The answer is B, Jacob Riis.
Jacob Riis is most known for his pictures of an impoverished New York City, and worked for better living conditions in those areas.
That reminds me of John Adams, but since this is a multiple choice question, what are your options?
The accurate description of how merchants were viewed in medieval Europe and Japan is <u>B. In Europe</u>, they were viewed with much more respect than in Japan.
<h3>What was the class of merchants in Europe and Japan?</h3>
In medieval Japanese society, merchants were not respected as they occupied the lowest class under the Japanese feudal system.
In medieval Japan, merchants, traders, and shopkeepers were ostracized and regarded as milking others. Japanese merchants were alleged to be profiting from the peasant and artisan classes.
On the other hand, merchants were highly regarded in European society after the aristocrats and knights. European merchants enjoyed a high social status with class privileges above civil servants, scholars, priests, artisans, and peasants.
Thus, <u>Option B</u> accurately describes merchants in medieval Europe and Japan, unlike Options A, C, and D.
Learn more about merchants in Europe and Japan at brainly.com/question/4468754
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The British are the ones that were not. :)
The invaders as seen in the battle of tours and Constantinople would unite Europe under the banner of Christianity, starting crusades to take the holy land later on.