The city held out for seven months and tyrian <span>counterattacks caused Alexander to lose many men.</span>
I believe it's the Himalayan Mountain Range
Answer:
These are the ways in which the culture of marriage in the United States reinforces heterosexuality as a cultural norm.
Explanation:
Sexuality is often imposed on human beings as a social construction, where the culture around us and the concepts and customs defended by it determine that heterosexuality is correct, desired and expected from each of us. While homosexuality is seen as something wrong and culturally combated in the strongest possible way.
Our culture presents marriage as a way of teaching us about heterosexuality and as a way of imposing that this type of sexuality is desired by us. This can be seen through the prohibition of homosexual marriage and all the prejudices carried by homosexuality, which imposes on us that homosexual couples are unhappy, because they do not fit in the heteronormatized culture, which causes suffering, and, nobody wants to suffer or be unhappy.
On the other hand, for cultural reasons, marriage is shown as something heterosexual, happy, easy and that promotes improvements in everyone's life.
The king promised Christian is the Roman king.
His name is <span>Constantine</span>
Goods, Services, and Taxes
Luxurious silks,
spices
,
incense
, and the like counted among the Byzantine and early Islamic period’s most desired goods. Silk was particularly prized by both the Byzantine and
Sasanian courts
. Significant quantities of it outside the Middle East attest to the material’s inherently high value and to the reach of its appeal. For instance, extraordinary silks survive as the linings of reliquaries in European treasuries; equally impressive are pieces wrapping the bodies of mummies found in China. Byzantine and Sasanian silks have been
discovered in graves
in
Egypt
, showing the taste for the material among local, upper-class populations (
15.109
). Silk’s role as a valuable commodity ensured that its production continued for several centuries. Examples with
classical imagery
featuring crosses and Arabic inscriptions show the enduring popularity of older motifs (