The answer is true because each of the photographs were one of a kind !
<span>One major difference was the locations. Meroe was built on the bottom of mountains and thus had a steady amount of rainfall, due to which the soil was fertile. Other cities in Egypt depended on the annual flooding of the Nile River in order to have good soil to plant and grow food needed for survival. This kind of flooding was really important and hence Meroe was important.</span>
Answer:
1. Cultural exchange of gunpowder
2. Cross Cultural exchange was Through Europeans.
3. Spread of islam
Explanation:
1. There was a cultural exchange of gunpowder by the Mongols. Tang and Song dynasties were non nomadic and used gun powder. When expanses of land like southern Asia and eastern Europe was being conquered by nomadic Mongols, gunpowder was spread to non nomadic areas.
2. Cross cultural exchange was through European dominated trade, this was by the Dutch and Portuguese. Trade was mostly sea based and central Asian nomads had no access to this. This development limited Central Asia in cross regional exchange.
3. One cross cultural exchange was that Non nomadic merchants spread Islam to areas in India.
Well, structurally it would be similar with the Pope being the head of the Church, like a King. Then respectively you have the archbishop who rules an ecclesiastical province. Then the bishops rule the diocese that make up the province. In that way, the line of power is similar with King, nobles and peasants.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, the correct response would be "both Egypt and Mesopotamia" that </span>placed valued writing, art, and fine workmanship, since these were some of the most innovative societies in human history.