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How did world religions enter Sub-Saharan Africa? Select all that apply.

climate change
continental drift
European colonization
immigration
missionaries
trade

2 Answers

2 votes
European colonization, immigration, missionaries, and trade
User Tedsmitt
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4 votes

Answer:

  • European colonization
  • Immigration
  • Missionaries
  • Trade

Step-by-step explanation:

Religion in Sub-Saharan Africa has changed and advanced in the course of the last a few thousand years from various perspectives. While the traditions delineated in this outline give instances of those that exist today, and that were influenced by the extension of European imperialism in the nineteenth century, people groups living in the huge zone south of the Sahara desert had officially supported rich frameworks of conviction and practice some time before the landing of Christianity and expansionism, and positively sometimes before the Muslim development from the Arabian promontory.

Islam entered Sub-Saharan Africa in the eighth century, and inside six hundred years of the prophet's passing had infiltrated from the Sahara to the Sudan belt, and from the Atlantic to the Red Sea, making its essence felt among the indigenous people groups who occupied this field.

While Islam extended through the exchange processions, having a specific effect in West Africa and the Sudan before the landing of Europeans, Christianity was at that point present in Ethiopia in the early hundreds of years of the Christian Era. While Portuguese ministers visited East and Central Africa in the sixteenth Century, it was just with the landing of travelers and teachers in the nineteenth Century that African religions were tested by outcasts who reordered their domains and quickened the procedure of social and religious change through transformation.

User Somendra Kanaujia
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