Honestly I have no clue I’m still learning sorry
Dear King,
My children and wife are starving, whilst you and your queen eat lavish meals. I shall not simply: "Eat cake!" (As your wife so rudely implored me to). You must do something now, before you are executed in the town square.
Worriedly,
Mr. Peasant.<span />
Hey!! I believe that the answer is D. Ethnic and religious diversity!!
They overthrew their countries in the name of Allah. Atheists, or those the Qur'an calls Infidels had to convert to Islam and if they resisted, they were killed.
<span>For Christians and Jews, well they occupied their nations and were forced to pay the Jizya, that is a tax. With it they built the Mosque of Omar that is in Jerusalem today. </span>
<span>Non-Muslims often had to dress in common clothes and were prohibited from riding horses--a reminder of their subjection. </span>
<span>And when they paid their tax, they must approach the collector with their faces down, not looking in his eyes. Again, to remind them they were inferior and in subjection. Then the collector would slap them in the face before taking their money. </span>
<span>In most conquered countries, the Christians usually converted after a couple generations. Then they did not have to pay the tax. Hope this helped
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The ruling in Plessy C. Ferguson affects the legalities of segregation because:
(C) It redefined the concepts of <em>separate but equal.</em>
<h3>Further explanation</h3>
This case occurred in the state of Virginia, a former Confederate state in the southern United States. The local law was segregationist. For example, the railway company had to create wagons for blacks and whites separately. Homer Plessy, an Afro-American man who was not allowed to sit in the white wagon, decided to break the law. He was arrested and sent to the Supreme Court of the United States.
This court confirmed the judgment of the court of Louisiana and rejected his claim. The judges said that segregation was not a violation of the 13th amendment that abolished slavery. This judgment more recognized the right of states to apply racist and segregationist laws, as long as each racial group was treated equally with each similar group. There was not a law for all, but a law for each population group. All whites must be equal for the same laws, and all blacks must be equal before the same laws. It was called the concept of <em>separate but equal.</em>
<h3>Learn more</h3>
- The Emancipation proclamation: brainly.com/question/4638275
- The Black Codes: brainly.com/question/507264
- Martin Luther King’s letter from Birmingham jail: brainly.com/question/2510454
<h3>Answer details</h3>
Subject: History
Chapter: The Reconstruction Era
Keywords: slavery, segregation, the black people in the United States, southern states, civil rights, separate but equal concept