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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. 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
Greece: geography
Mesopotamian civilizations
Myths
The Magna Carta
2. 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
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
Egypt: developments
The Roman Empire
Charles Martel
3. King's authority limited by law - rights of the king's subjects declared (i.e. habeas corpus) - respect for legal procedures
The Early Middle Ages
Key provisions of Magna Carta
Martin Luther's beliefs
Roman contributions to the western world (greatest contribution)
4. A.D. 570-632 - Emerged from the deserts of Arabia; appeared as a messenger of God (Allah) and a prophet of Allah's monotheistic faith - According to Islamic traditions - Mohammed was last in a line of prophets that traced back to Abraham and included
Mohammed
Mythology
Neolithic or New Stone Age
India: developments
5. 500 BC to the conquest of Greece by the Macedonian king Philip II in 338 BC; highpoint of greek civ - Sophic emphasis on the individual - revol of philosophy by Socrates - Plato's emphasis on ethics - Aristotle emphasis on observable reality - Herodo
Rome's economic problems
Classical Greece
Islamic civilization: government and religion
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
6. Became the dominant Germanic tribe - Clovis - king of the Franks (A.D. 481-511) - was converted to Christianity - Domestic feuds and civil war broke out among the Merovingians (A.D. 561) - Political power shifted away from the monarchy
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
Ganges River
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
The Franks
7. 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
The Aztecs
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
The ziggurat
Development of the Renaissance
8. Born around 6 B.C. in the Roman province of Judea - Became an influential rabbi - His death by crucifixion and resurrection as the Christ (Greek for messiah) were writings in the Gospels
India under Muslim rule
General characteristics of the Renaissance
Jesus of Nazareth
The Carolingians
9. 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.
Constantine
India: developments
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
Mesopotamia
10. 1779 - A power - driven machine that produced fine - strong yarn
The Magna Carta
Ottoman Empire
Spinning mule
Effects of the Reformation
11. 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
Neoclassicism
The Early Middle Ages
The Chaldeans
The Assyrians
12. Political outcomes: stability - leading lords emerged as kings - foundation for nation - states - Economic outcomes: self - sufficiency - foundation for urbanization - Productive surpluses and specialization of skills would lead to trade - Trade woul
Persian War
France during the later Middle Ages
Feudalism: outcomes
Literature and Philosophy during the rennaisance
13. Reflected the new secular trends - Humanism stressed the importance of the individual - Machiavelli's 'The Prince' stressed that 'the ends justify the means' as a political philosophy - The influence of the 'classical' arts was strong - and a new emp
The Persians
Literature and Philosophy during the rennaisance
Islam
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
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
Development of the Renaissance
River Valley Civilizations
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
American Indian culture
15. The Phoenicians - The Lydians - The Israelites
Johannes Kepler
Enlightened despotism
Smaller civilizations of the Near East
The Hittites
16. Began with the death of Alexander the Great - 323-30 B.C. - Fusion of Greek and Eastern cultures - A time of great economic growth and expansion; an increase in international trade and commerce - Rise of cities; Rhodes - Alexandria - and Antioch repl
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
The Hellenistic Age
Achievements of the Byzantine Empire
The Roman Republic: decline
17. (A.D. 871-99) established the English kingdom after stemming the Danish invasions
Arabs
Origins of people in America
The Fall of Rome
Alfred the Great
18. 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 Dorians
Spartan way of life
Ibn Battuta
Feudalism: economic
19. c. 1000-1500
The Later Middle Ages
India under Muslim rule
Mycenaean civilization
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
20. 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
Mycenaean civilization
Galileo Galilei
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
Neolithic or New Stone Age
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
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Feudalism: political
The Battle of Waterloo (1815)
