APUSH chapter 1
The ideals that the colonists cherished as synonymous with American life included reverence for all of the following
a. Individual liberty. b. Self-government. c. Religious tolerance. d. Economic opportunity.
Know the following New World plants that revolutionized the international economy
a. Maize b. Potatoes c. Beans d. Tomatoes
All of the following were original territories of North American Indian populations within the current borders of the United States
a. Northeast. b. Southeast. c. Great Plains. d. Great Basin.
The colonists who ultimately embraced the vision of America as an independent nation had in common all of the following characteristics
a. The desire to create an agricultural society. b. Learning to live lives unfettered by the tyrannies of royal authority. c. Learning to live lives unfettered by the tyrannies of official religion. d. Learning to live lives unfettered by the tyrannies of social hierarchies.
All of the following are true of the Inca, Mayan, and Aztec civilizations
a. They had advanced agricultural practices based primarily on the cultivation of maize. b. They lacked the technology of the wheel. c. They built elaborate cities and carried on far-flung commerce. d. They had talented mathematicians, which allowed them to make accurate astronomical observations.
The Appalachian mountain range was probably created before the continental separation approximately
350 million years ago
In 1492, when Europeans arrived in the Americas, the total of the two continents' populations was
54 million
The European explorers who followed Columbus to North America continued to view themselves as
Europeans
some forty thousand Africans were forced into slavery by Portugal and Spain to work on plantations on the Atlantic sugar islands
In the last half of the fifteenth century
The Aztec chief Moctezuma allowed Cortes to enter the capital of Tenochtitlan because
Montezuma believed that Cortes was the god Quetzalcoatl.
Native American (Indian) civilization was least highly developed in
North America
Men became conquistadores because they wanted to
a. Gain God's favor by spreading Christianity. b. Escape dubious pasts. c. Seek adventure, as the heroes of classical antiquity had done. d. Satisfy their desire for gold.
Men in the more settled agricultural groups in North America performed all of the following tasks
a. Hunting. b. Gathering fuel. c. Clearing fields for planting. d. Fishing.
By the 1770s, trade restrictions helped bring about
a crisis of imperial authority
The development of "three sister" farming on the southeast Atlantic seaboard produced
a rich diet that led to high population densities
Europeans wanted to discover a new, shorter route to eastern Asia in order to
a. Break the hold that Muslim merchants had on trade with Asia. b. Reduce the price of goods from Asia. c. Gain more profits for themselves. d. Reduce the time it took to transport goods
Know the following explorers to the area they explored
a. Coronado-New Mexico and Arizona b. Cortes-Mexico c. Pizarro-Peru d. Columbus-Caribbean islands
Some of the more advanced Native American cultures did all of the following
a. Establish large, bustling cities. b. Make strikingly accurate astronomical observations. c. Study mathematics. d. Carry on commerce.
All of the following contributed to the emergence of a new interdependent global economic system
a. Europe providing the market and capital. b. Africa providing the labor. c. New World providing its raw materials. d. The advancement and improvement of technology
The stage was set for a cataclysmic shift in the course of history when
a. Europeans clamored for more and cheaper products from Asia. b. Africa was established as a source of slave labor. c. The Portuguese demonstrated the feasibility of long range ocean navigation. d. The Renaissance nurtured a spirit of optimism and adventure
At the time of the European colonization of North America the number of Indian tribes was estimated at
approximately 200
The treatment of the Native Americans by the Spanish conquistadores can be described as
at times brutal and exploitative
The crop that became the staple of life in Mexico and South America was
corn (maize)
Most likely the first Americans were people who
crossed the land bridge from Eurasia to North America
As a result of Pope's Rebellion in 1680, the Pueblo Indians
destroyed every Catholic Church in the province of New Mexico
The institution of encomienda allowed the European governments to
give Indians to colonists if they promised to Christianize them
Columbus called the native people in the "New World" Indians because
he believed that he had skirted the rim of the "Indies."
The Great Ice Age accounted for the origins of North America's human history because
it exposed a land bridge connecting Eurasia with North America.
The Arabs and Africans were responsible for slaving trading in Africa
long before the Europeans had arrived
The Iroquois Confederacy was able to menace its Native American and European neighbors because of its
military alliance, sustained by political and organizational skills
Within a century after Columbus's landfall in the New World, the Native American population was reduced by
nearly 90 percent
The early voyages of the Scandinavian seafarers did not result in permanent settlement in North America because
no nation-state yearning to expand supported these ventures
Spain began to fortify and settle its North American border lands in order to
protect its Central and South American domains from encroachments by England and France
The introduction of American plants around the world resulted in
rapid population growth in Europe
Before the middle of the fifteenth century, sub-Saharan Africa had remained remost and mysterious to Europeans because
sea travel down the African coast had been virtually impossible
Before the arrival of Columbus, most native peoples in North America lived in
small, scattered, and impermanent settlements
European explorers introduced __________ into the New World
smallpox
Spain was united into a single nation-state when
the African Moors were expelled from the Iberian Peninsula
The origins of the modern plantation system can be found in
the Portuguese slave trade
One of the main factors that enabled Europeans to conquer native North Americans with relative ease was
the absence of dense concentrations of population or complex nation-states in North America.
European contact with Native Americans led to
the deaths of millions of Native Americans, who had little resistance to European diseases
The size and sophistication of Native American civilizations in Mexico and South America can be attributed to
the development of agriculture
The flood of precious metal from the New World to Europe resulted in
the growth of capitalism
After his first voyage, Christopher Columbus believed that he had sailed to
the outskirts of the East Indies
The existence of a single original continent has been proved by
the presence of the discovery of nearly identical species of fish in long-separated freshwater lakes of various continents.
The Christian crusaders were indirectly responsible for the discovery of America because
they brought back news of valuable Far Eastern spices, drugs, and silk
In an effort to reach the Indies, Spain looked
westward because Portugal controlled the African coast