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    Long Distance Relationship

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    Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 2011‚ Vol. 101‚ No. 6‚ 1302–1316 © 2011 American Psychological Association 0022-3514/11/$12.00 DOI: 10.1037/a0025497 So Far Away From One’s Partner‚ Yet So Close to Romantic Alternatives: Avoidant Attachment‚ Interest in Alternatives‚ and Infidelity C. Nathan DeWall University of Kentucky Nathaniel M. Lambert The Florida State University Erica B. Slotter Northwestern University Richard S. Pond‚ Jr. and Timothy Deckman University of

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    Dbq Trade

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    Between the years of 100 and 1450 trade developed and thrived between different regions of the world. These regions included Africa‚ Europe‚ and Asia‚ and the Americas. Trade was established between these areas using different trade routes. As these areas traded more than just goods were spread. Ideas‚ religion‚ and technology were spread along the trade routes. These cultural aspects were combined with traditional cultures to create new syncretic societies. These trade patterns led to cultural consequences

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    Long-Distance Friendships

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    Getting to know your friends in this day in age is quite different than it was ten years ago‚ ten years ago you got to know your friends face-to-face and you actually knew them. Whereas in today’s time‚ with Facebook‚ Twitter‚ and Instagram people are becoming friends with people they do not know. According to Gertrude Stein in his essay‚ “Friending‚ Ancient or Otherwise” he states‚ “Then there is the question of who really counts as a “friend.” In tribal societies‚ people develop bonds through

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    02.01 Travel Journal 1. How did manorialism develop in Medieval Europe? • Some people moved to countryside and focused on agriculture. • Small‚ independent economies arose‚ centered on large agricultural manors. • system controlled by powerful warrior landlords‚ built small armies to protect manor. • Landlords also leased out land in exchange for loyalty. 2. How did the idea of feudalism emerge as an historical construct? • 3. What role

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    Asia‚ Northern Africa‚ and Europe. This disease was also given the title of the Black Death because of how fatal it was and the deadly symptoms one contracted through it. The plague was transmitted from fleas containing bacteria that were carried by rats‚ to humans. Moreover‚ the Black Death killed millions of citizens and completely changed the society of 14th century Europe. As time goes on‚ the Bubonic Plague had economic‚ social‚ and religious effects on medieval Europe. The economic effects of

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    Alfred the Great was born in the year of 849 and was the fourth or fifth child and he was also the youngest out of all his brothers and sisters. Aethelwulf the king of western Saxons their father Aethelwulf decided that it would be fair if they took turns in being king instead of having the youngest try rule in the age of the Vikings where they would attack any settlements. Alfred reigned as the Wessex king from 871 to 899. He died in October 899 and was also buried in Winchester in England. His

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    Medieval Europe was under an extreme burden at the turn of the century. The demographics of medieval Europe grew to an unprecedented scale. The population had grown to the brink of starvation. Only under the best conditions would the field ’s yield enough to feed the population. The Black death struck in 1347 and decimated the European population. The black death was a necessity to prevent overpopulation and economic decline. The economy of the fourteenth century was in a state of decline. The population

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    The Feudal System in Medieval Europe  (7th‐14th  Century A.D.)    1   A Summary   by kiplangat cheruiyot   An Introduction  At  the  beginning  of  medieval  age  in  Europe‚  based  on  a  feeble  resource  of  data‚  it  is  believed  that  between  80‐90%  of  the  economic  activity  was  agriculture.  Nearly  everybody  therefore‚  earned  a  living  through  agriculture  as  an  economic  activity.  The  economic structure prevailing then became known as Feudalism‚ a term which has come 

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    John Hartog Western Civilization: Ancient to Early Modern 12/1/13 Life of a Peasant in Medieval Europe During the time of Medieval Europe‚ a group‚ called the peasants‚ lived together under the ruling of a lord. Peasants got little respect but were expected to work long and hard hours just to provide for their families. There was little time for anything besides working. The peasant’s in Medieval Europe had an extremely hard and harsh lifestyle (www.historylearningsite.co.uk). When children

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    it has rich historical roots in religion and has tussled with it‚ especially in the form of the Catholic Church of Europe during the Middle Ages. It is believed to have originated in Hellenistic Egypt‚ and closely tied to Hermes Trismegistus‚ who may have been a combination of Egyptian Thoth and Greek Hermes (Budge 414-415). However‚ the transmission of alchemy to Medieval Europe is believed to have occured in the early twelfth century‚ with Robert of Chester serving as one of the earliest translators

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