Answer: The Mesopotamians believed that these pyramid temples connected heaven and earth. In fact, the ziggurat at Babylon was known as Etemenankia or "House of the Platform between Heaven and Earth". An example of an extensive and massive ziggurat is the Marduk ziggurat, of Etemenanki, of ancient Babylon.
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The correct answer is C. It is not true that societies of the Fertile Crescent believed in equality and communal living.
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Mesopotamia is a designation for the area between the Euphrates and the Tigris. Today, its territory roughly corresponds to Iraq, northeastern Syria, southeastern Turkey and southwest Iran.
Mesopotamia was the cradle of civilization. The first Sumerian population appeared in Mesopotamia at the turn of the 4th and 3rd millennium BC. In ancient times, it was divided into northern Assyria and southern Babylon. The upper part of Babylonia was called Akkad and the lower part of Sumer. In 539 BC the Persians of the Achaimen dynasty invaded Babylon, and in 331 BC Alexander the Great, after whose death Babylon became part of the Seleucid Empire.
Around 150 BC Mesopotamia was seized by the Parthians, and in the 2nd century AD the Persians again. In 637, Muslim Arabs took control of Mesopotamia. Since then Mesopotamia has been called El Iraq el'Arabi, as the Arabs called it.
It could be either A or D, but I due to the lack of third party votes they're not really counted in elections, so answer D.
It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question, so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. <span>The first known democracy came about in Greece about 500 BC when Cleisthenes overthrew Peisistratus and the type of democratic institutions that the Greeks then lived under for the next two centuries is DIRECT DEMOCRACY. Hope this helps.</span>