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Difference between revisions of "World History Final Exam"

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Instructions:  Closed book; No penalty for wrong answers; 60 questions; 40 minutes long.  
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Instructions:  Closed book; No penalty for wrong answers; 60 questions; 45 minutes long.  
  
1.  Which of the following countries had a [[revolution]] that included the dethroning and execution of the King and Queen, the destruction of churches and a horrible “Reign of Terror”?
+
''Post your own answers at [[Talk:World History Final Exam]]''.
  
(a) the United States
+
1.  This Christian – considered one of the most influential persons in all of world history – read the Bible nearly every day for intellectual inspiration, and discovered both calculus and gravity:
<br>(b) England
+
<br>(a) Abraham
<br>(c) France
+
<br>(b) Alexander the Great
<br>(d) Italy
+
<br>(c) Isaac Newton
<br>(e) Germany
+
<br>(d) Nero
  
2.  About how many total years are there in the recorded or written history of the world?
+
2.  Which group of people first discovered and developed the concept of zero?
 +
<br>(a) the ancient Egyptians
 +
<br>(b) Enlightenment philosophers
 +
<br>(c) the Jacobins
 +
<br>(d) Indians (in South Asia)
  
(a) 1000 years
+
3.  About what percentage of the world is Christian today?
<br>(b) 2000 years
+
<br>(a) 90%
<br>(c) 2500 years
+
<br>(b) 66%
<br>(d) 5000 years
+
<br>(c) 50%
<br>(e) 50,000 years
+
<br>(d) 33%
  
3Mesopotamia is best known for which of the following?
+
4Which of the following made this statement in German: “I do not see why man should not be just as cruel as nature.”
 +
<br>(a) Martin Luther
 +
<br>(b) Adolf Hitler
 +
<br>(c) Benito Mussolini
 +
<br>(d) Isaac Newton
  
(a) It was an early, ancient civilization
+
5.  Karl Marx is best known for writing:
<br>(b) It was the birthplace of Buddhism
+
<br>(a) the Bible.
<br>(c) It was the successor to the Roman empire
+
<br>(b) the Communist Manifesto
<br>(d) It was the origin of Communism
+
<br>(c) the Art of War
<br>(e) It was the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution
+
<br>(d) the Wealth of Nations
  
4Socrates, Plato and Aristotle were:
+
6The “Great War” was the original name for what?
 
+
<br>(a) World War I
(a) Greek Olympic athletes
+
<br>(b) World War II
<br>(b) Roman soldiers
+
<br>(c) the Thirty Years’ War
<br>(c) Greek philosophers
+
<br>(d) the Franco-Prussian War
<br>(d) Christian theologians
+
<br>(e) Egyptian pharaohs
+
  
5Order these religions from oldest to youngest:
+
7The Industrial Revolution began where?
 +
<br>(a) the United States
 +
<br>(b) England
 +
<br>(c) Germany
 +
<br>(d) Russia
  
I.     Christianity
+
8. The Concert of Vienna was which of the following:
<br>II.    Islam
+
<br>(a) a masterful performance of Beethoven’s work
<br>III.  Hinduism
+
<br>(b) where Mozart preferred to have his music played
 +
<br>(c) a set of alliances between nations requiring each to assist the other if war broke out
 +
<br>(d) a brilliant plan of Napoleon for invading Russia
  
(a) I, II and III
+
9.  The author of the Books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes was probably:
<br>(b) I, III and II
+
<br>(a) Solomon
<br>(c) III, II and I
+
<br>(b) David
<br>(d) III, I and II
+
<br>(c) Moses
<br>(e) II, I and III
+
<br>(d) Jesus
  
6. In Acts 9:29, the Bible says that Saul (later renamed as Paul) “spoke boldly in the name of the Lord Jesus and disputed against the Hellenists ….”  One question:  who were the Hellenists?
+
10. The founder of Islam was:
 +
<br>(a) Saint Augustine
 +
<br>(b) Muhammad
 +
<br>(c) Attila the Hun
 +
<br>(d) Charles Martel
  
