Immediately after the storming of Bastille A) Peasants began attacking the aristocracy. The common people were tired of not having any say especially because starvation was rampant among the peasants. Tension rose between the commoners and the rich as the rich class (called the first and second estates) tried to keep power from the common people (Third estate). The people fought back by forming their own assembly called the national assembly. This assembly was supported by a finance minister named Jacques Kneckers. However, the king Louis XVI banished Kneckers and this is when the people decided to storm Bastille in protest. This lead to more riots and the peasants attacking the aristocracy or the highest class of people in France.
Petrarch's other passion was writing. His first pieces were poems that he composed after the death of his mother. He would go on to write sonnets, letters, histories and more. Petrarch's writing was greatly admired during his lifetime, and he was crowned Rome's poet laureate in 1341. The work Petrarch held in highest regard was his Latin composition Africa<span>, an epic poem about the Second Punic War. His vernacular poems achieved greater renown, however, and would later be used to help create the modern Italian language.</span>
Option 3: He supported the building of the Hagia Sophia.
Justinian I was one of the outstanding rulers of the Byzantine Empire, he governed from 527 until he died in 565. During his reign, he expanded the Empire and many great monuments were built including the famous Hagia Sophia in 537, which was originally constructed as a church. The church was the largest of its time and considered the greatest architecture building of the Byzantine Empire (330-1453)