plz reply soon

<p>is this summary enough for these 2 historical events </p>

<p>The Industrial Revolution
Not all revolutions are political. A social revolution is a revolution that transforms society or the economy without drastically altering the existing political system. The Industrial Revolution of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries had a major impact on every country in the world. Beginning around 1780 in England, industry started to replace agriculture, and machinery started to replace manual labor. By the mid-nineteenth century, new forms of production and transportation—including the invention of the steam engine, mechanical typesetting, and movies—had fundamentally altered the modern world. Consequently, the lives of Europeans changed drastically within just a couple of decades.
The economic transformation brought about the British industrial revolution was accompanied by a social transformation as well. Population boomed, and demographics shifted. Because industrial resources like coal and iron were in Central and Northern England, a shift in population from Southern England northward took place. Northern cities like Manchester grew tremendously. These changes in social and demographic realities created vast pressure for political change as well. The first act to protect workers went into affect in 1802 (though in practice it did very little). Pressure to redress the lack of representation for the new industrial cities and the newly wealthy industrial manufacturers also began to build.</p>

<p>Ww2</p>

<p>In 1939, World War II began with the German leader, Adolph Hitler's unprovoked attack on Poland. This and many subsequent acts of aggression, along with numerous crimes against humanity paved the way for the Allies to wage war against her. In the next several years, England, the United States, China, Russia, France, and numerous others stood defiantly against Hitler, sending forth young men to fight on the ground, in the air and at sea to remove German forces from an ever growing number of occupied lands. Beginning in the Mediterranean in 1943, and then moving up into the rest of Europe, US servicemen began an air campaign to rid the world of the German threat. But no sooner did they and their English counterparts begin bombing runs over German targets than their enemy shot them down with fighter planes. Thousands of aircrews fell from the sky in great explosions. And yet despite the flames, some airmen survived. What became of them? Where did they go? The following links to Stalag Luft III history and testimonials will provide you with some answers as well as help players understand the real life experiences endured by World War II Prisoners of War.</p>

<p>63 views no reply :frowning: reply soon plz any feedback is appreciated</p>

<p>So you want somebody to do y</p>

<p>is this summary enough or it’s not ?</p>

<p>I have no idea what this is or what kind of summary it is, or how detailed it’s supposed to be. Summarizing WWII in one paragraph is pretty tough</p>