(a) Greek-speaking Jewish people
+
11.  Which leader unintentionally paved the way for Christianity to expand later?
<br>(b) Indians
+
<br>(a) Napoleon
<br>(c) Americans
+
<br>(b) Mussolini
<br>(d) Chinese
+
<br>(c) Alexander the Great
<br>(e) Japanese
+
<br>(d) Hammurabi
  
7David and Solomon were rulers over which ancient kingdom?
+
12This great American general, who was homeschooled and mastered the art of tank warfare, once said, “You need to overcome the tug of people against you as you reach for high goals.”  Who was he?
 +
<br>(a) Douglas MacArthur
 +
<br>(b) George Washington
 +
<br>(c) Dwight Eisenhower
 +
<br>(d) George Patton
  
(a) Egypt
+
13.  Who proposed the Strategic Defense Initiative, or “Star Wars,” to a surprised world?
<br>(b) Israel
+
<br>(a) Barack Obama
<br>(c) Roman empire
+
<br>(b) Franklin Delano Roosevelt
<br>(d) Greek empire
+
<br>(c) Ronald Reagan
<br>(e) Assyrian empire
+
<br>(d) Bill Clinton
  
8Alexander the Great was “great” at what?
+
14What developed in Western Europe and Japan at about the same time?
 +
<br>(a) feudalism
 +
<br>(b) scholasticism
 +
<br>(c) the Renaissance
 +
<br>(d) the Enlightenment
  
(a) military conquest
+
15.  All of the following are true about utilitarianism EXCEPT:
<br>(b) mathematical achievement
+
<br>(a) throwing two people off of a lifeboat in order to save the remaining ten
<br>(c) writing philosophical essays
+
<br>(b) refusing to destroy an evil city if there are merely ten good people in it
<br>(d) converting people to Buddhism
+
<br>(c) John Stuart Mills was a big supporter of utilitarianism
<br>(e) negotiating peace treaties
+
<br>(d) it is OK to convict and imprison an innocent man if causes many others not to commit crime
  
9.  The Hammurabi Code includes which of the following:
+
16.  The person who developed the concept of the “social contract” that was used by the American Declaration of Independence was:
 +
<br>(a) Gottfried Leibniz
 +
<br>(b) William Blackstone
 +
<br>(c) Charles-Louis Baron de Montesquieu
 +
<br>(d) John Locke
  
(a) when your neighbor slaps you on one cheek, then you should turn the other cheek
+
17.  Which philosopher emphasized the value of experience, and founded the Lyceum school?
<br>(b) when someone converts to Christianity, he must be put to death
+
<br>(a) Socrates
<br>(c) a death penalty is given to someone who falsely accuses someone else of something
+
<br>(b) Hippocrates
<br>(d) light punishment for crimes compared to the Old Testament’s rules for punishment
+
<br>(c) Plato
<br>(e) the Code was simply this:  worship Hammurabi at all times
+
<br>(d) Aristotle
  
10The Old, Middle and New Kingdoms describe which ancient empire, and which time period?
+
18After whom is the State of Virginia named?
+
<br>(a) Queen Mary of William and Mary
(a) Israel, 2000 to 1000 B.C.
+
<br>(b) the wife of Christopher Columbus
<br>(b) Egypt, 3100 to 700 B.C.
+
<br>(c) Queen Elizabeth
<br>(c) Babylon, 5000 to 4000 B.C.
+
<br>(d) the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus
<br>(d) India, A.D. 1500 to 2000
+
<br>(e) China, 10,000 to 5,000 B.C.
+
+
11.  Who was the Roman ruler when Jesus was born?
+
  
(a) Julius Caesar
+
19.  What and when was the Pax Romana?
<br>(b) Augustus Caesar
+
<br>(a) From 27 B.C. to A.D. 180, it was a time of peace and prosperity for the Roman empire
<br>(c) Nero
+
<br>(b) From 200 B.C. to the birth of Christ, it was a time of peace and prosperity for the Roman empire
<br>(d) Mark Antony
+
<br>(c) From the birth of Christ to A.D. 300, it was a time of peace for the Roman empire
<br>(e) Constantine
+
<br>(d) It was the peaceful period between World Wars I and II
  
