Muslims
The Reconquista targeted the Muslim Moors who had invaded and occupied the Iberian Peninsula, primarily in modern-day Spain and Portugal. The goal was to drive them out and establish Christian kingdoms in the region.
Very strictly speaking, no religious group was targeted by the Nazis on religious grounds. Perhaps you are thinking of the Jews, but they were targeted as a race; then there were the Jehovah's Witnesses, but they were targeted for 'civil disobedience', not for their religion as such.
The Moriscos were expelled from Spain as a result of the Reconquista.
I believe you are thinking of the Normans (a historic group of people from Northern France), not the Mormons (a religious group begun in 1830). The Normans were participants in the Reconquista in Iberia, which took place from about 711 to 1492. During the Reconquista, European Christians fought the Muslim Kingdoms on the Iberian Penninsula. The new ideas that the Normans and other Reconquista participants would have brought to the area were religious beliefs and political models, as well as technology - specifically military technology.
Armenians were targeted.
A social identity group that is targeted or object of oppression or a group that is systematically mistreated.
Jews were targeted by Nazis as weakening Germany. Many were imprisoned and executed. Another ethnic group involved in Nazi genocide were the Romani (gypsies).
A group that is systematically mistreated or oppressed.
The Patriot Act does not target any individual religious group. If a certain religious group feels as if they are being targeted by the bill, it is most likely because they fit a specific profile. You may, in theory, be more inclined to be targeted if you are of Middle Eastern decent due to the common threat coming from that region. However, it would not be based on you religious involvement. Ideally the bill is nondiscriminatory and will not target any race, color, sex, religion, etc., but the people enforcing the law may be prejudice and create feelings of unease.
Before the Reconquista, Spain was primarily ruled by Muslim forces, specifically the Moors, who invaded the Iberian Peninsula in the early 8th century. This period saw the establishment of various Islamic kingdoms, known as taifas, that coexisted with Christian states. The Reconquista, which began in the late 15th century, was a series of campaigns by Christian kingdoms to reclaim territory from Muslim rule, ultimately leading to the fall of Granada in 1492.
The Crusades and the Reconquista are related as both were military campaigns motivated by religious fervor and aimed at reclaiming territory from Muslim control. The Crusades, beginning in 1096, sought to regain the Holy Land, while the Reconquista, spanning from the 8th to the 15th centuries, aimed to recapture the Iberian Peninsula from Muslim rule. Both movements reflected the broader Christian desire to expand their influence and territory, and they influenced each other culturally and politically, as the Reconquista was often framed within the same religious context as the Crusades. Additionally, the experiences and tactics from the Crusades informed the strategies employed during the Reconquista.
Monopoly is targeted for 7- adult