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Which three reasons made the Christian (re) conquest of land held by the Moors a very slow ordeal? Group of answer choices very rough terrain, climate extremes, and the Moors themselves that retaliated rough weather, wild animals and political confusion very few accurate map-makers, Moors bribed Christians into leaving, and forced conversions no loyalty to one king, lonely life on the meseta did not appeal to the Spaniard that preferred urban life, no money

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  1. 18 May, 01:23
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    Moors were the stronghold of the Granada in spain

    Explanation:

    Moors refers primarily to the Muslim inhabitants of the Maghreb, the Iberian Peninsula, Sicily, and Malta during the Middle Ages. The Moors initially were the indigenous Maghrebine Berbers. The name was later also applied to Arabs.

    Moorish period was called the 'land of the Vandals'. Pope had gathered together all the white people against Moors of Europe. This led to waves of conquests and battles on the blacks of Europe. These attacks are remembered as the crusades. Moors did not appear to appreciate the fact that the crusades were a serious threat to their rule in Europe. They started to bribe the Christians and forced conversions to change to Islam.
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