Transcript Slide 1

Life in the Middle Ages
1) Who were the groups of religious
and ethnic minorities who formed
administrative units that were
governed by laws particular to their
needs within the Ottoman Empire?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Zimmis
Millets
Sejm
Junkers
Magyars
Life in the Middle Ages
1) Who were the groups of religious
and ethnic minorities who formed
administrative units that were
governed by laws particular to their
needs within the Ottoman Empire?
C) Sejm
Life in the Middle Ages
2) What was the Latin translation of the
Bible by Jerome (348-420 C.E.), which
was adopted as the standard version
by the Catholic Church?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Vulgate
King James
Coverdale
Gutenberg’s
Tyndale
Life in the Middle Ages
2) What was the Latin translation of the
Bible by Jerome (348-420 C.E.), which
was adopted as the standard version
by the Catholic Church?
A) Vulgate
Life in the Middle Ages
3) What was the Turkish imperial state
that conquered large amounts of land
in the Middle East, North Africa, and
the Balkans, and fell after World War I?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Austrian Empire
Turkey
Ottoman Empire
Austria-Hungary
None of the above
Life in the Middle Ages
3) What was the Turkish imperial state
that conquered large amounts of land
in the Middle East, North Africa, and
the Balkans, and fell after World War I?
C) Ottoman Empire
Age of Exploration
4) What was the name of the jointstock company, founded in 1602,
that had total control over trading
(mainly in spices) between the East
Indies and the Netherlands?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Mississippi Company
South Sea Company
English East India Company
Dutch East India Company
Both B and D
Age of Exploration
4) What was the name of the jointstock company, founded in 1602,
that had total control over trading
(mainly in spices) between the East
Indies and the Netherlands?
D) Dutch East India Company
Age of Exploration
5) What was the period of economic
innovation resulting from colonization
and exploration between the late
fifteenth and eighteenth centuries,
which also saw the rise of joint-stock
companies and the growth of
mercantilism?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Industrial Revolution
Second Industrial Revolution
Old Regime
Mercantilist Period
Commercial Revolution
Age of Exploration
5) What was the period of economic
innovation resulting from colonization
and exploration between the late
fifteenth and eighteenth centuries,
which also saw the rise of joint-stock
companies and the growth of
mercantilism?
E) Commercial Revolution
Age of Exploration
6) What was the name of the 1842
agreement ending the Opium War
between China and England, giving
England control of Hong Kong and
regional ports, as well as awarding
British citizens extraterritoriality rights?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Open Door Policy
Treaty of Nanjing
Sino-British Joint Declaration
Treaty of Wanghia
None of the above
Age of Exploration
6) What was the name of the 1842
agreement ending the Opium War
between China and England, giving
England control of Hong Kong and
regional ports, as well as awarding
British citizens extraterritoriality rights?
B) Treaty of Nanjing
The Reformation
7) What is the refusal of the Catholic
Church to administer the sacraments to
a person?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Excommunication
Simony
Indulgence
Celibacy
Transubstantiation
The Reformation
7) What is the refusal of the Catholic
Church to administer the sacraments to
a person?
A) Excommunication
Counter-Reformation
8) What was the movement within the
seventeenth-century Catholic Church
that opposed the Jesuits and
advocated that humans could only
achieve salvation through divine
grace, not through good works.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Spiritualism
Anabaptism
Jansenism
Calvinism
Antitrinitarianism
Counter-Reformation
8) What was the movement within the
seventeenth-century Catholic Church
that opposed the Jesuits and
advocated that humans could only
achieve salvation through divine
grace, not through good works.
C) Jansenism
Absolutism in France
9) Who was the first Bourbon monarch
of France that converted to
Catholicism from Calvinism to bring
peace after the French Civil War,
passing the Edict of Nantes?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Henry III
Phillip II
Catherine de Médicis
Henry IV
Charles IX
Absolutism in France
9) Who was the first Bourbon monarch
of France that converted to
Catholicism from Calvinism to bring
peace after the French Civil War,
passing the Edict of Nantes?
D) Henry IV
Absolutism in France
10) What was the name of the series of
rebellions against monarchical rule in
France, lasting from 1649 to 1652?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Corvée
Infanta
Fronde
Taille
None of the above
Absolutism in France
10) What was the name of the series of
rebellions against monarchical rule in
France, lasting from 1649 to 1652?
