the answer is because they never end
Option A is the right response when referencing the ottomans and Safavids.
<h3>What shared features did the Safavids and Ottomans have?</h3>
The three Islamic empires of the early modern period – the Mughal, the Safavid, and the Ottoman – shared a common Turko-Mongolian heritage. In all three the ruling dynasty was Islamic, the economic system was agrarian, and the military forces were paid in grants of land revenue.
Present-day Iran and Azerbaijan were part of the Safavid Empire. Anyone with a basic understanding of geography and the location of the Ottoman Empire would be aware that it was to the west of the Safavid Empire.
Thus, option A is correct.
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Answer:
Became president
Explanation:
I think after the American Revolution, people thought he was <em>amazing</em> so people nominated him as president.
The South faced much more hardship economically during the war (because their agricultural economy based on slave labor made mobilization of resources more difficult while the North's economic and industrial capacity soared during the war as it continued its rapid industrialization). In the South, the biggest problems were lack of labor, poverty and poor relief, especially in times of acute food shortages. Also, their money had no base and was ultimately worthless, making buying and selling goods extremely difficult. They couldn't get aid from foreign nations due to their lack of capital and resources to spare (and when cotton and other cash crop fields were destroyed and lost money, it was a nail in the coffin). The North, on the other hand, had a solid economy with money well-backed by gold and silver. Their industrialization also meant that the main problem faced, which they could recover from and work through, was labor shortages (from all men going to fight).