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Test your basic knowledge |
AP World History
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
history
,
ap
,
bvat
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The forgiveness of the punishment due for past sins - granted by the Catholic Church authorities as a reward for a pious act. Martin Luther's protest against the sale of these is often seen as touching off the Protestant Reformation.
Indulgence
Teotihuacan
Scientific Revolution
Asoka
2. Statement issued by Britain's Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour in 1917 favoring the establishment of a Jewish national homeland in Palestine.
Faisal
Shakespeare
Jenne-jeno
Balfour Declaration
3. Arab historian. He developed an influential theory on the rise and fall of states. Born in Tunis - he spent his later years in Cairo as a teacher and judge. In 1400 he was sent to Damascus to negotiate the surrender of the city.
Muhammad Ali
1911
Max Planck
Ibn Khaldun
4. The community of all Muslims. A major innovation against the background of seventh-century Arabia - where traditionally kinship rather than faith had determined membership in a community.
Winston Churchill
Western Front
Iroquois Confederacy
Umma
5. Concession from Spanish letting a colonist take tribute from Indians in a certain area
Yellow River
Manumission
McCarthyism
Enconmienda
6. Date: Origin of Buddhism - Confucianism - Taoism(Hint ___ century BCE)
Eva Peron
Indian Ocean
Teotihuacan
6th century BCE
7. A state that is not ruled by a hereditary leader (a monarchy) but by a person or persons appointed under the constitution
Cultural imperialism
Republic
Liu Bang
Rigveda
8. In medieval Europe - an agricultural laborer legally bound to a lord's property and obligated to perform set services for the lord. In Russia some of them worked as artisans and in factories; in Russia it was not abolished until 1861.
Teotihuacan
OPEC
Keiretsu
Serf
9. Portuguese explorer who in 1488 led the first expedition to sail around the southern tip of Africa from the Atlantic and sight the Indian Ocean. (p. 428)
Bartolomeu Dias
Proxy wars
Philip II
Mechanization
10. Originally - a title meaning 'universal priest' that the Mongol khans invented and bestowed on a Tibetan lama (priest) in the late 1500s to legitimate their power in Tibet. Subsequently - the title of the religious and political leader of Tibet.
Sandinista
Dalai Lama
Atahualpa
Dar al-Islam
11. Term applied to a group of 'developing' or 'underdeveloped' countries who professed nonalignment during the Cold War.
Realpolitik
Bolshevik
Third World
Battle of Midway
12. European scholars - writers - and teachers associated with the study of the humanities (grammar - rhetoric - poetry - history - languages - and moral philosophy) - influential in the fifteenth century and later.
Humanists
1853
Saddam Hussein
Democracy
13. Date: Beginning of Bronze Age and river valley civilizations (Hint: _000s BCE)
3000s BCE
Moksha
Yongle
Western Front
14. A pledge signed by all but one of the members of the Third Estate in France - the first time the French formally opposed Louis XVI
Hundred Years War
Franz Ferdinand
Western Front
Tennis Court Oath
15. A French general and then French Emperor later exiled to the island of St. Helena
32 CE
Napoleon
Byzantine Empire
Muscovy
16. Date: Cortez conquered the Aztecs (Hint: 1__1)
Berlin Conference
Apostle Paul
Great Zimbabwe
1521
17. Fascist dictator of Italy (1922-1943). He led Italy to conquer Ethiopia (1935) - joined Germany in the Axis pact (1936) - and allied Italy with Germany in World War II. He was overthrown in 1943 when the Allies invaded Italy.
Apostle Paul
Mandate System
1954
Benito Mussolini
18. The ideological struggle between communism (Soviet Union) and capitalism (United States) for world influence. The Soviet Union and the United States came to the brink of actual war during the Cuban missile crisis but never attacked one another.
Shinto
Cold War
The Golden Triangle
Roman Senate
19. First hereditary dynasty of Muslim caliphs (661 to 750). From their capital at Damascus - the Umayyads ruled one of the largest empires in history that extended from Spain to India. Overthrown by the Abbasid Caliphate.
Mandate System
Umayyad Caliphate
Mongol Empire
Cecil Rhodes
20. Quick-maturing rice that can allow two harvests in one growing season. Originally introduced into Champa from India - it was later sent to China as a tribute gift by the Champa state (as part of the tributary system.)
Congress of Vienna
Champa Rice
4th century CE
Diaspora
21. A powerful European family that provided many Holy Roman Emperors - founded the Austrian (later Austro-Hungarian) Empire - and ruled sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spain.
Tang Revival
Druids
Solidarity
Habsburg
22. Soviet leader who was after Khrushchev
Bread and Circuses
Leonid Brezhnev
Semitic
1917
23. Ultraconservative empress in Qing (Manchu) dynasty China. Ruled china in the turbulent late 19th century - not as a true Empress but as an Empress Dowager.
Cixi
1954
Cyrus
ethnic cleansing
24. The English monarch who was beheaded by Puritans (see English Civil War) who then established their own short-lived government ruled by Oliver Cromwell (Mid 1600s).
