- The status of non-Muslims was inferior. During the Umayyad Period it was specially the case, as Islam was Arab-centric and only Muslim Arabs had access to high positions in the administration and bureaucracy. During the Abbasid Period, Caliphs decided to rely more and more on non-Arabs, notably Persians and in 930 CE a law was passed that made it mandatory for all bureaucrats of the Empire to be Muslims. Therefore non-Muslims had a professional incentive to further their career.
- The <em>dhimmi </em>status involved the payment of a "protection" tax that had to be paid by non-Muslims to Muslims. Poor people had no choice but to convert if they could not afford the payment of such tax.
- As the Empire prospered and developed many Muslims migrated to conquered lands that were majoritarily non-Muslim before their arrival. Their increased influx made the new majority relevant and non-Muslims preferred to convert in order to assimilate to their new reality.
Answer: I think True
Explanation:
A command economy is a system where the government determines production ... is when government central planners own or control the means of production, ... Also known as a planned economy, command economies have as their ... enterprises have little or no incentive to drive efficiency, control costs.\
Hope this was right.
Answer:
worked in many factories in jobs traditional held by men
True, post WW2 Japans economy boomed and especially in that time they became a world economic power and today they are still one of the strongest economies in Asia.
Answer:
Prehistory is the time before written records.
Explanation: