Answer:
In the early sixteenth century, Iran was united under the rule of the Safavid dynasty (1501–1722), the greatest dynasty to emerge from Iran in the Islamic period. The Safavids descended from a long line of Sufi shaikhs who maintained their headquarters at Ardabil, in northwestern Iran. In their rise to power, they were supported by Turkmen tribesmen known as the Qizilbash, or red heads, on account of their distinctive red caps. By 1501, Isma‘il Safavi and his Qizilbash warriors wrested control of Azerbaijan from the Aq Quyunlu, and in the same year Isma‘il was crowned in Tabriz as the first Safavid shah (r. 1501–24). Upon his accession, Shi‘a Islam became the official religion of the new Safavid state, which as yet consisted only of Azerbaijan. But within ten years, all of Iran was brought under Safavid dominion. However, throughout the sixteenth century, two powerful neighbors, the Shaibanids to the east and the Ottomans to the west (both orthodox Sunni states), threatened the Safavid empire.
Explanation:
The Kansas Nebraska Act on 1854 lead to the Civil war because both Kansas and Nebraska allowed the people to decide if they should or shouldn't allow Slavery into their borders.
I think that the best way to complete this analogy is option a.<span>non-fiction : fiction. There is nothing in the original pair to make an analogy to the other ones, and in both pairs you could say that the first part describes a real story and the other a fictional, not a real story. </span>
C
The Moroccan invasions led to the downfall of both