1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
beks73 [17]
3 years ago
14

Which statement is the MOST accurate comparison of Egyptian and Mesopotamian religious beliefs?

History
1 answer:
7nadin3 [17]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

c

Explanation:

A) Egyptians focused on rituals and daily prayers while Mesopotamians were more focused on preparing for the afterlife.  - false, since the Egyptians focused on afterlife

B) Egyptians were mainly monotheistic and focused on one God while Mesopotamian beliefs focused on nature gods and goddesses. - false, the Egyptians  were polytheistic

C) Egyptians were more concerned with preparing for the afterlife, while Mesopotamian beliefs focused on warring gods and goddesses.

D) Egyptians did not have religious myths or specific gods, whereas Mesopotamians had a collection of stories to explain the creation of the world. - false - they had a lot of myths!

You might be interested in
Please help me!!!!!!!!!!!!
choli [55]

Answer:

c

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
The Tet Offensive was considered a turning point during which _____.
dalvyx [7]
The tet offensive was considered a turning point  during which :
Media coverage shifted away from the personal and toward facts and figures read on the air

hope this helps
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Besides supporting nazi ideas what was the main purpose if Nazi propaganda ?
WINSTONCH [101]
I guess there are many answers to this depending on what your teacher is passing to you! But I believe the best answer to the posed question would be that Nazi propaganda's main purposed was to intimidate, threaten and empower themselves. I believe that this age was a huge problem due to the intimidation that Nazi Germany posed to other countries.
Hope I was able to help! If you have any further questions, please let me know!
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The Erie Canal helped in which of the following ways
AURORKA [14]

1. The Erie Canal opened the Midwest to settlement.

Prior to the construction of the Erie Canal, most of the United States population remained pinned between the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Appalachian Mountains to the west. By providing a direct water route to the Midwest, the canal triggered large-scale emigration to the sparsely populated frontiers of western New York, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Illinois.

2. It sharpened the divide between the North and South over slavery.

Before the opening of the Erie Canal, New Orleans had been the only port city with an all-water route to the interior of the United States, and the few settlers in the Midwest had arrived mostly from the South. “Southerners had been moving up the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers into southern Ohio and southern Indiana, which did become sympathetic to slavery,” according to Jack Kelly, author of the new book “Heaven’s Ditch: God, Gold and Murder on the Erie Canal.” The Erie Canal checked that trend as the new settlers from New England, New York and Europe brought their abolitionist views with them to the newly established Midwest states. “The New Englanders and Europeans beginning to stream across the canal were opposed to slavery, and it set up this confrontation,” Kelly says. “Southerners became more hardened and Northerners more adamant.” Kelly adds that the transformation of the Midwest into America’s breadbasket by the new settlers also “reduced the dependence of the industrial North on the agriculturally dominant South.”

3. The Erie Canal transformed New York City into America’s commercial capital.

Believing the Erie Canal to be a pork-barrel project that would only benefit upstate towns, many of New York City’s political leaders tried to block its construction. Good thing for them that they failed. “The Erie Canal really made New York City,” Kelly says. Prior to the canal’s construction, ports such as New Orleans, Philadelphia and even Baltimore outranked New York. “The success of a port depends on how big a region it can draw from inland,” Kelly says. “It gave New York City access to this huge area of the Midwest, and that was an enormous factor in establishing New York City as a premier port in the country.” As the gateway to the Midwest, New York City became America’s commercial capital and the primary port of entry for European immigrants. The city’s population quadrupled between 1820 and 1850, and the financing of the canal’s construction also allowed New York to surpass Philadelphia as the country’s preeminent banking center.

4. It gave birth to the Mormon Church.

The Erie Canal brought not only rapid change, but anxiety, to towns along its path. Kelly says that apprehension sparked an evangelical religious revival in the 1820s and 1830s along the canal route as well as the birth of religions such as Adventism and Mormonism. “Many people don’t realize Mormonism started right on the Erie Canal since it’s so associated with Utah,” Kelly says. It was along the canal route in 1823 that Joseph Smith claimed to have been visited by a Christian angel named Moroni and where in 1830 he published the Book of Mormon and founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Like Smith himself, many of the religion’s early followers were drawn from the underclass who missed out on the prosperity brought to some by the canal. The new waterway, though, proved to be a 19th-century “information superhighway” that aided the spread of the new religion.

5. The Erie Canal helped to launch the consumer economy.

In addition to providing an economic boost by allowing the transport of goods at one-tenth the previous cost in less than half the previous time, the Erie Canal led to a transformation of the American economy as a whole. “Manufactured goods had been pretty much unknown on the frontier until transportation costs became cheaper. Farmers could grow wheat in western New York, sell it and have cash to buy furniture and clothing shipped up the canal that they otherwise would have made at home,” Kelly says. “That was the first inklings of the consumer economy.”

<em>Credit to: https://www.history.com/news/8-ways-the-erie-canal-changed-america</em>

<u>There are three more reasons if you go to the website listed above.</u>

Hope this helps! ;)

8 0
3 years ago
PLSSSSS HELPPPP IF U KNOW HISTORY OR GOD 25 POINTSSSSS
vaieri [72.5K]

Basically, by purchasing an indulgence, an individual could reduce the length and severity of punishment that heaven would require as payment for their sins, or so the church claimed. Buy an indulgence for a loved one, and they would go to heaven and not burn in hell.

3 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • The newly elected mayor of Chicago in 1871, Joseph Medill, promised to implement stricter fire codes. The year after the fire, t
    15·1 answer
  • Which best describes Jefferson’s response to the handling of the Whiskey Rebellion?
    9·2 answers
  • How do you think people live in puerto rico cuba guam and the philippines felt about this poem
    10·1 answer
  • Although the New England, the Middle colonies, and the Southern colonies were all settled largely by people of English origin, b
    11·1 answer
  • Which Chinese leader did mao overthow when he became the chairman of the people’s republic of China
    7·1 answer
  • Whats an iconoclast?
    12·1 answer
  • 15 POINTS
    5·1 answer
  • Small fragments of orbiting bodies that have landed on the surface of Earth are known as
    14·1 answer
  • Which problem would a market economy solve more efficiently than other economies
    7·2 answers
  • A religion that forces people to join their religion is called a ______________ religion
    15·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!