History questions not worth their own thread

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What would happen if Dachs asked a question in this thread? It would be like dividing by 0 :lol:
 
I have plenty of questions. I think I've asked some in this very thread before!

Actually, here's one that's been bugging me: does anybody know of any good, preferably relatively unbiased, and recent accounts of the Xinhai Revolution and subsequent warlord period? If possible the book(s?) in question would cover from about 1911 into the twenties, maybe up to 1936.
 
As far as I know, the Indian opium flooded the market making it more widely available in greater quantities allowing a wider segment of the population to smoke, and those who already did to smoke more. It didn't create presence of opium, but changed the scale of that presence.
 
I have plenty of questions. I think I've asked some in this very thread before!

Actually, here's one that's been bugging me: does anybody know of any good, preferably relatively unbiased, and recent accounts of the Xinhai Revolution and subsequent warlord period? If possible the book(s?) in question would cover from about 1911 into the twenties, maybe up to 1936.
God, I could have answered this question last week, but I threw out all my university readers on Sunday. My opportunity to show off an prove my dominance over Dachs has failed through my own cleanliness. :cry:
 
I, as an amateur, would say, based on the place where most of the Iroquoian languages are, that it originated in New York somewhere. But I don't know for sure.
 
Anything known of their early prehistory? Did they originate in a given known area?

Cherokee oral traditions say they migrated from the Great Lakes region. Artifacts discovered support that they were Iroquois speaking people that migrated south during the Mississippian period.
 
Does anyone know of record of societies before the invention of the truck that cleared roads of snow? Long range between cities and villages, or even in the cities themselves?
 
Does anyone know of record of societies before the invention of the truck that cleared roads of snow? Long range between cities and villages, or even in the cities themselves?

Before the invention of cars people used sleighs (and sleighriding was a 'popular' pastime) and horse-drawn carriages (which have higher/bigger wheels than the average car or even truck) and naval transportation to get to another town. Clearing and maintaining roads was, in general, a local rather than a national task. I'm guessing the national car association doesn't have a pre-modern precursor. But the topic is no specialty of mine, so...
 
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