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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. Writing - Commerce - Government
China: developments
Africa's geological diversity
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
The Babylonians
2. 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
The Magna Carta
The Aztecs
Greece: geography
India under Muslim rule
3. 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
Iona
Early Japanese civilization
India under Muslim rule
Social Darwinism
4. (A.D. 768-814) A Carolingian ruler - dominated the political structure of the early Middle Ages - crowned 'Emperor of the Romans' by Pope Leo in A.D. 800 and had a major impact on the history of Europe - revived the concept of the Holy Roman Empire a
Mythology
Manorialism
Myths
Charlemagne
5. 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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6. 'Liberty - Equality and Fraternity'
Calvinism
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
Nicolaus Copernicus
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: philosophy
7. Influenced its history - Japanese culture reflects a reverence for nature - Mountains - forests - and coastal areas determined cultural growth
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8. The pope was dominant in religious matters and the monarch in secular matters - A continuing power struggle evolved between the papacy and the secular ruler during the late Middle Ages
Sumeria
The Holy Roman Empire during the late Middle Ages
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
Results of the Industrial Revolution
9. Works of Greeks and Romans reconnected Europeans with their ancient heritage
Galileo Galilei
Renaissance
Modern influence of Magna Carta
Athens and Sparta
10. 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
John Locke
Reasons for the Byzantine Empire's success
The Lydians
Christianity: basic doctrines
11. 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)
The French Revolution
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
India under Muslim rule
The Roman Republic
12. 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
Power loom
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
Dissolution of the Frankish Empire
Division of the Muslim Empire
13. His teachings influenced Chinese culture - Wanted to improve society - Taught that certain virtues are guidelines to happy life
River Valley Civilizations
Confucius
Constantine
Rome's economic problems
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
The (Protestant) Reformation
Egypt
Galileo Galilei
15. 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
Sumeria
Greece: geography
The caste system
The Roman Republic: decline
16. 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
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: commercial revival
Rome's political problems
Rome's economic problems
17. An inequitable class structure - A disorganized legal system and no representative assembly - Enlightenment philosophy influenced the middle class - The bankruptcy of the French treasury was the immediate cause - The 'Declaration of the Rights of Man
The Aztecs
Mohammed
The Hittites
Background to the French Revolution
18. 4000-323 B.C. Organized warfare: Mycenae (military stronghold) - Sparta - phalanx (military formation - Literature: epic poetry (Iliad - Odyssey) - plays (drama - tragedy - comedy) - History: Herodotus (historian who reported the Persian Wars) - Thu
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
John Calvin
The Hellenistic Age
Contributions of the Greek World
19. 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: society
The Peloponnesian War
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages
Hinduism
20. 431-404 B.C. - Devastated Sparta - Athens - and their Greek city - state allies - Sparta was victorious but unable to unite the Greek city - states - Greek individualism was a catalyst in the collapse of the Greek city - state alliances
Flying shuttle
The caste system
Japan's geography
The Peloponnesian War
21. (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
India under Muslim rule
The Napoleonic Code
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
The Punic Wars with Carthage
22. 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
Athens and Sparta
Zoroastrianism
The Early Middle Ages
English Parliament
23. 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
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
Neoclassicism
Roman contributions to the western world Culture: history - literature
Impact of Spanish Exploration and Conquest on Indigenous People of the Americas
24. 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
Spinning mule
Grooved rollers
Feudalism: outcomes
The 'continental system'
25. 1760 - Improved production of iron
Coke smelting
The Napoleonic Code
The intellectual response to the Industrial Revolution
Constantine
26. Ghana - Mali and Songhai
Mesoamerica
Darwin
Famous empires that grew in the West African savanna
Cotton gin
27. 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
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
John Calvin
River Valley Civilizations
Muslim contributions - Science and technology
28. The earliest Indian civilization - the Harappa culture - developed around the Indus River Valley in 2500 B.C.
The Mayas
Indus River
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
Hinduism
29. 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
Renaissance
Social Darwinism and Capitalism
The Roman Empire
Reasons for the Byzantine Empire's success
30. The oldest known civilization on earth - established in the Tigris - Euphrates Valley in the 4th millennium BC. Sumerian civilization took the form of a cluster of city - states - the best known of which is Ur. Sumerians were the first to use the pot
The Kingdom of Zimbabwe
The East African Coast
Sumeria
The Franks
31. 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
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
The Chaldeans
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
Muslim contributions
32. Law - rule of law/equality before the law - civil and contract law codes
Pepin the Short
Roman contributions to the western world (greatest contribution)
Zoroastrianism
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
33. A.D. 960-1279 - The Chinese Empire lost much territory after the fall of the Tang rulers - Advances in education - art - and science contributed to an improved way of life
Reasons for the spread of Christianity (the Roman period)
The Roman Republic
Historical interpretations of the Middle Ages
Chinese civilization under the Sungs
34. Became the birthplace for the Hellenic civilization
Iona
The 'continental system'
The Hellenistic Age
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
35. The ancient Near East comprised the Tigris and Euphrates Valley - the Fertile Crescent - and the Nile Valley.
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: education
Pepin the Short
The ancient Near East: geography
The Aztecs
36. The Phoenicians - The Lydians - The Israelites
Neolithic or New Stone Age
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages
The Franks
Smaller civilizations of the Near East
37. 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
Enlightened despotism
Absolutism
The Olmec
Ibn Battuta
38. 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 Sumerians
General characteristics of the Renaissance
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
39. Philosophy (Scholasticism) dealt with the consistency of faith and reason
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: philosophy
Literature and Philosophy during the rennaisance
Origins of people in America
Reasons for the Reformation
40. The Olmec - The Mayas - The Aztecs - The Incas
Muslim contributions
Early cultures in Mesoamerica
Characteristics of medieval civilization during the late Middle Ages: society
Role of the Church in the Early Middle Ages
41. International relations placed France against Europe. Napoleon won territory from the Holy Roman Empire and forced Spain to cede the Louisiana territory to France
Islamic civilization: trade and cultural expansion
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
Christianity: basic doctrines
Confucius
42. 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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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'
Johannes Kepler
Napoleon and the First Empire: international relations
John Calvin
The conquest of Indigenous People of the Americas
44. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads
Early Japanese civilization
The spread of the Renaissance throughout Europe
Division of the Muslim Empire
Watt steam engine
45. 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
The Age of Reason/Enlightenment
Modern influence of Magna Carta
The Aztecs
Development of feudalism and a samurai warrior - class
46. A.D. 250-900 - Yucatan peninsula - Achieved a complex civilization - cities were trade and religious centers - excelled in many fields - including mathematics - science - astronomy - and engineering (pyramid building) - Only known written language of
Hindus
Reasons for the decline of the Byzantine Empire
The English Reformation
The Mayas
47. Replaced the Franks as legitimate rulers - The Carolingian Renaissance resulted in the establishment of a palace academy with a prescribed academic curriculum
The Sumerians
Constantinople
The Carolingians
Social Darwinism
48. c. 1000-1500
Darwin
The Later Middle Ages
Ancient Africans' advances in their societies and cultures
Absolutism
49. 146 B.C. After which Rome emerged as the dominant power in the Mediterranean - Rome incorporated Greek culture into its empire - Roman expansion resulted in a world republic
Rallying cry of the French Revolution
The Punic Wars with Carthage
The Sumerians
The Holy Roman Empire during the late Middle Ages
50. 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
General characteristics of the Renaissance
The Scientific Revolution
Cleisthenes - Athens Leader
The ziggurat