12An example of a work of art produced during the Renaissance is
+
20Each of the following is an example of monotheism EXCEPT:
 +
<br>(a) Judaism
 +
<br>(b) Buddhism
 +
<br>(c) Christianity
 +
<br>(d) Islam
  
(a) a random splattering of paint on a canvas, to illustrate the artist’s emotions
+
21.  Which movement in the arts coincided with the Age of Revolution?
<br>(b) a life-size sculpture of the Mother of Jesus holding Him after the Crucifixion
+
<br>(a) Romanticism
<br>(c) colorful paintings intended to create an “impression” rather than convey detail
+
<br>(b) Neo-classicism
<br>(d) a music video that ends with the performers smashing their guitars on stage
+
<br>(c) Cubism
<br>(e) a random sampling of garbage nailed to a poster board to promote environmentalism
+
<br>(d) the Renaissance
  
13What was the “Pax Romana”?
+
22Who was Constantine the Great?
 +
<br>(a) a leader of the Roman Republic, prior to Julius Caesar
 +
<br>(b) a Roman leader who freed Peter the Apostle from jail
 +
<br>(c) the Roman emperor who first legalized Christianity
 +
<br>(d) the last of the great Greek philosophers
  
(a) A peaceful period in the Roman empire that included the “Five Good Emperors”
+
23.  The following caused the downfall of belief in the “divine right of kings”:
<br>(b) A peaceful period in the Greek empire that included rule by Alexander the Great
+
<br>I.  the French Revolution
<br>(c) A peaceful period in ancient China when gunpowder was developed
+
<br>II.  religious wars in England
<br>(d) The time in the Roman empire shortly after the life of Christ, when Constantinople converted
+
<br>III.  the Renaissance
<br>(e) A peaceful period in the Roman empire when Christians were treated with great respect
+
  
14.  All of the following were effects of the Crusades EXCEPT:
+
(a) III only.
 
+
(a) it led to increased trade between Europe and Asia
+
<br>(b) it initially protected Christian pilgrims who went to the Holy Land
+
<br>(c) it united the Eastern Orthodox Church with the Roman Catholic Church
+
<br>(d) the Catholic Church gained more power
+
<br>(e) it laid the foundation for the future change from feudalism to rule by kings
+
 
+
15.  The following were civilizations in Central or South America EXCEPT:
+
 
+
(a) the Maya
+
<br>(b) the Toltecs
+
<br>(c) the Aztecs
+
<br>(d) the Incas
+
<br>(e) the Persians
+
 
+
16. All the following are “pillars” or basic principles of Islam EXCEPT:
+
 
+
(a) submission to Allah
+
<br>(b) prayer to Allah several times a day
+
<br>(c) fasting during daylight hours for the month of Ramadan
+
<br>(d) donating to the poor
+
<br>(e) love your neighbor as yourself
+
 
+
17.  When were the “Middle Ages”?
+
 
+
(a) 500 B.C. to A.D. 500
+
<br>(b) A.D. 1 to 500
+
<br>(c) A.D. 500 to 900
+
<br>(d) A.D. 500 to 1500
+
<br>(e) A.D. 1000 to 1700
+
 
+
18.  A “Machiavellian” politician is someone who:
+
 
+
(a) puts the people first
+
<br>(b) sacrifices himself for the good of the people
+
<br>(c) manipulates politics for his own self-serving gain
+
<br>(d) avoids politics to pursue something more meaningful
+
<br>(e) heroically joins the army to fight for his nation
+
 
+
19.  Martin Luther’s views included which of the following?
+
 
+
I.  Justification is by faith alone
+
<br>II.  The Bible should remain in Latin, and not be translated into German
+
<br>III. A church should not be selling indulgences
+
 
