Answer:
Gold is what truly drove me to explore in the first place. I was familiar with the idea of Mercantilism, which is the idea that there is only so much wealth in the world, and that to make your kingdom strong you must have more gold and wealth than the other kingdoms. However, I also desired to seek riches for my personal wealth. In my time, government rulers would send explorers to find riches like land, spices, gold and other resources that would make their country rich and important. An example of that would be how Christopher Columbus explored for gold and wealth to bring back to Spain. He traded with the indigenous people for gold at a great profit for Spain.
God and religion were also a popular motive for exploration during my time. With Europe Christianized, people wanted to spread the Gospel to the rest of the world, because Europeans had always seen spreading Christianity as a good thing. Colonization would later become a race to convert indigenous people to a particular brand of Christianity. Religion was also an excuse for enslaving or exploiting non-Christians which allowed kingdoms to participate in the slave trade.
The correct answer is false.
It is false that Nahum prophesied against Israel over a period of 15 years.
What is true is that Nahum always had words of solace, compassion, and comfort to Judean people with his series of prophecies. Naum, the Jewish prophet, predicted the fall of Thebes, an important city of the Egyptian Empire. This happened in 663 BC. Nahum also predicted the fall of Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrians, in 612 BC. Historians agree that prophet Nahum wrote their prophecies thinking of giving hope messages to the Jewish people.
The answer is number one which is A
<span>Serfdom
in Russia continued after it had died out in western Europe, and most
peasants were serfs who were legally bound to the land and led miserable
lives.
Hope this helped : )
</span>