I believe your answer is B
Because Napoleon or Tyrant or Dictator, supported many ideas of the Enlightenment and begin instituting systems and titles from the monarchy,historians later classified him as a <em>Despot</em> and his policies were called <em>Napoleonic Civil Code,1804 or The Napoleonic Code.</em>
- It was the first legal code to be established in an European country with a civil legal system.
- It influenced the laws of many countries formed during and after Napoleonic Wars.
- The Napoleonic Code influenced developing countries outside Europe,especially in the Middle East,attempting to modernize their countries through legal reforms.
- These codes gave post revolutionary France its first coherent set of laws concerning property,colonial affairs,the family and individual rights.
- Napoleon centralized the government,putting control firmly in the hands of the national government.
- The overall goal of the Napoleonic Code was to reform French law in line with the principles of Revolution.
- The Code with its stress on clearly written and accessible laws,was a major step in replacing the previous patchwork of feudal laws.
- This Code gave right to equality to all men.
- Napoleon's initial goal was to stabilize the government of France.France was in turmoil after the revolution.Napoleon did stabilize the government and implement judicial reforms to increase Democratic reforms.He also planned to protect France from foreign countries opposed to a France without a monarchy.
Answer:
The correct answer is B, <em>they struggled for control of the Middle East</em>.
Explanation:
The history of the relationship between the Ottomans and Safavids is mainly characterized by their conflicts for the control of different regions of the Middle East. All the other options don't correctly describe this history.
However, because both societies were Muslim according to Islam they couldn't war against each other unless it was for religious reasons.
Thus in the early 1500s Selim I, sultan of the Ottoman Empire consulted his scholars and decided that the Shah Ismail of the Safavids preached heresies against Islam. He then persecuted internal supporters of the Safavids which intensified the rivalry between the two empires.
The conflict between Ottomans and Safavids was fought also through trade embargoes in the 1500s. Ottomans imposed trade embargoes against the Safavids but they only worked until the early 1600s. In the 18th century, they would start to see themselves all parts of the same faith but still fearing each other.