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THE CIVIL War is the defining event in the history of the United States, yet also the most misunderstood. More books are written on this war than on any period of US history, yet for all the words poured across the pages, the real cause of the war—slavery—is usually missed or obscured. Rather, there are tales of chivalrous Confederate generals heroically leading charges, drunken Union generals butchering their men in horrible frontal assaults, brothers fighting brothers in a pointless war that ravaged the land and wounded a people. Was the Civil War just a tragic mistake? A war like any other imperialist war the United States ruling class has its soldiers fighting in today? While some answer these questions with a yes, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels would have been taken aback. They would have resoundingly answered “no.” The Civil War, they believed, was not just another horrible atrocity, but rather a revolution that ended slavery and destroyed the slave-owners’ power as a class.
Answer:
b is a suitable answer give it a try
Answer:
Option C. Indicating one's social status
Explanation:
Hi! Your question was incomplete but i found the excerpt on Life in the Early Middle Ages, in the chapter <em>Fashion in the Middle Ages</em>.
The answer to your question would be option C. The purpose of clothing in Medieval times was to indicate one's social status. Rich people like kings wore accessories made of gold and precious stones and they also wore the finest clothing materials. Merchants from an elevated class also wore the best clothes they could afford to show people how much money they had. On the contrary, regular town people usually didnt have enough money to buy clothes so their clothes looked worn and torn.