+
(a) I, II and III
+
 
<br>(b) I and III
 
<br>(b) I and III
 
<br>(c) I and II
 
<br>(c) I and II
<br>(d) II and III
+
<br>(d) I, II and III
<br>(e) II only
+
  
20The King of Saudi Arabia was in the news in April when President Barack Obama bowed down before himWhat religion or belief system does the King of Saudi Arabia have?
+
24Which of the following are forms of imperialism, and rank them from strongest to weakest
 +
<br>I.  Merger, as in adding new states to the United States
 +
<br>IIColonizing, as in England starting the American colonies
 +
<br>III.  Spheres of influence, as in influencing elections
 +
<br>IV.  Economic influence, as in using the same currency
 +
<br>V.  Protectorates, as in providing military defense
 +
<br>VI.  Trade, as in exchanging goods with Latin America
  
(a) Christian
+
(a) I, II, III, IV, V, and VI
<br>(b) Jewish
+
<br>(b) II, V, III, IV
<br>(c) atheist
+
<br>(c) I, III, and VI
<br>(d) Sunni Moslem having authority over Mecca
+
<br>(d) II only
<br>(e) Shiite Moslem having authority over Mecca
+
+
21.  To illustrate how people in the Middle Ages accepted the existence of Hell, you could cite:
+
  
(a) Charles Darwin
+
25.  The time period between Jesus and Attila the Hun is roughly equal to (within a few hundred years) of the time period between:
<br>(b) Dante
+
<br>(a) the fall of the Roman Empire and the Great War
<br>(c) Rembrandt
+
<br>(b) the writing of the Old Testament and the King James Version of the Bible
<br>(d) Van Gogh
+
<br>(c) the peak of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment
<br>(e) Karl Marx
+
<br>(d) the Crusades and the peak of the Renaissance
  
22This major change occurred from 1760 to 1840, beginning in England and spreading to the American colonies and to parts of Western Europe.  What was it?
+
26About how long did the Age of Exploration last?
 +
<br>(a) 50 years
 +
<br>(b) 100 years
 +
<br>(c) 200 years
 +
<br>(d) 300 years
  
(a) The Bubonic Plague
+
27. How does Christianity differ most from the other major religions of the world?
<br>(b) The Black Death
+
<br>(a) The emphasis of Christianity on submission to God.
<br>(c) Communism
+
<br>(b) The emphasis of Christianity on faith.
<br>(d) The Industrial Revolution
+
<br>(c) The emphasis of Christianity on wisdom and justice.
<br>(e) Atheism
+
<br>(d) The emphasis of Christianity on ending desire, because desire causes suffering.
  
23An example of the rise in nationalism in the late 1800s was:
+
28Order these by chronology, beginning with the earliest:
 +
<br>I. Hernando Cortes
 +
<br>II. the Treaty of Tordesillas
 +
<br>III.  Francisco Pizzaro
 +
<br>IV.  Oliver Cromwell
  
(a) Turkey
+
(a) I, II, III and IV
<br>(b) Germany
+
<br>(b) II, I, III, IV
<br>(c) North Africa
+
<br>(c) IV, I, II and III
<br>(d) Canada
+
<br>(d) III, I, II and IV
<br>(e) South America
+
  
24The final end to World War II came immediately after:
+
29Who comprised the “Triple Entente”?
 +
<br>(a) Great Britain, Russia and France
 +
<br>(b) France, Great Britain and the United States
 +
<br>(c) Italy, France and Russia
 +
<br>(d) Austria, Germany and Hungary
  
(a) capturing, trying and sentencing Adolf Hitler
+
30.  The Crusades were:
<br>(b) dropping the atomic bombs on Japanese cities
+
<br>(a) two military expeditions over a 100-year period, beginning in AD 1050, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
<br>(c) intervention by the United Nations
+
<br>(b) four military expeditions over a 100-year period, beginning in AD 1099, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
<br>(d) a cease-fire negotiated by France
+
<br>(c) five military expeditions over a 200-year period, beginning in AD 1001, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
<br>(e) the communist revolution
+
<br>(d) one military beginning in AD 1050, by Christians to conquer the world
  
25The Scientific Revolution was started by the work of:
+
31Of the modern theories of math and physics, which one led to the most new technology and products?
 +
<br>(a) Bernhard Riemann’s geometry
 +
<br>(b) Quantum Mechanics
 +
<br>(c) the Big Bang
 +
<br>(d) the Theory of Relativity
  
