SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
CSET World History
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
history
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. c. 1000-1500
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
The Later Middle Ages
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
Egyptian civilization: significant aspects
2. Established a civilization in the Nile Valley (3000 B.C.) - Natural barriers (desert and sea) - as well as its isolation from other civilizations - greatly hindered foreign invaders; spared Egypt from the repeated political disruptions characteristic
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
Egypt
The Scientific Revolution
Classical Greece
3. 1483-1546 - Northern Germany - Rejection of hierarchical priesthood and papal authority - Questioned the right of the pope to grant indulgences (full or partial remission of temporal punishment due for sins which have already been forgiven)
Adam Smith
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
Martin Luther
Neolithic or New Stone Age
4. Writing - Commerce - Government
China: developments
The Roman Empire
India under Muslim rule
Steamboat
5. Manor estates - Owned by lords - Peasant serfs given land to work in exchange for percentage of crop - Free peasants worked as skilled laborers - Dues and fees charged for tenancy - use of roads - bridges - etc.
Grooved rollers
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
Feudalism: economic
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
6. Rugged landscape of mountains and valleys - scattered islands led to the development of independent city - states (polis) rather than one unified empire - Scarcity of good agricultural land encouraged seafaring in eastern Greece - The southern mainla
Martin Luther
Greece: geography
The French Revolution
The Viking (Norse) invaders
7. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
Islam in Africa
Division of the Muslim Empire
Pepin the Short
8. The Ming (native Chinese) ousted the Mongols - Ming (1368-1644) rulers limited contact with the West - The Manchus (1644-1911) overran China and followed a policy of isolationism - weakening China
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
Jesus of Nazareth
Manorialism
9. Became a revolutionary anti - Catholic movement - Basis of 'Reformed Churches -' which spread throughout Europe; Calvinism made Protestantism an international movement
The Chaldeans
The Counter Reformation
Reasons for the Reformation
Calvinism
10. An Athenian ruler who came to power around 500 B.C.E. - an introduces further reforms that advanced democracy. He developed ten social classes based on where someone lived rather than their wealth. Established the Council of 500 and a policy where al
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
Spartan way of life
General characteristics of the Renaissance
Isaac Newton
11. Borrowed from China - Archaeology has revealed Japan's ancient past - Japanese culture developed during the Heian Era (794-1156) - Poetic form such as the Haiku developed - and literature spread
Early Japanese civilization
Greece: geography
The Israelites
Impact of Spanish Exploration and Conquest on Indigenous People of the Americas
12. Manufacturing: flying shuttle - Birth of the factory system: spinning jenny - water frame - spinning mule - watt steam engine - power loom - cotton gin - Iron - making: coke smelting - grooved rollers - Transportation: steam locomotive - steamboat
Calvinism
Arabs
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
13. Concrete - arch - roads (200000 miles of roads) - aqueducts and cisterns - monumental buildings (the Colosseum)
Steam locomotive
Origins of people in America
Roman contributions to the western world Engineering and architecture
Early Japanese civilization
14. An ethical religion - Of the Persians - based on concepts of good and evil
Charles Martel
The Viking (Norse) invaders
Zoroastrianism
Coke smelting
15. Wrote the 'Wealth of Nations' (1776) and advocated manufacturing as the true source of a nation's wealth (the laws of the market place and not government regulations dictate national economies); considered the father of modern economics
Adam Smith
The Holy Roman Empire during the late Middle Ages
Alfred the Great
Early Japanese civilization
16. The Renaissance of northern Europe emphasized the teachings of Christianity and placed less reliance on humanism - The French Renaissance reflected a democratic realism - The English Renaissance did not flower until the Elizabethan Age
Social Darwinism
Laissez faire
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
Africa's geological diversity
17. (A.D. 747-768) a Carolingian ruler appointed by the pope as king and established the Papal States on former Byzantine lands
China: developments
Steam locomotive
Pepin the Short
Greece: geography
18. The Sumerians - The Babylonians - The Hittites - The Assyrians - The Chaldeans - The Persians
Contributions of the Greek World
Mesopotamian civilizations
Johannes Kepler
Nicolaus Copernicus
19. Capitalism was regarded as the 'natural environment' in which 'survival of the fittest' could be tested - belief that some races were superior to others - that poverty indicated unfitness - and that a class - structured society was desirable
Egypt
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
Classical Greece
Early Japanese civilization
20. Arabs preserved the cultures of the peoples they conquered - Religious pilgrimages led to the spread of new ideas - The caliphs improved farming methods and crop yields - Military expansion also served as a vehicle for cultural exchane between the Ar
Islamic civilization: government and religion
The Mayas
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
21. The Olmec - The Mayas - The Aztecs - The Incas
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Absolutism
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
22. (460-429 B.C.) Represented the zenith of Athenian society and the height of its democracy
The Age of Pericles
North American Indians
Rome's political problems
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
23. Lasted five centuries - The Pax Romana (Roman peace) was two centuries without a major war (27 B.C.- A.D. 180) - By the end of the second century A.D. - Rome was in economic and political decline - which weakened the empire
The Roman Empire
Water frame
Pepin the Short
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
24. Individual conviction in one's beliefs (solidarity) - The efficiency and organization of the early church administration - - Doctrines that stressed equality and immortality - Teachings and doctrines developed by 'Church Fathers' such as Augustine we
Spinning jenny
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
Nicolaus Copernicus
25. Architecture was dominated by the Romanesque (11th -12th century) and Gothic (13th -15th century) styles
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
Alfred the Great
Rome's economic problems
Iona
26. King Darius of Persia wanted to conquer all of the Greek city - states but Athens and Sparta resisted. Greek city - states vs. Persia - Greek city - states won. Athens emerged as most powerful city state in Greece.
