AP European History Final Study Guide

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In his Essay on the Principle of Population, Malthus argued that

"prudential restraint" was the only hope of warding off "positive checks" to population growth.

When Henry II died in 1559, about ____________ percent of France's population was Calvanist.

10

The last official execution for witchcraft in Europe was in the Holy Roman Empire in

1775.

The British Parliament abolished the slave trade in 1807, but only freed all slaves in British territories in what year?

1833

Of the 600,000 soldiers that Napoleon took with him to invade Russia ____________ returned.

30,000

Scholars estimate the number of people executed for witchcraft during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to be upwards of

40,000.

The number of people killed during the Reign of Terror was

40,000.

An estimated ___________ of Europeans who sailed for the Americas during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries died on the voyage.

50 percent

Since steam engine technology grew more expensive, what industries were largely invested?

A and B

The belief in unrestricted private enterprise with no government interference in the economy was promoted by

Adam Smith.

Which sentence does NOT describe the working conditions in the early cotton factories?

Although not forced by law, orphan and children workers willingly worked for their "masters" under their apprenticeship to earn money for food and clothes.

How did the Enlightenment affect attitudes toward popular culture?

As the educated public adopted the Enlightenment's critical worldview, they increasingly saw popular culture as superstitious and vulgar.

In France, the group that met in 1787 to discuss new taxes was the

Assembly of Notables.

What period caused Europe to experience a political and social upheaval that resulted in a halt of economic development

B. and C.

The period when the papacy resided in Avignon is known as the

Babylonian Captivity.

Who led the way in the 1830's and 1840's in the development of railroads and travel networks?

Belgium

____________'s state-owned railroads stimulated the development of heavy industry and made the country an early industrial leader.

Belgium

Who were the three leading countries that mastered the industrial technologies that were first developed by Britain?

Belgium, France, and the German states

Which of the following characterizes eighteenth-century colonial trade in Europe?

Britain's mercantilist system achieved remarkable success as trade with its colonies grew substantially.

The beginning of European exploration and expansion was marked by the 1415 conquest of

Ceuta.

The English civil war (1642-1649) pitted

Charles I against Parliament.

The largest buyer of silver in the sixteenth and seventeenth century was

China.

Erasmus advocated

Christian education for moral and intellectual improvement.

In 1851, Great Britain hosted the Great Exhibition in ____________, made entirely of glass and iron.

Crystal Palace.

Who proposed the theory of the iron law of wages?

David Ricardo

In August 27, 1789, the National Assembly issued a statement of principles known as the

Declaration of the Rights of Man.

___________ was the first European to round the Cape of Good Hope.

Diaz

Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Woman was intended as a reply to

Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France.

Under the terms of the Peace of Westphalia,

European conflicts over religious faith ended.

The Medici family claimed their power in the city of

Florence.

One of the root sources of Florentine prosperity was

Florentine merchants' control of papal banking.

In 1778, rebels in the American War of Independence made a formal alliance with

France.

The doctrine of socialism began in

France.

One of the first "Renaissance men" was

Francesco Petrarch.

The Inca Empire was conquered by

Francisco Pizarro.

The true establishment of Prussian absolutism came under the rule of

Frederick William I.

Which of the following occurred first?

French voters approve Napoleon's constitution.

Who was a German journalist and thinker who was a strong proponent of government support for industrialization, focusing on railroad building and the tariff?

Friedrich List

____________ was a German journalist and thinker who was a strong proponent of government support for industrialization. He believed industrialization was essential to prevent the German states from falling behind the rest of the world.

Friedrich List

The plague was probably brought into Europe by

Genoese ships from the Crimea.

The three most numerous ethnic groups in the Austrian Empire were

Germans, Hungarians, and Czechs.

Printing with movable type was developed in the mid-fifteenth century in

Germany.

In 1851, London hosted an industrial fair called the

Great Exhibition.

In 1804, the French colony of Saint-Domingue was renamed

Haiti.

Under King Henry VIII, the head of the Church of England was

Henry VIII.

The Aztec Empire was conquered by

Hernando Cortés.

How did the problem of food shortages change in the eighteenth century?

Increased road and canal building permitted food to be more easily transported to regions with local crop failure and famine.

Where were many urban workers in Great Britain from?

Ireland

In the 12th-13th century, much if Europe saw a trend toward diversity and pluralism except for

Ireland.

In Great Britain, the majority of the working class population consisted of

Irish.

Why did European slave traders in Africa adopt the "shore method" of trading in the eighteenth century?

It permitted Europeans to move easily along the coast, obtaining slaves at various slave markets and then departing quickly for the Americas.

Which of the following statements about Florence at the time of the Renaissance is false?

Its major industry was wool production.

Elizabeth I of England was succeeded by

James I.

One of the century's most influential works on child rearing was Emile, or On Education by

Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

An important factor in the strengthening of French absolutism was

King Louis XIV's refusal to call the Estates General into session.

The followers of the English theologian-reformer Wyclif were called

Lollards

In the Revolution of 1848 in France

Louis Philippe quickly abdicated.

____________ ruled from 1643 to 1715, the longest reign in European history.

Louis XIV

During Louis XIV's reign, French explorers in North America established

Louisiana.

Which of the following resulted from Machiavelli's nailing his list of ninety-five theses to the door of the Cast,e Church at Wittenberg?

Luther became famous overnight, and German officials began official proceedings against him.

Which of the following is true of Lutheranism?

Lutheranism taught salvation through faith alone, not good works.

According to the authors of the textbook, the most important literary work of the Renaissance is

Machiavelli's The Prince.

In the fifteenth century, the largest commercial center of the Indian Ocean was

Malaka.

The author of Defensor Pacis and proponent of the idea that authority in the Christian church rested in a general council rather than in the papacy was

Marsiglio of Padua.

During the Reign of Terror, the dominant person on the Committee of Public Safety was

Maximilien Robespierre.

The Enlightenment thinker who argued in favor of separating and sharing political power was

Montesquieu.

Robespierre was the co-leader of the

Mountain.

Madame du Châtelet translated the work of ____________ into French.

Newton

The first great departure from the Aristotelian view of the universe came from

Nicolaus Copernicus.

The title of Thomas More's classic work, Utopia, means

Nowhere.

Who allowed the British state to adopt aggressive tariffs on imported goods to protect its industries?

Oliver Cromwell

On what grounds might a supporter of Clive (see Document 17-5) and an opponent of Equiano (see Document 17-4) have defended slavery?

On the grounds that the increased power of England justified the suffering of African slaves

All of the following were powerful Renaissance Italian city-states except

Palermo.

In 1783, American independence was recognized in the Treaty of

Paris.

During the September Massacres,

Parisian crowds slaughtered prison inmates.

The division of Christianity in Germany into Catholic and Lutheran states was recognized by the

Peace of Augsburg.

All of the following wrote important works of vernacular literature except

Peter Abelard.

Catherine the Great was married at age fifteen to

Peter III.

The European kingdom that took the lead in overseas exploration was

Portugal.

Alvise da Ca' da Mosto's description of West Africa provides evidence of

Portuguese participation in West African trade networks.

The two men generally given credit for creating the modern scientific method were Francis Bacon and

René Descartes.

"George Stephenson acquired much glory for his locomotive named ____________. . ."

Rocket

Cossaks were

Russian peasants who had fled their lords.

In 1765, the British imposed new taxes on the American colonies to help pay for the

Seven Years' War.

The collapse of the ____________ gave a boost to Indian Ocean trade.

Silk Road

Ignatius Loyola founded the

Society of Jesus.

In the mid-sixteenth century, the largest concentration of slaves from Africa in Europe was found in

Spain and Portugal.

The concept that blood could be either "Christian" or "Jewish" was developed by officials in the

Spanish Inquisition.

At the Battle of Poltava, Peter the Great defeated

Sweden.

Who sponsored prizes for innovations in machinery and agriculture and played a pivotal part in the circulation of "useful knowledge"?

The British Royal Society of Arts

Which is not true of Joan of Arc?

The French king intervened to prevent her execution.

As literacy expanded among the common people, what was a staple of popular literature other than the Bible?

The chapbook containing Bible stories, prayers, and stories about the lives of the saints

Which of the following describes the treatment of children in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries?

The disciplining of children was often severe in order to conquer the child's will.

The growth in eighteenth-century consumerism in clothing was encouraged by what two factors?

The growth of fashion merchants who dictated changing styles and the declining production costs based on female labor

Which of the following describes the enclosure movement of the eighteenth century?

The land was divided into plots bounded by fences to farm more effectively.

From 1701 to 1763, what was at stake in the wars between Great Britain and France?

The position as Europe's leading maritime power, with the ability to claim profits from Europe's overseas expansion.

What caused the pattern of late marriage in early modern Europe?

The tendency of couples to wait to marry until they were economically independent

What was the status of Jews in European colonies in the eighteenth century?

They faced political and economic forms of discrimination but were considered to be white Europeans and thus could not be enslaved.

What place did prostitutes generally hold among the common people in towns?

They were accepted members of the community of the laboring poor.

Which of the following contemporaries believed that due to the major growth in population, women were to be married later in order to prevent future diseases?

Thomas Malthus

Beginning in 1545, the papacy created the Council of ____________ to help plan the Counter-Reformation.

Trent

The __________ was a new religious order for women that emerged in the sixteenth century.

Ursuline Order

Before the Portuguese gained control of the slice trade in the Indian Ocean, the trade had been controlled by the

Venetians.

The political and cultural center of the Hapsburg Empire was

Vienna.

According to Adam Smith (see Document 17-3), under what conditions did the "natural price" of a commodity more or less equal its "market price"?

When supply more or less equaled demand

Which of the following were responsible for calling the early factories "satanic mills", as well as protesting against the hard life of the London poor?

William Blake

All of the following individuals were part of the Romantic movement except

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

Jan Hus was

a Bohemian church reformer.

The Jaquerie was

a French peasant revolt.

Martin Luther wrote his letter entitled "Ninety-Five Theses" to Archbishop Albert in response to

a campaign to sell indulgences.

A sworn association of free men in a city was called

a commune.

Out of the Revolution of 1848 there emerged in France

a conservative government led by an emperor.

Generally, the plague disaster of the fourteenth century resulted in all but which of the following for European society?

a decline in flagellantism

The best description of Machiavelli's The Prince is that it is

a description of how government should be organized and implemented.

The Italian Renaissance had as one of its central component ideals

a glorification of individualism.

The Enlightenment reached its highest development in France for all these reasons except

a large portion of the French nobility embraced many Enlightenment concepts.

Mercantilist theory postulated that

a nation's international power was based on wealth, especially its gold supply.

The Time of Troubles refers to

a royal succession crisis and civil war in Russia at the beginning of the seventeenth century.

The key feature of Newton's most important work was the law of

action and reaction.

The "labor aristocracy" of the working class

adopted distinctive values that included strict personal behavior.

Britain's parliamentary system taxed

aggressively.

In his Essay Concerning Human Understanding, John Locke claimed that

all human development is determined by experience.

What resulted from the Factory Acts?

all of the above

By the late fourteenth century, guilds

all of the above.

Many countries made efforts to adopt the methods of production that were successful in Britain. However, some countries did not prosper in the transition to an industrial economy. These failing regions include

all of the above.

The invention of moveable-type printing

all of the above.

A comparison of the lives of seventeenth-century western and eastern European peasants reveals

all of these.

Between 1792 and 1794, the National Assembly of France passed laws on its colonies that

all of these.

For the common person in seventeenth-century France, critical reason was enhanced by the emergence of

all of these.

For the common person in the seventeenth-century France, critical reason was enhanced by the emergence of

all of these.

German rulers were attracted to Luther's ideas because

all of these.

In 1793, France was at war with

all of these.

In Europe, marriages in the later nineteenth century

all of these.

In the political sphere, the Renaissance Italian powers

all of these.

Peter the Great's "westernization" of Russia included the requirement that nobles

all of these.

Spain's economy in the sixteenth century suffered from

all of these.

The growth of the international scientific community in the seventeenth century was spurred on by

all of these.

The invention of the steam engine affected urbanization by

allowing the building of factories away from water, thus contributing to urbanization.

Between 1815 and 1850, most people who believed in nationalism

also favored democratic republicanism.

The most important lesson Louis XIV learned from the Fronde was that the

alternative to anarchy was absolute monarchy.

The Pugachev Rebellion of 1773, was

an insurrection of the serfs against Catherine the Great.

According to Frederick William I, a nation's power was best served by having a strong

army.

Under Ivan the Terrible,

artisans were bound to their towns so that they could be heavily taxed.

Spanish viceroys presided over the ____________, a judicial advisory council.

audiencia

To undercut the power that the aristocracy exercised through its control of Parliament, most English Tudor kings

avoided expensive wars.

What is class-consciousness?

awareness of belonging to a distinct social and economic class whose interests might conflict with those of other classes

Most people in the fourteenth century believed that the Black Death was caused by

bad air.

All of the following food crops were introduced from the Americas to Europe except

bananas.

Galileo's law of inertia stated that

being at rest was not a natural state for an object.

Madame du Châtelet

believed women's limited contribution to science was the result of unequal education.

Higher wages and a more abundant amount of food meant that an ordinary English family

both A and C

John Cockerill did which of the following?

built a large industrial enterprise, which produced machinery, steam engines, and railway locomotives

The religious revival movement known as Pietism

called for a warm, emotional religion that everyone could experience.

In the fifteenth century, the Portuguese developed a new kind of ship, the

caravel.

According to its editor, the fundamental goal of the Encyclopedia was to

change the general way of thinking.

Child rearing in the later nineteenth century Europe saw

children and adolescents receive more parental attention than in past generations.

Edwin Chadwick believed that

cleaning up the urban environment would reduce poverty.

In 1789, economic conditions in France included all of the following except

collapsing prices for food.

The purpose of the Holy Alliance, begin in 1815, was to

combat liberal and nationalist revolutions against established authorities.

According to Luther, salvation

comes by faith alone.

The Dutch East India Company represents the

commercial imperialism of the Dutch.

In 1649, after the execution of Charles I, England was declared a

commonwealth.

Frederick the Great

condemned serfdom in general but still accepted it in practice.

In the early days, child labor was

considered desirable for most parents because it helped to pay for poor families.

By the end of his life, Columbus

continued to believe he had discovered islands off the coast of Asia.

The Protestant Reformation in Germany

contributed to its continued fragmentation.

In Central and Eastern Europe, Romantic writers

created new literary cultures based on local languages and peasant folk tales.

The central feature of Columbus's character was his

deep religious convictions.

In late eighteenth-century France, the third estate

did not have the right to wear swords.

The Renaissance Italians' skill in diplomacy

did not lead to the formation of a consolidated federal system.

Edward Jenner received financial prizes from the British government for

discovering that cowpox could be used to vaccinate against smallpox.

The greatest killer of the Native American population was

diseases such as smallpox.

Pierre Bayle is famous for his

doubts about the attainability of certainty.

Across Europe, the favorite leisure-time activity of working people was

drinking alcohol.

The participation of the laboring poor in the French Revolution was motivated primarily by their

economic distress.

According to the Dutch humanist Erasmus, the key to moral improvement was

education.

What was the safety valve for European overpopulation?

emigration

In response to the German Peasant Revolts of 1524-1525, Luther

encouraged the princes to crush revolts.

After he was defeated at Waterloo in 1815, Napoleon was

exiled to St. Helena.

Historians today consider the success of absolutism under Louis XIV to be due mostly to his

expansion and professionalization of the army.

The causes of the Scientific Revolution include all of the following except the

extensive support and funding provided by European governments.

An encomienda granted by the Spanish king allowed Spaniards to

extract tribute and forced labor from the native people on a particular piece of land.

In the fifteenth century, ____________ powers dominated the Italian peninsula.

five

Abundant food and high wages meant all of the following except

food prices were rising.

Alvise da Ca' da Mosto's description of West Africa offers insight into the

forces of supply and demand that fueled the West African slave trade.

The reform of the Corn Laws ushered in an era of

free trade.

By the seventeenth century, nobles in eastern Europe had

gained unchallenged control over the peasants who worked their lands.

As a result of Pugachev's rebellion, Catherine II

gave the nobles more power over their serfs.

In response to peasant disorders, on August 4, 1789, the National Assembly voted to do all of the following except

grant peasants the rights to lands seized from nobles.

The Edict of Nantes

granted the Huguenots the right to public worship in 150 towns.

In seventeenth-and eighteenth-century Europe, guild masters

guarded their guild privileges jealously.

Metternich's hatred of liberalism was based on his belief that liberalism

had been responsible for a generation of war.

During the seventeenth century, the scientific revolution

had few practical applications.

By 1740, under the rule of Frederick William I, Prussia, twelfth in Europe in population

had the best army in Europe.

On his initial voyage to the Americas in 1492, Columbus considered the natives he met to be

handsome and peaceful.

Copernicus rejected the Ptolemaic model of the solar system primarily because

he felt that it was too unwieldy to be part of God's harmonious creation.

Napoleon negotiated the Concordat of 1801 with the pope largely because

he hoped that the Catholic Church would help stabilize society and maintain order.

When the Inca leader Atauhualpa first met the Spanish

he was seized and ultimately executed.

The most enduring legacy of Frederick William I was

his providing a foundation for the most militaristic country of modern times.

Alvise da Ca' da Mosto's description of West Africa includes accounts of Arabs acquiring slaves by trading

horses.

Plans by Napoleon to invade England were stopped by

huge France losses in the Battle of Trafalgar.

The "new learning" of the Renaissance was called

humanism.

Herbert Spencer argued that

humans' economic struggle was determined by "the survival of the fittest."

Kepler refined the Copernican model of the solar system by

hypothesizing elliptical orbits for the planets.

Population growth in Europe in the eighteenth century occurred

in all regions.

The Declaration of Pillnitz

incited France to declare war on the Hapsburg monarchy.

Peter the Great was interested in reform because he hoped to

increase Russia's territory.

In general, Romantic authors and artists encouraged

individualism.

The Church practice that led Luther to revolt was

indulgences.

In Reflections on the Revolution in France, Edmund Burke defended

inherited privileges of the aristocracy.

Napoleon's Grand Empire

inspired reactive nationalism.

The Karlsbad Decrees

instituted repressive measures in the German Confederation.

In the 1780's, over 50 percent of France's annual budget was expended on

interest payments on debt.

The National Assembly accomplished all of the following except

introduction of universal compulsory education.

Theory proposed by English economist David Ricardo suggesting that the pressure of population growth prevents wages from rising above subsistence level:

iron law of wages

Napoleon's Civil Code of 1804 did all of the following except

it gave all citizens the right to vote.

The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre

killed thousands and turned into a long civil war.

In the early seventeenth century, the king of England claimed

kings had absolute power by divine right.

In the eighteenth century, advocates for agricultural innovation argued that

landholdings and common lands needed to be consolidated and enclosed in order to farm more efficiently.

In elections to the Estates General, the third estate was represented primarily by

lawyers and government officials.

When eighteenth-century liberals spoke of equality, they were referring to

legal equality.

In Renaissance thinking, secularism focused attention on

life after death.

The Charter issued by Louis XVIII in 1814, established a(n)

limited constitutional monarchy.

The negative reputation of Ivan the Terrible grew from his violent treatment of

many of the leading boyar families.

In his efforts to produce a son, King Henry VIII did all of the following except

married Jane Seymour and later had her executed after she failed to produce a male child.

Tycho Brahe is best known for his

massive collection of astronomical data.

George's Haussmann is best remembered for

massive rebuilding projects in Paris.

In her A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, Mary Wollstonecraft argued that

men and women would benefit from equal rights.

Luther and other Protestants believed all of the following except

men should never strike a woman or force her to act against her will.

At the end of the nineteenth century, white-collar employees were identified with the

middle class.

Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate is best described as a(n)

military dictatorship.

China failed to compete with the Europeans in the maritime expansion into the Americas in the fifteenth century because of

military pressure from the Mongols and administrative inefficiency.

During the mid eighteenth-century, all of these were the effects of the new methods of farming in Britain except

more than half of Britain's population worked in agriculture.

In Europe in the 1850's and 1860's, the key agent of political change was

nationalism.

In both England and France, the Hundred Years' War promoted

nationalism.

Prior to the Columbian Exchange, Native Americans had

no animals for travel except alpacas and llamas.

All the following statements regarding the Grand Empire in 1810 are true except

no country was at war against France.

In the later nineteenth century in Europe, all of the following statements regarding science are true except

ordinary citizens gained detailed scientific knowledge in a wide range of subjects.

In the late eighteenth-century France, the second estate

owned 25 percent of the land in France.

Catherine the Great's most significant territorial triumph was the

partition of Poland.

In 1789, Napoleon was a

patriot committed to the revolution.

During the eighteenth century, which group of people were semi-forced into faftory labor?

pauper children

The most striking feature of the states in eastern Europe was a

peasantry reduced to serfdom.

The groups that benefited most from the Revolution and Napoleon were the middle class and the

peasants.

According to the English Test Act of 1673,

political participation was based upon adherence to the Church of England.

The industrious revolution was a result of

poor families choosing to reduce leisure time and the production of goods for household consumption in order to earn wages to buy consumer goods.

During the Renaissance, in the field of art

portrait paintings became more realistic in style.

According to Thomas Mun (see Document 17-2), which of these was crucial to a country's economic health?

positive balance of trade

What was the staple of the Irish diet?

potatoes

Central to Calvin's theology is the principle of

predestination.

French foreign policy under Cardinal Richelieu focused primarily on

preventing the Catholic Habsburgs from holding territories surrounding France.

The philosopher Jeremy Bentham argued that

public policy should be based on the principle of the greatest good for the greatest number.

The Scientific Revolution's enthusiasm to classify and "order" nature led to a new practice of grouping people by

race.

After the Seven Years' War, Frederick II set out to

rebuild the Prussian economy and improve the lives of his subjects.

All of the following were aspects of the centralizing efforts of Charles VII of France except

redistribution of feudal lands.

To improve the rural economy and lives of the peasants, Empress Maria Theresa

reduced nobles' power over their serfs.

When the Spanish arrived in Tenochtitlán, they found an Aztec Empire that was

reeling from internal weaknesses.

Galileo's greatest achievement was his

refinement of the experimental method.

Among the "enlightened" actions of Catherine the Great were all of the following except the

refusal to participate in the partition of Poland.

The root cause of the Thirty Years' War was

religious.

According to recent scholarship, during the eighteenth century the guild system

remained flexible as masters adopted new technologies and circumvented impractical rules.

The Peace of Utrecht

represented the balance-of-power principle in operation.

To strengthen his armies, Peter the Great did all of the following except

require all military positions be filled by native Russians to ensure loyalty to him.

The spinning of thread for the loom

required the work of several spinners for each loom, which led merchants to employ the wives and daughters of agricultural workers at terribly low wages.

The Thermidorian reaction saw the ___________ reassert their authority in French politics.

respectable middle class

The accomplishments of Frederick II included all of the following except

restructuring the Prussian social system.

The effect of the Hundred Years' War on England was that it

resulted in a great net loss in cash.

The most important factor in the emergence of the Italian Renaissance was the

rise of a wealthy, urban business elite.

The Great Fear was led by

rural peasants.

Wet-nursing practices included

rural wet-nursing conducted within the framework of a putting-out system.

In Paris, wealthy women presided over ____________ where new books and ideas were discussed.

salons

What was the division of labor throughout genders called?

separate spheres

As King, Louis XVI was

shy and well-intentioned.

In the eighteenth century, the term public sphere referred to

social and economic elites.

Thomas More's Utopia placed the blame for society's problems on

social institutions.

A major difference between northern and Italian humanism is that northern humanism stressed

social reform based on a Christian ideals.

The Conciliar Movement

sought church reform through general councils.

Both Catherine the Great and Frederick the Great

sought to improve the lives of their subjects.

Luther would have most approved of a woman

staying at home to be a wife and mother.

The invention of moveable-type printing resulted in all of the following except

strict controls on the subject matter that was allowed in print.

Italian humanists stressed the

study of the classics for what they could reveal about human nature.

The efforts of the Counter-Reformation were generally

successful in making widespread reforms in the Catholic Church.

In the sixteenth century, there was a huge increase in the use of enslaved Africans in Brazil in order to produce

sugar.

Prince Henry II of Portugal is significant for his

support of exploration.

What was tariff protection used for in European countries?

supports country's own economy

As the nineteenth century progressed, the upper-middle class

tended to merge with the old aristocracy.

The American Revolution influenced the French Revolution in all of the following respects except

the Americans sent supplies and military advisors to aid the French cause.

During the middle decades of the seventeenth century, the European nation that prospered the most was

the Netherlands.

Who dominated banking in Catholic France?

the Protestants and Jews

A pretest for the Hundred Years' War was

the Salic law's prohibition of a woman on the French Throne.

Which of the following did NOT experience faltering efforts at industrialization?

the United States

Prussia moved to the forefront of the German principalities with

the acquisition of Silesia in 1742.

Empiricism emphasized

the actual examination of phenomena.

The text cites Francesco Petrarch as a n example of

the belief in the Middle Ages that Germanic migrations had created the "Dark Ages."

All of the following were part of the reshaping of Paris after 1850 except

the building of government-subsidized housing for the poor.

Most seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophes believed that

the common people were incapable of governing themselves.

The battle of Crecy witnessed

the decisive use of longbows and cannons.

According to the Aristotelian view of universe,

the earth was motionless.

All of the following were factors in the origins of the French Revolution except

the famine created by the government's attempt to end manorial agriculture.

Rousseau's Social Contract was based on two fundamental concepts: popular sovereignty and

the general will.

As a result of the Renaissance,

the gulf between the learned minority and uneducated majority increased.

The Declaration of the Rights of Man and citizen asserted all of the following except

the illegality of monarchies.

Charles Dawrwin's theory of evolution through natural selection tended to reinforce

the inherent tensions between employers and their employees.

The primary factor determining the direction of Spanish exploration in the Americas was

the lure of precious metals.

According to Enlightenment thinkers,

the methods of natural science should be used to examine all aspects of life.

All of the following contributed to Spain's mid-seventeenth century financial crisis except

the monarchy's refusal to declare bankruptcy.

French intendants were directly responsible to

the monarchy.

Friedrich Engels, author of The Conditions of the Working Class in England (1844), believed

the new poverty of industrial workers was worse than the old poverty of cottage workers and agricultural laborers.

The fatal obstacle to German unification under Prussian leadership in 1850 was

the opposition of Austria and Russia.

The German philosopher Kant asserted that

the publication of the ideas of the philosophes would lead to an enlightened society.

The concept of a "reading revolution" asserts all of the following except that

the reading public grew selective in its choice of reading material.

Over the course of the second half of the nineteenth century, in England

the real wages of British workers almost doubled.

The success of the Revolution of 1830 in France was due primarily to

the revolutionary actions of the artisans, shopkeepers, and workers of Paris.

By 1791, the National Assembly had expanded the rights of women in all of the following areas except

the right to vote.

Fur-collar crime is a term used to describe

the robbery and extortion inflicted on the poor by the rich.

The guiding principle behind Cardinal Richelieu's domestic policies was

the subordination of all groups and institutions to the monarchy.

Eugène Delacroix's artwork celebrated

the virtue of popular revolution.

Rousseau was more skeptical than earlier Enlightenment philosophers of

the virtues of civilization and rationalism.

The images of guild-based economic activity (see Document 17-1) suggest that

there was little division of labor or none within guild workshops.

As a result of the Peace of Augsburg,

there were no religious wars in Germany for many decades.

All of the following statements regarding Protestants are true except

they believed a monastic life was superior to a secular life.

The Directory continued France's foreign wars largely because

they helped alleviate a number of domestic problems, including unemployment.

Regions in the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America could not respond to low-cost imports by raising tariffs mainly because

they were controlled by imperial powers that did not allow them to do so.

In regard to the education of women, Italian humanists

thought the proper sphere for women was private and domestic.

In the early seventeenth century, English Puritans wanted

to eliminate, among other things, bishops from the Church of England.

Rich individuals sponsored artists and works of art

to glorify themselves and their families.

As a result of the Thirty Years' War, the Austrian Hapsburgs

turned inward and eastward in an attempt to unify their power.

Peter the Great built St. Petersburg largely with

unpaid peasant labor.

During the struggle between Frederick William the Great Elector and the Prussian nobility,

war and invasion strengthened Frederick William's hand.

One of the main reasons for popular dissatisfaction with the Directory in 1797, was

war weariness.

What delayed Latin American countries from joining the Indusrtial Revolution?

wars of independence

In religious affairs, Elizabeth I of England established a policy that

was a middle course between Catholic and Protestant extremes.

According to Machiavelli, the sole test of "good" government was whether it

was effective.

Christian humanists believed that human nature

was fundamentally good.

France, under Napoleon

was governed by authoritarianism.

The development of germ theory

was led by Louis Pasteur.

Spain, compared to England and France during the Renaissance,

was much less unified.

Copernicus's theory of the universe

was not published until the last year of his life.

Prostitution in late medieval society

was not respected but was legalized.

In Peter the Great's tour of western Europe, he

was notably impressed by the Dutch and English.

Joseph II's conversion of labor obligations to cash payments

was opposed by both nobles and peasants.

The English Peasants' Revolt most probably

was the largest single uprising of the entire Middle Ages

At the Congress of Vienna, the victorious allies

we're guided by the principle of the balance of power.

As an "age of crisis," problems in seventeenth century Europe included all of the following except

weakened governments.

In 1815, the principal ideas of liberalism

were in practice in Europe in France and Great Britain.

More than three-quarters of those accused of witchcraft were

women.

Portolans were

written descriptions of sea routes.


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