The people built sturdy longships, the government included councils called Things- this statements described are elements of Norse culture.
Option: B & C
Explanation:
Norse are the German people. Vikings and Norse are more or less similar. Norse people are fully involved with trades that's why they known as traders whereas vikings are mainly farmers in their part time job they joined the trading businesses. Norse people used to live in Scandinavia.
The people were well trained and they were habituated in building longships and the government included councils which called things. Vikings and Norse cultured people are very old civilized person over the earth almost 300 years ago they come to the world.
Answer: Many historians argue that <u>the battle of Stalingrad</u> turned the tide of World War II against Germany.
Explanation:
After the battle of Stalingrad (23 August 1942 – 2 February 1943), Germany publicly admitted defeat for the first time in war. After five months of fight, the Soviet Union finally defeated the Nazi Germany. Four months after the battle, American and Allied troops headed towards Normandy, and thus the liberation of Western Europe began on D-day ( 6 June 1944). The battle of Stalingrad remains the largest confrontation in World War II, with over 1 million Soviet and 800,000 German casualties.
Answer:
The right choice is:
A. he encouraged Catholics to question a number of practices
of the church including the sale of indulgences.
Explanation:
Martin Luther is the father of Protestant Reformation. He was a Catholic priest and a seminar theologian in Wittenberg, Germany. In the 1510s, he went to Rome and came back shocked by the sale of indulgences and papal bulls for the forgiveness of sins. He couldn´t agree with those acts aimed at enlarging the chests of the Church. After a long reflection, he openly questioned them and the authority of the Vatican. He said that Christians could win God´s grace by faith only, not through buying indulgences, and that the Bible was the ultimate authority in religious matters. The furious reaction of the Vatican was to excommunicate him given his refusal to retract.