Apostle Paul
Siddhartha Gautama
1347 CE
King Charles I
25. Alliance against democracy - supporting communism
1848
Peloponnesian War
Warsaw Pact
Confucianism
26. The 1 -100-mile (1 -700-kilometer) waterway linking the Yellow and the Yangzi Rivers. It was begun in the Han period and completed during the Sui Empire.
Ming
Grand Canal
Laissez Faire
Ptolemy
27. Members of a mainly Hindu warrior caste from northwest India. The Mughal emperors drew most of their Hindu officials from this caste - and Akbar I married a Rajput princess.
Witchcraft
Rajputs
OPEC
Driver
28. Date: Many European Revolutions / Marx and Engles write Communist Manifesto (Hint: 1__8)
6th century BCE
Creole
1848
Diffusion
29. The part of the Great Circuit involving the transportation of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic to the Americas.
Middle Passage
Theodosius
Teotihuacan
Khubilai Khan
30. Wife of Juan Peron and champion of the poor in Argentina. She was a gifted speaker and popular political leader who campaigned to improve the life of the urban poor by founding schools and hospitals and providing other social benefits.
Leonid Brezhnev
Mohandas Gandhi
Eva Peron
Treaty of Versailles
31. A monumental sanctuary built in Jerusalem by King Solomon in the tenth century B.C.E. to be the religious center for the Israelite god Yahweh. The Temple priesthood conducted sacrifices - received a tithe or percentage of agricultural revenues.
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32. English industrialist whose pottery works were the first to produce fine-quality pottery by industrial methods.
Delian League
Creoles
Josiah Wedgwood
Harappa
33. English overthrow of 1688-1689 in which James II was expelled and William and Mary were made king and queen. The significance is that Parliament made the monarchy powerless - gave themselves all the power - and wrote a bill of Rights. The whole thing
Romanization
Glorious Revolution
1905
Ghana
34. Radical Marxist political party founded by Vladimir Lenin in 1903. They eventually seized power in Russia in 1917.
Collectivization
Puritans
Bolsheviks
Printing press
35. Area between the Greek and Slavic regions; conquered Greece and Mesopotamia under the leadership of Philip II and Alexander the Great
Aswan High Dam
Centuries
1839
Macedonia
36. Massive pyramidal stepped tower made of mudbricks. It is associated with religious complexes in ancient Mesopotamian cities - but its function is unknown.
Crystal Palace
Hellenistic Age
Asian Tigers
Ziggurat
37. German journalist and philosopher - founder of the Marxist branch of socialism. He is known for two books: The Communist Manifesto (1848) and Das Kapital (Vols. I-III - 1867-1894).
221 BCE
Enlightenment
Celts
Karl Marx
38. City - now in ruins (in the modern African country of Zimbabwe) - whose many stone structures were built between about 1250 and 1450 - when it was a trading center and the capital of a large state.
Hammurabi
1054 CE
Great Zimbabwe
James Watt
39. A citizen-soldier of the Ancient Greek City-states. They were primarily armed as spear-men.
Neo-Assyrians
Hoplite
Caesar Augustus
Colombian Exchange
40. French wars against England - Prussia - Russia - and Austria led by Napoleon
Napoleonic Wars
1095 CE
Umma
United Nations
41. South Africans descended from Dutch and French settlers of the seventeenth century. Their Great Trek founded new settler colonies in the nineteenth century. Though a minority among South Africans - they held political power after 1910.
Afrikaners
Vasco da Gama
Guilds
ziggurat
42. Religion expounded by the Prophet Muhammad (570-632 C.E.) on the basis of his reception of divine revelations - which were collected after his death into the Quran.
Bolshevik
Syncretism
Islam
Pax Romana
43. Prosperous civilization on the Aegean island of Crete in the second millennium B.C.E. Exerted powerful cultural influences on the early Greeks.
World Bank
Minoan
Hieroglyphics
1492
44. Political party in China from 1911 to 1949; enemy of the Communists. Often abbreviated at GMD.
Terrorism
cuneiform
Samurai
Guomindang
45. Type in which each individual character is cast on a separate piece of metal. It replaced woodblock printing - allowing for the arrangement of individual letters and other characters on a page. Invented in Korea 13th Century.
Polis
Stoicism
Movable type
Nirvana
46. Indian religion founded by the guru Nanak (1469-1539) in the Punjab region of northwest India. After the Mughal emperor ordered the beheading of the ninth guru in 1675 - warriors from this group mounted armed resistance to Mughal rule.
Emilio Aguinaldo
1898
Umma
Sikhism
47. German physicist who developed the theory of relativity - which states that time - space - and mass are relative to each other and not fixed.
Hacienda
Great Zimbabwe
Albert Einstein
Rama
48. During the Cold War - countries who did not want to support either side sometimes declared themselves to be.
Auschwitz
Bread and Circuses
Nonaligned
Christopher Columbus
49. The Ottoman province in the Balkans that rose up against Janissary control in the early 1800s. Terrorists from here triggered WWI. After World War II it became the central province of Yugoslavia.
Varna
Serbia
Serf
Joesph Stalin
50. The largest and most important city in Mesopotamia. It achieved particular eminence as the capital of the king Hammurabi in the eighteenth century B.C.E. and the Neo-Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar in the sixth century B.C.E. (p. 29)
Beijing
Babylon
1898
Zimmerman telegram