(a) Galileo
+
32.  Who was Ho Chi Minh?
<br>(b) Copernicus
+
<br>(a) a Korean leader who sought unification of North and South Korea
<br>(c) Einstein
+
<br>(b) a Vietnamese leader who sought a unified, communist Vietnam
<br>(d) Newton
+
<br>(c) a Japanese military commander who led the invasion of China
<br>(e) Hume
+
<br>(d) a Chinese leader who was defeated by Chairman Mao
  
26Who had military success against the Japanese, the Mongols, and even the United States?
+
33When a student does well on an exam because he started studying sooner than the other students, he is proving what [fill in] declared in about [fill in].
 +
<br>(a) Aesop … 600 B.C.
 +
<br>(b) Aesop … 100 B.C.
 +
<br>(c) the Bible … A.D. 500
 +
<br>(d) Aristotle … 700 B.C.
  
(a) the Chinese
+
34.  Put the following events in chronological order:
<br>(b) the Indians
+
<br>I.  D-Day
<br>(c) the Cambodians
+
<br>II.  the Communist Revolution
<br>(d) the Vietnamese
+
<br>III.  the sinking of the Lusitania
<br>(e) the Australians
+
<br>IV.  the construction of the Berlin Wall
  
27.  Age of Exploration lasted during which period?
+
(a) III, II, I and IV
 +
<br>(b) I, II, III and IV
 +
<br>(c) III, IV, I and II
 +
<br>(d) II, I, III and IV
  
(a) 1100 to 1300
+
35. Who broke the German’s Enigma?
<br>(b) 1450 to 1650
+
<br>(a) the “Red Baron”
<br>(c) 1500 to 1750
+
<br>(b) American bombers flying over Berlin
<br>(d) 1600 to 1850
+
<br>(c) a Polish mathematician
<br>(e) 1700 to 1950
+
<br>(d) an unknown soldier while in trench warfare
  
28. Each of the following was an African kingdom during the Middle Ages EXCEPT:  
+
36. The following example best illustrates the nature of the Cold War:  
 +
<br>(a) Stalin may have known more about the progress of the Manhattan Project than Truman did.
 +
<br>(b) 500,000 German soldiers froze to death when Germany invaded Russia.
 +
<br>(c) the 9-11 attack on the World Trade Centers.
 +
<br>(d) the internment of American Japanese during World War II.
  
(a) Nigeria
+
37.  Order these civilizations or empire chronologically, from the earliest to the latest:
<br>(b) Zimbabwe
+
<br>I.  the First French Empire
<br>(c) Aksum
+
<br>II. Mesopotamia
<br>(d) Kongo
+
<br>III.  the Roman Empire
<br>(e) Ghana
+
<br>IV.  ancient Greece
  
29.  The following are elements of imperialism EXCEPT:
+
(a) I, II, III and IV
 +
<br>(b) II, IV, III, and I
 +
<br>(c) II, III, IV, and I
 +
<br>(d) I, II, IV, and III
  
(a) establish colonies and hold a direct influence or control over the colonies
+
38.  The ideas or actions of each of the following contributed to the French Revolution EXCEPT:
<br>(b) establish protectorates, allowing an independent nation but protecting it with a larger nation
+
<br>(a) Rousseau
<br>(c) sending money to a dictator so that he can spend it however he likes
+
<br>(b) Burke
<br>(d) establish “spheres of influence,” in which countries had special trading privileges in regions
+
<br>(c) Voltaire
<br>(e) exert outside influence through private businesses profiting from the region
+
<br>(d) Robespierre
  
30“Those who do not obey do not eat.”  That famous quote describes which of the following systems?
+
39President Franklin Delano Roosevelt would not have underestimated how difficult it would be to defeat the Japanese in World War II if he had learned about this group in world history:
+
<br>(a) the Roman Empire.
(a) Capitalism
+
<br>(b) the Korean Empire.
<br>(b) Democracy
+
<br>(c) the Mongol Empire.
<br>(c) Anarchy
+
<br>(d) the Indian Empire.
<br>(d) Communism
+
<br>(e) Theocracy
+
  
