this is the name of the 18th century scottish philosopher who expressed: there scarcely ever was a civilised…

this is the name of the 18th century scottish philosopher who expressed: there scarcely ever was a civilised nation of that complexion, nor even any individual, eminent either in action or in speculation.\nhegel\nhumes\ndarwin\njefferson\nquestion 14 (1 point)\nthis is the name of the rebellion that led to the british relying more heavily on black slave labor\nshays rebellion\nbacons rebellion\nboston tea party\nquestion 15 (1 point)\nduring the colonial era, this group of europeans colonized less attractive lands\ngermans, italians, and british\nfrench, dutch, british\nspanish, dutch, portuguese\nspanish, french, british
Answer
Brief Explanations:
- Question 14: Bacon's Rebellion was a 1676 rebellion in Virginia. After the rebellion, the British colonial authorities in Virginia and other colonies turned more towards Black slave labor as a more "controllable" labor source compared to indentured servants (who were involved in the rebellion's context of labor dissatisfaction). Shay's Rebellion was in 1786 - 1787 in Massachusetts (post - American Revolution) and was about economic hardships and debt, not related to slave labor shifts. The Boston Tea Party was in 1773 and was a protest against British taxation.
- Question 15: During the colonial era, the Spanish, Dutch, and Portuguese often colonized less - "prime" or less attractive lands. The British, French, etc. had more focus on more resource - rich or strategically more important (in terms of, for example, access to waterways for trade) lands in many cases. The Spanish colonized large parts of the Americas, including some arid or less - immediately - profitable (in a short - term, European - centric view) regions. The Dutch had colonies like New Netherland (which later became New York), and the Portuguese had colonies in areas like Brazil (which had a mix of different terrains).
Answer:
- Question 14: Bacon's Rebellion
- Question 15: Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese