Respuesta :
Answer: "guaranteed the safety of any merchant"
Explanation: in the excerpt we can see the description of how the merchants started to buy and sell products in Europe around the year 1150. The phrase that indicates that it was dangerous for merchants to travel, is "guaranteed the safety of any merchant", because the idea of having to guaranteed the safety, indicates that it was some kind of danger.
The evidence from the passage that best supports the inference that Europe was dangerous for merchants to travel to before the 1100's is:
B. "guaranteed the safety of any merchant".
- Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos published "Sugar Changed the World" in 2010, a book that shows how countries and people changed in connection with the production and trade of sugar.
- In the passage, one change shown is that Europe began to open up because of merchants who brought in sugar.
- However, it wasn't always safe for merchants to travel. In the 1100's, there was a count who offered them protection and safety so that they could come and go with their goods, sugar included.
- The evidence that leads us to that conclusion is the phrase "guaranteed the safety of any merchant." If it were not for the count, merchants would not have traveled safely.
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