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Ask QuestionPosted by Riya Jain 6 years ago
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Ankitsingh ???? 6 years ago
Posted by ??(。☬Ashu☬。)?? Bhardwaj 6 years ago
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Saanvi Saksena 6 years ago
Saanvi Saksena 6 years ago
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Grahul 📒🎒📓📔🙇🙇🙇 Rahul 6 years ago
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Posted by Śěřãj The Cute? 6 years ago
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Sowndaryaa Lakshmi V 6 years ago
Śěřãj The Cute? 6 years ago
Posted by ??(。☬Ashu☬。)?? Bhardwaj 6 years ago
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Posted by Sai Vennela 6 years ago
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Gaurav Seth 6 years ago
Giuseppe Mazzini was an Italian revolutionary. He was born in 1807. He became a member of the secret society of the Carbonari. When he was 24 years old, he was sent into exile in 1831 for attempting a revolution in Liguria. After that, he founded two more underground societies; first Young Italy in Marseilles and then Young Europe in Berne. Mazzini believed that God had intended nations to be the natural units of mankind. So Italy had to be forged into a single unified republic instead of being a patchwork of small state kingdoms. Following in the footsteps of Mazzini, many secret societies were set up Germany, France, Switzerland and Poland. The Conservatives feared Mazzini.
Posted by Angel?Riya Arora 6 years ago
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Nitika Chaudhary 6 years ago
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Gaurav Seth 6 years ago
- MAHATMA Gandhi found in salt a powerful symbol that could unite the nation.
- On 31 January, 1930 he sent a letter to Viceroy Irwin stating eleven demands.
- The most stirring demands was to abolish the salt tax.
- Salt was one of the most essential food items consumed by the rich and poor alike and a tax on it was considered as an oppression on the people by the British government.
- Mahatma Gandhiji’s letter was an ultimatum. If his demands were not fulfilled by 11 March, he had to launch a Civil Disobedience Campaign.
- So, Mahatma Gandhi started Salt March accompanied by 78 of his trusted volunteers.
- The March was over 240 miles, from Gandhiji’s ashram - Sabarmati to Dandi.
- The volunteers walked for 24 days. Thousands came to hear Mahatma Gandhi wherever he stopped.
- On 6th April, he reached Dandi and ceremonial violated the law, manufacturing salt by boiling sea water.
- This was the beginning of the Civil Disobedience Movement.
Posted by Aniket Patel 6 years ago
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Gaurav Seth 6 years ago
Denudation of the soil cover and subsequent washing down is known as soil erosion.
Causes of soil erosion:
- Due to human activities like deforestation, overgrazing, construction and mining, etc.
- Natural forces like wind, glacier and water leads to soil erosion.
- The running water cuts through clayey soils and makes deep channels as ‘gullies’. The land becomes unfit for cultivation, this process is called gully erosion and the land is called bad land or ravines in the Chambal basin.
- Sometimes, water flows as a sheet over large areas down a slope. It leads to the washing away of the top soil. This process is called sheet erosion.
- Wind blows loose soil off flat or sloping land, and is called wind erosion.
- Soil erosion is also caused due to defective methods of farming.
Posted by 2739 7373 6 years ago
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Sanskar Sharma 6 years ago
Posted by ◼️♡Vedhya ♡◼️ . 6 years ago
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Hamza Memon 6 years ago
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Posted by ◼️♡Vedhya ♡◼️ . 6 years ago
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◼️♡Vedhya ♡◼️ . 6 years ago
Posted by Aditya Bajoliya 6 years ago
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Yogita Ingle 6 years ago
Giuseppe Garibaldi was an Italian nationalist revolutionary who fought for Italian independence and political unification. In 1848, he played an important role in the movement for Italian freedom by organising the Red Shirts, a corps of volunteers. He also formed an alliance with Victor Emanuel, the king of Sardinia, and Count Cavour. Because of his popularity, a large number of Italians pledged their allegiance to the king of Sardinia. Later in 1859, Garibaldi launched a campaign against Austria. He conquered Sicily and Naples in 1860. Soon, there was a revolt in the Papal States and they joined the fledgling Italian Republic. As a result of this unification, a united Italy was finally established in 1861 with Victor Emanuel as its king.
Posted by Aditya Bajoliya 6 years ago
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Yogita Ingle 6 years ago
Napoleon Bonaparte was the ruler of France. He was crowned as the king of France in December 1804. He was known as the ‘son of the revolution’. He was an excellent general who recovered he lost territories. He Expanded his kingdoms through wars with Austria , Prussia and Russia between 1805-07. He passed the Napoleonic code in 1805 to simplify the administration. He was defeated very badly by the British General Arthur Wellesley at Waterloo in 1815. He was arrested and sent to the island of Saint Helena where he died in 1821.
Posted by Apsara Begum 6 years ago
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Yogita Ingle 6 years ago
A windbreak (shelterbelt) is a plantation usually made up of one or more rows of trees or shrubs planted in such a manner as to provide shelter from the wind and to protect soil from erosion. They are commonly planted in hedgerows around the edges of fields on farms.
Posted by Safwana Beegam 6 years ago
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Meghna Thapar 6 years ago
The Government of India Act 1935 aimed to establish India as a Federation of States. It emphasized the division of powers, independent and apolitical Governors and Governors-General and introduced provincial autonomy for the first time in India. On 26 January 1950, India adopted a new constitution.
Posted by Shekhar Kumar 6 years ago
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Posted by Awdhesh Srivastava 6 years ago
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Shreya S❤ 6 years ago
Shreya S❤ 6 years ago
Posted by Ram Baran Yadav 6 years ago
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Yogita Ingle 6 years ago
SRI LANKA: There were two major groups SINHALAS AND TAMILS. The Sinhalas make up 74% of its total population, the TAMILS were 18% and the rest were the community of Christians. IN TAMILS there were to sub categories , Indian TAMILS whose forefathers came here as plantation workers and the Sri Lankan TAMILS.
BELGIUM: Its ethnic composition was very complex. They were The French, The Dutch and The Germans. The French had a majority in the capital (80%) and the minority in the country(40%). The Dutch had a majority in the country (59%) while a minority in the capital (20%) city of Brussels. The Germans were only 1% in the whole country.
Posted by Vikash Parashar 6 years ago
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??? ??? 6 years ago
Posted by ??? ??? 6 years ago
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Meghna Thapar 6 years ago
The Rowlatt Act was a legislative act passed by the Imperial Legislative Council in London on March 10, 1919, indefinitely extending "emergency measures" enacted during the First World War in order to control public unrest and root out conspiracy in India.
Posted by Dewang Doye 6 years ago
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? Royal Thakur ? 6 years ago

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Mayank Dadhich 6 years ago
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