You would likely adopt "Islam" to help solidify business ties with Arab traders
hope this helps
<span>Religions
and numerals do not tend to mix. You might be talking about cultures that do
not have concepts of numerals i.e. words that designate numbers. Actually,
there are plenty of cultures that does that. For short, there are societies
where numbers and counting is non-existent. Some of these cultures include the
pre-contact Mocoví, Pilagá, Jarawara, Jabutí, Canela-Krahô, Botocudo (Krenák),
Chiquitano, the Campa languages, Arabela, Khoisan language speakers, and
Achuar. Before contact with modern civilization, these isolated cultures have
no idea about counting and numbering. It seems that counting developed in
cultures that engaged in commerce.</span>
Answer:
Capitalism
Explanation:
In capitalism the seller sets the price of the goods or services they sell as they want for profit, the state doesn't interfere. This allows for market competition where people try to have the best product so it will sell more and they'll have more profit. In this economic system the government doesn't interfere much in the people's economic activities.
Answer:
False the region was densely populated was in 1861.
1.) The two most famous conquistadors were Hernán Cortés who conquered the Aztec Empire and Francisco Pizarro who led the conquest of the Incan Empire.
3.) What is it? Pok-A-Tok was a ball game played by the ancient Maya well over 1000 years ago in what's now Cancun and Riviera Maya. And there's evidence that the Toltecs and Aztecs played variations of the game, too, as there are stadiums (for lack of a better term) dotted throughout Mexico.
7.) Hernán Cortés
9.) Between 1519 and 1521 Hernán Cortés and a small band of men brought down the Aztec empire in Mexico, and between 1532 and 1533 Francisco Pizarro and his followers toppled the Inca empire in Peru. These conquests laid the foundations for colonial regimes that would transform the Americas.
11.) The Inca Empire is thought to have originated at the city of Cuzco in what is modern-day southern Peru.
Hope this helps you in some way :)