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Otrada [13]
3 years ago
10

Which medieval queen was married to both Louis VII of France and Henry II of England?

History
1 answer:
chubhunter [2.5K]3 years ago
4 0
Eleanor of Aquitaine was married to both.
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A

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In 1920 women recieved the right to vote while the others recieved that right before then

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3 years ago
PLEASE HELP
Taya2010 [7]

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Explanation:

Since the last two decades, convergence literature has reawakened widespread interest. However, the rest of them rely on global prosperity or wealth convergence. Globalization's implications have also been extensively discussed and analyzed, but its influence on the integration of quality of life metrics other than wealth has been little studied. As a consequence, this research explores whether global human development metrics (primarily related to wealth, health, and education) are converging or diverging, as well as the effect of globalization on the process. Using complex panel data econometrics on data from 153 countries around the world from 1990 to 2015, we discovered that the Human Development Index (HDI) and its components are highly correlated. Although the health and education indicators are convergent, the wealth variable is divergent. We also discovered that globalization has major converging effects on HDI and its component metrics. Income inequalities are caused by a country's previous degree of economic growth, not by globalization. Globalization had a greater effect on lower-income countries than on higher-income countries.

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2 years ago
How many planets are in the earth?
katrin2010 [14]
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2 years ago
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Explain ONE difference in the way in which nomadic and sedentary societies in Afro-Eurasia before 1450 ce adapted to their envir
soldi70 [24.7K]

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3 0
3 years ago
How did muslim poetry change during this time
Juliette [100K]
Answered with what i know and a little research. 

-  <span>As a vigorous and multifaceted Hinduism unfolded in India during the 7th century, a new religion made its appearance in Arabia: Islam. Within a century, Islam’s dominions extended from Spain to Sind (now part of Pakistan). By the 10th and 11th centuries the followers of Islam consolidated their hold on northwestern India. By 1200 Islamic rule was established in the city of Delhi in northern India, and it then spread in two waves over nearly the whole of India. The first wave of expansion occurred under the Delhi Sultanate, which ruled from 1206 to 1526. During the second wave, under the Mughal Empire (1526-1858), Islamic rule achieved its maximum extension. 

This encounter between Hinduism and Islam lasted more than 800 years. During most of this time, Islam had the upper hand politically, a fact that had enormous consequences for Hinduism and that presented challenges for both Hinduism and Islam which continue to this day. Islam’s military victories outside India were followed by the conversion of the masses to Islam, with the possible exceptions of Spain and the Balkans. In India, however, Islam succeeded in converting barely a quarter of the population to Islam by 1900. Although Hinduism had successfully incorporated all previous invaders and political conquerors within the Hindu religious system—from the Persians in 6th century BC to the Huns in the 6th century AD—its powers of assimilation failed in the face of Islam. 

One response of Hinduism to the presence of Islam was political. It included the emergence of the Hindu Vijayanagar kingdom, which held power in southern India from about 1336 to 1565, and the Hindu Marāthā state in western India during the 17th and 18th centuries. The rise of Sikhism and the Sikh Empire (1767-1846) in the Punjab can also be considered part of this response. Willing to use violence in self-defense, Sikhs took a militant stance toward the conquerors. 

The Islamic presence evoked a paradoxical Hindu religious response that blended hostile rejection and active emulation. Mainstream Hinduism retreated into a defensive position under the protective cover of orthodoxy (conformity to rule), judging by the number of Hindu religious codes produced during this period. At the theological level, however, Hinduism witnessed the rise and flowering of the bhakti (devotion) movement. This movement of ecstatic devotion to Vishnu or Shiva had gained a firm foothold in the south by the 9th century, and it swept over the rest of the country by the 17th century. Devotion to the divine (bhakti), rather than knowledge of the divine (jñana), became the dominant form of Hinduism, perhaps reflecting the historical circumstances. Bhakti poetry expressed love for the divine, often in the forms of Krishna and Rāma. Among the mystical bhakti poets were Chaitanya, Tulsīdas, Mīrābāī, and Kabīr. 

The bhakti movement also provided a point of contact with a mystical movement in Islam known as Sufism. Sufis were religious figures known for their piety and love of God. As they carried out their work in India, the two traditions of Hinduism and Islam came together in their love of God. This coming together, however, never crossed over from communion to union, but the rise of Sikhism points to a possible crossover. Sikhism rejects image worship and ritualism in keeping with Islam, while retaining many aspects of the Hindu world-view.   </span>
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