of a house to dwell in, these deponents, out of charity, they being poor, let them live in theirs some time, until that the said Sarah Good was of so turbulent a spirit, spiteful, and so maliciously bent that these deponents could not suffer her to live in their house any longer and was forced for quietness sake to turn she, the said Sarah, with her husband, out of their house. Ever since, which is about two years and an half ago, the said Sarah Good hath carried it very spitefully and maliciously towards them. The winter following after the said Sarah was gone from our house, we began to lose cattle and lost several after an unusual manner, in a drooping condition, and yet they would eat, and your deponents have lost after that manner seventeen head of cattle within two years, besides sheep and hogs, and both do believe they died by witchcraft. The said William Good on the last of May, [that] was twelve months [ago], went home to his wife the said Sarah Good, and told her what a sad accident had fallen out She asked what. He answered that his neighbor Abbey had lost two cows, both dying within half an hour of one another. The said Sarah Good said she did not care if he, the said Abbey, had lost all the cattle he had, as the said John Good told us. Just that very day that the said Sarah Good was taken up, 10 we, your deponents, had a cow that could not rise alone, but since presently after she [Good] was taken up, the said cow was well and could rise so well as if she had ailed nothing. She, the said Sarah Good, ever since these deponents turned her out of their house, hath behaved herself very crossly and maliciously to them and their children, calling their children vile names and hath threatened them often.

to Arrested.

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 18, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

78

25

Henry Herrick and jonathan Batchelor against Sarah Good

june 29, 1692

The deposition of Henry Herrick, aged about twenty-one years: this deponent testifieth and saith that in last March, [that] was two years [ago], Sarah Good came to his father’s house and desired to lodge there, and his father forbid it, and she went away grumbling and my father bid us follow her and see that she went away clear, lest she should lie in the barn and by smoking of her pipe should fire the barn. And said depo- nent with Jonathan Batchelor seeing her make a stop near the barn, bid her be gone, or he would set her further off, to which she replied that then it should cost his father Zachariah Herrick one or two of the best cows which he had.

And Jonathan Batchelor, aged fourteen years, testifieth the same above written, and doth farther testify that about a week after, two of his grandfather’s master cattle were removed from their places and other younger cattle put in their rooms and since that several of their cattle have been set loose in a strange manner.

Essex County Court Archives, vol. 1, no. 21, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

79

 

 

26

Samuel Sibley against Sarah Good june 29, 1692

Samuel Sibley, aged about thirty-four years, testifieth and saith that I being at the house of Doctor Griggs that night after that Sarah Good was examined, and Elizabeth Hubbard said, ‘There stands Sarah Good upon the table by you with all her naked breast and bare footed [and] bare legged,” and said, “0 nasty slut! If I had something I would kill her!” Then I struck with my staff where she, said Sarah Good, stood and Elizabeth Hubbard cried out, “You have hit her right across the back, you have almost killed her.” If anybody was there they may see it.

Essex Institute Collection, vol. 1, no. 30, from the Records of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1692, Property of the Supreme Judicial Court, Division of Archives and Records Preservation, on deposit at the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts.

27

Death Warrant for Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth How, and

Sarah Wilds and Officer’s Return july 12, 1692, and july 19, 1692

To George Corwin, Gentleman, High Sheriff of the County of Essex Greeting:

Whereas Sarah Good, wife of William Good of Salem Village, Rebecca Nurse, wife of Francis Nurse of Salem Village, Susannah Martin of Amesbury, widow, Elizabeth How, wife of James How of Ipswich, [and] Sarah Wilds, wife of John Wilds of Topsfield, all of the county of Essex in their Majesties’ province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, at a Court of Oyer and Terminer held by adjournment for our Sovereign

Ms.Am.48, Rare Books and Manuscripts, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts, Courtesy of the Trustees of the Boston Public Library.

80

DEATII WARRANT AND OFFICER’S RETIJRN 81

Lord and Lady, King William and Queen Mary, for the said county of Essex at Salem in the said county on June 29 were severally arraigned on several indictments for the horrible crime of witchcraft by them prac- ticed and committed on several persons, and pleading not guilty did for their trial put themselves on God and their country, whereupon they were each of them found and brought in guilty by the jury that passed on them according to their respective indictments and sentence of death did then pass upon them as the law directs execution, whereof yet re- mains to be done.

