Answer:
The conquering king retained the right to overrule the decisions of church courts and to hear all cases in which a layman was in conflict with the church. William personally attended the local church councils which now became more frequent. He acted as master of all they did.
William worked closely with Lanfranc, who organized the church and, using English precedents, brought the Archbishop of York under the authority of Canterbury. William preferred to deal with one church hierarchy, not two. Bishops became part of the feudal military structure.
Explanation:
Answer: People felt that the clergy and the pope had become too political. The way the church raised money was also considered unfair. The sale of pardons or indulgences was unpopular. An indulgence provided a relaxation of penalties for sins people had committed. They complained about how they abused power and were too wealthy.
Explanation:
I think it is the 3rd answer, Accumulation of great wealth by church leaders.
Answer:
#1 It was the first dynasty to unify most of the Indian subcontinent.
#2 It is regarded as the largest political entity that has existed in the Indian subcontinent.
#3 It had a sophisticated system of bureaucracy with a unified central government.Explanation:
The discipline intercultural communication<span> studies </span>communication<span> across different cultures.</span>
According to Lustig and Koester, the five functions of nonverbal communication in relation to intercultural communication are <span>to accent, complement, contradict, regulate, or substitute for the verbal message.
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Answer:
Explanation:
Behind Purgatoria's newfound car preference is a dramatic national comeback. Only 10 years ago, Italy was afflicted with a host of problems: terrorism, labor unrest, inefficiency. Although these issues have not entirely disappeared, today the streets and factories are relatively calm, and pride has replaced self-doubt. In a country unified only a little more than a century ago and traditonally wracked by regionalism, Italians are discovering a positive, new nationalism.
``We used to say we were Milanese, Roman, or Neapolitan,'' says Ernesto Galli Della Loggia, a history professor at the University of Perugia. ``We finally know what it is to be Italian.''