Western Civilization Since 1648 (HIST-1600) Ch. 15
Under the reign of Peter the Great, Russian colonization efforts were directed toward:
Central Asia.
Frederick William I made Prussia strong by:
Exerting prudent financial leadership and building a large army.
Ottoman power in southeastern Europe declined rapidly after the Ottomans:
Failed to capture the Habsburg capital of Vienna.
In his "Two Treatises of Government," John Locke argued that:
Legitimate government authority is conditional and contractual.
The balance of power in eastern Europe was realigned in 1721 with the Peace of:
Nystad.
Slaves working on sugar plantations in the French Caribbean accounted for the livelihoods of approximately ______ of the French population.
1/25th
The theory of absolutism became popular in the seventeenth century in response to:
A desire for order after the chaos and war of the previous century.
To achieve the goal of absolutist rule, ______ was an absolute necessity.
A strong, centralized, loyal bureaucracy
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, absolutism was a political theory that:
Allowed rulers to govern by divine right and according to their own will.
Peter the Great's authority to rule Russia was threatened during the early part of his reign by:
An attempt to depose him and place his half sister on the throne.
James II of England angered his critics and set off a national crisis when he:
And his second wife, Mary of Modena, had a son: a Catholic heir to the throne.
The new diplomatic goal that emerged in western and central Europe in the mid-seventeenth century was:
Balance of power politics.
Peter the Great's victory against Sweden in the Great Northern War resulted in Russian ports on the:
Baltic Sea, which facilitated a lucrative grain trade.
In England, Charles II triggered a crisis not unlike that produced by his father's rule when he:
Began modeling his kingship on the absolutism of Louis XIV.
Louis XIV recruited members of the ______ to work as royal intendants.
Bourgeoisie
After the collapse of the Ottoman empire, Austria's main rival in central Europe was:
Brandenburg-Prussia.
England's Glorious Revolution created the necessary climate to increase the power of the:
Commercial classes.
Louis XIV used the palace of Versailles to:
Demonstrate the grandeur of his rule and to control the French nobility.
The outcomes of the War of the Spanish Succession made clear that military dominance in Europe lay with the:
English Navy.
T/F: All governments in Europe strove to be absolutist over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
False.
T/F: French colonies in North America were largely self-sustaining.
False.
T/F: French intendants usually served in the region in which they were born.
False.
T/F: The "Junkers" were a group of enserfed peasants in Prussia.
False.
T/F: The Glorious Revolution occurred completely without bloodshed.
False.
T/F: The Rurik dynasty ruled Russia after the death of Ivan the Terrible.
False.
T/F: The degree of social mobility in all absolutist states was extremely low.
False.
T/F: While Louis XIV persecuted Huguenots in his realm mercilessly, all Catholics enjoyed similar rights and freedoms.
False.
In general, the centralization of state power in eastern Europe came at the expense of the:
Freedom of peasants.
The Treaty of Utrecht (1713) altered the balance of power in Europe by:
Giving Great Britain trading rights and desirable French territory in the New World.
The government of France under Louis XIV would be best described as:
Highly centralized, with everyone being appointed by and reporting to the king.
In general, the religious policies of Louis XIV aimed to:
Impose religious unity upon all French people.
The court culture at Versailles was ordered by:
Incredibly detailed rules of etiquette.
Louis XIV endeavored to control potential rebellions among the noble class by:
Insisting that all nobles spend part of the year with Louis at Versailles.
During the Glorious Revolution, violence broke out to protest:
James II's support of Catholicism and his absolutist policies.
The royal finance minister who increased revenues in France during the reign of Louis XIV was:
Jean-Baptiste Colbert.
The Russian Table of Ranks reordered the class system in Russia to be, from lowest to highest:
Landlord, administrative, military.
Russian peasants were:
Legally the property of their landlords.
The War of the Spanish Succession broke out when:
Louis XIV's grandson succeeded to the Spanish throne.
The most important opponents of royal absolutism were:
Nobles.
The real political authority in the Dutch Republic lay with:
Powerful merchants.
The Act of Toleration of 1689 granted:
Protestant dissenters the right to worship freely in England.
Louis XIV persecuted some Catholic sects in France because some, like the:
Quietists and Jansenists, diminished the role of priests as mediators of the faith.
Louis XIV's finance minister, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, was a confirmed mercantilist who believed that France's wealth would increase if it:
Reduced its imports and increased its exports.
Absolute monarchs developed all of the following institutions to enhance their power EXCEPT:
Representative legislative bodies.
The governmental system used by the United Provinces in the Netherlands throughout the seventeenth century was a(n):
Republic.
Which European government developed into an autocracy in the early modern period?
Russia.
After securing a foothold on the Gulf of Finland, Peter the Great built a capital there named:
Saint Petersburg.
The goal of Peter the Great's foreign policy was to:
Secure year-round ports for Russia.
The purpose of reorganizing class structure in Russia by creating the Table of Ranks was to:
Strengthen the war machine in Russia by luring nobles into military service.
Under the reign of Louis XIV, French colonies dominated the:
Sugar trade.
The most profitable French colonies were located in:
The Caribbean.
Absolutism was difficult for the Habsburgs to achieve in the Holy Roman Empire because:
The Holy Roman Empire was made up of many individual states that ruled in their own interests.
The balance of power in central and eastern Europe was reshaped at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries because of the loss of power of:
The Ottoman Empire.
In general, the policies of Peter the Great of Russia included:
The introduction of Western ideas and customs.
T/F: "Tories" was a nickname for the supporters of King Charles II.
True.
T/F: In spite of Jean-Baptiste Colbert's efforts, Louis XIV left France's finances in ruins.
True.
T/F: In the late seventeenth century, European wars almost always had a colonial aspect.
True.
T/F: The Estates-General in France never met during the reign of Louis XIV.
True.
T/F: The League of Augsburg united Holland, England, Spain, Sweden, Bavaria, Saxony, the Rhine, the Palatinate, and the Austrian Habsburgs against Louis XIV.
True.
T/F: The absolute monarchs ruled only with the consent of their nobles and people.
True.
T/F: Unlike many places in Europe during the seventeenth century, there was a high degree of religious tolerance in the Dutch Republic.
True.
Louis XIV asserted his authority over the Marquis of Canillac and other nobles who acted independently by:
Trying and convicting them in courts of law.
The newly efficient taxation systems in many European realms of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries paid for many expenses, but by far the most expensive expenditure made by states was:
War.
The wars of Louis XIV:
Were an enormous drain on the treasury of France.
The popular name for those who opposed Charles II's move toward absolutism was:
Whigs.