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Investigate the impacts of Moctezuma I on the Aztec Empire.(1 point)
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Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also weakened alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire.
Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also weakened alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire.

Moctezuma I condensed the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire.
Moctezuma I condensed the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire.

Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as banning religious schools across the empire.
Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as banning religious schools across the empire.

Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Correct response:
"Moctezuma I expanded the Aztec Empire’s territory. He also solidified alliances, which granted him more power. He enacted political and social reforms as well, such as requiring religious schools across the empire."

Brief justification: Moctezuma I (reigned 1440–1469) led major military expansions, strengthened the Triple Alliance’s control over conquered provinces, centralized administration and tribute, imposed laws and social codes, promoted religious education (calmecac and telpochcalli), and sponsored public works (e.g., aqueducts). These actions increased imperial power and cohesion.