Answer:
Two factors transformed the conflict. One was the war against Revolutionary France and the desperate need of its Jacobin leaders for allies. The other was the radical leadership of the black general Toussaint L'Ouverture. ... Most black generals had been fighting alongside France's enemies.
Explanation:
T<span>he western conquests </span>began<span> in 533.</span><span>
Byzantium continued on for nearly a millennium until Constantinople itself fell in a siege carried out by the Ottoman Empire in 1453.</span>
In 1921 Adolf Hitler became leader of the Nazi party. The Nazis were racists and believed that their Aryan race was superior to others.
To them, an Aryan was anyone who was European and not Jewish, Romany or Slavic.
They also thought Germany was a more important country than its neighbours.
Laws against the Jews
In 1934 Hitler became Germany's head of state. He introduced anti-Semitic laws which discriminated against Jewish people living in the areas he controlled.
Some of these laws meant that Jewish children could no longer go to school, keep pets or have a bicycle.
The Nazis believed that Jews were a problem that needed to be removed. The mass killings of the Holocaust were what Hitler called "The Final Solution".
Hitler also wanted to make Germany bigger, so he invaded neighbouring countries and took them over.
Many of the non-German people living on land that he wanted for Germans were also sent to concentration camps.
Today we call this ethnic cleansing.
The Nazis and their collaborators were able to do these things partly because not enough people stood up to them.
A decrees in atmospheric transparency
Answer:
<em>Under the Delhi sultanate during the period of Firoz Shah Tughlaq hindus were forced to convert or accept death.
</em>
Explanation:
The Delhi sultanate was founded by Qutb-ud-din-Aibak, a ruler of Mamluk dynasty in 1230. The Delhi sultanate had a majority population of hindus. The rulers of the Delhi sultanate generally chose a less to moderately tolerant approach to the hindu population.
The rulers were not severely oppressive and at the same time were not overly liberal. The approach varies widely depending on the sultans that ruled. Mohammaad Bin Tughlaq of Tughlaq dynasty, the third dynasty of the Delhi sultanate was known for being the most tolerant sultan of the sultanate. He encouraged religious freedom and kept politics free from religion.
His successor Firoz Shah Tughlaq reversed the policies of Mohammad Bin Tughlaq and created an environment of intolerance. He forced people to convert threatening them to death and consulted the Muslim body Ulema to take political decisions. The later rulers were known to be moderately tolerant.