Why did nomads and settled civilizations have complex and often hostile relationships? What role did nomads play in mediating and/or hindering contacts among peoples in this period?

What will be an ideal response?


Answers will vary but correct responses should include: Hostility became routine between societies that relied mainly on tilling the soil and those that had to move frequently from one place to another with their herds. Grazing needs a lot of space, relatively speaking, to turn the plant life that livestock eat into humanly edible food. So practitioners of the two types of culture became competitors for land. Their differences were so marked that farmers and nomad herders found it easy to hate each other and hard to establish mutual understanding. By moving and spreading, however, they did mediate contact among people of this period. Through policies of assimilation and absorption by empires of the regions that experienced nomadic invasions, cultural diffusion and exposure was bound to occur between cultures. Alliances formed between formally isolated regions to fight off external invaders also contributed to increased contacts.

History

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History

How did the spread of Christianity change after the reign of Constantine?

A) The appeal of polytheistic religions limited its spread. B) The Great Persecution stopped its spread. C) Imperial support played a more important role. D) The role of missionaries became more important.

History

Laos and Cambodia became protectorates of __________ in the 1880s and 1890s.

A. France B. the United States C. China D. Japan

History

After World War II ended, most American women

a. held part-time jobs in relatively poorly paid occupations. b. cared for their families and did not work outside the home. c. pressed for full equality in the workplace. d. worked full time outside the home. e. pursued college education or formal job training.

History