Answer:A slave is property, bound to work as his/her owner sees fit. A slave has no legally protected rights of ownership. Some slaves in some sense ‘owned’ property, or even money, but this was always at the owner’s discretion, and legally it all belonged to the owner really.
Serfdom, on the other hand, was an implicit contractual relationship. The serf owed both labour and rent, usually in kind — serfdom is typical of an economy with little use of money. In return, the lord owed protection and justice. These were rough times, and a common labourer without a lord would not be able to prevent marauders seizing his land.
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A) “The wolves howled, the ravens screamed, the sky seemed on fire.”
Because ravens can't really scream, they make a bird sound that is NOT screaming
Answer:
Spelling.
Explanation:
It's really about language and the evolution of tongues, but when I say tongues, I mean dialects, since they both mean the same thing: Praise God.
Ramses the Great accompanied his father in military campaigns to quell rebellions in Canaan. He also supported him in the war against the Hittites who had occupied the territories of Syria, traditionally belonging to the Egyptian empire, but lost several years ago due to the weakness of King Akhenaten. Already as commander, he carried out a campaign against Kush (Nubia), in the 8th year of Seti's reign.
It is said that Ramses was in Kush when Seti died. He returned to Egypt where, together with his mother, Tuya, he performed the funeral ceremonies of his father in the Theban necropolis. During the first five years of his reign he carried out five military actions that ensured the peace and prosperity of the people:
- Naval battle: On the part of the Stele of Tanis, occurred in the Delta, before the attack of shardana pirates. Ramses defeated them and recruited the prisoners as soldiers for his army. These shardana are mentioned in the Pentaur Poem as members of the Egyptian army
- Expeditions to Asia: Shortly after beginning his reign alone, Ramses had to react to the threat of the Hittites. Perhaps they considered the new king weaker than his powerful father, since they began numerous skirmishes in the borders invading the land of Retenu until the Egyptian army was forced to react. The first expedition was to pacify Canaan, as a step prior to the conquest of Syria.
- The battle of Qadesh: In the fifth year of his reign Pharaoh decided to cut off the Hittite attacks, proof of this is the famous battle of Qadesh, north of Syria, where they finally found the Egyptian armies of Ramses II with the alliance Syrian-Hittite of King Muwatalli II.
- Conquests in Libya: Ramses also made incursions into Libya, where he established several colonies and built several fortresses to guard them, forming a defensive line from Racotis (now Alexandria) to El Alamein.
- Reform of the army: Ramses II took advantage of the bad result of the battle of Qadesh to change the military of high rank, placing his sons in front of the different bodies. He also created elite bodies with foreigners, Nubian warriors, Libyans, Asians and Shardanas, bodies that were loyal to the person of Pharaoh.