31Who said, “I am the successor, not of Louis XVI, but of Charlemagne”
+
40Order these leaders chronologically, from the earliest to the latest:
 
+
<br>I.  Augustus Caesar
(a) Julius Caesar
+
<br>II.  Julius Caesar
<br>(b) George Washington
+
<br>III.  Charlemagne
<br>(c) Adolf Hitler
+
<br>IVRomanov
<br>(d) Napoleon
+
<br>(e) Barack Obama
+
 
+
32.  Christian charitable organizations including the Red Cross and YMCA developed to help with social problems occurring after the:
+
 
+
(a) fall of the Roman empire
+
<br>(b) Crusades
+
<br>(c) Reformation
+
<br>(d) Industrial Revolution
+
<br>(e) World War II (in America only)
+
 
+
33Trench warfare, poisonous gas, many millions of deaths, no accomplishments, the “Bloody Red Baron,” and unwise terms of settlement afterward.  What do these describe?
+
 
+
(a) the Hundred Years’ War
+
<br>(b) the “Great War”
+
<br>(c) World War II
+
<br>(d) the Cold War
+
<br>(e) the Korean War
+
 
+
34“We’re here because some crazy Germans decided they were supermen and that they had a right to rule the world. They’ve been pushing people around all over the world, looting, killing, and abusing millions of innocent men, women, and children. … If you don't like to fight, I don't want you around. You had better get out before I kick you out. There's one thing you have to remember. In war, it takes more than the desire to fight to win. You've got to have more than guts to lick the enemy. You also must have brains. It takes brains and guts to win wars. A man with guts but no brains is only half a soldier. We whipped the Germans in Africa and Sicily because we had brains as well as guts.”  Who said that?
+
 
+
(a) Neville Chamberlain
+
<br>(b) Adolf Hitler
+
<br>(c) George Patton
+
<br>(d) Douglas MacArthur
+
<br>(e) Erwin Rommel
+
 
   
 
   
35.  The Great Depression resulted in which of the following:
+
(a) I, II, III and IV
 +
<br>(b) III, I, II and IV
 +
<br>(c) II, I, III and IV
 +
<br>(d) IV, I, II and III
  
(a) the election of Republican Presidents
+
41. All of the following were Christian leaders EXCEPT:
<br>(b) a successful government jobs programs that brought rapid recovery
+
<br>(a) Constantine the Great
<br>(c) better cooperation between different nations as they worked more together
+
<br>(b) Charlemagne
<br>(d) the rise of fascism in Germany and Italy
+
<br>(c) Maria Theresa
<br>(e) an increase in the value of the stock market
+
<br>(d) Philip of Macedon
  
36. Countries that have had much higher percentages of belief in evolution compared to the United States are:
+
42. Did most Europeans prefer North or South America during the Age of Exploration, and why?
(a) France only
+
<br>(a) North America, because it had better natural resources.
<br>(b) England and Germany, the main combatants in World Wars I and II
+
<br>(b) North America, because it had a better climate.
<br>(c) Turkey
+
<br>(c) South America, because it had more gold and silver.
<br>(d) Poland and South Korea
+
<br>(d) South America, because it was easier to reach by boat.
<br>(e) England and Germany, who were on the same side in World Wars I and II
+
  
37An example of modern terrorism is
+
43Causes of World War II include:
 +
<br>I.  the Great Depression
 +
<br>II.  the terms in the Treaty of Versailles
 +
<br>III.  the rise in nationalism
  
(a) the attack on the World Trade Center known as “9/11”
+
(a) I only
<br>(b) the invasion of Iraq by American soldiers
+
<br>(b) I and III
<br>(c) peaceful protests against war
+
<br>(c) I, II and III
<br>(d) criticism of government
+
<br>(d) II and III
<br>(e) the pro-life March for Life on January 22nd each year in D.C.
+
  
38.  The first democracy in the world was in:
+
44.  The best example of “realpolitik” is:
 +
<br>(a) Napoleon’s invasion of Russia.
 +
<br>(b) Otto von Bismarck’s war with France.
 +
<br>(c) the Mongol’s invasion of Japan.
 +
<br>(d) Germany’s invasion of Poland in 1939.
  
