Throughout history, people have always tried to find new and better ways of doing things. Technology brings with it both good and bad effects. Technological progress is inevitable.
Thought history, people have made efforts at innovation. Technological can have positive effects such as in productivity and negative effects such as when it results in unemployment
I believe the answer is: 1.<span>Signing of the Treaty of Nanjing
</span><span>The signing of The treaty of nanjing Marked the end of the Opium War between the British Empire and the Qing Dinasty.
The treaty heavily favored the British Empire both economically and politically, and made China became a very desirable target for the nations that aimed to expand their territory (such as Japan)</span>
Earliest humans to live in Europe were able to survive the last Ice Age period that was a characterized by ferocious change in the climate that covered the continent in a thick layer of ice. Stone age blacksmiths during this period survived through the masterly and use of fire to make tools as a survival strategy while old cultures died and new ones emerged over thousands of years, where the hunter-gatherer populations ebbed and flowed. The hunting of animals and gathering of wild fruit and berries eventually led to adoption of pastoral, farming cultures that arrived in Europe from the Middle East around 8,000 years ago.
I think its B. His Catholic religion.
The Muslim scholars of what historians call the School of Toledo (12th century) were responsible for the translation of many Greek texts to the Arabic and then to Latin. Because of these translations, the studying of those texts increased and they started to be read on European universities.
Many Toledo translations were important for major Renaissance scientists as Roger Bacon (c. 1219/20 – c. 1292) and Copernicus (1473-1543), for example.
The re-discovery of ancient Greek texts due to their translation from the School of Toledo is an example of cultural diffusion. The work done in Toledo kept those texts alive and being read until they found interested audiences in the rest of Europe.