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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. Established the first lasting monotheism - After the death of Solomon (922 B.C.) - the Hebrews were divided into two kingdoms (Israel and Judah) - Disunity and conquest resulted in the destruction of Israel (722 B.C.) and Judah (586 B.C.) - The revol
Ottoman Empire
The Israelites
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
The Lydians
2. (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
Charles Martel
Turk Dominance
The Age of Pericles
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
3. (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
The topography of Africa
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
Nicolaus Copernicus
4. 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
Enlightened despotism
Reasons for the Reformation
The Punic Wars with Carthage
5. 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
Darwin
England during the later Middle Ages
The Assyrians
6. 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
Manorialism
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
Alfred the Great
River Valley Civilizations
7. Economic prosperity - domination of the commercial trade routes controlled by Constantinople - monopoly of the silk trade - The Byzantines made excellent use of diplomacy to avoid invasions - and they were geographically distant from the tribes who s
8. 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
Minoan civilization
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Islam in Africa
Zoroastrianism
9. The Sumerians - The Babylonians - The Hittites - The Assyrians - The Chaldeans - The Persians
Classical Greece
Martin Luther
Mesopotamian civilizations
Mesopotamia
10. A.D. 1200-1533 Northwest coastal region and inland region of South America (Peru) - Controlled a vast empire in South America - The Tiahuanaco culture developed in the Andes Mountains - unified an extensive empire - Developed a sophisticated record -
Paleolithic or Old Stone Age
The Incas
The Later Middle Ages
North American Indians
11. 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
The Lydians
Inventions of the Industrial Revolution
Mesopotamian civilizations
Early Japanese civilization
12. Architecture was dominated by the Romanesque (11th -12th century) and Gothic (13th -15th century) styles
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
Mohammed
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
India: developments
13. The Phoenicians - The Lydians - The Israelites
The Later Middle Ages
Development of the Renaissance
Smaller civilizations of the Near East
The importance of city life in the Sung Empire
14. 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
Islamic civilization: government and religion
The Phoenicians
The English Reformation
15. No formal system in place to choose Roman emperors; some chosen directly by the emperor - others were heirs to the throne - others were able to buy the throne - Informal and corrupt process of succession resulted in weak and ineffective rulers and ma
16. 1733 - Increased the speed of weavers
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: architecture
India: developments
Causes of the Industrial Revolution
Flying shuttle
17. Pillaged the coasts of Europe in the 8th century - The Danes were responsible for the major invasions of England - In France - the Carolingian king was forced to cede Normandy to the Vikings
Laissez faire
The Counter Reformation
The Viking (Norse) invaders
Absolutism
18. 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
Mongul rule in China
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
Confucius
19. Works of Greeks and Romans reconnected Europeans with their ancient heritage
The ancient Near East: geography
Laissez faire
Renaissance
The caste system
20. Stimulated new states of West Africa and spread Islamic culture and religion
Islam in Africa
The Israelites
The conquest of Indigenous People of the Americas
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
21. Became a revolutionary anti - Catholic movement - Basis of 'Reformed Churches -' which spread throughout Europe; Calvinism made Protestantism an international movement
Calvinism
Absolutism
France during the later Middle Ages
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
22. A totalitarian and militaristic state dependent on slave labor to sustain its agricultural system; state owned most of the land - Warrior state - dependent on a superior military (result of constant threat of rebellion) - Spartan citizens were outnum
Spartan way of life
The ziggurat
Japan's geography
General characteristics of the Renaissance
23. The cultural period of the Stone Age that developed primarily in Europe between the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods - beginning around 10000 years ago and lasting in various places as late as 3000 bce. The Mesolithic is marked by the appearance of
Minoan civilization
Iona
Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age
The Babylonians
24. 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
Constantinople
Ibn Battuta
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
The Lydians
25. Immediate cause: continuous barbaric invasion - Internal factors included political instability - decreasing farm production - inflation - excessive taxation - and the decline of the military - including the use of mercenaries - The rise of Christian
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
The Fall of Rome
Effects of the Reformation
Origins of people in America
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.