(a) London
+
45.  Immanuel Kant would most likely illustrate his view of what is morally right and wrong by which of the following examples:
<br>(b) Rome
+
<br>(a) littering is morally wrong because the result would be unacceptable if everyone did it.
<br>(c) Athens
+
<br>(b) throwing two people off of a lifeboat to save the remaining ten is morally right because ten people are worth more than two people.
<br>(d) Cairo
+
<br>(c) disobeying your parents is morally wrong because of the example of the Prodigal Son in the Bible.
<br>(e) Washington, D.C.
+
<br>(d) based on the theory of relativity, everything is relative so the only things that are morally right and wrong are what you decide are right and wrong.
  
39Jesus was unique among religious leaders because:
+
46If this influential person in World History were able to speak to our class for a few minutes, he might give you the following advice: “Master a trade or useful activity as a teenager, as I did.  Become the world’s greatest expert at it.  Develop an ambition for it that has no limits.  Then persevere in finding someone to support your dream.  Add to that the fearless advantage of Christian faith, and you will be able to unlock a great discovery that will change the world more than you will ever realize.”  Who would be most likely to give you that advice? 
 +
<br>(a) David Hume
 +
<br>(b) Christopher Columbus
 +
<br>(c) Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
 +
<br>(d) Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
  
(a) He performed miracles to heal people
+
47. How was Nicolae Ceausescu different from virtually all other communists?
<br>(b) He willingly accepted crucifixion, despite being innocent
+
<br>(a) Ceausescu defeated Hitler
<br>(c) He emphasized the power and importance of faith
+
<br>(b) Ceausescu did not defeat Hitler, but slowed him down
<br>(d) His teachings included parables to illustrate important and logical truths
+
<br>(c) Ceausescu was pro-life and he prohibited abortion
<br>(e) All of the above
+
<br>(d) Ceausescu was Stalin’s favorite communist
  
40The King James Version of the Bible was significant because:
+
48Who developed the concept of the “invisible hand”?
 +
<br>(a) James Clerk Maxwell
 +
<br>(b) Adam Smith
 +
<br>(c) Friedrich Engels
 +
<br>(d) Anwar Sadat
  
(a) it translated the entire Bible into majestic English in the early 1700s, and was an instant success
+
49.  Each of the following was an Enlightenment thinker EXCEPT:
<br>(b) it translated the entire Bible into majestic English in the early 1600s, and was so influential that it improved the development of the English language
+
<br>(a) Voltaire.
<br>(c) it translated the entire Bible into the English language before King Henry VIII split from the Catholic Church in Rome
+
<br>(b) Rousseau.
<br>(d) it was a widely used Latin translation of the Bible circulated through use of the printing press
+
<br>(c) Hume.
<br>(e) it was the version of the Bible used by Martin Luther when he translated it into German
+
<br>(d) Descartes.
  
41I mastered the High Seas as a boy and, partly motivated by a desire to spread Christianity, discovered the New World by reaching islands in the Caribbean.  I left some men and provisions there.  After returning to Europe, I then sailed back to the America and found the exact same location again.  Who am I?
+
50Which revolution was named the “Glorious Revolution”?
 +
<br>(a) a revolution in 1688 in England, replacing the Catholic King James II with the Anglican King and Queen, William and Mary
 +
<br>(b) French Revolution, through the eyes of the peasants
 +
<br>(c) the American Revolution
 +
<br>(d) the communist revolution
  
(a) Amerigo Vespucci
+
51.  What were some results from Magellan’s voyage around the world?
<br>(b) Magellan
+
<br>(a) Italy gained control of colonies in Africa and a new trade route to Asia
<br>(c) John Cabot
+
<br>(b) Spain gained access to South America and the Southwest region of North America
<br>(d) Christopher Columbus
+
<br>(c) Portugal gained the colony of Brazil
<br>(e) Captain Bligh
+
<br>(d) Spain gained control of much of South America and the Philippines
  
