1st question: Taghaza (also Teghaza) is an abandoned salt-mining centre located in a salt pan in the desert region of northern Mali. It was an important source of rock salt for West Africa up to the end of the 16th century when it was abandoned and replaced by the salt-pan at Taoudenni which lies 150 km (93 mi) to the southeast.
2nd question: A caravan (from Persian: کاروان) is a group of people traveling together, often on a trade expedition. Caravans were used mainly in desert areas and throughout the Silk Road, where traveling in groups aided in defense against bandits as well as helping to improve economies of scale in trade.
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Answer: Medicine was inseparable from religious dogmas and the church.
Explanation:
The church was an integral part of everyday medieval life. She was involved in every segment of life, including medicine. There was no progress in medieval medicine since the church ruled out a scientific approach. All knowledge about medicine was taken from antiquity, and there was no progress in absorbing new knowledge in that context. Medicine in the Middle Ages was related to the spiritual; it was based on the belief in the spiritual's inseparability from the material, that is, the body from the soul.
Diseases were attributed to sin either individually or collectively, like the outbreak of epidemics. The fight against diseases was often reduced to the individual, the family took care of the patient, which was almost a common method in the Middle Ages. Progress was recorded only in the twelfth century with the founding of a university and the translation of certain texts from the Arabic language.
<span>Both the Democratic and Republican Parties would support the idea that the United States should "stay together" at all costs, although many states such as the ones who seceded from the Union, felt differently. </span><span />
A radical politician party was believed because they saw the right & wrong & needed a voice for the people