Chapter 13 p. 353

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Transcript Chapter 13 p. 353

Chapter 13 p. 353-367
Quiz
AP World History
1. The tropics are warm all year round.
The center of the tropical zone is
marked by the
A) polar caps.
B) Gulf Stream.
C) equator.
D) Sahara Desert.
E) none of these
2. The rainy and dry seasons in the
Indian Ocean reflect the influence of
A) the monsoons.
B) the jet stream.
C) the Gulf Stream.
D) “El Niño”.
E) the Himalayas.
3. The form of extensive agriculture that
was used in sub-Saharan Africa is
called
A) hunting and gathering.
B) marginal cultivation.
C) intensive cultivation.
D) shifting cultivation.
E) selective cultivation.
4. The Tuareg were
A) Islamic missionaries who reached the subSaharan region.
B) traders from the caravans between Arabia and
Libya.
C) western Saharan pastoralists and caravan
guides.
D) herders of camels and llamas in the Gold Coast
region.
E) descendants of the Dutch in South Africa.
5. The empires of Mali in West Africa
and of Delhi in South Asia both utilized
A) Islamic administration.
B) papal administration.
C) Orthodox Buddhist administration.
D) a scholar bureaucracy.
E) the electoral system.
6. The spread of Islam to lands south of the
Sahara came about through
A) war.
B) forced conversion.
C) a gradual and peaceful process of
conversion.
D) the missionary efforts of the Arabs
during the Umayyad Caliphate.
E) the travels of Ibn Battuta.
7. According to mythology, the
legendary founder of Mali was
A) a Shi'ite imam.
B) Marco Polo.
C) Sundiata.
D) Sumanguru.
E) Agamemnon
8. In addition to fulfilling his personal religious
obligations, Mansa Kankan Musa's
pilgrimage resulted in the
A) disappearance of Buddhist practice in
Mali.
B) decrease in Malian taxes.
C) contraction of the Malian economy.
D) construction of new mosques and
Quranic schools in Mali.
E) conversion of all Malians to Islam.
9. Mansa Kankan Musa made a famous
pilgrimage that
A) spread Christianity to West Africa.
B) demonstrated the enormous wealth of
his country.
C) led to the Christian Crusades.
D) was inspired by the death of
Muhammad.
E) brought about his untimely death.
10. The most significant factor contributing to
agriculture in the Delhi Sultanate was
A) slave labor on sugar plantations.
B) a switch to the three-field crop rotation
system.
C) the use of swidden agricultural practices.
D) extensive irrigation canals.
E) staple crops, including cucumbers and
melons.
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11. This West African Kingdom
flourished between 1235 and the late
1400s C.E. Its wealth and power were
based on trade, mainly gold for salt.
Their riches became well known after
the Muslim emperor Mansa Musa
made a famous pilgrimage to Mecca
during the mid-1300s, distributing gold
along the way.
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12. This Muslim kingdom founded by
the Afghan Turks ruled northern India
between 1206 and 1526 C.E. This
kingdom introduced Muslim influence
and forms of governance into India.