5040 students in total including the 5% from Misty's school
Temple Mount is important to Jews because it is the location where Abraham prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac, and it is the site of the Great Temple erected by King Solomon.
The place of "the sacrificial stone of Isaac" was chosen by King David to build a sanctuary that would house the most sacred object of Judaism, the Ark of the Covenant. The works were later completed by Solomon in what is known as the First Temple or Temple of Solomon and whose description we only know through the Bible, as it was desecrated and destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar II in 586 BC, giving rise to the Jewish exile to Babylon. A few years later the Second Temple was rebuilt, which was destroyed again in 70 AD by the Romans, with the exception of the western wall, known as the Wailing Wall, which is still preserved and which is the most important place of prayer for the Jews. According to the Jewish tradition, it is the place where the third and last temple must be built in the times of the Messiah.
A flashback gives more of a reflective feel...that the author is almost reliving that certain experience. If you look into the flashback a little more, it could be biased because the character could just be remembering what he/she WANTS to remember, rather than what ACTUALLY happened. Comparing the actual chain of events in the book and viewing the character's flashback in a film is a great way to see those little differences in perspective.
Answer:
200years
Explanation:
During the period of the Crusades, warfare between Christians and Muslims lasted nearly 200 years.
The Crusades were a series of military campaigns promoted by the Pope and carried out by a large part of Christian Latin Europe, mainly by the France of the Capetians and the Holy Roman Empire. The Crusades, with the initial specific objective of restoring Catholic control over the Holy Land, were fought over a period of almost two hundred years, between 1096 and 1291. Later, other campaigns in Spain and Eastern Europe, some of which they did not see its end until the fifteenth century, received the same denomination. The Crusades were held mainly against the Muslims, but also against the pagan Slavs, Jews, Greek and Russian Orthodox Christians, Mongols, Cathars, Hussites, Waldenses, Prussians (or Prussians), Lithuanians (in general against the Baltic peoples) and against enemies politicians of the Popes.
Ultimately, the suffrage movement provided political training for some of the early women<span> pioneers in Congress, but its internal divisions foreshadowed the persistent disagreements among </span>women<span> in Congress and among </span>women's rights<span> activists after the passage of the 19th Amendment.</span>