• The Mongol Empire had established a philosophy arranged on a mission to bond the whole world in one realm.• The Mongol army was better systematized and disciplined than the militaries of its rivals.• The Mongols made up for their small numbers by joining huge numbers of dominated peoples into their military forces.• The Mongols quickly developed Chinese methods and technology of blockade warfare, which permitted them to dazed the intricate defenses of walled cities.• Mongol forces were real in part because of their increasing standing for a cruel brutality and absolute destructiveness. Their status served as a practice of psychological conflict.• The Mongols showed a remarkable ability to muster both the human and material assets of their growing domain over census taking, an operational system of transmit stations for quick communication, and the early stages of a central bureaucracy in the center of Karakorum.• The Mongols nurtured commerce.• The Mongols drew on oppressed peoples to fill optional and lower-level governmental positions.• The Mongols greeted and maintained many religious customs as long as they did not become the attention of political disagreement.
John Steinbeck's the Pearl takes place in La Paz, Mexico.
Steinbeck was inspired to write the story after hearing a folk talk while visiting Baja (where La Paz is located) which is a heavy pearl producing region.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
earlier opportunities to the new deal
Obama .........................................
<span>Catholic AnswerA Bishop is a man who was a priest and has been consecrated by another Bishop in the Apostolic succession. He enjoins the fullness of Christ's priesthood and rules over a diocese as a successor to the Apostles. from Modern Catholic Dictionary by John A. Hardon, S.J. Doubleday & Co., Inc. Garden City, NY 1980 Bishop A successor of the Apostle who has received the fullness of Christ's priesthood. His most distinctive power, that of ordaining priests and other bishops, belongs uniquely to a bishop. Moreover, in spite of some disputed cases in history, it is highly probably that a priest would not be authorized by the Holy See to ordain another priest. A priest certainly cannot consecrate a bishop. In the ordination of a bishop the "matter" is the imposition of hands on the head of the bishop-elect by the consecrating bishops, or at least by the principal consecrator, which is done in silence before the consecratory prayer; the "form" consists of the words of the consecratory prayer, of which the following pertains to the essence of the order, and therefore are required for the validity of the act: "Now pour out upon this chosen one that power which flows from you, the perfect Spirit whom He gave to the apostles, who established the Church in every place as the sanctuary where your name would always be praised and glorified." (Etym. Greek episkopos, a bishop, literally, overseer)</span>