These are therefore in their Majesties’ names, William and Mary, now King and Queen over England, etc., to will and command you that upon Tuesday next, being July 19, between the hours of eight and twelve in the forenoon [of] the same day, you safely conduct the said Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth How, and Sarah Wilds from their Majesties’ jail in Salem aforesaid to the place of execution, and there cause them and every of them to be hanged by the necks until they be dead, and of the doings herein make return to the clerk of the said court and this precept And hereof you are not to fail at your peril. And this shall be your sufficient warrant, given under my hand and seal at Boston July 12 in the fourth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord and Lady, William and Mary, King and Queen, etc.

William Stoughton

July 19, 1692

I caused the within mentioned persons to be executed according to the tenor of the within warrant

George Corwin, Sheriff

TITUBA

Tituba, described in the seventeenth-century records as an “Indian woman,” was a slave in the household of Salem Village’s minister, Sam- uel Parris. Parris had purchased Tituba, along with her husband John (also characterized in the records as an “Indian”), during his residence in Barbados during the 1670s. Almost no information survives regard- ing Tituba’s personal or family history, either before or after the Salem crisis, though she would become a central figure in the popular mythol- ogy surrounding 1692. We do know that she had a reputation for super- natural knowledge and in early 1692 was commissioned by the aunt of one of the afflicted girls to bake a urine-cake, the purpose of which was

 

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September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

1.Why is it important to understand historical perspectives on terrorism?

 

2. Briefly explain how movements, with legitimate concerns, may evolve to become political extremist. Why?

 

3. Are all extremist beliefs inherently wrong and unneccessary, or are they sometimes correct and necessary? At what point should they be understood rather than rejected?

 

4. If terrorism and guerrilla warfare are examples of “poor man’s warfare”, in your opinion are they therefore necessary and understandable options? If so, why? If not, why?

 

5. What are “terrorist proxies”? Explain how countries use these proxies. Why they do so? Discuss potential benefits enjoyed by sponsors who use such proxies. Discuss potential risk

 

6. Briefly discuss the motivations behind “lone wolf” acts of political violence

 

7. Compare the differences between an Islamic jihad  and a christian crusade. What is the modern perception of what Jihad is? How have groups like Al Qaeda used Jihad to justify what they do?

 

8. Discuss the significance of the classical idealogical continuum for the analysis of potlitical extremism in the modern world. Is this continuum useful for evaluating the nature of the New Terrorism? If so, How?  If not, how not?

 

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September 9, 2025/in General Questions /by Besttutor

Discuss the new ideas that emerged from the Great Schools of the Axial Age.  Compare and contrast the ideas of China’s sages with the ideas emerging in the same period in India and Greece.  Why do we tend to divide the new philosophies between “natural philosophy” and “moral” or “political” philosophy?  Give an example of each.  Why do we tend to call the teachings of Chinese and Greek scholars “philosophy” whereas we tend to think of the teachings emerging in India as “religious”? (Hint:  To answer this question, you will have to read the Armesto chapter posted on the website AS WELL AS the textbook chapters.)

650-900 words – 50% of your grade.

 

Section II:  Answer one of the questions below in 650 -900 words:

1.     From 3500-2000 BCE, as civilizations developed in the river basins of Mesopotamia, Egypt, South Asia and East Asia, more intensive cultivation brought agricultural surpluses that ushered in a wide range of impacts.  Explain with examples from at least two of the river-basin civilziations how food surpluses led to the rise of complex societies and states.  (To answer this question, you must define “complex society” and discuss the types of states developed in the societies you are discussing.)

2.     The second millennium BCE witnessed large-scale migrations of nomadic peoples who brought with them their domesticated horses and their chariot technology.  These people are referred to by scholars as Indo-Europeans, largely on the basis of their languages (see Current Trends in World History:  How Languages Spread).  Contrast the impact of migrations into Southwest Asia(Anatolia and Mesopotamia), Egypt, South Asia, and East Asia.  To what extent did conflict play a role in the impact of Indo-European language speakers on the formation of territorial states?

3.     From the mid-second through the mid-first millennium BCE, “second-generation” societies developed in Easter Zhou China, the Ganges plain of South Asia, and the Mediterranean, while parts of South America, Mesoamerica, and sub-Saharan Africa birthed their first complex societies.  What are the differences between the second-generation societies of Afro-Eurasia and the first complex societies elsewhere, and what might account for these very different, yet contemporary developments across the globe?

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