Answer:
See explanation.
Explanation:
The Wade-Davis Bill required a much heavier standard for Southern states to be re-admitted into the Union after the Civil War. This included an "ironclad oath," made by at least 50% of Southern voters in each state that they had both never supported the Confederacy and that they swore full loyalty to the Union.
This was in opposition to Lincoln's 10% Plan, which only aimed to require that 10% of voters per state swear loyalty to the Union.
It was lasted over 9 years from December 1979 to February 1989
If you look at the years of the states and write down the ones in 1889 and 1900, it gets easier. Three that I got were Wshington, Montana, and South Dakota (I'm sure there are more but those were three).
There were many ways in which early Muslims viewed and treated Jews and Christians, but mostly it was with tolerance, except on the outskirts of the empire.