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Travka [436]
3 years ago
12

Ramses II refused to let ____ lead the Hebrews home. Abraham Moses David Joshua

History
2 answers:
algol [13]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

b, moses

Explanation:

Everyone knows the story of Moses, but the reason this is a tricky question is because not many people know Ramses the 2nd was the pharaoh at the time  

Ivan3 years ago
5 0

I am pretty sure that its B. Moses

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Arab Empire What was life like in the Arab Empire Our hypothesis​
olga nikolaevna [1]

Answer:

<h2><u><em>History of Arabia, history of the region from prehistoric times to the present. </em></u></h2>

<u><em> </em></u>

  • <em>Sometime after the rise of Islam in the first quarter of the 7th century CE and the emergence of the Arabian Muslims as the founders of one of the great empires of history, the name ʿArab came to be used by these Muslims themselves and by the nations with whom they came in contact to indicate all people of Arabian origin. The very name Arabia, or its Arabic name Jazīrat al-ʿArab, has come to be used for the whole peninsula. But the definition of the area, even in Islamic sources, is not agreed upon unanimously. In its narrowest application it indicates much less than the whole peninsula, while in ancient Greek and Latin sources—and often in subsequent sources—the term Arabia includes the Syrian and Jordanian deserts and the Iraqi desert west of the lower Euphrates. Similarly, “Arabs” connoted, at least in pre-Islamic times, mainly the tribal populations of central and northern Arabia. </em>

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  • <em>Arabia has been inhabited by innumerable tribal units, forever splitting or confederating; its history is a kaleidoscope of shifting allegiances, although certain broad patterns may be distinguished. A native system has evolved of moving from tribal anarchy to centralized government and relapsing again into anarchy. The tribes have dominated the peninsula, even in intermittent periods when the personal prestige of a leader has led briefly to some measure of tribal cohesion. </em>

<u><em> </em></u>

  • <em>Arabian culture is a branch of Semitic civilization; because of this and because of the influences of sister Semitic cultures to which it has been subjected at certain epochs, it is sometimes difficult to determine what is specifically Arabian. Because a great trade route passed along its flanks, Arabia had contact along its borders with Egyptian, Greco-Roman, and Indo-Persian civilizations. The Turkish overlords of the Arabic-speaking countries affected Arabia relatively little, however, and the dominant culture of western Europe arrived late in the colonial era. </em>

<u><em> </em></u>

<h2><u><em>Mark me as the brainlyest </em></u></h2>

4 0
2 years ago
What percent of the following letters in the world percentage are vowels round to the nearest hundredth if necessary plzzz help
seropon [69]

5 vowels, 21 <span>consonant.</span>

<span>So vowels are about 23%</span>

8 0
3 years ago
List 3 important facts about the industrial workers of the 1920s
GaryK [48]

"The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), members of which are commonly termed "Wobblies" ... 3.4.3 Elsewhere in Europe .... One of the IWW's most important contributions to the labor movement and broader push towards ... eventually took the name Workers' International Industrial Union, which was disbanded in 1924...For those in the industrial sector, organized labor. ... From that time on, local craft unions proliferated in the cities, publishing lists of “prices” for ... "


7 0
3 years ago
BRAINLIESTTTT ASAP!!
Tju [1.3M]
I am pretty sure it is “Children could be paid less than adults to do the same work.”
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
FREE
anastassius [24]

Answer:

<h3>If only one person has the authority to rule, then no  one else, even members of government, may have  authority, so divine right undermines civil society.</h3><h3 />

Explanation:

  • The statement that best explains an enlightenment position on the divine right to rule is "If only one person has the authority to rule, then no  one else, even members of government, may have  authority, so divine right undermines civil society."
  • If we look from an enlightenment position, authority and power should be derived from reason as it does not believe in divine right theory of power and legitimacy.
  • It believes that rights and liberties of the people are infringed upon and other forms of rational democratic processes are undermined when only one person takes control over the whole power.
5 0
3 years ago
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