Rome's political problems
22. Established the first kingdom in Palestine (c. 1030-1010 B.C.)
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
The Sumerians
Saul
The Scientific Revolution
23. Influenced its history - Japanese culture reflects a reverence for nature - Mountains - forests - and coastal areas determined cultural growth
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24. (A.D. 747-768) a Carolingian ruler appointed by the pope as king and established the Papal States on former Byzantine lands
Steamboat
Pepin the Short
The forest states
Sumeria
25. Based on the teachings of Mohammed - The spread of Islam started in the seventh century A.D. - The Koran became the center for Islamic moral and ethical conduct - Mohammed established a theocracy based on Islamic law
Power loom
Islam
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
Martin Luther
26. 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
Jesus of Nazareth
The Incas
The topography of Africa
Muslim contributions
27. No privileges/tax exemptions based on lineage - Government promotion was based on ability - Modernized French law (equality before the law)
Turk Dominance
The Napoleonic Code
Capitalism
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
28. In economics - the doctrine of '___________' (limited government intervention in business affairs) stood in opposition to regulated trade
The Ming and Manchu Dynasties
Laissez faire
Minoan civilization
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
29. 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)
Athens and Sparta
The Israelites
Key provisions of Magna Carta
India under Muslim rule
30. Called for a free and open economic system was needed - Expanded Darwin's theory of evolution to include society as a whole - viewed society as a 'struggle for existence'; only the 'fittest' members of society would survive - The accumulation of weal
The East African Coast
Ganges River
Social Darwinism
The Babylonians
31. Conquered much of Asia Minor and Northern Mesopotamia (2000-1200 B.C.) - A major contribution included the invention of iron smelting - which revolutionized warfare
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Johannes Kepler
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
The Hittites
32. 1764 - Introduced the first power - driven machine to manufacture cloth
Water frame
Greece: geography
Voltaire - Montesquieu - Locke - and Rousseau
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: philosophy
33. 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
Nicolaus Copernicus
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
The importance of city life in the Sung Empire
34. 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
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
Ibn Battuta
The Roman Republic: decline
Indus River
35. Writing - Commerce - Government
China: developments
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
Paleolithic or Old Stone Age
Feudalism: outcomes
36. 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
France during the later Middle Ages
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Christianity: basic doctrines
Rome's economic problems
37. 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
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
The Chaldeans
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
The Renaissance
38. Urban culture - Planned cities (i.e. citywide sanitation systems) - Metallurgy (gold - copper - bronze - tin) - Measurement (weight - time - length - mass)
India: developments
Alfred the Great
Steamboat
Constantinople
39. A failed French attempt to close the continent to British trade in hopes of destroying the British economy
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40. 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
Development of the Renaissance
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
Darwin
41. Its geographic proximity to the Arabs - Slavs - and Seljuk Turks - all of whom were becoming more powerful - The loss of commercial dominance of the Italians - Religious controversy with the West and a subsequent split with the Roman Catholic Church
France during the later Middle Ages
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
42. A collection of myths or stories - usually about the gods and their relationships to human beings; the study of myths
Origins of people in America
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
Historical interpretations of the Middle Ages
Mythology
43. 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
The Napoleonic Code
Early Japanese civilization
Alexander the Great
Calvinism
44. 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
The Franks
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
The Age of Reason/Enlightenment
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
45. The ancient Near East comprised the Tigris and Euphrates Valley - the Fertile Crescent - and the Nile Valley.
The Punic Wars with Carthage
The ancient Near East: geography
Hindus
Chinese civilization under the Sungs
46. The creators of Mesopotamian civilization (3500-3000 B.C.) - Used Tigris and Euphrates rivers for trade and commerce - as well as areas surrounding the Persian Gulf - Material progress included large - scale irrigation projects - an advanced system o
Zoroastrianism
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
Feudalism: outcomes
The Sumerians
47. Became the birthplace for the Hellenic civilization
Effects of the Reformation
Iona
Mythology
Mesopotamian civilizations
48. Mesopotamia (Tigris and Euphrates rivers; southwest Asia/modern - day Iraq) - floods were unpredictable and destructive; flat plains invited invasion - Egypt (banks of Nile River - Mediterranean and Red Seas; Northeastern Africa) - India (Indus and G
River Valley Civilizations
Egyptian civilization: significant aspects
The Early Middle Ages
Enlightened despotism
49. The Turkish empire - By the middle of the 16th century - the Ottomans controlled not only Turkey but most of southeastern Europe - the Crimea - Iran - and a majority of the Middle East
Ottoman Empire
The Roman Empire
Modern influence of Magna Carta
Hindus
50. The center of Sumerian community life and served as a temple - storehouse - and treasury
'The Communist Manifesto'
The Battle of Waterloo (1815)
Zoroastrianism
The ziggurat