B. <em>1998</em>. It was in this year that Osama bin Laden co-signed a <em>fatwa</em> (a non-binding legal pronunciation made by a religious authority) with Ayman al-Zawahiri, stating that the killing of North American and their allies was an "individual duty for every Muslim", to "liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and Mecca from their grip". In the same year a series of U.S. embassies bombings (by terrorist cells linked or incited by al-Qaeda), thorough East African countries killed hundreds of people.
Answer:
Confessions
Explanation:
Christianity was was the only religion recognized in The Middle Ages. It dominated the the lives of both the peasants and the nobles. The Christianity that was spread across Europe during the middle ages was based on the scriptures that recounted the life of the Christ and his disciples The priests were part of life during the Middle Ages. They were people to trust enough to tell them the secrets and the private matters .They were exempt from tax because they provided spiritual care and conducted religious services to their parishioners. The opinion was that that Middle ages Christians was that the confessions were to be done to the priests.. I was that individual were to confess who were the Middle Age Christians had to confess sins committed have them absolved by God through the administration of a Priest
The growth of the silk road was greatly impacted by the growth in technology specifically modes of transportation. As the ability to move from place to place improved more trips were made and therefore the increase of trade products and use of the silk road took place.
Answer:
urbanization is the process of a society becoming more city oriented
Correct answer is: 1 - Axum became a multicultural kingdom, with both Islamic and Jewish populations.
The kingdom of Axum was one of the most powerful in Africa. It reached its apogee in the fourth century AD, and in this same century it was converted to Christianity. Its apogee occurred around the middle of the fourth century AD, when the Axumites (name for the inhabitants of Axum) took the Kush kingdom, its rival, to ruin. One of the most important events in the history of the Axum kingdom was the conversion to Christianity of King Ezana in the fourth century by a Christian monk of Phoenician origin. After the conversion of King Ezana, the entire region of Ethiopia and much of the Nubia region were strongly influenced by Christianity, and most of the population also converted, making Axum an eminently Christian empire.