Persian War
Feudalism: outcomes
The Dorians
The Viking (Norse) invaders
27. An English philosopher - Believed that people made a contract with their government to protect natural writes - Wrote about the inalienable writes to life - liberty - and the pursuit of happiness - His political ideas had a dramatic impact on the dev
The Phoenicians
Paleolithic or Old Stone Age
The French Revolution
John Locke
28. Muslims controlled India for centuries - Muslim invaders came into India in the 11th and 12th centuries and created kingdoms in the north - The Delhi Sultanate was the most powerful (1206-1526)
John Locke
The Roman Republic
India under Muslim rule
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
29. Science: methodology - theory and experimentation - astrolabe (astronomical instrument used to locate and predict the positions of the sun - moon - planet and stars) - alchemy - Technology: mechanical clocks - pointed arch - stained glass - windmill
Muslim contributions - Science and technology
The Renaissance
Impact of Spanish Exploration and Conquest on Indigenous People of the Americas
Mesopotamian civilizations
30. Region of great cities (e.g Ur and Babylon) located between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers; chronologically the first urban hearth - dating to 3500 BCE - and which as founded in the Fertile Crescent.
India under Muslim rule
Mesopotamia
The Franks
Japan's geography
31. His teachings influenced Chinese culture - Wanted to improve society - Taught that certain virtues are guidelines to happy life
Alexander the Great
Confucius
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
The Renaissance
32. Mathematician - physicist - astronomer - With a telescope - provided the first observational evidence in support of Copernicus - Observed the phases of Venus; discovered the four largest moons of Jupiter; observed and analyzed sunspots - Was question
Galileo Galilei
The forest states
Africa's geological diversity
Muslim contributions - Science and technology
33. The region that is now Mexico - Central America - and the western coast of South America
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
The Assyrians
Mesoamerica
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
34. The scientific revolution brought about new mechanical inventions - The availability of investment capital and the rise of the middle class provided an economic base - Geographic and social conditions in England favored industrialization
Causes of the Industrial Revolution
Africa's geological diversity
Social Darwinism
Division of the Muslim Empire
35. Society was based on a strict class division: clergy and nobility were the privileged class - peasants and artisans were the work force - and serfs were tied to the land
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
Philosophy influenced by the Age of Reason
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
Background to the French Revolution
36. The Hopewell people were skilled farmers and flourished in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys (200 B.C.- A.D. 400) - Mississippian culture developed in A.D. 800 and built large religious mound structures - The Anasazi culture (A.D. 800-1300) developed
Constantine
River Valley Civilizations
Ibn Battuta
North American Indians
37. Developed in the interior of the continent - Grew from an iron - working settlement - Huge stone structures were constructed - Economy was based on the gold trade
Neoclassicism
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
Steam locomotive
38. Developed their own language and sophisticated system of writing - developed literature and poetry - developed the Shinto religion - placed great emphasis on a love of nature - beauty - and good manners
Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
France during the later Middle Ages
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
39. The center of Sumerian community life and served as a temple - storehouse - and treasury
The Roman Republic: decline
Water frame
The ziggurat
Mesopotamia
40. 1783 - Allowed iron - makers to roll out iron into different shapes
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
Japan's geography
Grooved rollers
The Olmec
41. King's authority limited by law - rights of the king's subjects declared (i.e. habeas corpus) - respect for legal procedures
The Franks
Hindus
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Key provisions of Magna Carta
42. The rise of feudal monarchs resulted in the development of the nation - states of France - By the early 13th century - royal authority had expanded and France had become a European power - Conflicts with the pope over the extent of religious rule res
Egypt: developments
John Locke
France during the later Middle Ages
Mesopotamia
43. Class division of society - The decline of feudalism and manorialism - The commercial revival - Education - Philosophy - Architecture
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages
The Incas
Ibn Battuta
Confucius
44. Ended in defeat for Napoleon and ended the French Empire; Napoleon was permanently exiled to St. Helena
The Early Middle Ages
The Battle of Waterloo (1815)
Philosophy influenced by the Age of Reason
Muslim contributions - Science and technology
45. 1764 - Increased the speed and output of yarn spinners
The East African Coast
Islam in Africa
Spinning jenny
Islam
46. Stimulated new states of West Africa and spread Islamic culture and religion
Islam in Africa
Egypt
English Parliament
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
47. (Islamic scholar - A.D. 1305-1368) spread Islamic culture by traveling widely
The English Reformation
Capitalism
Ibn Battuta
Johannes Kepler
48. No privileges/tax exemptions based on lineage - Government promotion was based on ability - Modernized French law (equality before the law)
Ganges River
River Valley Civilizations
The Napoleonic Code
Steamboat
49. Egyptian life was dominated by concerns for the afterlife - religion - and the pharaoh - Medical advances and specialized surgery were major contributions - The Egyptians invented a hieroglyphic writing system - Commerce flourished throughout Arabia
Mycenaean civilization
Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age
Division of the Muslim Empire
Egyptian civilization: significant aspects
50. A dramatic increase in productivity and the rise of the factory system - Demographic changes (from rural to urban centers) - The division of society into defined classes (propertied and nonpropertied) - The development of modern capitalism
Results of the Industrial Revolution
General characteristics of the Renaissance
Manorialism
Africa's geological diversity