| Title's for History Papers |
1.7 |
CARS IN THE 50’S In the 50s you needed a car that looked and sounded tough, a 55 BelAir Convertible with dual glass pack mufflers would be a good set-up. |
1.4 |
... Added parts like turn signals meant safety was increased dramatically compared to the cars in the 20’s . ... By doing this the reflected light from incoming cars would make them aware of the position of an automobile whose headlights were not turned on. |
3.3 |
Cartography is described by Webster's as the art of making maps, but how is it done ? A cartographer doesn't just sit down and draw a map free hand. |
2.4 |
Submitted by Eva Jacobs Submitted to Mr . Tony S . Guiuan Carved in Silence The documentary was a brief compilation of stories about different experiences the Chinese immigrants encountered. |
5.1 |
... The Ku Klux Klan was formed as a social group of confederate army veterans in Pulaski, Tennessee, in 1866, but still goes on today . The Ku Klux Klan is a group of white secret societies who oppose the advancement of blacks, Jews, Gays and other Minority groups. |
2.9 |
35 Young v . Bristol Aeroplane Company, Ltd . House of Lords . HL July 24, 25, 26, 27, 1945; Nov . 29, 1945 . Before Viscount Simon, Lord Russell of Killowen , Lord Macmillan, Lord Porter and Lord Simonds. |
3.3 |
In this summary theme I intend to demonstrate how dramatic irony is used all along the short story as a way of reminding us the true intentions of the character that vowed revenge. |
2.1 |
The cast system developed and spread through a legal system based on the social organization of the Hindu way of life in which was introduced when the Aryans invaded the native Indians, in which the persons social position was fixed at birth. |
2.8 |
The Castle District Of Budapest Budapest, the capital of Hungary, is a very exciting place for history . Tourists can enjoy the historic beauty of the Castle District, and see how it has managed to mirror the country’s history in its stones. |
5.3 |
The Middle Ages are defined my many prominent stereotypes . They Include the Knight in shining armor the legendary quests and the hundred year’s war . Perhaps the most recognizable Medieval artifact is the Castle and the form of Government it instilled. |
5.3 |
Castles, the great fortresses of defense, where their own community and home . The popular fairy tale belief of castles is unrealistic . ... Masons were in immense demand for castles and churches during the medieval times. |
3.3 |
Castles Architecture A castle is a properly fortified military residence . Initially castles were designed and built to hold down conquered territory . ... Castles began to rise in the 11th century. |
1.7 |
The Catacombs Roman Christians in the first century did not have their own burial places . ... That is how the catacombs came to be . ... The catacombs were actually composed of galleries and passageways with side recesses for tombs. |
5 |
History of the Quarries The different phases of expansion of Paris have required during all its history the exploitation of local quarries . ... It is necessary to wait for the end of the tenth century and therefore a new flight of construction, Hugues Capet having made of Paris the new capital of his kingdom, to see the first underground quarries to appear. |
4.4 |
... From his analysis of the operation of the human will, Kant derived the necessity of a perfectly universalizable moral law, expressed in a categorical imperative. |
2.9 |
Catharine Beecher became a strong believer in spreading Calvinist morals and virtues because of the influence her father had on her life . ... Catharine seemed to also have a desire to influence others in their won lives. |
1.5 |
Cathedrals were massive buildings for prayer, and Christian activity . They usually took more than 800,000 pounds of wood and lead . Lumber was sometimes up to 60 feet long and was possibly from Scandinavia. |
1.2 |
Catherine De Medicis Catherine de Medicis came into the world on April 13, 1519 . ... It was by chance that Catherine actually loved her husband, but he did not feel the same way about her. |
3.4 |
Catherine the Great truly was a magnificent ruler and leader despite her notorious reputation . ... Catherine met Peter Ulrich, her second cousin, in 1739, when she was ten years old. |
2.2 |
Who really was Catherine the Great ? ... Catherine was born to in the Prussian city of Stettin on May 2, 1729 . ... Though she had a lack of affection for Catherine, she was extremely strict about her upbringing. |
1.3 |
cats and dogs are my favorite animal and birds coo at the sound of shooting sperm . The dog ran up the tree and ate my bird seed. |
1 |
Argue that the Norman Conquest was a very important event, a life-changing event in the history of Britain . Everyone in England knows the date 1066, for in that year England changed forever. |
1.4 |
... That was a joke but also an example of the cause and effect theory . The cause was he cleaned loaded guns and that effected him in the way that he shot himself accidently. |
5.2 |
Cause Effect Essay Chernobyl Disaster It was supposed to be just another ordinary morning on the day of April 26, 1986 . ... It reeked of doom and fatality as disaster abruptly struck at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the former USSR. |
5.9 |
Primarily, the American Revolution was a political and constitutional movement and only secondarily one that was either financial, commercial or social . ... Andrews Although some historians such as Andrews may argue that the American Revolution was not caused by the American colonists’ need for independence, or even over the fact that Britain held too much control over the colonies. |
1.1 |
The Cold War was mostly the fault of the Soviet Union . After World War II, Stalin, the leader of the Soviet Union agreed with the United States and Great Britain that he would allow Eastern Europe to have free elections. |
