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Ivahew [28]
3 years ago
6

Why did the revolt start on a different day than originally planned

History
1 answer:
alexira [117]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

The date of the original plan of attack was aug 11 but it started on aug 9, 1680. Spaniards heard of the plan, but too late to react.

Explanation:

I took the assignment

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Answer:

Ghenhis khan would kill the eintire city

Explanation:

he was a ruthless leader

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Please help me answer this :) <br><br> Will give brainlst
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1. Pardon

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4.reprieve

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How did the Tang use Buddhism to rule, and what was its impact on Chinese society?
Likurg_2 [28]

Buddhism was essentially a foreign religion in a culture with many well-established philosophical and religious traditions, notably Taoism and Confucianism. These three belief systems coexisted to varying degrees during both the Tang and Song dynasties. Confucianism guided the social realm— governance, education, family life, relationships among levels of society. It provided ethical guidelines for maintaining social order. Taoism offered mystical, proto-scientific ideas about one’s health, well-being, procreation, and longevity. In the Chinese context, Buddhism dealt mainly with the afterlife, the effects of good and bad deeds; addressing life’s misfortunes; it also promised release from suffering.

By the Tang dynasty, Buddhist temples and shrines had spread across the country. Buddhism enjoyed a great deal of state support. Then as now, lay people made donations to monks and temples to secure earthly and spiritual rewards. More specifically, they could accrue merit (positive actions resulting in spiritual and practical benefits) through charity, the support of public works (such as refurbishing a local temple), the donation of property, or the commissioning of artworks (a statue, or cave shrine, or production of a set of Buddhist texts). Individuals entering monastic life as monks or nuns still aroused suspicion from some members of society, particularly strict adherents of Confucianism. Sacrificing one’s family name, the possibility of offspring, cutting of one’s hair (a defilement of the body), and embracing poverty ran counter to many time-honored Chinese beliefs.

In a Buddhist context, grand celebrations were often held in honor of rulers, on festival days, in honor of new public works, and to protect the nation from famine or invasion. Some festivals involving the parade of sacred relics were criticized by various members of the court, in particular for arousing hysteria and for lavish expenditures. Buddhism was severely persecuted in 845 and again in the 900s during the Five Dynasties period between the Tang and the Song. Many of the reasons for this suppression were economic. Thousands of temples were destroyed and metal objects melted down for hard currency. Many monks and nuns were forced to return to lay life, where they could contribute to the general tax base.

3 0
4 years ago
The historian Raymond Scheindlin was quoted as saying that "the Jewish people and the Jewish religion are not at all the same th
Liono4ka [1.6K]

Answer:

Judaism is an ethnic religion. In modern times, many Jewish people adhere to the Jewish culture and traditions but not necessarily to the Jewish faith. Jewish music can be divided into sacred music and secular music, and it is more culturally varied than the music of universal religions, like Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism, which do not present a strong secular cultural branch.

Explanation:

The term Judaism refers to the religion, tradition, and culture of the Jewish people. Historically, it is the oldest of the three monotheistic religions, a group that includes Christianity and Islam, originated in the Middle East and derived from the first, called "Abraham religions". It is considered an ethnic religion because it constitutes one of the strongest aspects of belonging to the Jewish people as well as traditions, cultural, social, and linguistic practices. Until the 18th century, the words "Jewish" and "Judaism" were practically synonymous. However, the arrival of the Haskala (Jewish illustration) meant a radical change in the mentality of many Jews who saw themselves as <u>members of the same people but separated from the traditional adherence to the Jewish faith</u>. In this sense, Judaism refers both to a religion and to an ethnic group with its own cultural, traditional, and linguistic bonds, being Hebrew its main language. For that reason, some Jewish people do not follow the beliefs of Judaism but still are Jewish, since they were born and raised into their ethnic and cultural community.

However, the Jewish people are culturally and ethnically very diverse. Since the Jewish diaspora, many groups of Hebrews inhabited and assimilated cultural and ethnic aspects of different regions of the Middle East, Europe, and North-Africa. Therefore, ethnic groups within the Jewish people emerged, like the Sephardi in Spain, the Ashkenazim in central Europe and the Mizrahi in the Middle East, each one with its musical, linguistic, and cultural trend.

As an ethnic religion that is confined to a specific ethnic group, Judaism is not a universal religion. A universal religion is a religious creed that is open to all human beings in the world regardless of their ethnic, cultural, racial, national, geographical or political origin. Examples of universal religions are Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism, which actively seek to expand their beliefs throughout the world and to convert as many people as possible. On the other hand, traditional Hinduism is more similar to Judaism because it is not a universal religion either, instead, it is confined to the people of the Indian subcontinent.

Jewish music can be divided into sacred music and secular music, the latter being very influenced by diverse cultures that the Jewish people have entered into contact with through centuries. One possible issue that arises when comparing Judaism with universal religions, like Christianity, Islam, or Buddhism, is the fact that Jewish music and culture is so varied and rich for an ethnic religion, while universal religions, which tend to connect people from different cultures, have, in a certain way, more rigid and homogeneous cultural and music traditions.

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What happened to the price of cotton after World War I?
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