Foundations of Western Culture14-27
In Candide, Dr Pangloss's philosophy may be best described as________
"All is for the best"
The slogan of the French Revolution was
"Liberty, Equality and Fraternity"
Scientists and Social Darwinists were alarmed by modern society's abundance of mental complaints, which medical people attributed to
"nerves" aggravated by the pace of urban living.
Social Darwinists drew on the ideas of Herbert Spencer, who suggested that
"unfit" human beings should be allowed to perish in the name of progress.
Enlightenment-era scholars used historical and geological discoveries to challenge the authority of
Biblical accounts of the flood.
Which two Catholic powers warred against each other during the Thirty Years' War?
Spain and France.
Who were the Young Turks?
A group of Turkish nationalists who rejected pan-Islamism in favor of celebrating the uniqueness of Turkish culture and took control of the government in Constantinople
The Peasants' War took place in
1525, in the Holy Roman Empire.
Between 1700 and 1750, the population in Britain, France, the Italian states, and eastern Europe grew by about
20 percent.
What percentage of Germany's national budget was devoted to military expenditures in 1910?
45 percent
In the 1840s, factories in England employed
5 percent of the workers.
By the 1780s, the approximate percentage of French men who could read and write was
50 percent.
Which of the following developments was not seen in the industrialized world of the late nineteenth century?
A decline in work intensity and work hours demanded from working people
Which of the following describes the Freikorps?
A roving paramilitary band of students and demobilized soldiers in postwar Germany
Which of the following statements is false?
In 1529, Henry VII asked for a papal dispensation to divorce his wife, Anne Boleyn.
What was the Continental System?
A prohibition against trade between Great Britain and France or France's dependent states and allies
Which of the following reforms was not introduced by Alexander II?
A shift in political power from the nobility to the peasants
In Ireland after the war,
Irish republicans lost the fight for complete independence and saw their country partitioned.
What was the "canton system"?
A system of Prussian military enrollment instituted by Frederick William I
What was mannerism?
A theatrical style of painting exhibiting distorted perspective.
What was positivism?
A theory that the careful study of facts would generate accurate laws of society
What was the Flour War?
A turbulent food riot in France that followed deregulation of the grain trade in 1774
What American dancer took Europe by storm at the turn of the century in one of the first performances of modern dance?
Isadora Duncan
Which disease swept across Europe and Asia in 1830-1832 and again in 1847-1851, devastating urban populations both times?
Cholera
The political parties that evolved from traditional Catholic centrist parties of the pre-World War II era and became influential in postwar politics were the
Christian Democrats.
Who commanded the Portuguese fleet that rounded the Cape of Good Hope and reached India?
Vasco da Gama
In the Petition of Right of 1628, Charles I promised
not to levy taxes without the consent of Parliament.
Which of the following best describes the government of the Dutch Republic?
It was a decentralized, constitutional state headed by an elected officer.
Advocates of which political theory assassinated political leaders and bombed government and commercial buildings at the end of the nineteenth century?
Anarchism
The Little Entente was formed in 1920-1921 by which countries to protect them from German and Russian aggression?
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Romania
In 1938, Hitler demanded autonomy for the Sudetenland, the German-populated border region of
Czechoslovakia.
How did the economic crisis affect the status of the peasantry?
The disparity between prosperous and poor peasants became more sharply divided.
One of the most striking differences between the musical career of Ludwig van Beethoven and that of his predecessor Franz Joseph Haydn was that
Beethoven composed significantly fewer symphonies than Haydn.
What British writer described his experiences among the poor of Paris and London, wrote investigative pieces about the unemployed in the north of England, and published an account of the Spanish Civil War?
George Orwell
Which female French writer dressed like a man, became a socialist, and wrote novels emphasizing romantic love and moral idealism?
George Sand
Who carried out the renovation of Paris?
Georges-Eugène Haussmann
The division of which of the following nations established the border between the Eastern and Western superpowers?
Germany
What country made the greatest use of submarine warfare during World War I?
Germany
Which country had the largest socialist party in Europe after 1890?
Germany
The first and second Moroccan crises were colonial disputes between which two countries?
Germany and France
Which countries comprised the Triple Alliance?
Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy
Hitler's plans included the acquisition of more land for Germany, to give Aryans more
Lebensraum.
Which European country claimed the Congo region of central Africa?
Belgium
Which country gained independence from the Dutch in 1831?
Belgium
Great Britain entered World War I on the side of France and Russia after Germany violated the neutrality of
Belgium.
Thomas Hobbes's book Leviathan argues for which type of governmental authority?
Absolutist
The development of which artistic style involved abstract paintings that ceased to reflect any element of realism?
Abstract expressionism
What Polish writer portrayed Polish exiles as martyrs and formed the Polish Legion to fight for national restoration?
Adam Mickiewicz
Which of the following was not asserted by Sigmund Freud?
Adult gender identity is entirely dependent upon anatomy.
Portuguese traders in West Africa dealt in gold and "pieces," which was their term for
African slaves
Who wrote The Stranger (1942) and The Plague (1947), novels that dissected the evils of a corrupt political order and pondered human responsibility in such situations?
Albert Camus
The protestant military commander who raised a mercenary army and offered its services to the Catholic Holy Roman Emperor was
Albrecht von Wallenstein.
Who among the following was a prime minister of the Russian Provisional Government?
Aleksandr Kerensky
The German military leaders who encouraged William II to build up the nation's naval power were inspired by the naval theorist
Alfred Thayer Mahan.
During World War II,
Allied powers were able to produce more war matériel than Axis powers, especially as the war progressed.
What was the Enlightenment attitude toward slavery?
Although some Enlightenment thinkers denounced slavery as an infringement of natural human rights, others argued that blacks were "naturally inferior."
What distinguished America's industrial development from Germany's?
America's development depended more on the actions of innovative entrepreneurs and less on state promotion of industrial efforts.
Which of the following is true regarding the Soviet Union under Stalin?
An effort to increase the birthrate witnessed the return and enforcement of traditional gender relations, marriages, and attitudes toward sex.
What was a salon?
An informal gathering in a private home, presided over by a socially prominent woman
Who discovered radioactivity in 1896?
Antoine Becquerel
In 1700, approximately how many Africans were exported from Africa to the New World through the slave trade?
Around 36,000
Who was the founder of positivist thought?
Auguste Comte
Which major power stood in the way of Italian independence and unification?
Austria
World War I began with
Austria's declaration of war against Serbia.
Which powers divided up Poland-Lithuania in 1772?
Austria, Prussia, and Russia
Which two major powers sought to expand their influence in the Balkans, raising tensions in south-central Europe?
Austria-Hungary and Russia
All of the following European powers assisted the American colonists except
Austria.
American colonial resistance to British rule was largely driven by
the imposition of new taxes.
Artists from which artistic movement created streamlined office buildings and designed functional objects for everyday use, expressing optimism about the promise of technology?
Bauhaus
German forces invaded Poland in September 1939 and quickly overwhelmed the Polish troops by employing a strategy of
Blitzkrieg.
Descendants of Dutch farmers in southern Africa were known as
Boers.
In 1812, Napoleon fought the Russian army in a gigantic battle at
Borodino.
What country responded to the crisis of the depression by implementing huge tariffs, cutting unemployment insurance benefits, and resisting pump-priming activity on the part of the government as long as possible?
Britain.
Which of the following are essential to Hegel's philosophy of history?
the thesis, the antithesis and the synthesis
What factors sent many businesses into a long-term tailspin beginning in the mid-1870s?
High start-up costs for new businesses and weakening consumer demand
Who was the main architect of the Italian unification movement?
Camillo di Cavour
Who were the Jansenists?
Catholics whose emphasis on God's grace and individual conscience resembled some aspects of Protestantism
In 1829, the duke of Wellington's government passed a law that opened up Parliament and most public offices to
Catholics.
Who published On the Origin of Species in 1859?
Charles Darwin
Which king's increasingly repressive policies sparked another revolution in France in 1830?
Charles X
Independence for Algeria was negotiated by
Charles de Gaulle.
Who starred in the film Modern Times, which presented the inhuman, regimented side of the industrial age with humor and sympathy?
Charlie Chaplin
Among the elite classes, how did attitudes toward children change?
Children were no longer considered miniature adults, and books about and for children became popular.
In 1931, Japan embarked upon an expansionist military policy by invading
China.
Which of the following best describes the trend of urbanization in the eighteenth century?
Cities grew, with an important shift in urbanization from southern Europe to northern Europe.
The major European powers met to decide the fate of post-Napoleonic Europe at the
Congress of Vienna.
Which of the following was not true of precious metals and Spanish colonization in the Americas?
Conquistadores seized gold mines in what is today New Mexico.
__________ was a political doctrine which rejected much of the Enlightenment and French revolution preferring monarchies over republics.
Conservatism
Party politics in Great Britain came to be dominated by the
Conservatives and the Liberals.
In 1961, U.S. president John F. Kennedy launched a secret invasion of which country?
Cuba
__________ wrote The Declaration of the Rights of Woman.
De Gouges
Which of the following established the fundamental principle of order and uniformity in the Universe?
Decartes
Mary Astell based her thoughts about educating women on
Descartes's principles, in which reason took priority over tradition.
Who founded the Society of Jesus?
Ignatius of Loyola.
Why, in Frankenstein, did the monster kill his creator's bride?
Dr. Frankenstein refused to create him a female companion.
Anxious about Balkan instability and Russian aggression, Austria-Hungary formed a defensive alliance with Germany in 1879 that was called the
Dual Alliance.
What British woman cofounded the Women's Social and Political Union, initiated a violent and destructive campaign against men's property, and used confrontational tactics to demonstrate for the right to vote?
Emmeline Pankhurst
"Teddy boys" were found in the 1950s in
England.
Which of the following is true of seventeenth-century colonization?
English, French, and Dutch dominated the commerce of colonies in North American and the Caribbean.
Herder argued that
universal languages represented tyranny
The alliance between Britain and France that began with a secret agreement in 1904 was known as the
Entente Cordiale.
In 1935, Mussolini asserted Italian power by invading
Ethiopia.
Which major feature of the rebellions in the Austrian Empire was a minor part of other national revolutions of 1848?
Ethnic divisions
The Treaty of Rome, in an effort to reduce tariffs among some European nations and to develop common trade policies, established the
European Economic Community (EEC).
Travelers to the Americas or to China often misinterpreted the native societies that they found, but some of them returned with the troubling lesson that
European traditions and beliefs were neither universal nor superior to all others.
Which of the following best describes the marriage and family patterns of seventeenth-century Europe?
Europeans married later and had fewer children.
Which philosophical movement became popular among the cultural elite and university students in the late 1940s?
Existentialism
Which of the following was not involved in total war?
Expanding freedoms of speech and increased democratic participation in government in order to rally public support for the war effort
Who led the first expedition to successfully circumnavigate the globe?
Ferdinand Magellan
Which of the following is true of warfare in the sixteenth century?
Financiers such as the Fugger bank influenced European politics by helping to finance costly wars.
Which two writers were prosecuted for obscenity?
Flaubert and Baudelaire
The person who organized a battlefield nursing service during the Crimean War was
Florence Nightingale.
Which European country colonized the region called Indochina?
France
Italian revolutionaries fought the armies of which two nations?
France and Austria
Which two powers allied to fight against Russia in the Crimean War?
France and Britain
In which countries were women finally given the right to vote after the war?
France and Italy
The two powers that gained the most from the agreement that ended the Thirty Years' War were
France and Sweden.
The main factor in the fall of Napoleon III was
France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War.
Classicism was originally developed to be a national style of
France.
What pioneering missionary traveled to Asia preaching in India and Japan?
Francis Xavier.
Whose writings suggested that colonized peoples had been "traumatized" by the brutal imposition of outside values and posed the question of how to decolonize one's mind and culture?
Frantz Fanon
Who wrote the novels The Trial and The Castle, which depicted modern life as a vast, impersonal machine?
Franz Kafka
Who developed the practice of scientific management by timing and studying the motions workers used to accomplish tasks?
Frederick Taylor
Which ruler established absolutist rule over Brandenburg-Prussia?
Frederick William
Napoleon worked hardest at restricting which aspect of French liberty?
Freedom of speech and of the press
Who nationalized the Suez Canal in 1956, sparking an attack by Western forces?
Gamal Abdel Nasser
Who invaded southern Italy with a volunteer army, thereby including it in Italian unification?
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Blaise Pascal's wager suggested that people would be better off assuming
God existed.
Which of the following was not a consequence of the constant fighting during the Thirty Years' War?
Government bureaucracies fell apart because there weren't enough people to staff them.
Which country decided not to join the European Economic Community?
Great Britain
Which country had achieved industrial supremacy by the early nineteenth century?
Great Britain
Which countries took the greatest interest in trade with Egypt?
Great Britain and France
Which two European states formed an alliance that successfully challenged Napoleon's domination of the European continent?
Great Britain and Russia
Historians now believe that any distinction made between a "first" and a "second" Industrial Revolution applies mainly to
Great Britain.
Revolutions occurred in 1848 in all of the following regions except
Great Britain.
What painter argued that an artist should "never permit sentiment to overthrow logic" and thus portrayed laborers at backbreaking work?
Gustave Courbet
What monarch was self-described as "the first citizen of a free people"?
Gustavus III of Sweden
Which of the following was NOT an important example of Romanticism?
Hard Times
Who postulated the existence of a new personality type—the homosexual—in the 1890s?
Havelock Ellis
Which of the following best describes Luther's beliefs?
He believed that faith, not good works, would save sinners.
What announcement concerning religion did the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, make in 1529, in defiance of the German princes?
He declared the Roman Catholic faith to be the empire's only legitimate religion.
What was Napoleon's opinion of scientific inquiry?
He did everything he could to promote French scientific inquiry, particularly when it showed practical applications.
What was Martin Luther's attitude toward the German peasants who revolted in 1525?
He initially tried to mediate for them but eventually condoned the use of violence against them.
How, in Wordsworth's poem, did the Ancyent Marinere break with nature?
He killed an albatross
Which of the following was not an element of Peter the Great's Westernization program?
He ordered that English be the language of instruction in his new trade schools, because British traders were among the most successful in western Europe.
What did Dr. Frankenstein want most of all?
He wanted to create life.
What role did Jacques-Louis David play in the French Revolution?
He was an artist who planned revolutionary festivals.
All of the following are true of Philip II except
He was uninterested in political events outside the lands over which he had direct rule.
__________ coined the terms "industrial: and industrialist.
Henri/St. Simon
Which of the following is not an example of Queen Elizabeth I's defense of English Protestantism?
Her decision to marry Philip II of Spain.
Who captured the Aztec capital, Tenochtilan, in 1519?
Hernan Cortes
Which of the following is not true about Voltaire?
His work did not achieve any great success until after his death.
Who led a resistance movement in Indochina that forced the French to relinquish their colonial control?
Ho Chi Minh
Which of the following pairs depicted social conditions in their novels?
Honoré de Balzac and Charles Dickens
What was U.S. president Herbert Hoover's initial reaction to the Great Depression?
Hoover believed that the economic problems were temporary and refused to undertake any direct governmental assistance.
Which seventeenth-century author is most associated with the idea of natural law?
Hugo Grotius.
Who led the early Swiss reform movement?
Huldrych Zwingli
Which part of the Austrian Empire negotiated a dual monarchy and relative independence?
Hungary
What impact did Napoleon's victories have in Prussia?
In order to emulate the French, Prussia instituted reforms: serfdom was abolished, and the army was made more efficient.
Which of the following statements best describes the difference between peasants in the western Europe and those in eastern Europe?
In the west, labor shortages gave peasants some leverage to negotiate for more independence, while in the east nobles reinforced their control over the peasantry.
Which of the following was not a setback faced by seventeeth-century Spain?
Indians in the colony of New Spain revolted, attacking Spanish forces stationed there.
Which of the following is not true about romantics?
Their influence was most apparent in architectural designs of the period.
What argument did Jean-Jacques Rousseau make in his book The Social Contract?
Individual moral freedom could be achieved only by learning to subject one's individual interests to the good of the community.
__________ is that art of suggesting something outrageous without saying it explicitly.
Innuendo
All of the following works were written by Martin Luther except
Institutes of the Christian Religion
What were the general trends in reading and publishing during this period?
Interest in reading among the middle classes fueled a sharp increase in publication.
What did the Berlin conference of 1884 and 1885 accomplish?
It banned the sale of alcohol and controlled the sale of arms to native peoples, and it led to the division of the African continent along lines of latitude and longitude.
Which of the following best describes Christian humanism?
It combined a love of classical learning with an emphasis on Christian piety.
What impact did the Civil Code have on women?
It curtailed women's political and economic rights, even revoking some rights they had had under the monarchy.
What was the Truman Doctrine?
It declared the American policy of countering international political crises with economic and military aid.
What did the Act of Supremacy of 1534 promulgate in England?
It made Henry VIII the head of the Church of England.
Which of the following doe NOT apply to Frankenstein?
It may be considered an important example of enlightened thought because of the emphasis on science.
What was the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas?
It settled disputes between Portugal and Spain by dividing the Atlantic world between them.
How did the French revolutionary government view slavery initially?
It was seen as an insignificant issue and a necessary evil to support the French economy.
Which of the following statements about the Second International is false?
It welcomed the participation of anarchists.
What does the term Risorgimento refer to?
Italian unification
In what country did the movement known as Fascism begin?
Italy
Why was the South African War (or Boer War) significant?
Its costs in terms of money and lives were immense and turned many in Britain against imperialism.
Which non-European country adopted Western architecture, industrialization, and military organization, enabling it to escape Western imperial domination?
Japan
Who won the first victory by a non-European nation over a European great power in the modern age?
Japan
Who was the government minister of Louis XIV who established a mercantilist economic policy?
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
Which of the following best describes how Jews fared in Europe at the turn of the century?
Jews were often prominent in cultural and economic affairs in cities but suffered discrimination and persecution elsewhere.
Which enlightened absolutist had the most success in promoting religious toleration?
Joseph II
The ruler who pushed the principle of religious toleration further than anyone was
Joseph II of Austria.
In the United States, who aroused anti-Communist hysteria and called people to testify on behalf of their political beliefs in an effort to identify and persecute Communist sympathizers?
Joseph McCarthy
Who was censured by the U.S. Senate in 1954 for his assault on freedom and democratic values?
Joseph McCarthy
Who had achieved virtually complete dictatorship in the Soviet Union by the end of the 1920s?
Joseph Stalin
The Land Freedom Army, also known as Mau Mau, achieved independence for
Kenya.
What were collective farms established by Stalin in the Soviet Union called?
Kolkhoz
The superpowers faced off, indirectly, in the early 1950s during the
Korean War.
Who led a successful independence movement in West Africa emphasizing Gandhian methods of passive resistance?
Kwame Nkrumah
Which of the following was the primary cause of rapid urban population growth?
Large-scale emigration from rural areas to cities and towns
__________ is an economic and political doctrine which emphasises free trade and constitutional guarantees of individuals rights such as freedom of speech
Liberalism
Which of the Following was NOT a humanist?
Locke
Who discovered the heating process to make food safe?
Louis Pasteur
Between 1690 and 1740, warfare resulted in all of the following outcomes except
Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes.
War between France, Prussia, and Austria began in 1792 when
Louis XVI declared war on Austria to provoke a crisis that might weaken the Legislative Assembly.
What was the role of religion during Louis XIV's rule?
Louis saw Catholicism as a pillar of his rule and sought to enforce religious conformity.
Who was the leader of the French Popular Front?
Léon Blum
The largest ethnic group in Hungary in the late 1840s was the
Magyars.
What was one of the most important disputes dividing the Estates General?
Their method of voting
Who led the Communist forces that overthrew the Chinese government in 1949?
Mao Zedong
Who among the following was not a victim of the Terror?
Marquis de Lafayette
Which of the following was NOT a utopian socialist?
Marx
Which of the following was not true of the Reformation in England?
Mary Tudor took steps to further the Reformation after she succeeded her half-brother, Edward VI, to the throne.
__________ is the idea that economic forces are at the heart of reality.
Materialism
Who wrote the book Degeneration (1892-1893), in which it was suggested that the overstimulation of modern life was the cause of individual and national deterioration?
Max Nordau
The Committee of Public Safety was dominated by
Maximilien Robespierre.
Who were the Boxers?
Members of a secret Chinese fighting society opposed to Western influences
Which of the following best characterizes the primary consumers of Dutch art?
Merchants, artisans, and shopkeepers
Who developed the essay as a literary form and emphasized the doctrine of skepticism?
Michel de Montaigne
Which of the following was one of the founders of the political theory of anarchism?
Mikhail Bakunin
Who wrote Tartuffe, a play that poked fun at religious hypocrites?
Molière
Which of the following soured civilians toward the war effort?
Mounting inflation caused by wartime shortages
The intervention of what ruler was a key part of Italian unification?
Napoleon III
The factor most responsible for causing the Crimean War was
Napoleon III's aggressive efforts to overcome the containment of France.
Who were the carbonari?
Nationalist secret societies that resisted Napoleon's rule in Italy
In what city's music and skyscrapers did Europeans find potent examples of avant-garde expression that rejected a terrifying past and boldly shaped the future?
New York
Authorities in France felt threatened by Voltaire's popularization of Sir Isaac Newton's discoveries in his Elements of the Philosophy of Newton (1738) because
Newtonianism glorified the human mind and seemed to reduce God to an abstract principle.
In Russia, who used a new political police called the Third Section to spy on potential opponents and stamp out rebelliousness?
Nicholas I
Who first published a book attacking the Ptolemaic account of the movement of the heavens and arguing that the earth revolved around the sun?
Nicolaus Copernicus.
Who became leader of the Soviet Union after Stalin's death, initiating a period of modernization and relative openness in Soviet life known as the thaw?
Nikita Khrushchev
Which of the following best characterizes the artistic movement known as Dada?
Nonsense, incongruity, and alienation
The trials that focused on holding Nazi leaders responsible for atrocities committed during the war—and have shaped notions of human rights and international law ever since—were held at
Nuremberg.
What colonial commodity became more important in the postwar era?
Oil
Who was the main architect of German unification?
Otto von Bismarck
Which of the following artists initiated the style known as cubism?
Pablo Picasso
The final meeting of the Allied leaders—during which it was decided that the Soviets would control eastern Poland, that part of eastern Germany would be given to Poland, and that Germany would be divided into four occupied zones—was held at
Potsdam
How did profits from industry and empire building affect the distinction between aristocrats and the upper middle class?
The distinction between the newly rich and the aristocratic became blurred.
Which of the following best describes a prominent theme of John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost?
Personal liberty and the human condition
Who were the "indulgents" during the Terror?
Persons who favored a moderation of the Terror
___________ conceived idea that the Medieval period was the "Dark Ages."
Petrarch
__________ were French writers and critics who forged attitudes and championed change and reform in terms of "enlightenment."
Philosophes
Which statement best describes the "republic of letters"?
Philosophes united in a cosmopolitan community that transcended national boundaries and that was dedicated to intellectual pursuits and the ideals of reason, reform, and freedom
__________ means simple, ethical piety in imitation of Christ.
Philosophy Christi
Who wrote the original version of The Marriage of Figaro?
Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais
Who coined the phrase "Property is theft"?
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
Which two eighteenth-century religious revivals among Protestants and Catholics offer evidence that religion was not declining in importance for many people?
Pietism and Jansenism
Which of the following best describes Pietism?
Pietism was a deeply emotional form of Lutheranism that urged intense Bible study.
The constitutional uprising in which country was suppressed by Tsar Nicholas I after it failed to receive support from other European powers?
Poland
The treaties that constituted the Peace of Paris (1919-1920) replaced the Habsburg Empire with three small, internally divided states:
Poland, Czechoslovakia, and the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes.
Which of the following was not a feature of the artistic movement known as romanticism?
Portraits of middle-class families
Which of the following are turn-of-the-century theories that held that there can be no enduring or fundamental social laws because of the ever-changing nature of human experience?
Pragmatism and relativism
During the War of the Austrian Succession, all of the following occurred except
Prussia and Great Britain signed a defensive alliance.
Popular education was woefully underdeveloped throughout most of eastern Europe except in
Prussia.
What was the name of the tsarist prime minister who instituted both a series of land reforms benefiting peasants and repressive measures against revolutionary organizations?
Pyotr Stolypin
What was the dominant and most influential medium for spreading entertainment and information in 1950s Europe?
Radio
Which among the following brought entertainment and information into individuals' private living spaces in the 1920s?
Radio
What was the basis of the new calendar instituted by the National Convention?
Reason and republican principles
Wordsworth's the Rime of Ancyent Marinere is a representative work of
Romanticism
Who wrote the Discourse on Method?
Rene Descartes
Which of the following was NOT a socialist?
Ricardo
Which of the following was not a consequence of famine and disease in the early seventeenth century?
Rich people were disproportionately affected.
What composer wrote a cycle of operas set in a world doomed by the pursuit of power and redeemable only through unselfish love?
Richard Wagner
__________ is the act of singling out someone for witty and merciless criticism.
Ridicule
Which of the following was not a feature of rural European life in the first half of the nineteenth century?
Rising child mortality rates
The British prime minister who helped arrange the post-Napoleonic settlement was
Robert Castlereagh.
The "republic of virtue" was
Robespierre's term for his campaign to instill republicanism in the populace via a program of political reeducation.
What was the main economic problem that created chaos in 1920s Germany?
Runaway inflation
Which country sustained the greatest number of casualties?
Russia
In which three countries did powerful agrarian conservatives frequently block political, social, and economic change?
Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary
Murderous attacks motivated by virulent anti-Semitism during the nineteenth century forced large numbers of Jews to flee
Russia.
Which of the following was NOT a Philosophe?
Salutati
Which of the following best characterizes the beliefs of Benedict Spinoza?
Science and mathematics are not irreconcilable with religion.
In what sector of employment did women predominate in the late nineteenth century?
Service
Which of the following statements is true regarding sexuality and family during the 1920s?
Sexuality was addressed more openly, and relationships between young men and women were freer; however, the dominant context for sexuality remained marriage.
Who wrote The Second Sex (1949), which argued that most women not only had become an object or "Other" in society but also passively accepted their male-defined lives?
Simone de Beauvoir
In Ireland, the agenda of those dedicated to fostering Irish culture gained political force with the founding in 1905 of
Sinn Fein.
Who wrote The Advancement of Learning?
Sir Francis Bacon
Who revised the British criminal code and introduced a municipal police force in London?
Sir Robert Peel
__________is the belief that the social owenership of property, unlike the private ownership of property would benefit sociaty as a whole
Socialism
What were the dominant trends in lower-class life during this time?
Some shopkeepers and artisans prospered during a period of rising prices and growing demand, but day laborers and peasants with insufficient land holdings were often forced to migrate to cities or wander the countryside in search of food and work.
In several eastern European countries,
Stalin imposed Communist rule and removed coalition-type governments that included liberals, socialists, and peasant party leaders.
Following World War II, how did Stalin view the West?
Stalin perceived the West to be a menace to the Soviet Union and believed that Churchill and Roosevelt had conspired to allow his country to bear the brunt of Hitler's attack as part of their anti-Communist policy.
The critical defeat of the Germans in which Russian city in 1942-1943 turned the war against the Axis powers?
Stalingrad
The failed German siege of which city was a major turning point of World War II?
Stalingrad
__________ is a liberal arts course of study including grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, politics and moral philosophy.
Studia humanitas
Which of the following was not proposed by Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points?
Substantial reparations from Germany
Many Christians were scandalized by the alliance between the French king Francis I and
Sultan Seleiman I
Which of the following causes did not inspire the Vendée rebellion?
Support for the sans-culottes
Which country lost the most territory by the terms of the Treaty of Nystad?
Sweden
Who wrote the poems "The Wasteland" and "The Hollow Men," which portrayed postwar life as petty and futile?
T. S. Eliot
What 1941 agreement condemned aggression, reaffirmed the ideal of collective security, and endorsed the right of peoples to choose their governments—all issues that would become focal points for the Allies after the war?
The Atlantic Charter
What British legislation allowed voters to cast their ballot in secret, thereby limiting the influence of landlords and employers on the votes of their workers?
The Ballot Act of 1872
In 1955, which of the following, sponsored by the Indonesian president Sukarno, began working toward a common policy among nonaligned, postcolonial nations for achieving modernization?
The Bandung Convention
Which of the following is not true about pirates in early 1700s?
The British colonial governments tolerated them because they attacked merchants of rival countries.
Why were the number and size of European trading colonies in China limited?
The Chinese government despised Europeans and allowed them to trade in only one location.
Which of the following was not an agricultural development that began in Britain and spread to other countries?
The division of farmland into smaller, more easily managed holdings
Which of the following was not true of the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth century?
The French king and the Hasburg emperor allied as Catholic monarchs against the Muslim Ottoman Empire.
What was the most important new religious order of sixteenth-century Catholic Europe?
The Jesuits
What was the new assembly established by the National Assembly and endorsed by Louis XVI in the constitution of 1791?
The Legislative Assembly
Who abolished the French monarchy?
The National Convention
What name was applied to the series of economic and social programs instituted by U.S. president Franklin Delano Roosevelt to ease the effects of the Great Depression?
The New Deal
Which Western military alliance was formed in 1949?
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization
European nationalist movements proved most successful against which power?
The Ottoman Turks
What was the name of the treaty that ended the Thirty Years' War?
The Peace of Westphalia.
Which group was responsible for the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881?
The People's Will
In what country did the United States put down an independence movement, killing more than 200,000 natives in the process?
The Philippines
Many of the ideals of the French Revolution were based on
The Roman Republic
Which event forced Charles I to call Parliament into session in 1640?
The Scottish invasion of northern England
Which nation(s) among the following provided assistance to the Spanish republicans in their fight against fascism?
The Soviet Union
Which treaty ended the Seven Years' War and established British dominance in North America?
The Treaty of Paris
In the 1920s, which country was considered as the trendsetter in economic modernization?
The United States
The second Great Awakening began in what part of the world?
The United States
Which two dynasties fought for domination of Europe in the sixteenth century?
The Valois and Habsburg dynasties
Which conflict ended with the Peace of Utrecht (1713-1714)?
The War of the Spanish Succession
Which of the following works does NOT represents Humanism?
The Wealth of Nations
Which of the following was not a consequence of the Crimean War?
The alliance between Russia and Austria was strengthened.
Which battle saw the defeat of the Czechs by the armies of the Habsburg emperor and became a symbol to the Czech desire for self-determination?
The battle of White Mountain.
Which of the following was not a decision made at the Council of Trent?
The clergy and the laity should share authority.
What was Magyarization?
The demand by Hungarian nationalists for greater Hungarian influence in Hungary
What policies and circumstances allowed Japan to escape European rule?
The embrace of Western technology, careful study of Western societies, and government support for reform and innovation
Who was the stadholder of the Dutch Republic?
The executive officer responsible for defense and for representing the state at all ceremonial occasions
Desiderius Erasmus published all of the following works except
The first Black of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women.
What does the term tabula rasa refer to in Locke's theory?
The idea that the human mind is blank at birth and that all knowledge comes from sensory experience
Which of the following was not an accomplishment of the dominant literary style of the mid-nineteenth century?
The idealization of characters and arguments for political utopias
Which of the following best describes the court of Francis I?
The largest court in Europe, it was a focus of royal power and intrigue.
Which of the following is true regarding the League of Nations?
The league attempted to replace secretive power politics with collective security.
What legal entity protected investors from personal responsibility for a business's debts?
The limited liability corporation
Which of the following did not lead to the attack on the Bastille?
The massacre by Louis XVI's troops of members of the National Assembly
Which of the following best describes the place of scientific learning in European culture in 1700?
The public flocked to scientific lectures, and many women as well as men were interested in discussing scientific discoveries.
Which of the following contributed to colonial hostility toward European imperial powers?
The refusal of Western nations to incorporate a declaration of racial equality into the League of Nations charter
Which of the following was not a feature of middle-class and upper-class women's lives in the 1830s and 1840s?
Their fashions became more practical, reflecting their expanding public role.
To whom did the word flapper refer in the 1920s?
The sexually liberated postwar version of the "new woman"
Which statement regarding famines in the 1840s is false?
The threat of starvation saw citizens overcome class differences to face food shortages together.
Which of the following was not accomplished by the Treaty of Versailles?
The treaty confirmed Germany's claims to its colonies and reincorporated Germany into the community of nations.
Sigmund Freud's approach to understanding and treating modern anxieties emphasized the role of which of the following in shaping human behavior?
The unconscious
What were the June Days?
The violent suppression of French workers by the army and the National Guard
How did World War II affect colonial peoples?
The war undermined European domination of colonial peoples, who more and more refused to show deference to their imperial rulers.
Which of the following was a consequence of the Affair of the Placards?
There was a national crackdown on religious dissent in France.
Why did industrialization advance slowly in eastern Europe?
There was limited labor mobility due to the continuing existence of serfdom, and wealthy landlords had little incentive to invest in manufacturing.
Which of the following was not a change in European sexual mores during this period?
There was much greater toleration of homosexuality.
Why were Pierre Bayle's books controversial when they appeared in the late 1600s?
They argued that even religion must be subject to human reason.
Which of the following statements regarding the Anabaptists is false?
They came primarily from the upper classes.
Which statement best expresses the goals of British liberals?
They desired free markets and a limited economic role for government.
What became of the majority of the Caribbean islands' indigenous people?
They died as a result of warfare and disease.
Which of the following is not true about the impressionists?
They increased the realism of their art in response to the growing popularity of the camera and photography.
Which of the following is true regarding the Spartacists?
They were a radical socialist faction that favored direct worker control of institutions.
How were strikes from the 1880s on different from earlier ones?
They were larger and more frequent.
Who were the sans-culottes?
They were ordinary citizens of Paris, mainly skilled artisans and their families.
Which of the following was the course advocated by B. G. Tilak?
Tilak promoted Hindu customs and preached noncompliance with British rule, inspiring violent rebellion against British imperialism.
Which of the following was not one of Columbus's objectives?
To import enslaved Africans
Which battle prevented a French invasion of Britain and was a huge defeat for the French and Spanish navies?
Trafalgar
The idea of a Holy Alliance was proposed by
Tsar Alexander.
What triggered the entry of the United States into World War I on the side of the Allies?
Unrestricted submarine warfare by Germany, which led to the sinking of American ships
All of the following provide evidence for the unpopularity of Communist rule in Russia except
Vladimir Mayakovsky's poetry.
Which battle is considered Napoleon's final defeat?
Waterloo
Who developed the uncertainty principle in physics, the theory that precise formulations of atomic behavior were impossible because scientific observation itself disturbs the natural state of atoms?
Werner Heisenberg
In Turkey, Mustafa Kemal came to power emphasizing
Western dress, the Latin alphabet, and women's rights.
In Russia, nationalism took the form of opposition to
Western ideas.
In the majority of European countries, how did the legal rights of married women change during this period?
Women's rights improved somewhat as states attempted to make marriage more appealing to women in order to counter a declining birthrate.
Who issued the Fourteen Points, a blueprint for a new international order and a nonvindictive peace settlement?
Woodrow Wilson
Widening participation in the political process in western Europe was reflected in the successful parliamentary campaign of the British Liberal politician
William Gladstone.
Who was burned at the stake as a heretic in 1536 for translating the Bible into English?
William Tyndale
What wartime leader rallied the British people through his radio-broadcasted speeches?
Winston Churchill
Which statement best describes socialism and women in the 1830s and 1840s?
Women attempted to broaden socialist politics to include women's rights and issues.
Which of the following is true regarding women during World War I?
Women were divided as to how to respond to the war, but most opted to patriotically support the war effort.
Which of the following was not a significant argument supporting the women's suffrage movement?
Women were superior to men and should take over the administration of politics and society.
The Old Believers were
a Russian religious group who refused to adopt the ways of the Byzantine Orthodox church.
The Ottoman state appeared weak to Western eyes because of
a constantly shifting political and social system that pitted levels of authority against each other.
John Milton wrote all of the following except
a defense of the divine rights of absolutist monarchies.
The Dutch Republic is best described as
a federation of self-governing provinces that thrived on maritime commerce and tolerated religious diversity.
The Schmalkaldic League was
a group of German Protestant princes and cities opposed to Emperor Charles V.
The physiocrats were
a group of economists who urged the French government to deregulate the grain trade and reform taxation.
Tadeusz Kosciuszko was all of the following during his life except
a liberator of the serfs.
The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre was
a massacre of Huguenots in Paris and the provinces by Catholic obs.
All of the following have been cited by historians as contributing to the economic recession at the beginning of the seventeenth century except
a massive population boom throughout Europe between 1550 and 1650.
The Bolshevik Revolution of November 1917 led to
a military takeover by the Bolsheviks after they failed to win elections, followed by civil war.
The Terror refers to
a program instituted by Robespierre whereby political terror was used by the Committee of Public Safety to crush dissent and reorganize French society.
All of the following have been offered as historical explanations for the increase in the slave trade except
a shift from agriculture to manufacturing in the New World.
The National Convention abolished slavery in 1794 because
a slave revolt in St. Domingue and war with Spain in the Caribbean threatened the government with the loss of France's sugar-producing colonies.
An innovation that played an important role in the success of the Portuguese voyages of exploration was the caravel, which was
a small three-masted ship.
Thomas Hobbes argued that rulers derived their power from
a social contract among citizens.
Humanists based their program to reform society on the ideals of_________
ancient Greece and Rome
Baldassare Castiglione's The Courtier describes court culture as
a synthesis of military virtues and literary and artistic cultivation.
The provisional government formed after the February revolution in France did all of the following except
abolish property taxes.
The constitution enacted by a reform-minded Polish parliament in May 1791 did all of the following except
abolish serfdom.
The effects of the depression
added to colonial grievances and discontent.
Which of the following are used by Voltaire in Candide?
all of the above; ridicule, irony, innuendo
Which of the following applies to Voltaire's depiction of El Dorado?
all people were free
The Peace of Augsburg
allowed all princes of the Holy Roman Empire, whether Catholic or Lutheran, to determine the religion of their lands and subjets, but it excluded Calvinists and other dissenting groups.
Under Ottoman rule, Christians in the Balkans were
allowed to retain their faith.
The Dutch population, near starvation after the war, was saved by
an airlift of food supplies from the United States.
The Revolution of 1905 in Russia began with
an attack on peaceful demonstrators by the tsar's troops in St. Petersburg.
Voltaire's Candide is NOT
an story in which all turns out for the best
In 1787, on the eve of the French Revolution, the French monarchy
appeared to be secure in its power and had regained its prestige after its humiliating defeat in the Seven Years' War.
Famine in the 1840s
aroused social and political unrest as citizens blamed government officials for not ensuring fair prices and merchants for reaping benefits from high prices.
The only innovative artistic style to achieve immediate commercial success around the turn of the century was
art nouveau.
Karl Marx
attacked mutualism and anarchism as emotional, wrongheaded, and unscientific.
The Table of Ranks, established by Peter the Great in 1722, was a pivotal element of his reform program because it
based noble status on service to the state, not on birth, which gave the tsar greater control over his nobles and a ready-made bureaucracy and officer corps.
In 1798, the Society of United Irishmen
began a rebellion against British occupying forces timed to coincide with a French invasion, but they were brutally repressed.
The Russian army
believed that its superior numbers would outweigh its poor training and outdated equipment.
Byronic heroes
believed they were superior to the rest of society and viewd others with distain
The American War of Independence was
born of a common Atlantic culture of Enlightenment ideas and a belief in traditional British liberties.
Concentration camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau were
both work camps established to drive the Nazi war machine and extermination camps developed specifically for the purpose of mass murder.
Louis XIV transformed the French military by doing all of the following except
building the world's strongest navy.
Stalin's primary method of industrialization was a wartime policy called
central economic planning.
The Continential System
called for a boycott on British goods in France
Totalitarianism refers to
centralized systems of government that control society and ensure conformity through a single party and police terror.
Mohandas Gandhi advocated a policy of
civil disobedience.
Which of the following was NOT associated with Romanticism?
classicism
Opera
combined drama, dance, music, and scenery and often explored themes intended to be pleasing to the aristocracy.
The Nazi-Soviet Pact
committed both states to mutual nonaggression and provided for the division of Poland.
The Fabian Society was
committed to a type of socialism based on state planning and reform rather than revolution.
The second and third partitions of Poland, which occurred in 1793 and 1795, respectively,
completely abolished Poland as an independent kingdom.
The slave trade was
condoned by nearly all Protestant and Catholic church authorities.
For politicians to achieve electoral success in postwar western Europe, it was critical that they
connect themselves to the former resistance movements and other Axis opponents.
Which of the following was NOT associated with the French Revolution?
conservatism
The political doctrine that justified the restoration of traditional rulers was
conservatism.
Tsar Alexei expanded his absolutist powers in all of the following ways except for
consulting frequently with the nobles of the Assembly of the Land.
The "cult of the offensive" urged
continuous attacks on the enemy.
European population trends between 1650 and 1750 were dominated by
continuous urban growth, a south-to-north shift, and the massive growth of London.
The enclosure movement changed the social structure of the British countryside because
cottagers and small-scale farmers lost their independence when they lost their land to big landowners, who then employed them as farm laborers and tenant farmers.
The Zollverein was a
customs union that included most German states.
Governments contributed to a longer-lasting, more severe depression by
cutting spending and enacting huge tariffs on imports.
During the Great Depression, the birthrate in many countries
declined.
On the night of August 4, 1789, the National Assembly
decreed the abolition of "the feudal regime," freeing the serfs and ending the special tax privileges of the nobles.
François-René de Chateaubriand's book Genius of Christianity
deemed the Enlightenment's focus on reason as destructive to France and to Christianity.
At the battle of Lepanto in 1571, The Spanish
defeated the Turks and won control of the western Mediterranean.
The Chartists advocated
democratic government, annual elections, secret ballots, and universal manhood suffrage.
Tsar Nicholas II believed strongly in all of the following except
equal treatment under the law for all subjects.
Soldiers in the trenches
developed close bonds with their comrades as well as with opposing troops in order to cope with the terrible conditions on the fronts.
After World War II, governments in both the East and West
developed more comprehensive welfare states.
Some reformers considered drunkenness and the popularity of blood sports such as cockfighting and bearbaiting to be indicative of the lower classes' lack of
discipline.
The revolutionary wars
disrupted international commerce and caused widespread shortages.
The victory of Parliament over Charles I in 1646 led to
division among the victors over the extent of social and religious reform.
Collectivization of agriculture in the Soviet Union
dramatically worsened the lives of the peasantry and led to the rapid decline of agricultural production.
Under King Frederick William I, Prussia became a formidable military power by
drawing on all the resources of the state to support and maintain the army.
According the Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations
each person should be "free to pursue his interests in his own way"
In the eighteenth century, the ranks of the middle class grew steadily as a result of
economic expansion.
The Parliament of 1640 did all of the following except
eliminate the Anglican prayer book.
Methodism
emphasized conservative views but fostered a sense of democratic community.
A paradox of imperialism was that
empire was supposed to bring great riches, but according to some critics, its costs exceeded its profits.
The "new paternalism" of the Napoleonic state saw
employer-employee relations regulated and workers' organizations prohibited.
All of the following resulted from the revolutions of 1848 except the
end of aristocratic dominance.
The Civil Code of 1804
ensured equal treatment under the law to all men, but limited the rights of women
The Directory government exported the Revolution by
establishing satellite "sister republics" in areas where their armies were successful.
In the early eighteenth century, Sir Robert Walpole increased the role of Parliament in the British government by
establishing the system in which the leader of the dominant parliamentary party guided legislation through the House of Commons.
The Civil Code of 1804 did all of the following except
expand workers' rights.
Women's role in the civilian workforce
expanded as women took over jobs traditionally unavailable to them in order to replace the working men sent to the front.
Under Charles XII, Sweden
expanded until its army was defeated at the battle of Poltava.
The German states
experienced an artistic and intellectual revival influenced by anti-French nationalism.
After its war with Mexico, the United States was politically polarized by the question of whether to
extend slavery into new western territories.
The Polish constitution
extended equal rights to all ethnicities and religions.
Liberalism did NOT
favor the working class
Within the Atlantic world, slave revolts were
feared but uncommon.
All of the following aided the early rise of Nazism except
financial assistance from Mussolini.
The French Revolution began with a(n)
fiscal crisis caused by a mounting deficit.
The Treaty of Nanking
forced an expanded British opium trade on the Chinese.
Conservative figures put the battlefield toll of dead and wounded for the war at no less than
forty million.
During the eighteenth century, wars were
fought by professional armies according to more cautious and calculating strategies.
Robert Owen was best known for
founding model socialist communities.
Louis XIV sought to reform the nobility and bring them under his control by
gathering them at court, where they replaced violent disputes with court ritual.
The National Assembly did not
give the king the power to veto any law he disapproved of.
Outside of England and the Dutch Republic, the essential staple of most European's diets was
grain.
After midcentury, Great Britain, France, and Russia changed their colonial policies in all of the following ways except for
granting more independence to colonized peoples.
France and Britain responded to Hitler's annexation of Czechoslovakia by
guaranteeing military support to Poland, Romania, Greece, and Turkey in the event of a Nazi invasion.
Napoleon
had a personal and highly centralized military command.
In 1895, Irish playwright Oscar Wilde was sent to prison for
having sexual affairs with young men.
All of the following are true of Gustavus Adolphus except
he fought mainly against other Protestants.
In 1918, the German military
helped create a civilian government and tricked inexperienced politicians into taking blame for defeat in the war.
Which of the following illustrates Voltaire's use of ridicule?
his treatment of Pangloss
Marx and Darwin both argued that
humans are locked in a evolutionary struggle based on competition
Eighteenth-century Spain was
in decline economically and culturally.
World War I
increased social mobility, provided new economic opportunities for women, and sparked tendencies toward social leveling.
Imperialism was usually characterized by
indirect forms of economic exploitation and political rule.
Deists were
individuals who believed in God but rejected the idea that such a being took a role in earthly affairs.
The policies of war communism did all of the following except
introduce democratic procedures into the army to increase support among workers for the Bolsheviks.
When French armies occupied an area, they
introduced the laws of the French Republic, such as the abolition of seigneurial dues.
Sweden attempted to deal with the population problem by
introducing a family allowance to ease financial burdens on parents.
Johan Gutenberg_______.
is credited with developing the movable type printing press.
Philology_________.
is the study of language in its historical context
All of the following statements about the French Popular Front are true except
it enjoyed widespread support among the upper classes, who preferred the Popular Front to fascism.
The extensive use of the intendant system was important because
it gave Louis more direct power and influence in the various regions of the state.
Women
joined demonstrations, wrote petitions and tracts, and organized political clubs.
Which of the following made Frankenstein's creation a monster?
lack of nurturing
Georges Boulanger
led an abortive coup against the Third Republic.
The religious revival that began in the late 1700s
led to an increase in global missionary activity.
Historically, Liberalism stood for
limits on state intervention in private life.
As part of the post-Napoleonic settlement, France
lost all the territory it had gained since 1790.
In the eighteenth century, the Dutch Republic
lost its status as a great power in European politics.
After his restoration, Louis XVIII
made concessions that included maintaining the Napoleonic Code.
The death rates among missionaries, adventurers, traders, and bureaucrats in Africa plummeted after medicinal quinine was developed for use in the treatment of
malaria.
The Taiping was a
mass movement in China that sought the expulsion of foreigners and land reform.
As the middle class became more literate,
men read newspapers, novels, and religious tracts in coffeehouses while women read at home.
Adam Smith rejected
mercantilism.
The Spanish and Portuguese were more tolerant of intermarriage between Europeans and native Americans than were the British or French; such tolerance led to
mestizos composing over a quarter of the population in Spanish colonies.
Leopold I's priorities as the absolutist ruler of the Austrian Hapsburg Empire and as Holy Roman Emperor were to
modernize the army and reduce the independence of various ethnic provinces.
Competitive team sports developed in relationship to
nationalism.
The new artistic and architectural style featuring an emphasis on ancient Greek and Roman styles was called
neoclassicism.
In the early eighteenth century, the "consumer revolution" occurred because
new foreign goods such as calico and tea were available in greater quantities just as a growing European population emerged with enough disposable income to buy them.
By the 1890s, many activists for women's rights had come to focus on the goal of
obtaining women's right to vote.
France's Fourth Republic collapsed in 1958 because
of its failures in the Algerian war.
In the New World, Christianity
often blended with native practices and identities.
During the war, propaganda
on both sides employed stereotypical depictions of wartime enemies to promote racial thinking.
Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary in 1764 attacked most of the claims of
organized Christianity, both Catholic and Protestant.
The Rump Parliament did all of the following except
outlaw Puritanism.
In Great Britain, the Factory Act of 1833
outlawed the employment of children under the age of nine in the textile industry.
In 1931, Spanish revolutionaries
overthrew the monarchy and set up a republic.
The Edict of Nantes was significant because it
pacified a religious minority too large to ignore-the Huguenots-by giving them legal protection.
During food riots,
participants forced the sale of grain or flour at what they believed was a "just" price.
Elites attempted to reform popular culture in all of the following ways except
participating in "charivaris," "skimmingtons," "rough music," and "shivarees."
Some of the strongest resistance to Communist attempts to change everyday life and culture came from
peasants and fervent Muslims.
Which of the following was a conclusion of Locke's An Essay on Human Understanding?
personality is the product of personal experience
The word soviets refers to
political councils organized by discontented workers during the Russian Revolution of 1905.
"Jingoism" refers to
political sloganeering with nationalistic overtones.
Rococo painting is best described as
portraits and pastoral paintings that often depicted sensually intimate scenes.
Many philosophers and social thinkers at the end of the nineteenth century rejected the century-old belief that objective study of facts would generate enduring social laws, a theory known as
positivism.
The notion that the careful study of fact about human life could generate accurate laws of society which could, in turn help the formulation of policy and legislation is__________.
positivism.
All of the following products were part of the consumer revolution of the early eighteenth century except
potatoes.
Voltaire's Letters Concerning the English Nation
praised England for its scientific learning and toleration of Protestant religious dissent.
The Protestant reformer John Calvin developed the doctrine of
predestination.
The Corn Laws
prevented the import of low-cost grain into Britain.
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
proposed organizing society around natural groupings of male artisans in workshops.
During the Great Depression,
prosperity did continue in some regions and economic sectors.
In Britain, the general strike of union miners in 1926
provoked unprecedented middle-class resistance and failed to help the unions.
Cromwell faced growing opposition in the 1650s because he
raised taxes and gave himself too much power.
Europe's primary economic interest in sub-Saharan Africa was gaining access to
raw materials.
Artists' responses to midcentury political and social issues affected the literary and artistic style known as
realism.
The American colonists
received assistance from several European powers and the support of enlightened public opinion in Europe.
After the war, women
received the right to vote in most of the west, with the exception of France and Italy.
Frederick William of Hohenzollern transformed Brandenburg-Prussia into an effective absolutist state primarily by
recruiting the aristocracy and the peasantry into a large, powerful, and well-equipped military system.
The plays of William Shakespeare
reflected the concerns of the age, namely the nature of power and the crisis of authority.
Napoleon did all of the following to achieve and maintain social control except
rely on a steady stream of mass executions.
The postwar government of Germany was a
republic.
The Vienna settlement
required the cooperation of the major powers and guaranteed recognition of smaller states.
Ferdinand VII of Spain generated resistance from many when, after being restored to the throne in 1814, he
restored the prerevolutionary nobility, church, and monarchy.
The "September massacres" occurred when
revolutionary mobs panicked at the approach of Prussian troops on Paris and massacred eleven hundred inmates of French prisons.
All of the following were features of urban life except
rising life expectancy.
The novels of Sir Walter Scott and Alessandro Manzoni both served to promote
romantic nationalism.
The dominant artistic movement of the 1830s and 1840s was
romanticism.
During the latter third of the eighteenth century, trade
saw limited growth as trade barriers and tariffs increased across most of western Europe.
The Glorious Revolution
saw the triumph of constitutionalism in England with the institution of a Bill of Rights.
In its 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that
segregated education was unconstitutional.
The poet and philosopher Margaret Cavendish attacked the use of telescopes and microscopes because
she believed it exalted masculine prowess and undermined Christian free will.
The Paris Commune was sparked by the
siege of Paris at the end of the Franco-Prussian War.
The artwork of Henri Matisse was designed to
soothe.
The artistic style known as expressionism
sought to portray the anguish of modern life and humankind's inner reality.
Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity argued that
space and time vary according to the vantage point of the observer, but the speed of light is constant.
Religious leaders during this period
spurred many to recommit to activism and attempted to fight secularization and dictatorship.
In seventeenth-century Europe, population levels
stagnated or declined in most places, particularly in central Europe.
The lycées were
state-run secondary schools for boys.
The economic recession of the seventeenth century caused the
states of northwestern Europe to become stronger and those in the south to decline.
In the years leading up to World War I, Germany was
strong economically and weak diplomatically.
Stalin's efforts at industrialization
succeeded in making the Soviet Union a leading industrial nation but also had great social costs.
The Enabling Act, passed in Germany in 1933,
suspended the constitution and virtually ended democratic government.
All of the following ere features of the growth of state authority except
taxes decreased because the Thirty Years' War had proved so lucrative for the victorious powers.
In the Leviathan Hobbes argued that
that absolute rule alone could prevent society from falling into a "state of nature" in which lifew was brutish and short
Laissez-faire refers to an economic theory
that argues that governments should leave individual enterprises free from excessive interference.
At the time of the Thirty Years' War, the Holy Roman Empire was under the rule of
the Austrian Habsburgs.
One-third of all European immigrants in the second half of the nineteenth century came from
the British Isles.
The civil war in Spain was won by
the Falangists.
In 1923, in response to the failure of Germany to make coal payments to France and Belgium,
the French and the Belgians sent troops to occupy the resource-rich Ruhr basin in Germany.
The Dutch lost ground to the French and the English in the New World because
the French and the English emphasized the establishment of settler colonies.
The United States provided massive economic aid to Europe via
the Marshall Plan.
The term Volksgemeinschaft refers to
the Nazi goal of a "people's community" of racially pure Germans.
A permanent peace was finally established between the Valois and the Habsburgs with the signing of
the Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis.
Of all the combatants in World War II, the only two countries to remain powerful in 1945 were
the United States and the Soviet Union.
The French army was at its weakest point in 1793 for all of the following reasons except
the army was relatively undermanned.
Cartel and trust both refer to
the banding together of firms in the same industry to control prices and competition.
The doctrine of predestination is best described as
the belief that God had ordained everyone to salvation or damnation before the creation of the world.
All of the following presented challenges in the decolonization process except
the continued deference of colonized peoples to the intimidating power the West still had.
The "tennis court oath" was an oath taken by
the deputies of the newly declared National Assembly that they would not disband before achieving constitutional reform.
Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws argued against
the divine right of monarchs.
The most dramatic of Tsar Alexander II's Great Reforms was
the emancipation of the serfs.
Across Europe, aristocrats often enjoyed all of the following privileges except
the exclusive right to bear arms.
The Directory was
the executive body headed by five directors that followed the Terror.
Some scientists in the eighteenth century changed their views about women's biology, conceding that
the female egg, and not just the male sperm, contained vital elements for creation of a fetus, a doctrine known as ovism.
All of the following threatened native Americans in the English colonies except
the formation of alliances among native tribes.
Bismarck's Kulturkampf exemplified
the hostility exhibited by some nationalists toward religious loyalties.
All of the following were factors that contributed to the French fiscal crisis except
the inability of the government to secure loans from private sources.
The Jesuits were
the major Catholic teaching order and missionary network.
Liberal economics was based on which combination of concepts?
the market and private property
In general, Tsar Alexei promoted
the opening of Russia to Western influences.
Which of the following does NOT apply to Voltaire's depiction of El Dorado?
the people of the city valued gold
The Thermidorian Reaction
the period in which the Convention turned against Robespierre and his regime of Terror.
America was urged to "take up the white man's burden" by
the poet Rudyard Kipling.
Christian Dior's "new look" of the 1940s emphasized
the restoration of the nineteenth-century female silhouette.
All of the following were reforms of the French National Assembly that sparked the June Days of 1848 except
the restriction of voting rights.
The months before the Estates General met were characterized by all of the following except
the swearing of the "tennis court oath" by members of the Third Estate.
Mitteleuropa refers to
the territorial aspirations of German statesmen who envisioned central Europe, the Balkans, and Turkey under their control.
Secularization could best be described as
the trend toward making religion a matter of private conscience rather than public policy.
The war went worse for Russia primarily because
the tsar failed to unite the bureaucracy and his people in a single-minded war effort.
Freemasonry was marked by all of the following except
the unwillingness of the aristocracy to join.
The phrase "best circles" refers to
the upper level of society composed of aristocrats and the wealthiest or best educated.
The Italian government's policy of trasformismo involved
the use of bribes, public works programs, and other benefits to localities to influence members of the Italian parliament.
The art of Maria Sybilla Merian provides a good example of
the way in which art and science could intersect.
The principal challenge faced by religiously motivated reformerswas that
the working classes seemed to be uninterested in religious practice.
The Dreyfus Affair involved
the wrongful conviction of a Jewish officer in the French military for treason.
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon defined property as
theft.
Although François Boucher's paintings and George Frideric Handel's oratorios are distinctly different cultural art forms, one common aspect that links the two men is that
they appealed to the middle class through their emphasis on emotion.
The economic crisis affected women in all of the following ways except
they married earlier in hopes of escaping the effects of the economic recession.
The French Academy of Science refused to admit Marie Curie as a member because
they refused to believe that a woman was capable of doing the work credited to her.
The Ottomans pursued state consolidation
through a combination of settlement and military control.
Poland's rebellion against Russian rule in 1863 was put down
through military force and promises of reform to the peasantry.
The Indian Rebellion of 1857 was the result of the British
tightening their control of India and eroding local Indian autonomy.
The Royal Society of London's mission was
to "scrutinize the whole of Nature."
Napoleon's basic approach to war was
to concentrate his forces and crush his enemies in a lightning campaign characterized by a single decisive battle and relentless pursuit.
England's Catholic church hierarchy had William Tyndale burned at the stake after he
translated the Bible into English.
Henry IV did all of the following except
undermine the financial stability of the monarchy through overspending.
Relative to their fellow subjects back in England, American colonists were
undertaxed.
Jeremy Bentham's name for his brand of liberalism was
utilitarianism.
The Treaty of Amiens in 1802
was a short-lived truce between Napoleon and Great Britain.
The appeasement of Germany in 1938
was based on the democratic powers' belief that Germany had legitimate grievances.
The Provisional Government of Russia (1917)
was composed of moderate aristocrats and middle-class politicians.
Poland-Lithuania
was weakened by the power of the nobles and twenty years of civil war and invasion.
One likely reason that Scotland, parts of Switzerland, and the Scandinavian countries more successfully promoted education and literacy than countries such as France is that they
were all Protestant countries that emphasized the importance of personally reading the Bible, which Catholic countries such as France did not do.
In the sixteenth century, magic and science
were closely linked, and many leading scientists also dabbled in alchemy and astrology.
Nineteenth-century women
were generally encouraged to participate in individual sports and exercise to better prepare them for the rigors of motherhood.
In general, the colonies in British North America
were left to themselves and developed their own representative governments.
Enlightenment ideas and absolutism
were often combined by "enlightened despots" who introduced Enlightenment reforms while maintaining their absolutist powers.
The reforms introduced by enlightened absolutists
were often successfully resisted by groups such as the nobility that felt threatened by innovation.
The Jews in Poland-Lithuania
were persecuted during the Deluge, and tens of thousands were killed.
Under Louis XIV, the arts
were treated as a branch of government and were used to glorify the king.
During the Great Depression, gender relations
were unsettled because men were often unable to find work to support their families and low-paying jobs for women became families' main source of income.
Hitler first became chancellor of Germany in 1933
when the German president, at the urging of social elites, offered Hitler the position.
The National Assembly granted the right to vote to
white men who possessed a certain amount of wealth.
Olympe de Gouges, in her Declaration of the Rights of Women of 1791, argued that
women should have new political and social rights as well as new social and economic responsibilities.
The phrase "new women" referred to
women who took advantage of modern trends to live more independent, public, and assertive lives than had been traditionally available to them.
The majority of service workers in the emerging white-collar sector were
women.
In his Persian Letters (1721), Montesquieu struck a chord with some European women when he had the wife of one of his Persian travelers
write a suicide note to her husband in which she proclaimed that her mind had always been free and independent.
The term nihilist was applied to
young nobles who repudiated traditional behavior and values.
Who produced a series of novels set in industrializing France that explored social degeneration?
Émile Zola