1.8 |
Reparations left many people in the victorious nations feeling guilty . The loss of all that land to other countries simply made Hitler's early aggression look justified. |
2.5 |
... Many theories surround the cause and the potential avoidance of World War I . Germany was quite frequently blamed for the cause of this disaster, which cost so many lives. |
2.9 |
Causes and Consequences of the Long March The Long March was a huge march marched by 100 000 Communist in 16 October 1934 . ... On 20th October 1935 the survivors of the long march ended the march in Shaanxi where they were welcomed as heroes by local people. |
3.5 |
The Russian revolution in 1917 was the dramatic change of an autocratic government to a communist government . There were many key factors that led to this revolution, mainly the effect of WWI to the Tsar and the people of Russia. |
6.7 |
The Causes and Effects of World War What were the causes and effects of World War I ? ... There was more to the onset of the war then the event of an Austrian prince being murdered in Serbia, as is what most people consider to be the cause of World War I. |
2.9 |
... Two harsh new laws were put into place 1 in 1833, it was ordered that English became the national language of Cape Colony; 2 in 1833 as well, the British emancipated their slaves and caused the Boer great instability because it greatly depended on free labor. |
3.4 |
... This would cause tensions, which would ultimately lead to the American Revolution . The primary causes for the American revolutionary movement were the demand for no taxation without representation, and no taxation solely for raising revenue. |
1.3 |
There were many different settlement patterns in the colonies . Different types and groups of people chose to settle in each region and in individual colonies whitin regions. |
3.8 |
In the mid-eighteenth century, differences of thought and interests have developed between the mother country and its growing colonies . As Britain started to enforce their rule on them, the rebels became angry and started the American Revolution. |
3.9 |
... The development of the Chesapeake and North Eastern colonies reflected the many different motives for relocation and investment in the New World . ... The growth caused a giant demand in the Chesapeake for laborers; Anglican English citizens of lower means filled the niche of a work force in the south by the system of indenturedment. |
6.2 |
The economic and social dominance that would be achieved by farming the geologically troublesome southern colonies fueled the expansion of slavery . ... Cast to the bottom of the social ladder, the earliest slaves foreshadowed the agonizing position of slavery in American history The arrival of African slaves in the American colonies was for economic incentive. |
1.9 |
There were several factors that led to the Russian Revolution of 1917 . ... The next major factor in causing the Russian Revolution were the revolutionary actions of Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks. |
1.4 |
long term causes of World War I were mainly about Nationalism, Imperialism, Industrialization, Propaganda, and Alliances . These long term causes still remain true today . ... The United States of America still remains imperialistic today. |
3.5 |
Great Britain first established their North American colonies to boost their economy and deal with the issue an overpopulated England . ... Also the extent to which the British military attempted to handle the colonies by force provoked the American Revolution. |
3.2 |
The American Revolution had no one cause - instead there were a number of underlying issues between the colonies and England . While independently these were not enough to cause a revolution, combined and with much agitation from pro-independence orators, they resulted in the Revolution. |
1.8 |
When studying the American Revolution, one may wonder what initially caused the colonial English citizens to revolt against their mother country, England . Not surprisingly, there is no one single cause of the Revolutionary War. |
1.5 |
Causes of the Civil War Although some historians feel that the Civil War was a result of political blunders and that the issue of slavery did not cause the conflict, they ignore the two main causes. |
5.6 |
Causes of the Civil War It is amazing that even today, over 130 years after the Civil War started, there is passionate debate regarding the cause of the civil war. |
2.7 |
Debate over Slavery The North and the South had differing opinions on whether slavery was economically and morally right . These issues started when the North outlawed Slavery. |
2.1 |
Some people may believe that the Civil War was caused strictly over the controversy of slaves, but it was not . Slavery was a major contribution to the Civil War, but there were others as well, such as economic and cultural differences, and each side’s interpretation of the Constitution. |
4.1 |
Although the New England and Chesapeake regions were settled by people of English origin, there were many distinctions between the two areas by the end of the seventeenth century. |
4.5 |
... This was the immediate reason for the outbreak of war but there were many more long-term causes . ... The Balkans crisis was another long-term cause of the war. |
10.1 |
... This world in arms is not spending money alone . ... Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron . --Dwight Eisenhower 1953 speech The Great War, or the War of the Nations, brought in a new era of human nature and civilization. |
2.6 |
The following points give examples what caused the French revolution to start listings from 1 to 10 having the number 1 being the most important cause. |