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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. King's authority limited by law - rights of the king's subjects declared (i.e. habeas corpus) - respect for legal procedures
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Napoleon and the First Empire
Key provisions of Magna Carta
2. Conquered the Peloponnesus (peninsula of southern Greece) and ushered in a 'dark age' characterized by violence and instability
Spartan way of life
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
The Dorians
River Valley Civilizations
3. 'Liberty - Equality and Fraternity'
The ancient Near East: geography
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
The Persians
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
4. 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.
Feudalism: economic
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
Mythology
Four key beliefs of Hindus
5. Geneva - Switzerland - The Doctrine of Predestination (God willed eternal damnation for some people and salvation for others) was central to Calvinistic belief - Rejection of all forms of worship and practice not traced to Biblical tradition
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
Watt steam engine
John Calvin
Egypt: developments
6. 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
Arabs
The Napoleonic Code
Nicolaus Copernicus
7. 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
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
Mycenaean civilization
Watt steam engine
The Lydians
8. 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
Feudalism: economic
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
The Counter Reformation
9. 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
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
Coke smelting
The Roman Empire
Modern influence of Magna Carta
10. In eastern India - Sacred to Indians but was not the geographical river area that led to the development of Indian civilization - Associated with the rise of the Mauryan Empire in 322 B.C.
Ganges River
Mohammed
Africa's geological diversity
Spinning mule
11. 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
Islamic civilization: government and religion
Greece: geography
Feudalism: outcomes
Mongul rule in China
12. Education stressed the liberal arts. - Theology influenced both religion and politics - Universities were created in Paris - Oxford - and Cambridge during the 11th and 12th centuries - Latin was the language of intellectual Europe; vernacular was use
Background to the French Revolution
Galileo Galilei
Alexander the Great
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
13. 1200-400 B.C. - South - central Mexico - Developed one of the first civilizations in Mesoamerica - Developed an agricultural community - Developed the first calendar in America - Noted artwork in many media (jade - clay - basalt - and greenstone) - M
The Olmec
Cotton gin
The (Protestant) Reformation
Mohammed
14. 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
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Feudalism: economic
Mesoamerica
Charles Martel
15. The Muslim empire was ruled by Arab caliphs - Arabs conquered much of the Byzantine and Persian empires (including North Africa) and Spain - The Battle of Tours (A.D. 732) resulted in the Franks halting Muslim expansion in Europe - Muslim Spain laste
Myths
Results of the Industrial Revolution
The Phoenicians
Arabs
16. 1785 - Led to faster production of cloth
Power loom
Rome's political problems
The 'continental system'
Galileo Galilei
17. Developed strong governments - Benin grew wealthy and powerful until European contact threatened society - Slave trade produced wealth for the cities and the expansion of the slave trade extended into Africa's interior - Trade - taxes - and a powerfu
The forest states
The topography of Africa
The Age of Reason/Enlightenment
Water frame
18. (Islamic scholar - A.D. 1305-1368) spread Islamic culture by traveling widely
The East African Coast
Africa's geological diversity
The Phoenicians
Ibn Battuta
19. The disintegration of traditional feudal loyalties - the rise of powerful monarchies - and the collapse of a single religious doctrine caused European intellectuals to think about new ways of unifying and governing nation - states - Their exploration
Renaissance
The Age of Reason/Enlightenment
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
Capitalism
20. Works of Greeks and Romans reconnected Europeans with their ancient heritage
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Renaissance
The Roman Empire
Feudalism: political
21. Hierarchical and interdependent - Church - Lords/nobles - Vassals/lesser lords - Knights - Peasants (free and serfs) - Grants of land given by lords in exchange for oaths of loyalty - Private armies of vassals and their knights protected lords and th
Ibn Battuta
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
Feudalism: political
22. Institutions: hospitals - medical schools - libraries - universities - Agriculture: cash crops - crop rotation - Mathematics: algebra - algorithms - Arabic numerals - decimal point - Globalization: exploration - work of scholars - trade (Atlantic - M
Muslim contributions
Jesus of Nazareth
Absolutism
Egypt: developments
23. The period of human culture that began around 10000 years ago in the Middle East and 4000 years ago later in other parts of the world. It is characterized by the beginning of farming - the domestication of animals - the development of crafts such as
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
The East African Coast
Literature and Philosophy during the rennaisance
Neolithic or New Stone Age
24. 20000-30000 years ago - during the last Ice Age - the first humans crossed over the Bering Sea land bridge into the Americas - As they migrated southward - they inhabited the hemisphere from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego - Their widespread dispersion le
Origins of people in America
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
The Babylonians
The East African Coast
25. 356-323 B.C. - Of Macedonia - Established the Hellenistic Age - Conquered Persia - Asia Minor - and Egypt; established a world empire - Bureaucracy replaced the city - state as the form of government - Following his death - dynasties were established
Islam in Africa
The Assyrians
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
Alexander the Great
26. Stimulated new states of West Africa and spread Islamic culture and religion
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
Steam locomotive
Islam in Africa
Neolithic or New Stone Age
27. Established at Byzantium by Emperor Constantine as a 'New Rome' in the East in A.D. 330 - Strategically located (where Europe and Asia meet) - had excellent defensible borders - and was a crossroads of world trade - With the fall of Rome/collapse of
John Locke
The Punic Wars with Carthage
Constantinople
Flying shuttle
28. Trade and commerce led to a high standard of living in cities - Muslim trade helped spread Islamic culture to foreign lands - Many factors helped trade expand - including no taxation and strong banking practices
The Israelites
The Roman Republic
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
Roman contributions to the western world (greatest contribution)
29. Mainly composed of three regions: desert - savanna - and tropical rainforest - The Sahara desert dominates the continent (covers most of northern Africa) - Trade and commerce were connected to the geographical potential of the area - Large population
Manorialism
The topography of Africa
Napoleon and the First Empire
The Viking (Norse) invaders
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.
Martin Luther
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: feudalism/manorialism
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Mesopotamia
31. The center of Sumerian community life and served as a temple - storehouse - and treasury
Jesus of Nazareth
Saul
The ziggurat
The Magna Carta
32. The commercial revival led to the rise of towns. - A true middle class emerged - Economic activities in the towns were supervised by the guild system (merchant and craft guilds) - The Crusades led to the revival of international trade
General characteristics of the Renaissance
The Assyrians
Spartan way of life
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: commercial revival
33. 1764 - Increased the speed and output of yarn spinners
Muslim contributions
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Spinning jenny
Mycenaean civilization
34. Writing (cuneiform) - Organized government - Written law code (Hammurabi's Code) - Systematized religion (Zoroastrianism) - Astronomy; astrology
Sumeria
Mesopotamia: developments
Reasons for the Reformation
Flying shuttle
35. International relations placed France against Europe. Napoleon won territory from the Holy Roman Empire and forced Spain to cede the Louisiana territory to France
Historical interpretations of the Middle Ages
The topography of Africa
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
Feudalism: outcomes
36. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads
The 'continental system'
Zoroastrianism
Ganges River
Division of the Muslim Empire
37. Aztecs conquered by Cortes in 1521 - Inca Empire conquered by Pizarro in 1513
The Sumerians
The Mayas
The conquest of Indigenous People of the Americas
The Age of Pericles
38. 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
Zoroastrianism
The Magna Carta
Islamic civilization: government and religion
American Indian culture
39. Mathematician - astronomer - Believed God had created the world according to an intelligible plan and that man could understand this plan through application of reason -'Three laws of Planetary Motion'
Johannes Kepler
The Peloponnesian War
Ganges River
The Dorians
40. As the Western Roman Empire was under relentless attack from barbarian tribes - people looked to the Church for salvation - The Church became the preserver of civilization and its unifying force in both political and religious life - Church entered i
Capitalism
Mesopotamia: developments
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
Sumeria
41. 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
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
The Carolingians
42. 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
Constantine
The Early Middle Ages
Power loom
Egypt
43. 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
Spartan way of life
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
The Holy Roman Empire during the late Middle Ages
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
44. The First Act of Supremacy (1534) marked the beginning of the English Reformation. - The king of England - Henry VIII - became the head of the church - The pope's refusal to annul the marriage of Henry VIII to Catherine of Aragon initiated the break
Charles Martel
Flying shuttle
English Parliament
The English Reformation
45. The most important city - states in ancient Greece; both developed a unique culture and distinct political structure - Established the world's first democracy (c. 507 B.C.) - developed democratic institutions - Developed philosophy as represented by
Reasons for the Byzantine Empire's success
Athens and Sparta
Cotton gin
England during the later Middle Ages
46. c. A.D. 500-1000 - Dark Ages: A.D. 500-800 - The collapse of Rome and sweeping advances of Germanic and Viking raiders - Europe entered a time of chaotic political - economic - and urban decline - A struggle back toward stability
The Early Middle Ages
North American Indians
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
'The Communist Manifesto'
47. 509-27 B.C. Started after Etruscan control was overthrown - Society was divided into the patricians (propertied class) - plebians (main body of Roman citizens) - and slaves - Government was based on consuls - the Senate - and the Centurial Assembly -
Steamboat
The Incas
Christianity: basic doctrines
The Roman Republic
48. (1848) - Written by Marx and Friedrich Engels - advanced the theories of modern scientific socialism
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49. Ghana - Mali and Songhai
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
Martin Luther's beliefs
50. The medieval political unity of Europe was replaced by the spirit of modern nationalism - The authority of the state was strengthened - The middle class was strengthened - Calvinism gave capitalism its psychological base - Religious wars reflected th
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
Development of the Renaissance
Effects of the Reformation
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature