Regular World History Review (COMPLETE)

Pataasin ang iyong marka sa homework at exams ngayon gamit ang Quizwiz!

Short Answer: What influence did geography have on the development of SE Asia?

(If have please send to me, chpt 8 test)

Short Answer: Describe the impact of Mansa Musa's pilgrimage to Makkah, both on Mali and countries through which he traveled

(If you have the answer please send it to me)

Short Answer: Explain why the importance of ancestors was a key element in African religion.

(If you have the answer please send it to me)

Short Answer: Explain the importance of Islam in the development of Melaka

(if have place send to me, chpt 8 test)

Short Answer: Describe how Islamic expansion happened in India and the impact Muslim rule had on Indian society and culture. Give reasons and examples to support whether the impact was negative or positive

(if have please send to me, chpt 8 test)

Short Answer: How did the samurai and shogun affect the government of early Japan?

(if have please send to me, chpt 8 test)

Short Answer: Identify a contribution from each of the three Chinese dynasties that immediately preceded the Kublai Khan conquered China

(if have please send to me, chpt 8 test)

Short Answer: Conflicts among what groups made it difficult for Eastern Europe to form new monarchies?

(if you have please send them to me, chpt 10 test)

Short Answer: Explain St. Thomas Aquinas' masterpiece Summa Theological

(if you have please send them to me, chpt 10 test)

Short Answer: Identify the three things that guilds established for their trade

(if you have please send them to me, chpt 10 test)

Short Answer: Identify three cultural achievements of European civilization during the High Middle Ages

(if you have please send them to me, chpt 10 test)

Short answer: How did the economic effects of the Black Death help to break down the institution of serfdom?

(if you have please send them to me, chpt 10 test)

Short Answer: Explain the schism. Who was involved? What was the argument? Why was this important?

(if you have please send to me, chpt 9)

Short Answer: Describe the significance of the POPE crowning Charlemagne

(if you have please send to me, chpt. 9)

Short Answer: How did trade facilitate the spread of Islam across Africa?

(if you have the answer please send it to me)

Multiple Choice: The Treaty of Tordesillas accomplished what? a. Gave North America to the Spaniards and South America to the Portuguese b. Established a blockade in the Atlantic Ocean c. Ended the Spanish - Portuguese War d. Established a line of demarcation in the Atlantic Ocean

?? (chpt 13 test #33)

Multiple Choice: Which of the following Italian states did Portugal NOT begin to challenge as chief trading points in Europe a. Papal States b. Venice c. Florence d. Milan

?? (chpt 13 test, #41)

Matching: Established after Chinese rule was overthrown a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

?? (chpt. 8)

Story: "Belisarius, then, as mentioned, had a mighty reputation and outstanding mental ability; his plans were formed to benefit the Emperor's affairs and carried out with a mind of his own. Other generals, being more on a par with each other and only thinking of their personal gain in their conduct of operations, began to plunder the Romans and to subject the citizens to the will of the soldiers, never considering their duty or keeping the troops obedient to their commands. So they made many mistakes, and in a very short time the whole Roman Empire fell down in ruins about them." -Procopius, Belisarius, Justinian's Virtuous General Question: Who benefited from Belisarius's plans? a. the Romans b. other generals c. Justinian d. the people of the Empire

???

Multiple Choice: Slaves were imported to work on large land estates and plantation because a. African was a colony of Europe b. Mulattoes were not looked upon favorably c. There were not enough Native Americans d. None of the above

??? (chpt. 13 test, #37)

Fill in the Blank: The Swahili language was a combination of Arabic and ____________

Bantu

Fill in the Blank: What were the 4 Khanates

Chagatai, Golden Horde, Create Khanate Yuan, IlKhanate

Short Answer: Identify at least five changes during the High Middle Ages allowed for increased food production

Changes in the High Middle Ages allowed for the increase in food production. One of these changes is the farruca. The farruca is an iron plow, that was pulled by a horse, that allows the land to be turned faster and the allowance of seeds to be planted. two more advancements in the Middle Ages for the horse was the horseshoes and collar. These two things allowed for the horse to more easily pull the farruca that is needed for planting. The horseshoe allows a horse to walk on different surfaces with a smaller chance f injury (more grip). The fourth change is the draining of swamp lands, this draining allowed for more planting and food production. The last change is the crop rotation. Instead of planting in one field and allowing the other lay follow you plant in two and allow the third to lay follow. Instead of 50% food production (between the two fields) you have 66%. This is a 16% increase in food production in the High Middle Ages.

Fill in the Blank: Blacksmiths in ________ were highly valued for their ability to turn iron ore into tools and weapons.

Ghana

Short Answer: Describe the elements of the feudal contract for both vassal and lord

In the feudal contract between vassal and lord both benefited. The lord would have a vassal by giving him land and protection. In return for this the vassal would sometimes work for him, he would side with him in an argument (same other way around too), help with problems at court and even sometimes marriage was possible between the groups (usually between vassal son and the lords daughter).

Short Answer: The kingdoms of cities that were on important trade routes became very rich as trade increased. How did kings obtain their wealth?

Kings obtained their wealth by putting taxes on items that were being imported and exported by merchants

Fill in the Blank: The Ashanti people of Ghana believed in a supreme being called _________.

Nyame

Fill in the Blank: The Yoruba people of Nigeria believed that the creator god sent his son _______ down from Heaven in a canoe to create the first humans

Odudwa

Q&A: How did the early Islamic empire expand? (this is one of the essays from three documents so if you would like to read it, it is test 6) (answers can vary)

One of the ways the early Islamic Empire expanded was by the conquering of other city states. At the Battle of Yurmuk in the Eastern Roman Empire, "some od rhyme [The Greeks] were put to death" (Al-Biladun). The Muslims were a powerful and fearful force of warriors who conquered the city-state of al-Yarmuk at the Battle of Yurmuk. By the Muslims conquering this one place it lead to the expansion and then further expansion of the Islamic Empire. The Islamic Empire also expanded by the compromise of Islam and there city-states. In The Treaty of Tudmir And al-Aziz's forces would, "not harass him [Theodmir], nor remove him from power... they [Theodmir's followers] will not be coerced in matters of religion," however Theodmir's forces must, "pay one dinar every year, together with four measures of wheat, four measures of barely..." (The Treaty of Tudmir). Through The Treaty of Tudmir the Christ King Tudmir would not be invaded by the Muslim forces, however there were certain rules each must follow. By this compromise both sides could live together while the Islamic Empire expanded. Through this method the region of Spain did not have to be destroyed and they would not be controlled by an outside force.

Short Answer: Who was Joan of Arc and why was she significant?

She was a military leader. She claimed to had a vision from God and she joined the military. Under her leadership the French started to win (The French we're losing horribly before Joan came). Then she was capture by the English and accused of witchcraft and executed. The French won the war thanks to Joan

Short Answer: Explain the two Aztec legends and their significance.

The Aztec were a people group who had legends that caused them to live where they did. They were told when they see an eagle on a prickly pear cactus that is growing out of a rock that is where they are to settle. After a long time of searching they came across Lake Texcoco where they saw this exact thing. Their second legend was that the Toltec commander left telling them he would be back in a sacred year from the east. The Aztec knew of this legend, and when the Spaniards came to the Americas it was thought to be him because of the similar flag design as well as coming from the east. These legends are significant to their culture because of the impact it left each tribe member promising them a future.

Short Answer: Explain how the Inca gained, consolidated, and maintained their power using specific examples.

The Inca's where a powerful South American civilization who expanded their empire from Ecuador to Chile and parts of the Amazon River Basin. The Inca's gained land through force, especially that of Pachacuti. The Incan men had mandatory military service causing over 200,000 men to be under his military rule. With these men he had the biggest and strongest military in the Americas. He went city to city destroying and burning them conquering kingdoms such as the Aryama kingdom. With his power spreading all across the Andes the Inca's began to become the greatest civilization in the Americas. Pachacuti knew his empire was vast causing him to split it into four sections, Tuwaynitsuya. Each section was ruled by governors that would communicate with the king assuring no rebelling. Encouraging the people not to rebel they had government improvements such as roads and sufficient food supply. Long roads were built to connect each section in the middle at the capital. The only ones allowed on this road were runners, one who would carry messages all over the kingdom. This allowed for the well communication of the cities. The diverting of canals by the government was important to water drought prone areas. With sufficient nutrients the Inca's could grow and plant crops all year round for multiple years in a row. With the combination of governmental improvements and the use of force the incas became the powerful empire they were stretching all across the Andes.

Short Answer: The Chinese form of government was adopted by many other countries. Describe the basis for the Chinese form of government and evaluate its effectiveness

The basis for the Chinese form of government is the Chines model and the civil service examination. The civil service examination was used so that only the best of the best could be part of the government. The government was a monarchy that was led by bureaucracy principles. This was effective because the government was unified and the rulers were skilled in the teachings of Confucianism.

Short Answer: Describe the code of chivalry

The code of chivalry was a law put onto knights that they were supposed to follow, even though many did not. During war the knights were not supposed to fight for money or the fame but to stay humble. This also put women on a pedestal because they were supposed to be treated with respect and as an equal to the husband.

Short Answer: What was the relationship between early peoples of North America and their environment?

The early peoples had to use their environmental supplies to their advantage. The Inuit who lived on the coast of the tundra caused them to have minimal wood supply. Instead of wood for houses they used turf and stone, and while moving they used igloos as temporary shelters. Since they did not have wood they could not make tools causing them to use another source, animal bones. These bones include narwal horns, seal and caribou, they would take these bones and carve out tools to be used in the future. They were not the only tribe who had to use their environment to their advantage however. The Plains Indians used the buffalo for everything they needed. They would eat the meat, use the hides for clothes and tepees and the bones for tools. Though these tow groups are in the Americas their culture is different because the groups in the Americas culture is different because of their surroundings. They did not take advantage of anything they had and waste it but put it all to good use so that they could survive.

Short Answer: How did the architecture of the Gothic cathedrals reflect medieval religious values?

The gothic cathedral architecture was a symbol of religious values. An example of this is their high walls. These high walls symbolized them reaching to heaven and being with God, which is what we want in the end. Another example is their many stained glass windows that depicted daily life. First the stained glass windows allowed for light to shine in which was God's Holy presence on the ones of the church. Second the depictions of daily life was how they showed their glory for God through the work they do on earth.

Short Answer: What weakness caused the Kushites to be conquered by Assyrians? What skill did the Kushites learn from the Assyrinas as a result of this defeat?

They still used iron and stone weapons causing the Assyrians iron weapons to be overwhelming. They learned of smelting iron and turning it into tools from the Assyrians

Fill in the Blank: What was the name of Kublai Khan's dynasty in China?

Yuan

(this is based off of a photo) Multiple Choice: One of Charles the Great's most successful ruling methods was a. relying on messengers to keep informed b. using generals to rule over conquered territory c. conducting personal inspections of every province d. insisting that local laws be replaced by imperial legislation

a

Matching: "Those who serve" a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

a

Matching: A burial mound over 98 feet high with a base larger than that of the great pyramid a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

a

Matching: Business associations a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying buttewaa

a

Matching: Called the "rubber people" due to the rubber trees that grew in the area they lived a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

a

Matching: Carved colossal stone heads a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

a

Matching: Christopher Columbus a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

a

Matching: English Protestants inspired by Calvin a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

a

Matching: He was considered a "complete man of theater" a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

a

Matching: Hunted seal, caribou, and fish for both food and clothing a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

a

Matching: In La Venta, this civilization had a pyramid that towered above the city a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

a

Matching: Successor to Muhammad a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

a

Matching: Tenochtitlan was located in the middle of this a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

a

Matching: The Maya used a sophisticated writing system based on this a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

a

Matching: The oldest major city in the Americas a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

a

Matching: This kingdom was mostly polytheistic a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

a

Matching: This kingdom was overwhelmed by Assyrians with iron weapons a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

a

Matching: This kingdom was south of Egypt a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

a

Matching: initiated the Fourth Crusade a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

a

Matching: settled along the tundra region a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

a

Multiple Choice: 10% of what is produced that is given to the Church is known as: a. tithe b. tilde c. taille d. task

a

Multiple Choice: A special class of _________ believed they had the power to foretell events, usually by working with supernatural forces a. Diviners b. Ife c. Griots d. Yoruba

a

Multiple Choice: A trading state of the upper Niger River valley a. Ghana b. Timbuktu c. Meroe d. Mombasa

a

Multiple Choice: Built in basilica shape used in the construction of the churches in the late Roman Empire a. Romanesque b. Gothic c. all of the above d. non of the above

a

Multiple Choice: During the Abbasid dynasty, the council that advised the caliph was led by a prime minister known as a(n) a. vizier b. Quran c. sultan d. general

a

Multiple Choice: Elizabeth I was considered _______ in religion and politics a. moderate b. extreme c. weak d. none of the above

a

Multiple Choice: Farming peoples who spoke dialects of the __________ family of languages moved into East Africa a. Bantu b. Swahili c. Kilwa d. Ghana

a

Multiple Choice: Followers of Theravada see Buddhism as a. a way of life b. a sect of hinduism c. part of christianity d. personal therapy

a

Multiple Choice: Francisco Pizarro a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

a

Multiple Choice: Hernando Cortez a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

a

Multiple Choice: How were members of the Grand Council elected? a. by the clan mother b. by the clan men c. by gladiatorial victory d. by seniority

a

Multiple Choice: In order for the students to get their degrees, students have to pass by: a. Oral exam b. Written exam c. Teaching a class d. None of the above

a

Multiple Choice: Korean society was strongly influenced by a. The Chinese model of society b. Western literature c. The kingdom of Silla d. Greek and Roman colonists

a

Multiple Choice: Marco Polo inspired others with his literary work a. "The Travels" b. "The New World" c. "The Expedition" d. "The Far East"

a

Multiple Choice: Muslims regarded the _______________ as their greatest literary work a. Quran b. Hadith c. The Arabian Nights d. Muqaddimah

a

Multiple Choice: Name the TWO religions fighting in the French Wars of Religions a. Catholic and Calvinism b. Jews and Catholics c. Calvinism and Islam d. None of these

a

Multiple Choice: Name the country the war took place in: a. Germany b. Italy c. France d. Spain

a

Multiple Choice: Name the location where the Protestant nobles revolted against the Catholic forces that began the 30 Years War a. Bohemia b. Netherlands c. A and B d. None of these

a

Multiple Choice: Resentment against Umayyad rule grew because a. Non-Arab Muslims did not like the way local administrators favored Arab Muslims b. Mu'awiyah changed the capital from Medinah to Athens c. Of the inability of the Umayyad generals to defeat the Byzantines d. The people were not allowed to gamble

a

Multiple Choice: Societies in which descent is traced through the mother, rather than the father a. Matrilineal b. Patrilineal c. Lineage groups d. Ancestors

a

Multiple Choice: Spain experienced the growth of a strong national monarchy at the end of the 1400s with the marriage of the following nobles: a. Ferdinand and Isabella b. Frederick and Isabella c. William and Katherine d. William and Elizabeth

a

Multiple Choice: Study of religion and God a. theology b. scholasticism c. theocracy d. cistercian

a

Multiple Choice: Style of the 12th century, that replaced the round barrel vault of churches with a combination of ribbed vaults and pointed arches is known as: a. Romanesque b. Gothic c. Frankish d. Spanish

a

Multiple Choice: The Bantu communities were based on a. subsistence farming, which meant they grew crops for personal use, not for trade b. the transport of goods by camel caravans across the deserts between trading cultures c. gold mining d. the fundamentals of Christianity, which they learned from shipwrecked Syrian sailors

a

Multiple Choice: The Mongols, led by Genghis Khan, a. brought much of the Eurasian landmass under a single rule, creating the largest land empire in history b. successfully invaded Hawaii, but could not hold it for long c. conquered the islands of Java and Sumatra, which had repulsed several previous Chinese attacks d. defeated every army that challenged them, except for the Vietnamese

a

Multiple Choice: The Spanish conqueror of the Inca Empire was a. Francisco Pizarro b. Hernan Cortes c. Vasco da Gama d. Christopher Columbus

a

Multiple Choice: The area of Africa that juts into the Atlantic Ocean is the a. Hump of Africa b. Horn of Africa c. Congo river d. Sahara

a

Multiple Choice: The first major battle fo the Hundred Years War occurred in 1346 at: a. Crecy b. Agincourt c. Champagne d. Paris

a

Multiple Choice: The land in eastern North America from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico a. Eastern Woodlands b. Tundra c. Great Plains d. Southwest

a

Multiple Choice: The most important gift a lord could give to a vassal was a. a piece of land b. his daughter in marriage c. a boat d. a gold ring

a

Multiple Choice: The theory of __________ is a set of principles that dominated economic thought in the seventeenth century. It states that the prosperity of a nation depended on a large supply of bullion, or gold and silver a. Mercantilism b. Democracy c. Commercial capitalism d. Slavery

a

Multiple Choice: What percentage of population were the Huguenots? a. 7% b. 8% c. 9% d. 10%

a

Multiple Choice: What was the common factor that differentiated the cultures of the North American people groups? a. Geography and Climate b. Religion c. Isolation d. None of the above

a

Multiple Choice: Which Island is located furthest south (of Japan) a. Kyushu b. Shikoku c. Honshu d. Hokkaido

a

Multiple Choice: Which country was not one of the five European countries who rose to new heights through worldwide trade? a. Germany b. England c. France d. Spain

a

Multiple Choice: Which is the correct hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church? (top to bottom) a. Pope, archbishop, bishop, priest b. Pope, bishop, archbishop, priest c. Archbishop, bishop, priest d. Priest, bishop, archbishop, pope

a

Multiple Choice: Which of the following was a code of ethics knights were to uphold? a. Chivalry b. The Book of the Dead c. The fief d. Vassalage

a

Multiple Choice: Which social group grew in importance due t their growing numbers in the Americas? a. Mestizos b. Creole c. Peninsulares d. Mulattos

a

Multiple Choice: Why was a colony important for the parent country? a. Raw materials and markets for finished goods b. To control more Native Americans c. So that the sun never sets on the territory it owns d. To demonstrate their strength

a

Multiple Choice: Wood carvings often represented a. Gods, spirits, ancestors b. Terra-cotta c. Ife d. Griots

a

Multiple Choice: the main purpose of this was to appease the gods a. human sacrifice b. prayer c. mediation d. migration

a

Multiple Choice: the taille is an a. annual direct tax on land or property b. what you do when you keep score c. a mark on a serf that identifies the lord for whom he works d. non of the above

a

Multiple Choice:This covers 10% of the African continent a. rainforest b. desert c. savanna d. the nile

a

Choose: With A. William and Mary or B. William and Anne, in the leadership role, they accepted the English A. Bill of Rights or B. Declaration of Independence, which laid the foundation for a limited, or constitutional monarchy. They also accepted the A. Peace of Westphalia or B. Toleration Act of 1689 that stated the Puritans, not Catholics, had the right to freely worship in public

a, a, b

Choose: He believed in the A. Divine Right of the King or B. Ultimate Right of the King, which made Parliament upset because they had no power. His son, the next monarch, A. Charles I or B. Charles II, had the same beliefs as his father and had a problem with the A. Huguenots or B. Puritans. They believed that the monarchy was gaining too much A. power or B. land, and believed England was turning to a more tradition A. Protestant or B. Catholic, religion. The final situation that pushed the A. Huguenots or B. Puritans, to leave for A. Switzerland or B. America, was when the monarch, A. Charles I or B. James I, went back on his word without Parliament's permission

a, a, b, a, b, b, b, a

Matching: Dynasty that preceded the Song dynasty a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

ab

Matching: Replaced the Umayyads a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

ab

Matching: The location of the Maya observatory and the Pyramid of Kukulcan (The Plumed Serpent) a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

ab

Matching: This is the movement that was adopted by the Catholic Reformation which tried to merge classical ideals of the Renaissance with a spiritual revival a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

ab

Matching: Usually bones of saints or objects connected with saints or have religious meaning a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

ab

Matching: When he came to the throne of the House of Bourbon he ruled as a Catholic a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ab

Matching: a man who served a lord in a military capacity a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ab

Matching: groups of related families a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

ab

Matching: Heavy, arched support of stone, built onto the outside of the walls a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying buttress

abc

Matching: Muhammad's wife a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

abc

Matching: This fleet held massive, heavy, and outdated ships headed for Protestant England in 1588 a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abc

Matching: This is Russian for Caesar a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

abc

Matching: ruler of the Mongol state based in Samarkand a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

abc

Matching: the grant of land made to a vassal a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

abc

Matching: He was the English monarch with two Protestant daughters but fled to France with his family when one of the "invaded" England (Glorious Revolution a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abcd

Matching: His religion was Huguenot when he came to the throne of the House of Bourbon a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abce

Matching: He was a young boy when he came to the throne of France; his royal mister was Cardinal Mazarin a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

abd

Matching: This is what was left after Cromwell purged the Parliament of the supporters of the King a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abd

Matching: strengthened the power of the papacy a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

abd

Matching: These people strongly opposed to Huguenots in France who were wealthy and could recruit large armies a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abde

Matching: He was the monarch who enforced the strict Catholicism in Spain and was known as the "Most Catholic King" a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

abe

Matching: This is the Prussian aristocracy who also served as officers in the army a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

abe

Matching: codified Roman law, resulting in The Body of Civil Law a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

abe

Matching: An event in which the merchants can bring their goods to trade with other merchants a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

ac

Matching: He was the artist who complete St. Peter's Basilica in Rome and the Throne of Saint Peter encompassing the detailed and emotional sides of this artistic movement a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

ac

Matching: Hindu warriors who resided the advance of Ghazni a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

ac

Matching: Perfected by the Muslims; later helped European sailors a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

ac

Matching: Shelters that were warm in the winter and cool I the summer a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

ac

Matching: This stated that the Puritans, not Catholics, could freely worship in public in England a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ac

Matching: created the Carolingian Empire a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ac

Matching: the capital of the Aztec civilization a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

ac

Matching: Dynasty that preceded the Tang dynasty a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

acd

Matching: Group of nobles who ruled the French kingdom of Navarre a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

acd

Matching: created the first French parliament a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

acd

Matching: he was the first ruler to take the title czar a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

acd

Matching: He was married to Mary Stuart and led against her father in the Glorious Revolution a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

acde

Matching: French Protestants inspired by Calvin a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ace

Matching: This dynasty took over after the Time of Troubles in Russia a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

ace

Matching: people from Western Asia who settled on the plains of Hungary a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ace

Matching: Created by 9th century Arab mathematician a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

ad

Matching: His poem "Quiet Night Thoughts" has been memorized by schoolchildren for centuries a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

ad

Matching: Sun-dried brick a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

ad

Matching: This is what the English thought helped them during the Spanish invasion; God showed his for on England in this manner a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ad

Matching: a heavy, wheeled plow with iron plowshare a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

ad

Matching: led the Muslim forces during the Third Crusade a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ad

Matching: Formed the kingdom of Angkor a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

ade

Matching: 14th Century Islamic palace in Grenada, Spain a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

ae

Matching: Agricultural estate run by a lord and worked by peasants a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

ae

Matching: Multistoried structures that housed many people a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

ae

Matching: Norsemen of Scandinavia a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ae

Matching: One of the trading societies of the Southeast Asia a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

ae

Matching: This is the belief that the King was chosen by God and only answerable to God a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ae

Matching: This was Russia's capital until 1918 and was considered "a window to the West" a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

ae

Matching: the Maya calender a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

ae

Matching: Created the Rubaiyat a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

b

Matching: Deganawida and Hiawatha were important leaders a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

b

Matching: He laid the foundation for the country of Prussia who built a large army, set up an efficient government and had a tax system a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

b

Matching: Khanbalik a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

b

Matching: Local lords paid this to the Aztec ruler a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

b

Matching: Located in the Ohio and Mississippi River valleys a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

b

Matching: The denial of basic Church doctrine a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

b

Matching: These people supported the Parliament during the civil war of 1642 a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

b

Matching: This kingdom is in and around modern day Ethiopia a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

b

Matching: This kingdom was known for converting to Christianity in 330 a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

b

Matching: a large community of Anasazi formed at this location in southern Colorado a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

b

Matching: founded a community of monks that became the model for Roman Catholic monasticism a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

b

Matching: known as the Mound Builders a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

b

Multiple Choice: A crucial part of every Muslim city or town was the covered market known as a __________. a. Mosque b. Bazaar c. Hajj d. Makkah

b

Multiple Choice: Although the majority of the world's Muslims are Sunnis, most of the people in Iraq and Iran are ________________ a. Kurds b. Shia c. Slaves d. Descendants of Ali

b

Multiple Choice: As a result of trade, the city of Changan became a. polluted b. the wealthiest city int he world c. overrun with non-Chinese d. industrialized

b

Multiple Choice: At the heart of the Chaco Canyon, this large complex contained 800 rooms housing more than 1000 people. This place included communal rooms where people assembled to perform religious rituals. a. Mesa Verde b. Pueblo Bonito c. Anasazi d. Bandolier

b

Multiple Choice: Bartolomeu Dias a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

b

Multiple Choice: Beginning in 1420, who took the lead in European exploration? a. Spain b. Portugal c. Netherlands d. England

b

Multiple Choice: Economic system in which people invested in trade and goods in order to make profits a. currency b. commercial capitalism c. money economy d. barter system

b

Multiple Choice: Ferdinand Magellan a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

b

Multiple Choice: General MY'awiyah was known for what? a. the Rashidun caliphate b. The Umayyad dynasty c. the Abbaside dynasty d. none of the above

b

Multiple Choice: Henry the Navigator a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

b

Multiple Choice: In Maya culture, the fruit of the __________ tree that was used as money in markets throughout the region a. apple b. cacao c. mango d. papaya

b

Multiple Choice: In addition to the Five Pillars, Muslims must obey the shari'ah which a. contradicts the Five Pillars in many key areas b. Forbids them to gamble, eat pork, drink alcoholic beverages, or engage in dishonest behavior c. Forbids men to shave their beards d. Commands them to have at least four wives

b

Multiple Choice: In the 16th century, where did the Spanish establish themselves a. Moluccas b. Philippines c. Vietnam d. Malaysia

b

Multiple Choice: Indios means a. Inhabitants of India b. Inhabitants of the Indies c. Inhabitants of the Americas d. None of the above

b

Multiple Choice: Islam was slow to spread in East Africa because a. Most of the cultures there lacked a written language b. Many of Islam's beliefs conflicted with traditional African beliefs and customs c. Few Muslim traders could speak Arabic d. Those who tried to convert Africans to Islam were often thought to be evil and were killed

b

Multiple Choice: It was through the Muslim world that Europeans a. were able to obtain products from Spain and Egypt b. recovered the works of Aristotle and other Greek philosophers c. developed an appreciation for painting and sculpture d. learned new farming techniques

b

Multiple Choice: Mali's famous trading city was a. Ife b. Timbuktu c. Meroe d. Kalahari

b

Multiple Choice: Muslim scholar and scientist Ibn Sina wrote a medical encyclopedia that a. Formalized many of the time's myths about human health and medicine b. was translated into Latin and was a basic textbook in Europe c. Based many of its treatments and cures on tribal rituals d. Is still considered the best medical textbook today

b

Multiple Choice: Once Genghis Khan came to power he a. was quickly assassinated by the previous Khan b. devoted himself to conquest, eventually establishing the Mongol Empire c. made an alliance with the Tang rulers d. converted to the Islamic faith

b

Multiple Choice: One which island were all of Japan's major cities located? a. Kyushu b. Honshu c. Skikoki d. Hokkaido

b

Multiple Choice: Percentage accused of being a witch that were women: a. 65% b. 75% c. 85% d. 95%

b

Multiple Choice: Storytellers who orally passed along African history a. King Ezana b. Griots c. Diviners d. Blacksmiths

b

Multiple Choice: Tasing societies of Southeast Asia included a. Vietnam and Angkor b. pagoda and Sailendra c. Srivijaya and the sultanate of Melaka d. China and India

b

Multiple Choice: The African rainforest is home to a. Nubia, which later became the independent state of Kush b. The disease-carrying insect, the tsetse fly c. The ancient civilization of Mali d. The Great Rift Valley, where mountains loom over deep canyons

b

Multiple Choice: The Carolingian Renaissance was a. an artistic movement b. a revival of learning and culture c. a theatrical troupe d. the rewriting of history by peasants

b

Multiple Choice: The Hundred Years War began when France seized this duchy: a. Normandy b. Gascony c. Flanders d. Hildegard

b

Multiple Choice: The Magna Carta was a document that a. established peace between the Normans and the French b. eventually was used to strengthen the idea that a monarch's power was limited, not absolute c. conceded power over the courts to the Roman Catholic Church d. established the first English Parliament and defined its powers to grant taxes and pass laws

b

Multiple Choice: The Romanesque style of building has: a. a lot of windows b. barrel vaulted ceilings c. let's in a lot of light d. all of the above

b

Multiple Choice: The Venetian leaders of the Fourth Crusade a. led a "children's crusade" that ended with victory b. saw an opportunity to neutralize the Byzantine Empire and diverted their army to Constantinople c. massacred the inhabitants of Cairo, including women and children d. were forced to return to Europe after half of their forces perished in storms at sea

b

Multiple Choice: The chief motivation for European expansion was: a. gold, guns, glory b. god, guns, glory c. gold, goods, guns d. goods, god, glory

b

Multiple Choice: The journey of enslaved people from Arica to the Americas became known as the a. Triangular Trade b. Middle Passage c. Commercial Capitalism d. Mercantilism

b

Multiple Choice: The part of the peasant cycle where they slaughter the excess livestock and preserve the meat happens in the season of: a. summer b. fall c. winter d. spring

b

Multiple Choice: The peasant diet was dominated by: a. fruit b. bread c. vegetables d. meat

b

Multiple Choice: The people of Ghana often traded their gold for a. iron, out of which they would fashion highly desired tools and weapons b. salt, which was used to preserve food and improve taste c. camels, so they did not have to rely on the Berbers to transport their goods d. peanuts, from which they made delicious foods

b

Multiple Choice: The revolt led by Hussein in the early Umayyad period led to a. a bloody war that lasted just seven hours b. the split of Islam into two groups, the Shia Muslims and the Sunni Muslims c. the strengthening of the Umayyad dynasty d. a total disregard of the burial place of Muhammad

b

Multiple Choice: The serfs were responsible for: a. marrying outside of the manor b. working their lord's land c. leaving the manor at will d. all of the above

b

Multiple Choice: The three major feast days of the Roman Catholic Church is: a. Eucharist, Baptism, and Marriage b. Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost c. Easter, Christmas, and Thanksgiving d. Eucharist, Christmas, and Pentecost

b

Multiple Choice: Theravada Buddhism became the religion of the masses in Southeast Asia partly because a. it was seen as the only alternative to Islam b. it tolerated local gods and pose no threat to established faiths c. it was reaction to Christianity, since Theravada Buddhist had just forced the Christian rulers out of the area d. The Theravada Buddhists roamed through he area, making converts of the middle class

b

Multiple Choice: This was the name given to this area in 1420 by Henry the Navigator who began sailing down the West African coast and discovered gold a. Gold Valley b. Gold Coast c. Gold Sea d. Gold Crescent

b

Multiple Choice: Vasco de Gama a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

b

Multiple Choice: What are Africa's four distinct climate zones? a. tropical, dry midlatitude, high latitude b. mild, desert, rain forest, savanna c. tropical wet, tropical dry, humid subtropical, desert d. steppe, desert, mediterranean, tropical dry

b

Multiple Choice: What did the "Protestant Wind" accomplish? a. it pushed fireships into the Armada b. a storm forced the Armada to crash into Scotland and Ireland c. the River Thames turned to blood d. Bloody Mary died

b

Multiple Choice: What did the Inca use to carry supplies? a. wheeled carts b. llamas c. horses d. camels

b

Multiple Choice: What is the name of the Dutch colony in the Americas? a. New York b. New Netherlands c. New Deutschland d. New Jersey

b

Multiple Choice: What was the common element among the cultures of the Mesoamerican people groups? a. Geography and Climate b. Relgion c. Isolation d. None of the above

b

Multiple Choice: Which two factors contributed to the failure of Kublai Khan's invasion of Japan in 1281? a. mountainous terrain and the dedication of the samurai b. the Kamakura shogunate and a massive typhoon that destroyed most of the invading fleet c. poor strategy on the Mongol's part, plus their unfamiliarity with the Japanese terrain d. the remarkable strategy of the shogun, coupled with the skill of the samurai

b

True or False: Enslaved people were encouraged to have children a. true b. false

b

Choose: After this took place, the monarchy and the House of Lords was abolished leaving England to be a A. monarchy or B. commonwealth. Soon thereafter, A. Cromwell or B. Charles II, eventually abolished the A. Parliament or B. Senate, making the government a military A. dictatorship or B. council. This only lasted for two years, when the Parliament reconvened and restored the English Monarchy int eh new king, A. Charles II or James II.

b, a, a, a, a

Choose: In A. France or B. England, there was a civil war between the A. the king or B. the nobles, and A. Parliament or B. the people, over power. After the death of A. Elizabeth or B. Mary, the A. Stuart or B. Tudor, dynasty took over and started with A. Charles I or B. James I.

b, a, a, a, a, b

Choose: In 1685, a new leader, A. Charles II or B. James II, became king and was a devout Catholic. Unfortunately for him, he had two A. Catholic or B. Protestant, daughters named Mary and Anne. England was okay with his leadership until he had a A. son or B. daughter, in 1688 making his oldest daughter, A. Mary or B. Anne, upset because she wouldn't take the throne. A. Mary or B. Anne, was married to the Netherland leader, A. William or Orange or B. William the Silent, and they decided to "invade" A. the Netherlands or B. England, against her father. The name of this "invasion is called the A. Divine Revolution or B. Glorious Revolution

b, b, a, a, a, a, b, b

Choose: During the continued civil war of 1642, A. Roundheads or B. Cavaliers (the supporters of the King), fought against the A. Roundheads or B. Royalists (supporters of the Parliament). The Parliament side won because of the New Model Army that was created by A. Oliver Cromwell or B. Charles II. This army was made up of A. Royalists or B. Independents. After the big win, A. Oliver Cromwell or B. Charles II, purged the Parliament of A. those who supported the king or B. Those who supported Cromwell and what was left was called the A. Rump Parliament or B. House of Commons. Shockingly, the king, A Charles I or B. Charles II was executed which horrified all of Europe

b, c, a, b, a, a, a, a

Matching: An early civilization in Peru located along the coast that built temples and stone figures a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

b.

Matching: "The way of the warrior" a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

bc

Matching: Arabs who lived in the desert rather than in towns a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

bc

Matching: The god of learning and culture in the Toltec tradition a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

bc

Matching: The language of everyday speech a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

bc

Matching: These are life, liberty, and property a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

bc

Matching: These people supported the King during the civil war of 1642 a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bc

Matching: What early nomads crossed from Asia to North America a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

bc

Matching: heavily armored cavalry soldier a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

bc

Matching: "holder of power" a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

bcd

Matching: Located in present day Afghanistan a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

bcd

Matching: This laid the foundation for a limited, or constitutional monarchy in England a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bcd

Matching: This allowed the German states to choose their religion between Catholicism, Lutheranism, and Calvinism a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bcde

Matching: Extreme Puritans who were in Cromwell's New Model Army - they were very disciplined, organized and believed they were fighting for God a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bce

Matching: At the heart of Chinese state government from the Song Dynasty to the twentieth century a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

bd

Matching: He was the controller-general of the finances of France under Louis XIV a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

bd

Matching: Secular and spiritual leader of an Islamic community a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

bd

Matching: This English monarch believed in the divine right of kings (D.R.O.K) and was the first Stuart monarch a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bd

Matching: This religious order was founded by a group of monks that were unhappy with the lack of discipline of the Benedictine monks a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

bd

Matching: a type of corn a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

bd

Matching: the heart of feudalism a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

bd

Matching: Military commander who seized power and founded a dynasty that lasted for over five hundred years in Korea a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

bde

Matching: Nightly gatherings where the witches would dance and feast a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

bde

Matching: A system of knotted strings for keeping records a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

be

Matching: Elected as Genghis Khan a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

be

Matching: He led the commonwealth in England and eventually changed it to a military dictatorship where he didn't rule for very long a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

be

Matching: Most famous section of the Great Mosque of Samarra a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

be

Matching: Peasants legally bound to the land a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

be

Matching: This were the Russian nobility Ivan the Terrible crushed a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

be

Matching: negotiated a settlement with Saladin to allow Christians access to Jerusalem a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

be

Listing: What are the Five Pillars of Islam?

belief, prayer, charity, fasting, pilgrimage (hajj)

(This is based off of a chart) Multiple Choice: Based on the information in the chart, you can best describe the Carolingian Empire as a. weak and fractured b. focused on a central city where learning and culture flourished c. expanding and well administered d. shrinking from poor administration

c

(this is based off of a photo) Multiple Choice: During Justinian's reign as emperor, he recovered much of the territory that once belonged to the Roman Empire. What is the farthest west that Justinian was able to stretch his empire? a. Gaul b. Persia c. Spain d. Palestine

c

Matching: After their rise, focus of trade shifted to Cairo a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

c

Matching: Amerigo Vespucci a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

c

Matching: Etched lines into the soil that depicted animals, humans, and geometric shapes a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

c

Matching: He led a resistance against the "Most Catholic King" in the Netherlands a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

c

Matching: Marco Polo a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

c

Matching: Sect of Buddhism a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

c

Matching: Temporary shelters of hard packed snow a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

c

Matching: The area of Mexico and Central America where ancient empires flourished a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

c

Matching: Their supreme god was Itzamna a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

c

Matching: This kingdom allowed for local leadership of farming villages a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

c

Matching: This kingdom was ruled by strong kings with no laws a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

c

Matching: a walled enclosure a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

c

Matching: buffalo was important to their survival a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

c

Matching: gave written recognition to the obligations between kings and vassals a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

c

Multiple Choice: According to Islamic belief, Muhammad is... a. The son of Allah, similar to Jesus b. An angel c. The prophet of Allah d. The reincarnation of Moses

c

Multiple Choice: According to the Quran, fair, defensive warfare is a jihad, which means a. "Forgiveness to all who oppose us b. "borrowing for the sake of Allah" c. "struggle in the way of God" d. "the divine will of Allah"

c

Multiple Choice: All of the following are eastern African port cities EXCPET a. Mogadishu b. Mombasa c. Timbuktu d. Kilwa

c

Multiple Choice: Along Teotihuacan's thoroughfare, known as __________, were temple and palaces a. Avenue of the Sun b. Avenue of the Moon c. Avenue of the Dead d. Avenue of the Gods

c

Multiple Choice: Between the Tang and Ming dynasties, Chinese literature flourished because a. the government paid writers b. the Chinese population increased c. printing was invented d. people were bored

c

Multiple Choice: City life in the medieval cities war very: a. clean, fun, and busy b. dirty, roomy, and polluted c. dirty, smelly and polluted d. non of the above

c

Multiple Choice: Deganawida and Hiawatha created an alliance of five groups called the Iroquois League which led to the a. Great Trust b. Great Wall c. Great Peace d. Great Summer

c

Multiple Choice: Followers of Mahayana saw Buddhism as a. a way of life, not a dogma that is centered on societal salvation b. a sect of pantheism, and therefore not a true religion c. a religion, not a philosophy, with the Buddha as a divine figure d. A collection of many gods, with the Buddha as the chief god

c

Multiple Choice: From the beginning of their conquest of the New World, the Spanish and Portuguese rulers were determined to a. Enslave the native people b. Conquer the native people c. Christianize the native people d. Trade with the native people

c

Multiple Choice: Islamic scholars and theologians organized Islam's moral rulers into the ______________, or code of law a. Hijrah b. Big Book c. Shari'ah d. Hajj

c

Multiple Choice: John Cabot a. Spain b. Portugal c. Italy d. England e. Netherlands

c

Multiple Choice: Missionaries helped to make the native people a. Docile b. Educated c. All of the above d. None of the above

c

Multiple Choice: Muslim rulers in India were tolerant of Hindus because a. the Hindu religion was so similar to that of Islam b. they found the Hindus to be such a peaceful people c. they realized there were simply too many Hindus to convert them all d. the Hindus were the best servants

c

Multiple Choice: Name the TWO groups of people the Spanish crown of Ferdinand and Isabella expelled out of Spain: a. Muslims and Turks b. Jews and Catholics c. Muslims and Jews d. None of these

c

Multiple Choice: Political states ruled by the Pope a. Frankish Kingdoms b. Holy Roman Empire c. Papal States d. Byzantine Empire

c

Multiple Choice: The Aztecs believed they were living in the time of the _________ sun a. first b. third c. fifth d. seventh

c

Multiple Choice: The Vikings were made part of European civilization by a. their widespread invasions of asian kingdoms b. the conquest of Scandinavia in 911 by Charlemagne c. the Frankish policy of settling them and converting them to Christianity d. their desire to sail to America

c

Multiple Choice: The exchange of plants and animals between Europe and the Americas transformed economic activity in both worlds and was known as what? a. Triangular Trade b. Middle Passage c. The Columbian Exchange d. The American Exchange

c

Multiple Choice: The long lasting Germanic state, the Kingdom of the Franks was established by a. Charlemagne b. Charles I c. Clovis d. None of the above

c

Multiple Choice: The samurai of Japan were a new class of military servants whose purpose was to a. protect the emperor and his government from all threats b. remain ever vigilant and ready to defend Japan from invaders c. protect the security and property of their employers d. maintain the law and order throughout the land, constantly traveling from village to village

c

Multiple Choice: The temple of Angkor Wat a. was destroyed by Russian invaders b. is a squat, plain building that is indicative of the simple life of the Angkor people c. Combines Indian architectural techniques with native inspiration d. was completed in less than a year, which is a testament to the skills of the builders

c

Multiple Choice: This was the center of Kush, a major trading state a. Ghana b. Ife c. Kush d. Axum

c

Multiple Choice: Under Germanic law, if a crime was committed, the crime was considered a. brainwashing b. against society c. personal d. an ordeal

c

Multiple Choice: What are the FOUR lands Philip II's "empire" consolidated: a. Netherlands, Spain, parts of England and Americas b. Netherlands, Spain, parts of Italy and South Africa c. Netherlands, Spain, parts of Italy and Americas d. None of the above

c

Multiple Choice: What was the common element among the cultures of the South American people groups? a. Geography and Climate b. Religion c. Isolation d. None of the above

c

Multiple Choice: Which group was at the top of the sisal hierarchy in Colonial Latin America? a. Mestizos b. Creole c. Peninsulares d. Mulattoes

c

Multiple Choice: Which of the following is a group of independent villages organized by clans and led by a local ruler or clan head? a. Renegade society b. Kilwa c. Stateless society d. Bantu

c

Multiple Choice: Which of the following is the largest non-polar desert on Earth? a. Gobi b. Kalahari c. Sahara d. Mojave

c

Multiple Choice: Which of the following states of Southeast Asia was influenced by China? a. Thailand b. Burma c. Vietnam d. Angkor

c

Multiple Choice: Which was the earliest African kingdoms? a. Ghana b. Songhai c. Kush d. Axum

c

Multiple Choice: Who was the first to circumnavigate the globe a. Christopher Columbus b. Vasco da Gama c. Ferdinand Magellan d. John Cabot

c

Multiple Choice: larger communities made up of extended family units a. Matrilineal b. Patrilineal c. Lineage groups d. Southwest Asia

c

Multiple Choice: name the religion that wanted to be recognized and caused the war: a. Lutheranism b. Catholic c. Calvinism d. None of these

c

Multiple Choice: owned the "fleets of the desert" a. griots b. arabs c. berbers d. morocco

c

Multiple Choice:Secular or lay rulers choosing nominees to church offices and giving them the symbols of their office is known as: a. concordat of worms b. investiture controversy c. lay investiture d. papal election

c

Story: By 750, the Muslim empire included all of the Southwest Asia, Asia to the borders of India and China, most of Spain, and all of North Africa. The Muslim government was a theocracy - that is, the caliphs were religious as well as political leaders. Laws were based on the Muslim holy book, the Quran. Muslim leaders adapted laws to local practices. Question: What type of government was the Muslim empire? a. one headed monarch b. one run by a collection of educated experts c. one run by religious leaders d. one run by an elite few

c

Matching: "Great names," the heads of Japanese noble families a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

cd

Matching: Contest where knights could show their fighting skills a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

cd

Matching: Finished piece of the Journeyman's craft a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

cd

Matching: Located below Machu Picchu a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

cd

Matching: System of government in which a ruler holds absolute power with the divine right of kings a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

cd

Matching: This monarch in England was put in place when they restored the English Monarchy after Cromwell a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

cd

Matching: journey of Muhammad and his followers to Madinah a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

cd

Matching: These kingdoms are found in West Africa (multiple) a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

cde

Matching: This English monarch took after his father with the D.R.O.K. and his rule ultimately lead to the fleeing of the Puritans to America a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

cde

Matching: Established Catholicism as the official religion in France but allowed the Huguenots to worship and enjoy public privileges a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

ce

Matching: He was Russia's absolutist monarch who brought western ideas to Russia a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

ce

Matching: Inca language a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

ce

Matching: Means "to read" in Latin a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

ce

Matching: Pilgrimage to Mecca (Makkah) a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

ce

Matching: first census in Europe since Roman times a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

ce

Matching: "city of the prophet" a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

d

Matching: Economic system based on money, rather than barter a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

d

Matching: Formed the Grand Council a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

d

Matching: Hunted deer, caribou, bear, rabbits, and beaver in the northeast part of North America a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

d

Matching: Important food to the peoples of North America a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

d

Matching: Main location of the Maya civilization, including Chichen Itza a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

d

Matching: No written language, but paintings and pottery portray warriors, prisoners, and sacrificial victims a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

d

Matching: Powerful military leader who was the true ruler of Japan a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

d

Matching: The center of their empire was in the Tula until it was moved to Chichen Itza a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

d

Matching: Their greatest leader was Topiltzin, who was also a high priest of Quetzalcoatl a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

d

Matching: This aid that Elizabeth I was the "only supreme governor" over church and state a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

d

Matching: This kingdom was once ruled by Mansa Musa a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

d

Matching: This kingdom was once ruled by Sundiata Keita a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

d

Matching: This was founded by the Hapsburgs that encompasses modern day Austria, Czech Republic and Hungary a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

d

Matching: means of deterring guilt under Germanic law a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

d

Multiple Choice: About 40% of the African continent is covered by a. the rainforest, where little farming or travel is possible b. towns and urban areas c. water, in the form of large lakes and long rivers d. the savannas, broad grasslands dotted with small trees and shrubs

d

Multiple Choice: Bushido was a strict code that a. commanded them to kill anyone whom they thought was a threat to the Khan b. was similar to the code that medieval European knights lived by c. was based on finding peaceful resolutions to conflicts, using violence strictly as a last resort d. was based on loyalty to the samurai's lord

d

Multiple Choice: Christian rites known as sacraments included a. Marriage b. Baptism c. Eucharist (communion) d. All of the above

d

Multiple Choice: During the 1500s, the Iroquois people were nearly torn apart by _______ a. drought b. plague c. politics d. warfare

d

Multiple Choice: During the High Middle Ages, Europe's population nearly doubled due to: a. Europe was settled b. Widespread food production c. Farmland technology d. All of the above

d

Multiple Choice: Established the nation of Mali a. Mansa Musa b. King Ezana c. Muhammad Ture d. Sundiata Keita

d

Multiple Choice: Eventually, most European countries except for _____ entered the war. a. Spain b. Netherlands c. France d. England

d

Multiple Choice: For Muslims, obeying Allah's will means following a. The Ten Commandments b. The Twelve Tables c. The Golden Rule d. The Five Pillars

d

Multiple Choice: In 1066, William of Normandy a. tried to invade England, but was soundly defeated by King Harold's forces b. was forced to sing the Magna Carta c. called for the death of Thomas a Becket d. invaded England, soundly defeating King Harold's forces at the Battle of Hastings

d

Multiple Choice: Islamic women are to wear a head covering known as a a. hijab b. chador c. burka d. all of the above

d

Multiple Choice: Mali but its wealth and power through the trade of a. frankincense and myrrh b. gold and grains, like sorghum c. slaves and gold d. gold and salt

d

Multiple Choice: Most African women did all of the following EXCEPT a. inherited property b. worked in the fields c. taught children their family history d. tended cattle

d

Multiple Choice: Muhammad began to meditate in the hills because a. the town of Makkah was too crowded with sinners b. the hills were a holy site that were supposed to give visions to those worthy of them c. it was along the trade route for his caravan d. he became troubled by the gap between the honestly of most Makkans and the greediness of trading elites in the city

d

Multiple Choice: Offspring of Europeans and Africans were known as a. Mestizos b. Creole c. Peninsulares d. Mulattoes

d

Multiple Choice: Queen Isabella granted to Spanish settlers in the Americas the right of landowners to use Native Americans as laborer. This is known as a. Peninsulares b. Commercial capitalism c. Columbian exchange d. Encomienda

d

Multiple Choice: Serfs are: a. free peasants b. slaves c. both of above d. none of the above

d

Multiple Choice: The 30 Years War was considered the "___________ of the _____________ wars" a. first; political b. first; religious c. last; political d. last; religious

d

Multiple Choice: The Crusades had little lasting impact on Southwest Asia, except to a. Establish Christianity in the Arab nations b. Divide the Muslims into Shia and Sunni c. Create a spirit of brotherhood between the Byzantines and the Muslims d. Breed centuries of mistrust between Muslims and Christians

d

Multiple Choice: The Gothic style of building: a. has a lot of windows b. let's in a lot of light c. has very few windows d. A & B

d

Multiple Choice: The minaret of __________ is nearly 90 feet tall with an outside staircase a. Alhambra b. Cairo c. Damascus d. Samarra

d

Multiple Choice: The official religion of Axum was a. Islam, which was founded shortly after the Axumite civilization rose to power b. Judaism, which was discovered through trade with Israel c. the worship of over a hundred gods, among whom Juba was the chief god d. Christianity, which was first brought by shipwrecked Syrians

d

Multiple Choice: The slave trade led to a. depopulation b. warefare c. destruction of African culture d. all of the above

d

Multiple Choice: This group settled the areas of Louisiana and Canada a. English b. German c. Spanish d. French

d

Multiple Choice: This is a settlement of people living in a new territory, linked with the parent country by trade and direct government control a. outpost b. encomienda c. subsidy d. colony

d

Multiple Choice: This is known for attempting to reconcile faith and reason: a. theology b. scholasticism c. liberal arts d. the papacy

d

Multiple Choice: This is the difference in value between what a nation imports and what it exports over time a. Balance of wealth b. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) c. Profit d. Balance of Trade

d

Multiple Choice: Trade that connects Europe, Africa and Asia, and the Americas a. Middle Passage b. Commercial Capitalism c. Mercantilism d. Triangular Trade

d

Multiple Choice: What are the THREE achievements of Philip II? a. Consolidates the lands inherited by his father b. Strengthens control of the monarchy c. Enforces strict Catholicism d. All of the above

d

Multiple Choice: What are the two major parts of Southeast Asia? a. the Japanese islands and the South Yellow Sea b. China and India c. Vietnam and Angkor d. The mainland down to the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula and the archipelago of present-day Indonesia and the Philippines

d

Multiple Choice: What technology was used by early European explorers? a. Caravel with triangular lateen sails b. Astrolabe c. magnetic compass d. All of the above

d

Multiple Choice: When Mayas captured other nobles, they were used as a. slaves b. indentured servants c. target practice d. human sacrifice

d

Multiple Choice: Which early American crops were called the "three sisters"? a. beans, corn, potatoes b. corn, beans, mustard c. beans, squash, potatoes d. corn, beans, squash

d

Multiple Choice: Which of the following attacked Delhi and virtually destroyed it and slaughtered 100,000 Hindus at the gates of the city? a. Mahmud of Ghazni b. Dandin c. Genghis Khan d. Timur Lenk

d

Multiple Choice: Why are there no representations of Muhammad adorning mosques? a. By the time Muslims began constructing mosques, no images of Muhammad survived, so no one know what he looked like b. the Quran forbids all art c. People did not know how to paint d. The Hadith warns against any attempt to imitate God by creating pictures of living beings

d

Multiple Choice: emperor Tang Xuanzang is remembered for a. expanded his dynasty into Russia b. Making an alliance with Laos c. Being a cruel and ruthless ruler d. His devotion to a commoner's daughter

d

Multiple Choice:What percentage of the French nobility were the Huguenots? a. 25% b. 30% c. 40% d. 50%

d

Multiple choice: They launched an invasion of Kush and conquered it a. Berbers b. Axum c. Timbuktu d. Meroe

d

Story: "Perhaps... another kind of explanation can be given for the acceptance of Arab rule by the population of the conquered countries. To most of them it did not much matter whether they were ruled by Iranians, Greeks or Arabs. Government impinged for the most part of the life of cities... City-dwellers might not care much who ruled them, provided they were secure, at peace and reasonably taxed. The people of countryside.... lived under their own chiefs and... with their own customs, and it made little difference to them who ruled the cities. For some, the replacement of Greeks and Iranians by Arabs even offered advantages. " -Albert Hourani, A History of the Arab Peoples, 1991 Question: According to the passage, why was Arab rule readily accepted by people in the countryside? a. All governments made people's lives difficult b. Arab customs were already familiar to them c. the Arab government treated people in the countryside better than people living in cities d. the Arab government focused on cities and largely left people in the countryside alone

d

Matching: This main religion in these kingdoms was Islam (multiple) a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

dce

Matching: He was a young boy when he came to the throne of France; his royal minister was Cardinal Richelieu a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

de

Matching: Replaced the old landed aristocracy as the political and economic elite of Chinese society a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

de

Matching: These religious orders were primarily focused on ridding the church of heretics a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

de

Matching: This caused from a sharp rise in prices a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

de

Matching: amount of money paid by a wrongdoers to the family of the person he had killed or injured a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

de

Matching: Built of wooden poles covered with sheets of bark and was 150 to 200 feet in length a. Cahokia b. Mesa Verde c. Igloo d. Three sisters e. Longhouses ab. Clans ac. Tepees ad. Adobe ae. Pueblo bc. Bering Strait

e

Matching: Centered in Cuzco, Peru a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: Europe's largest city after Constantinople a. Abu Bakr b. Omar Khayyam c. Fatimids d. Madinah e. Cordoba ab. Abbasids ac. Astrolabe ad. Algebra ae. Alhambra abc. Khadija bc. Bedouin bd. Caliph be. Minaret bcd. Sultan cd. Hijrah ce. Hijj

e

Matching: Flourished in present-day New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

e

Matching: Machu Picchu is an important city of this civilization that can still be visited today a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: Maya city that may have had her 100,000 inhabitants a. Hieroglyph b. Tribute c. Mesoamerica d. Yucatan peninsula e. Tikal ab. Chichen Itza ac. Tenochtitlan ad. Lake Texcoco ae. Long Count bc. Quetzalcoatl bd. Maize be. Urumamba River ce. Quechua

e

Matching: One of their chief gods was Huitzilopochtli a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

e

Matching: Pachacuti was their leader a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: She was the last Tudor monarch a. Puritans b. Roundheads c. William the Silent d. New Act of Supremacy e. Elizabeth I ab. Henry IV ac. Toleration Act of 1689 ad. "Protestant Wind" ae. Divine Right of the King bc. Cavaliers/Royalists bd. James I be. Oliver Cromwell cd. Charles II ce. Edict of Nantes de. Inflation abc. Spanish Armada abd. Rump Parliament abe. Philip II acd. House of Bourbon ace. Huguenot ade. Commonwealth bcd. English Bill of Rights bce. Independents bde. Sabbats cde. Chalres I abca. James II abce. Henry of Navarre abde. Henry of Navarre abde. Ultra Catholics acde. William of Orange bcde. Peace of Westphalia

e

Matching: Sought out heretics a. guild b. heresy c. burghers (bourgeoisie) d. money economy e. inquisition ab. relic ac. trade fairs ad. carruca ae. manor bc. vernacular bd. cistercians be. serf cd. masterpiece ce. lecture de. Dominicans abc. flying butters

e

Matching: Technological advancement of the Tang dynasty a. Samurai b. Beijing c. Theravada d. Shogun e. Gunpowder ab. Tang ac. Rajputs ad. Li Bo ae. Srivijaya bc. Bushido bd. Confucianism be. Temujin cd. Daimyo ce. Mahayana de. Scholar gentry abc. Timur Lenk bcd. Ghazna cde. Dai Viet acd. Sui ade. Jayavarman bde. Yi Song-gye

e

Matching: Their supreme god was Ometeolt a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

e

Matching: They built roadways of stone across Lake Texcoco a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

e

Matching: They developed a system of 24,800 miles of roads a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: This empire reached the height of its power during the reign of Muhammad Ture a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

e

Matching: This kingdom united urban and rural dwellers a. Kush b. Axum c. Ghana d. Mali e. Songhai

e

Matching: This was the artistic movement that emerged during the Protestant Reformation in the 1520s that reflected elongated figures to show extreme suffering or religious high a. William Shakespeare b. Frederick William the Great Elector c. El Greco d. Austria e. mannerism ab. Baroque ac. bernini ad. Mercantilism ae. St. Petersburg bc. Natural Rights bd. Jean-Baptiste Colbert be. Boyars cd. Absolutism ce. Peter the Great de. Louis XIII abc. Czar abd. Louis XIV abe. Junkers acd. Ivan IV ace. Romanov Dynasty

e

Matching: Used quipu a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: With the help of two other city-states, this civilization was able to form the Triple Alliance a. Olmec b. Teotihuacan c. Maya d. Toltec e. Aztec

e

Matching: lived in pueblos a. Inuit b. Hopewell c. Plains Indians d. Iroquois e. Anasazi

e

Matching: their sun god was Inti a. Caral b. Chavin c. Nazca d. Moche e. Inca

e

Matching: won the Battle of Hastings a. Pope Innocent III b. Benedict c. Magna Carta d. Ordeal e. William of Normandy ab. Vassal ac. Charlemagne ad. Saladin ae. Vikings bc. Knight bd. Vassalage be. Richard the Lionhearted cd. Tournament ce. Domesday Book de. Wergild abc. Fief abd. Gregory I abe. Justinian acd. Philip IV ace. Magyar

e

Short Answer: What goes from Africa to the Americas in the triangular trade?

enslaved people

Short Answer: What goes from Europe to Africa in the triangular trade?

manufactured goods and textiles

Fill in the Blank: In early African cultures, young people were expected to enter the community fully at the time of ______. This transition was marked by an initiation ceremony

puberty

Short Answer: What goes from the Americas to Europe in the triangular trade?

rum, cotton, and raw materials


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