C) Fronde
Absolutism in France
11) Where did the opulent French
palace built by Louis XIV, which
represented the ostentation and
absolute power of his monarchy, reside?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Paris
Nice
Lyons
Nantes
Versailles
Absolutism in France
11) Where did the opulent French
palace built by Louis XIV, which
represented the ostentation and
absolute power of his monarchy, reside?
E) Versailles
Absolutism in France
12) Which treaty(ies) ended the War
of Spanish Succession in 1713,
recognized France’s Philip V as King of
Spain, prohibited the unification of the
French and Spanish monarchies, and
granting England with profitable lands
in North America from France?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Treaty of Pyrenees
Treaty of Dover
Treaty of Utrecht
Treaty of Rastadt
Both C and D
Absolutism in France
12) Which treaty(ies) ended the War
of Spanish Succession in 1713,
recognized France’s Philip V as King of
Spain, prohibited the unification of the
French and Spanish monarchies, and
granting England with profitable lands
in North America from France?
E) Both C and D
Absolutism in France
13) Who were the officials of the French
absolute rulers who were dispensed as
regional representatives into French
provinces to consolidate the Crown’s
control?
A) Cardinals
B)
C)
D)
E)
Chief advisors
Intendants
Dukes
None of the above
Absolutism in France
13) Who were the officials of the French
absolute rulers who were dispensed as
regional representatives into French
provinces to consolidate the Crown’s
control?
C) Intendants
Absolutism in France
14) Who was the Russian imperial
dynasty that strengthened absolutism
in Russia, ruling from 1613 to 1917?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Ivanovich Dynasty
Romanov Dynasty
Hapsburg Dynasty
Tudor Dynasty
Bourbon Dynasty
Absolutism in France
14) Who was the Russian imperial
dynasty that strengthened absolutism
in Russia, ruling from 1613 to 1917?
B) Romanov Dynasty
Absolutism in France
15) What was the war fought by
European powers after the death of
the Hapsburg ruler of Spain in 1700,
leaving the throne to Louis XIV’s
grandson?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Thirty Years’ War
Nine Years’ War
War of the Spanish Succession
War of Devolution
English Civil War
Absolutism in France
15) What was the war fought by
European powers after the death of
the Hapsburg ruler of Spain in 1700,
leaving the throne to Louis XIV’s
grandson?
C) War of the Spanish Succession
Absolutism in France
16) Who was the Romanov ruler of
Russia from 1763 to 1796 who
supported enlightened additions to
Russian culture and expanded
Russia’s borders to include control of
the northern shores of the Black Sea,
the Crimea, Polish land, and Alaska?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Catherine the Great
Peter the Great
Ivan the Terrible
Joseph II
Tsar Alexander I
Absolutism in France
16) Who was the Romanov ruler of
Russia from 1763 to 1796 who
supported enlightened additions to
Russian culture and expanded
Russia’s borders to include control of
the northern shores of the Black Sea,
the Crimea, Polish land, and Alaska?
A) Catherine the Great
Absolutism in France
17) Who was the Romanov ruler of
Russia from 1682-1725 that brought
Western European ideas to Russia,
improved the Russian army, achieved
control of the Orthodox Church,
dominated the nobility, and
transformed Russia into a major world
power?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Catherine the Great
Alexander II
Joseph II
Alexander I
Peter the Great
Absolutism in France
17) Who was the Romanov ruler of
Russia from 1682-1725 that brought
Western European ideas to Russia,
improved the Russian army, achieved
control of the Orthodox Church,
dominated the nobility, and
transformed Russia into a major world
power?
E) Peter the Great
Absolutism in France
18) Which French monarch ruled from
1643-1715, the longest reign in French
history, constructed the palace at
Versailles, believed in divine right of
kings, engaged in many wars, and
established absolutism in France?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Louis XV
Louis XVI
Napoleon Bonaparte
Louis XIV
Louis XIII
Absolutism in France
18) Which French monarch ruled from
1643-1715, the longest reign in French
history, constructed the palace at
Versailles, believed in divine right of
kings, engaged in many wars, and
established absolutism in France?
