Answer:
Violence against Jewish people increased and continued.
Explanation:
First option is correct as during the capture of the city many people were slaughtered and the violence continued. Some even had to convert to Christianity.
Second option is not correct as it was the army of Christians.
Third is not correct as Jerusalem was recaptured by the Muslims only in third crusade.
Fourth is not correct although partially some Jews were forced out of the city.
<span>C The US interpreted all expansions of communism as expansions of the Soviet Union's control. </span>
The Christian Church was a major power in the Western Europe during the Middle Ages. The church was a powerful institution that ordered many facets of life during the Middle Ages. It gave legitimacy to political institutions and provided direction to the lives of the average people as well.
The Vietnam War is the commonly used name for the Second Indochina War, 1954–1973. Usually, it refers to the period when the United States and other members of the SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) joined the forces of the Republic of South Vietnam in contesting communist forces comprised of South Vietnamese guerrillas and regular-force units, generally known as Viet Cong (VC), and the North Vietnamese Army (NVA). The U.S. had the largest foreign military presence and basically directed the war from 1965 to 1968. For this reason, in Vietnam today it is known as the American War. It was a direct result of the First Indochina War (1946–1954) between France, which claimed Vietnam as a colony, and the communist forces then known as Viet Minh. In 1973 a “third” Vietnam war began—a continuation, actually—between North and South Vietnam but without significant U.S. involvement. It ended with communist victory in April 1975.
Answer:
The 14th Revision to the U.S Structure, approved in 1868, allowed citizenship to all people born or naturalized within the Joined together States including previous oppressed people and ensures all citizens.
Explanation: