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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. (Frankish military/political leader) Halted the Muslim advance into Europe at the Battle of Tours (A.D. 732); Martel's victory helped preserve western civilization
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
Johannes Kepler
Background to the French Revolution
Charles Martel
2. 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
Ibn Battuta
India: developments
The topography of Africa
Results of the Industrial Revolution
3. 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
The conquest of Indigenous People of the Americas
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
Jesus of Nazareth
4. Salvation through faith rather than sacraments - 'Ninety - five Theses' served as a catalyst in starting the Reformation - Luther's excommunication initiated the Reformation; Lutheranism developed its own following - Lutheranism decentralized religio
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5. The agricultural organization and economic foundation of feudalism
Mycenaean civilization
The Dorians
Manorialism
The Olmec
6. 1764 - Introduced the first power - driven machine to manufacture cloth
Water frame
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
American Indian culture
The Magna Carta
7. 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
Paleolithic or Old Stone Age
The Incas
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
8. Also called enlightened absolutism - Grew out of the earlier absolutism of Louis XIV (France) and Peter the Great (Russia) - Advocated limited responsibility to God and church - A form of absolutism in which rulers were influenced by the Enlightenmen
The Hittites
Greece: geography
The 'continental system'
Enlightened despotism
9. 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
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
Manorialism
Darwin
Napoleon and the First Empire
10. Dominated the culture of the 18th century - There was an attempt to revive the classic style and form of ancient Greece and Rome - In literature - the novel was the outcome; in architecture - the Rococo style was dominant - In music - Haydn and Mozar
Charles Martel
Neoclassicism
Greece: geography
Four key beliefs of Hindus
11. Aztecs conquered by Cortes in 1521 - Inca Empire conquered by Pizarro in 1513
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
The conquest of Indigenous People of the Americas
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
Absolutism
12. (Islamic scholar - A.D. 1305-1368) spread Islamic culture by traveling widely
Zoroastrianism
Ibn Battuta
China: developments
The Peloponnesian War
13. Refers to the absolute rule of monarchs with unlimited power - The theory of absolute monarchs and the divine right of kings (rule by God's will) - Evolved from the limited power of the ruling class during the Middle Ages to the Age of Absolutism in
The ziggurat
River Valley Civilizations
Effects of the Reformation
Absolutism
14. 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
Historical interpretations of the Middle Ages
Islamic civilization: government and religion
Nicolaus Copernicus
Origins of people in America
15. Christianity and church dogma were questioned
The Roman Empire
Mesopotamia: developments
Arabs
Philosophy influenced by the Age of Reason
16. Began in Italy during the 14th century - The Crusades focused attention eastward (on Greece and the Near East) - By the 14th century - the move toward secularization was predominant - Conflicts between the papacy and the Holy Roman Empire in the 13th
Development of the Renaissance
Alfred the Great
Laissez faire
The Battle of Waterloo (1815)
17. International relations placed France against Europe. Napoleon won territory from the Holy Roman Empire and forced Spain to cede the Louisiana territory to France
The Incas
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
The Carolingians
The ancient Near East: cultural contributions
18. Ended in defeat for Napoleon and ended the French Empire; Napoleon was permanently exiled to St. Helena
John Locke
Christianity: basic doctrines
The Roman Republic
The Battle of Waterloo (1815)
19. That each person is born into a caste or social group - Reincarnation: after death all people will be reborn in either human or animal form; nothing truly dies and the spirit in death passes from one living thing to another - The cow is considered sa
The Dorians
Zoroastrianism
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Mesopotamian civilizations
20. 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 -
The Roman Empire
Smaller civilizations of the Near East
The Roman Republic
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
21. 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.
The Assyrians
Enlightened despotism
Martin Luther's beliefs
Feudalism: economic
22. Hastened by the Frankish system of inheritance - The Treaty of Verdun (A.D. 843) divided Charlemagne's empire among his three grandsons - Carolingian rule ended in the 10th century because of the decline in central authority and the invasions of the
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
Feudalism: outcomes
France during the later Middle Ages
Minoan civilization
23. 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
Calvinism
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Neoclassicism
The English Reformation
24. The earliest Indian civilization - the Harappa culture - developed around the Indus River Valley in 2500 B.C.
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
Rome's economic problems
Indus River
Africa's geological diversity
25. 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.
The English Reformation
Mesopotamia
The Incas
Roman contributions to the western world (greatest contribution)
26. Ravaged by economic and political decline and repeated civil wars - Caesar was assassinated in 44 B.C. - Augustus became the first emperor of the Roman Empire (27 B.C.)
The Roman Republic: decline
The Olmec
Johannes Kepler
Roman contributions to the western world Engineering and architecture
27. (Virgil's Aeneid - Ovid's Metamorphoses) - rhetoric (the art and study of the use of language with persuasive effect) - Continued the Greek tradition in literature - art - sculpture - and the humanities
Origins of people in America
The Fall of Rome
Confucius
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
28. 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 ziggurat
The Roman Empire
Constantinople
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
29. 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
Mycenaean civilization
Roman contributions to the western world Engineering and architecture
Jesus of Nazareth
30. Transformed society and changed the way people looked at the natural world - In doing so - science came into direct conflict with the teachings of the Church - Began in the 16th century - Important people: Nicolaus Copernicus - Galileo Galilei - Joha
The Phoenicians
The Scientific Revolution
Martin Luther's beliefs
The Magna Carta
31. Architecture was dominated by the Romanesque (11th -12th century) and Gothic (13th -15th century) styles
The importance of city life in the Sung Empire
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: commercial revival
Greece: geography
32. 1807 - Built by American inventor Robert Fulton - The steam engine was used to build it
Mycenaean civilization
France during the later Middle Ages
Steamboat
Four key beliefs of Hindus
33. Writing - Commerce - Government
Watt steam engine
The ancient Near East: geography
Hindus
China: developments
34. The center of Sumerian community life and served as a temple - storehouse - and treasury
Calvinism
Saul
Islam
The ziggurat
35. 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
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Coke smelting
Muslim contributions
India: developments
36. 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
Steamboat
Philosophy influenced by the Age of Reason
The forest states
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
37. Also known as the Catholic Reformation - Attempted to halt the spread of Protestantism - The Jesuits (Society of Jesus) became the first official Catholic response to the Reformation; Jesuits also initiated missionary and educational endeavors - The
River Valley Civilizations
The Counter Reformation
Contributions of the Greek World
Roman contributions to the western world (greatest contribution)
38. Emperors repeatedly raised taxes to support the ever - increasing needs of the army - Created tremendous burdens on the population - with the common people being most affected - Continual economic crises resulted in a rise in poverty and unemployment
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39. Centers of Aegean civilization; depended on the Aegean Sea to develop and extend their culture - (c. 2000-1150 B.C.) developed heavily fortified cities and based prosperity on trade and warfare
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
Effects of the Reformation
Mycenaean civilization
Grooved rollers
40. Concrete - arch - roads (200000 miles of roads) - aqueducts and cisterns - monumental buildings (the Colosseum)
Roman contributions to the western world Engineering and architecture
The Roman Republic
The Fall of Rome
Mesoamerica
41. Established the new Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadnezzar (605-538 B.C.) - Conquered Mesopotamia - Syria - and Palestine - Developed astrology - astronomy - advanced government bureaucracy - and architectural achievements such as the Hanging Gardens
'The Communist Manifesto'
The Chaldeans
The Assyrians
North American Indians
42. c. 1350-1600 - The revival of intellectualism - literature - philosophy - and artistic achievement - Spread westward and into northern Europe - Continued the road started in the Middle Ages that would lead to modern Europe
The Later Middle Ages
The Renaissance
Contributions of the Greek World
Galileo Galilei
43. 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'
Roman contributions to the western world Engineering and architecture
Johannes Kepler
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
Constantine
44. A.D. 1325-1521 - Central Mexico - Conquered much of central Mexico - The Toltecs preceded them - built a great city (Tenochtitlan) and ruled an empire - Religion and war dominated life - Rich mythological and religious traditions - Architecturally ac
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages
The Aztecs
The ancient Near East: cultural contributions
England during the later Middle Ages
45. 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
Muslim contributions
Constantinople
North American Indians
The Holy Roman Empire during the late Middle Ages
46. Became the birthplace for the Hellenic civilization
India under Muslim rule
Iona
Laissez faire
Results of the Industrial Revolution
47. 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
Egyptian civilization: significant aspects
The Magna Carta
Reasons for the Reformation
The Punic Wars with Carthage
48. Attempted to stem the tide - The empire split into the Western and Eastern Roman Empires - Barbarian invasions by Germanic and Asiatic tribes (the Goths - Vandals - and Huns) devastated Rome - and it fell in A.D. 476 - The Eastern Roman Empire at Con
Background to the French Revolution
Constantine
Alexander the Great
Martin Luther
49. The classical economists advanced the theory of laissez faire - Thomas Malthus (1776-1834) theorized that population growth would far outstrip food production - The revolutionary socialism of Karl Marx advocated a violent overthrow of the present eco
Darwin
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
Johannes Kepler
Historical interpretations of the Middle Ages
50. Military and political leader during the later stages of the French Revolution - Emperor of the French from 1804-1815 - His legal reform - the Napoleonic Code - has been a major influence on many civil law jurisdictions worldwide - Best remembered fo
Grooved rollers
Napoleon and the First Empire
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
The Assyrians