The Islam occurred in the sixth century AD, and with its appearance, the first Islamic state appeared on the scene, and later in history numerous Islamic states formed. The Islam unified multiple different tribes, which became a powerful force, and used the opportunity that some of the empires were on the downfall, so they attacked them and quickly expanded. As they were expanding, they were spreading the religion as well, forcing the people to accept it, or if they refused they were persecuted or killed. This has resulted in rapid change of the religious map of multiple regions, with the Islam becoming dominant in North Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, the Caucasus, and South Asia. Little by little the vast Islamic state was fracturing, and multiple different states occurred, with the Islamic law being in place. The Islamic states initially were prospering, developing, having big achievements in technology and sciences. Unfortunately, the fundamentalists wing prevailed, and the progress stopped, so the Islamic states started to fall behind, and that can be seen very well in the present.
B and C are reasons the german leaders were unhappy with the treaty ultimately setting the stage for Hitler to take power claiming to the german people he would do more and restore germany to their greatness
- Calvin Coolidge (1872 – 1933) was the 30th president of the United States and he was in office between 1923 to 1929.
- Warren G. Harding (1865 – 1923) was the 29th president of the US from 1921 until his death in 1923.
Both pertained to the Republican party and supported and implemented <u><em>laisez-faire</em></u><u> economic measures</u>, that consisted on free functioning of the markets with minimum goverment interventionism. Markets alone, would produce the most efficent outcomes, according to his viewpoint. Therefore, the policies introduced by their governments, involved minimum regulation for businesses, and for the economic activity in general.
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The following statements are true about the Ottoman Empire: The name of the Byzantine capital Constantinople was changed to Istanbul. The great leader Suleyman created a vast legal code for the empire. At its height, it encompassed territory that included all or part of more than 30 modern day countries in Asia, Europe and Africa.