What do secondary documents reveal about the relationships between Muslims and Jews in the Middle East during the Middle Ages?(1 point)

Responses

Muslims and Jews worked together in the economy, but lived by different laws passed by the Muslim empire.
Muslims and Jews worked together in the economy, but lived by different laws passed by the Muslim empire.

Muslims and Jews had to follow the same laws passed by the Muslim rulers, but were unable to trade with one another.
Muslims and Jews had to follow the same laws passed by the Muslim rulers, but were unable to trade with one another.

Muslims and Jews refused to work with one another because of their different religious views.
Muslims and Jews refused to work with one another because of their different religious views.

Muslims and Jews had similar religious beliefs and followed the same laws.
Muslims and Jews had similar religious beliefs and followed the same laws.

1 answer

The correct response is: Muslims and Jews worked together in the economy, but lived by different laws passed by the Muslim empire.

This option accurately reflects the historical context in which Muslims and Jews coexisted in the Middle Ages, often collaborating in trade and various economic activities, while also being subject to different legal frameworks as a result of the dhimmi status that Jews and other non-Muslims held in Islamic societies.