B is the answer
The arrests of the Templars in France was easy: The fighting men of the order were then on the bloody border with Islam, in Spain, and on Cyprus. The Templars in France were aged veterans of the Crusades, well into their second childhood.
<span>The things the knights confessed under torture defied belief: trampling and urinating on the Crucifix, secret rites of obscene kisses, sodomy, usury, treason, idolatry, heresy. After the arrests came seven years of inquisition, then hundreds and hundreds of public executions by burning. In the end, Pope Clement V abolished the order.</span>
Yes there was a general trend in the direction of the territories acquired.
Territorial expansion during this time was almost exclusively to the west.
Farmers were essentially slaves, however, worked less hard. The agriculturist's activity was to plant and develop crops which were transformed into sustenance. Divine beings were dealt with well since they were the most elevated rank.The divine beings had services held by ministers. The Egyptians imagined that on the off chance that they treated divine beings well they would get a ton of rain and would enable the ranchers to develop crops. A few Egyptians were sold into bondage as a result of obligations or sold themselves to escape neediness.