D) Louis XIV
Absolutism in France
19) Who was the chief minister to Louis
XIII of France, working to establish
absolute rule by weakening the nobles
and Huguenots and employing
intendants?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Duke of Sully
Cardinal Mazarin
Cardinal Richelieu
Oliver Cromwell
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
Absolutism in France
19) Who was the chief minister to Louis
XIII of France, working to establish
absolute rule by weakening the nobles
and Huguenots and employing
intendants?
C) Cardinal Richelieu
Prussia
20) Who was the ruler of Prussia from
1740-86 who seized Silesia from Austria
and started the War of Austrian
Succession and the Diplomatic
Revolution?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Frederick William, the Great Elector
Frederick I
Frederick William I, King of Prussia
Frederick II (Frederick the Great)
Frederick William II
Prussia
20) Who was the ruler of Prussia from
1740-86 who seized Silesia from Austria
and started the War of Austrian
Succession and the Diplomatic
Revolution?
D) Frederick II (Frederick the Great)
Prussia
21) What event involved the major
reversal of diplomatic alliances, where
Great Britain reversed its alliance with
Austria and forged a relationship with
Prussia, causing France to join with
Austria and Russia to check Prussia
power?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
The Seven Years’ War
The Diplomatic Revolution
The War of Jenkins’s Ear
The War of the Austrian Succession
Issuance of the Treaty of Paris of 1763
Prussia
21) What event involved the major
reversal of diplomatic alliances, where
Great Britain reversed its alliance with
Austria and forged a relationship with
Prussia, causing France to join with
Austria and Russia to check Prussia
power?
B) The Diplomatic Revolution
Prussia
22) Which war began as the “French
and Indian War” in North America and
evolved into a war on the European
continent resulting from the alliance
structure developed in the Diplomatic
Revolution and ending with Russia’s
surprise switch to an alliance with Prussia
and a confirmation of Prussia’s hold of
Silesia?
A) The Nine Years’ War
B)
C)
D)
E)
The War of Jenkins’s Ear
The War of the Austrian Succession
The Seven Years’ War
None of the above
Prussia
22) Which war began as the “French
and Indian War” in North America and
evolved into a war on the European
continent resulting from the alliance
structure developed in the Diplomatic
Revolution and ending with Russia’s
surprise switch to an alliance with Prussia
and a confirmation of Prussia’s hold of
Silesia?
D) The Seven Years’ War
Prussia
23) Which war was initiated by Prussia’s
acquisition of Silesia and involved
Bavaria, Spain, Prussia, and France
against Austria, Great Britain, the
Netherlands, and Russia?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
The War of the Austrian Succession
The War of Jenkins’s Ear
The War of the American Revolution
The Seven Years’ War
The Diplomatic Revolution
Prussia
23) Which war was initiated by Prussia’s
acquisition of Silesia and involved
Bavaria, Spain, Prussia, and France
against Austria, Great Britain, the
Netherlands, and Russia?
A) The War of the Austrian Succession
Prussia
24) Which Hohenzollern ruler ruled
Brandenburg, Prussia after the end of
the Thirty Years’ War and was known as
“the Great Elector”, who improved and
rebuilt the state?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
Frederick William I
Frederick I
Frederick William
Frederick II
Frederick William II
Prussia
24) Which Hohenzollern ruler ruled
Brandenburg, Prussia after the end of
the Thirty Years’ War and was known as
“the Great Elector”, who improved and
rebuilt the state?
C) Frederick William
Hapsburgs
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
25) Who was the Hapsburg ruler of
Spain that was elected Holy Roman
Emperor in 1519, defended the
Hapsburg lands from the Ottomans
and decided to split the Hapsburgs
Spanish and Holy Roman lands
between his son, Philip II, and his
brother, Ferdinand I?
Maximilian I
Charles V
Francis I
Henry VIII
None of the above
Hapsburgs
25) Who was the Hapsburg ruler of
Spain that was elected Holy Roman
Emperor in 1519, defended the
Hapsburg lands from the Ottomans
and decided to split the Hapsburgs
Spanish and Holy Roman lands
between his son, Philip II, and his
brother, Ferdinand I?
B) Charles V