Answer:
<em>Miguel León-Portilla</em>, from book <em>The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico</em>
Explanation:
<em>The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico is indeed a book written by Miguel León-Portilla, which translates excerpts of Nahuatl-language accounts of the Aztec Empire's Spanish conquest.</em>
The Broken Spears review paper is constructed in three distinguishable parts: the first one is the general intro León-Portilla utilizes to include context for both the book's subject matter.
He explains the cultural heritage of Aztec amongst the Nahua nations, the importance of Nahuatl spoken translators, and the struggle of accounts written by eyewitnesses well after the Spanish conquest of Mexico.
True
Islamic faith do not prohibit birth control. the prophet himself allowed coitus interruptus but the woman must consent to it as it denies satisfaction and child giving which are her rights. Islamic scholars interpreted this to allows child birth controls very early in their time, unlike Christianity and judaism which consider sacred the issue involving procreation, based on the story of Onan and his punishment by Yahweh.
We need to see the following to answer this....
Answer: sequence of events because it is listing dates in chronological order
Answer:
Explanation:
There were many factors that contributed to the shrinking of the american middle class in the 1970s, first of all the the emergence of the low-wage service sector (mainly blue collar job positions) and on the other hand a greater demand for higher-skill jobs for top companies which led to an expanding income gap between the highest paid executives and employees in the middle ranks