B.) Foreign empires conquer the Jewish kingdoms
Explanation:
- The beginning of the Jewish Diaspora is traditionally cites as the period between the 8th and 6th centuries BC when the kingdoms of Israel and Judah were destroyed, the first Temple ( 586 BC) was destroyed and their population sent to Babylonian slavery.
- The diaspora is also linked to the destruction of the Second Temple and the consequences of the failed Bar Kohba uprising against Roman rule over Judea in the 1st and 2nd centuries.
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"The people of ancient Egypt grew everything they needed to eat. The pharaoh got the rich peasants to do the farm work on the rich lands. Most villagers were farmers. ... TheEgyptians grew their crops along the banks of the River Nile on the rich black soil, or kemet which was left behind after the yearly floods." hope this helps
Answer:
Trade
Explanation:
This works better because it is peaceful. Ideas are brought by trades and discussed among civilizations. When you conquest a country they are likely to dislike their rulers and therefore secret societies and counter-culture beliefs will develop.
Answer:
The last five decades comprise the period from 1970 to 2020. Three achievements are of great importance:
- Massification of personal computers: helped by Bill Gates' Microsoft and Steve Jobs' Apple, personal computers became common in offices in the late 1980s, and common in households in the early and mid 1990s, increasing productivity, and literally chaging the world.
- Internet: the internet was not invented in the last five decades but it became a mass service in the late 1990s. Without the internet, computers (and nowadays smartphones) would not be as powerful and important. The internet has changed every single aspect of our lives, from the way we communicate to the way we work.
- The end of the Cold War: this is a political and economic achievement, not a technological one like the previous two. However, it is still of great importance. Starting with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and ending with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the end of the Cold War marked the origin of the world order in which we live today, a world order where capitalism and representative democracy are considered the best alternatives for economic and social organization.