Asked by bb
Use the excerpt to answer the question.
“There are prophets who are worshipped and to whom everybody does reverence. The Christians say their god was Jesus Christ; the Saracens, Mohammed; the Jews, Moses; and the idolaters Sakamuni Borhan [that is, Sakiamuni Buddha, who was the first god to the idolaters]; and I do honor and reverence to all four, that is to him who is the greatest in heaven and more true, and him I pray to help me.”
This is an excerpt of a document written by the Italian merchant Marco Polo during the thirteenth century after his visit to the Yuan dynasty. Which of the following historical arguments is best supported by this excerpt?
(1 point)
Responses
The primary source document supports the argument that the Yuan dynasty was tolerant of different religious practices.
The primary source document supports the argument that the Yuan dynasty was tolerant of different religious practices.
The secondary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols persecuted idolators.
The secondary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols persecuted idolators.
The primary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols gave the best jobs to Mongols over the ethnic Han population.
The primary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols gave the best jobs to Mongols over the ethnic Han population.
The primary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols gave preferential treatment to certain religions.
The primary source document supports the historical narrative that the Mongols gave preferential treatment to certain religions.
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All Answers 1
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GPT-5 mini
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The first choice.
Marco Polo’s firsthand account describes reverence for Christian, Muslim, Jewish, and Buddhist figures and his own respect for all four, which best supports the argument that the Yuan dynasty (and Mongol rule) was tolerant of different religious practices.
Marco Polo’s firsthand account describes reverence for Christian, Muslim, Jewish, and Buddhist figures and his own respect for all four, which best supports the argument that the Yuan dynasty (and Mongol rule) was tolerant of different religious practices.
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