We've Got Papers!
Find Your Term Paper:    
    NAVIGATE
  Home
  Join Now!
  Got Questions?
  Contact Us

    MEMBERS
  Username: 
  Password: 

    SUBJECTS
  Arts & Plays
  Biographies
  Book Reports
  Business
  Computers
  Creative Writing
  English
  Geography
  Health & Medicine
  History
  Legal & Government
  Miscellaneous
  Music
  Poetry & Poets
  Religion
  Science
  Social Issues


Term Papers on History

Cuban Missile Crisis
Number of words: 2565 - Number of pages: 10

.... by the United States government, landed on the shores of the Bay of Pigs in Cuba. The intent was to overthrow Fidel Castro and implement a more U.S.-friendly government, but the force was crushed in an embarrassing defeat. This left the world stunned. How could President Kennedy allow such a thing to happen? It marked the first of many events that led to the , which occurred over a year later. The Bay of Pigs incident broke all of the little trust that the Cubans had left I the United States, and ignited the support of Castro by the Soviet Union. Khrushchev's strong backing of his ally was .....

Get This Paper

The Influence Rock And Rap Music Has On Young People
Number of words: 1040 - Number of pages: 4

.... commonly known and liked by them" (130). Such sexual beats also come from CDs that are just bass. Everyone has experienced sitting at a stoplight when a car pulls up next to you with his or her radio is so loud your car starts shaking and you can't even think. The lyrics and beat of rock and rap may influence people to do such negative acts at such a young age. Sex plays an enormous part in music. Look at the way music artists dress, what they say in their lyrics or the music beat, and the title of the records. Some music artists dress inappropriately and wear next to nothing, in my opinion. .....

Get This Paper

European Enlightenment
Number of words: 611 - Number of pages: 3

.... art and intellect again appeared in society. Innovation began to permeate Europe, as humans discovered better ways to print books, tighten communications over distance, and cure diseases more reliably. Mankind started trying to deduce the laws of the universe. England's neighbor, France, erupted into the disorder of the French Revolution, killing their own king and harshly swinging from an absolute dictatorship to a radical republic. Representative of the Enlightenment are such thinkers as Voltaire, J.J. Rosseau, Montesquieu, Adam Smith, Swift, Hume, Kant, G.E. Lessing, Beccaria, and, in Ame .....

Get This Paper

Aztec
Number of words: 1866 - Number of pages: 7

.... get drunk except at certain religious feast. Drunkenness was considered a serious offense even punishable by death. In the s culture there were clans, each clan there was tribes and each tribe was divided up. Then each family were allotted sufficient land for its maintenance, if no one else were alive in the family, then the land were reverted back to the tribe. Urban communities, the land were communal, each group called capulli was composed of a few families that jointly owned a piece of land. Then part of the yield was given to the state as a tax. Rest of yield would be either sold, trad .....

Get This Paper

The New Imperialism
Number of words: 560 - Number of pages: 3

.... portion of our country."(Human record, pg.92) This type of exploitation was common throughout , but it was all done in a way that it seemed as beneficial for the colonized, as for them. Technological Advancements were very important in the development of . Inventions such as the maxim machine gun and the steamboats were key for the Europeans too reach their objectives in Asia and Africa. Steamboats were essential for the transport of goods and provisions, all the way from Europe to the colonies. Macgregor Laird states the importance of steamboats at this time, "By this invention every rive .....

Get This Paper

The French Revolution's Affect On Romanticism
Number of words: 1216 - Number of pages: 5

.... (Leinward 452) with Eighteenth- century writers focusing on the lives of the upper class. (Thompson 857) These writers followed "formal rules"(Thorlby 282), and based their works on scientific observations and logic (Thompson 895). The Revolution gave the common people and writers more freedom to express feelings and stimulated them to use reason. According to Thompson, The Revolution "had a major impact on Nineteenth- Century European Life." (895) It sent a strong wave of emotion and revival throughout France (Peyre 59). This lead to new laws and standards for the citizens, .....

Get This Paper

Theory Of History
Number of words: 1077 - Number of pages: 4

.... life in the wild, new land, the American settlers gained strength and a firm belief in the rights and liberties of the individual man. They revolted because England interfered with their trade industry, demanded unjust taxes, and sent British troops to compel obedience. In the beginning of the war the colonists fought for their individual rights. After a year of fighting they fought for independence and change in American life (Brinkley 122). Ever since the beginning of the colonies being formed, England and America had been growing apart from each other. In 1774 England was an aristocrac .....

Get This Paper

Comparing The Us Constitution
Number of words: 1258 - Number of pages: 5

.... protect personal liberties and individual freedom while the Russians were more concerned with the welfare and equality of the population as a whole. This difference is partially due to the differences in the conditions leading to revolution in each country. The American Revolution was initiated by the wealthy in response to what they considered unfair treatment by a foreign ruler while the Russian revolution was instigated by the poor in reaction to centuries of oppression and exploitation by the wealthy within their own country. In the years leading up to World War I, social unrest among .....

Get This Paper

Western Expansion Of The U.S.
Number of words: 1607 - Number of pages: 6

.... of Texas from Mexico. The strongest evidence of U.S. expansion goals is with the Mexican-American War. From the beginning, the war was conceived as an opportunity for land expansion. Mexico feared the United States expansion goals. During the 16th century, the Spanish began to settle the region. The Spanish had all ready conquered and settled Central Mexico. Now they wanted to expand their land holdings north. The first expedition into the region, that is today the United States Southwest, was with Corando. Corando reported a region rich in resources, soon after people started to settle the .....

Get This Paper

African - American Civil Rights
Number of words: 983 - Number of pages: 4

.... the first black American to play major league baseball. Blacks had crept in America's national past time; more radical social changes were soon to come. Disenfranchised blacks finally found a leader dedicated to their cause in Harry S. Truman. After hearing of a lynching of black war veterans, Truman was suddenly tuned in to the heated crisis in the southland. Despite persistent tries to advance the cause of the blacks, Truman was repeatedly shot down by a conservative congress. The boiling discontent felt by the blacks since the days of slavery could not be silenced so easi .....

Get This Paper


« prev  8  9  10  11  12  next »

Copyright © 2024 Got Papers.com. All rights reserved.
Home | Forgot Password | Cancel Subscription | Contact Us