Greece: geography
Persian War
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
27. Conquered much of Asia Minor and Northern Mesopotamia (2000-1200 B.C.) - A major contribution included the invention of iron smelting - which revolutionized warfare
The ancient Near East: cultural contributions
The Hittites
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
Arabs
28. The Norman Conquest (invasion of England by William the Conqueror - duke of Normandy) had a profound impact on the development of the culture - language - and judicial system of England - The Battle of Hastings (1066) ended Anglo - Saxon rule in Engl
Spinning jenny
Feudalism: economic
Coke smelting
England during the later Middle Ages
29. Attempted to unify the entire Near East under one rule (500s B.C.) - Established an international government - - Failed to conquer the Greeks; Persia was eventually conquered by Alexander the Great (334-331 B.C.)
The Persians
The Olmec
The Hittites
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
30. 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
The ancient Near East: geography
The 'continental system'
Pepin the Short
The Sumerians
31. The Olmec - The Mayas - The Aztecs - The Incas
The Age of Reason/Enlightenment
The Olmec
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
The accomplishments of the early Japanese
32. 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)
Coke smelting
Background to the French Revolution
The French Revolution
Martin Luther
33. 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 Franks
The Napoleonic Code
The Fall of Rome
The Chaldeans
34. 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 Later Middle Ages
Saul
Early Japanese civilization
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
35. An early Jewish convert to Christianity - was responsible for the spread of Christian theology and the resulting response from the Roman empire (opposition/resistance; Christianity firmly rooted in the collapsing world of Roman rule)
Martin Luther
Ibn Battuta
Paul of Tarsus (Paul the Apostle)
Background to the French Revolution
36. (460-429 B.C.) Represented the zenith of Athenian society and the height of its democracy
Egypt
The Age of Pericles
Causes of the Industrial Revolution
Rome's economic problems
37. 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 -
France during the later Middle Ages
The Roman Republic
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
The importance of city life in the Sung Empire
38. 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
Muslim contributions
Development of the Renaissance
India under Muslim rule
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
39. 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
Feudalism: political
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
The Later Middle Ages
Muslim contributions
40. 1764 - Increased the speed and output of yarn spinners
The Punic Wars with Carthage
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
Spinning jenny
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
41. Became the birthplace for the Hellenic civilization
Sumeria
Mongul rule in China
Iona
Hindus
42. 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
Charles Martel
Origins of people in America
The importance of city life in the Sung Empire
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
43. 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
Mycenaean civilization
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
The Roman Republic
Sumeria
44. Mathematician - physicist - and astronomer - The most influential scientist of the Enlightenment - Described universal gravitation and the three laws of motion - which dominated the scientific view of the physical universe for the next three centurie
The Dorians
Results of the Industrial Revolution
Isaac Newton
Arabs
45. 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
Water frame
Christianity: basic doctrines
Napoleon and the First Empire
The caste system
46. 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
Arabs
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
Four key beliefs of Hindus
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
47. Astronomer - Challenged the Church doctrine of a geocentric (earth - centered) theory of the universe (Ptolemy's theory; was the prevailing thought for more than 1000 years) - Believed that the sun was the center of the solar system - and the earth m
Nicolaus Copernicus
Athens and Sparta
Islamic civilization: government and religion
Hindus
48. In 1215 - King John was forced by the nobles to sing the Magna Carta - Limited the power of the king and increased the power of the nobles
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
The Roman Empire
Mesoamerica
The Magna Carta
49. 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
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: feudalism/manorialism
The Olmec
Spain and Portugal during the later Middle Ages
The Persians
50. 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 Mayas
The Renaissance
Philosophy influenced by the Age of Reason
Achievements of the Byzantine Empire