Although the Crusades are popularly viewed as religiously inspired campaigns to recapture the Holy Land, students should recognize them as a result of the social and economic events in Europe between 1000 and 1200. Religious and secular leaders seeking to end the fighting among feudal lords seized upon the Crusades as a means of redirecting that aggression. Feudal knights who would not be inheriting their family properties eagerly enlisted in the Crusades as a way to win wealth or status. The idea of the pilgrimage was a powerful one, and the Crusades were basically armed pilgrimages to the Holy Land. The various Crusades ultimately failed. The sack of Constantinople was a fitting denouement to the whole concept. The interaction with the East brought to Europe not only Arabic translations of Greek texts, but also original Arabic and Iranian scientific and philosophical works.
Answer:
Segregation in America. Or the reconstruction era after the american civil war
Explanation:
Right after slavery was abolished in 1865(ish) Jim Crow laws, Separate but equal ruling in plessy v. Ferguson
<span><span>A.</span>Feudalism</span>
In AD 1066, the Norman invasion of Britain overpowered the
Saxon-Dane rulers. They brought with them the feudal system of government or
feudalism. They establish the King of England. From then, England was changed
for ever. Normans spoke a variant of Frankish language or French and were known
to build castles everywhere, which served as the main form of defense. In the feudal
system of government, commoners worked and fought for nobles in exchange for
protection and the use of land.
The Great Awakening<span> or </span>First Great Awakening<span> was a Protestant religious </span>revival<span>that swept Protestant Europe and British America in the 1730s and 1740s. An evangelical and revitalization movement, it left a permanent </span>impact<span> on American Protestantism.
idk i coppied and pasted
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Answer B. made the most impact that still reflects today's government