42. The State of Virginia is named after whom?
+
52. Which of the following is true about the Seven Years’ War?  
 +
<br>I.  Britain and Prussia were allies on one side
 +
<br>II.  It occurred sometime in the mid-1700s
 +
<br>III.  France was on the winning side
 +
<br>IV.  William Pitt was a reason Britain was on the winning side
  
(a) the wife of the explorer who discovered it
+
(a) I, II, III and IV.
<br>(b) the person who wrote the first account of it
+
<br>(b) I, II, and III
<br>(c) the “Virgin Queen” of England: Queen Elizabeth.
+
<br>(d) the Indian who helped the first settlers
+
<br>(e) no one has any idea where the name came from
+
 
+
43.  The effects of the spread of communism to China included:
+
 
+
I.  Chairman Mao stole people’s property
+
<br>II.  Women were treated just like men
+
<br>III.  Chairman Mao formed “Red Guards,” who were students who enforced his ideas
+
<br>IV. People stopped working, causing a great famine
+
<br>V.  Chairman Mao held the Cultural Revolution to imprison or kill intelligent people
+
<br>VI.  People worked harder and invented marvelous new technology to benefit others
+
 
+
(a) I, III, IV, V, VI
+
<br>(b) I, II, III, IV, V
+
<br>(c) I, II, III, IV, V, VI
+
<br>(d) I only
+
<br>(e) none of them
+
 
+
44.  The Haitian Revolution:
+
 
+
I.  Occurred in 1750
+
<br>II.  Was fought by 100,000 slaves
+
<br>III.  Successfully obtained independence for Haiti
+
<br>IV.  Was a revolution against French control
+
 
+
(a) I, II and III
+
<br>(b) I, III and IV
+
 
<br>(c) II, III and IV
 
<br>(c) II, III and IV
<br>(d) I, II, III and IV
+
<br>(d) I, II and IV
<br>(e) II and IV
+
 
+
45.  The “Strategic Defense Initiative” (SDI), known by its critics as “Star Wars,” had which of the following effects:
+
 
+
(a) it stopped the terrorist attack on 9/11
+
<br>(b) it saved the United States from an all-out nuclear attack by the Soviet Union in the late 1980s
+
<br>(c) it was traded by President Reagan to the Soviet Union in exchange for its promise not to attack
+
<br>(d) it became a blockbuster movie starring Tom Hanks and Jen Aniston
+
<br>(e) it weakened the threatening power of the Soviet Union and its leaders, and thereby led to the peaceful end of communism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
+
 
+
46.  This person was the youngest general in the history of the world, taking command of an army at the age of only 17:
+
+
(a) Alexander the Great
+
<br>(b) Hannibal
+
<br>(c) Archimedes
+
<br>(d) Attila the Hun
+
<br>(e) Joan of Arc
+
 
+
47.  The modern nation of Israel has existed since when?
+
 
+
(a) 1804
+
<br>(b) 1919
+
<br>(c) 1940
+
<br>(d) 1948
+
<br>(e) 1963
+
 
+
48.  The slave trade ended in England when:
+
 
+
(a) The United States banned it in 1808
+
<br>(b) The Democratic Party took a strong stand against it during the Civil War
+
<br>(c) Christian reformers, and especially William Wilberforce, worked hard to stop it
+
<br>(d) The “invisible hand” of Adam Smith stopped it
+
<br>(e) Atheists refused to support it any longer
+
 
+
49.  One reason someone might oppose “free trade” is because:
+
 
+
(a) it increases the prices of goods like toothpaste and dog food
+
<br>(b) it enables foreign enemies to insert, even unintentionally, poison into goods like dog food and toothpaste, and to smuggle deadly drugs more easily into the United States
+
<br>(c) higher tariffs are an advantage of free trade
+
<br>(d) disputes under free trade are handled by courts in the United States
+
<br>(e) NAFTA is a good agreement
+
 
+
50.  The religion or belief system that has almost as many participants as Christianity, and may soon surpass it in population, is:
+
 
+
(a) Buddhism
+
<br>(b) Hinduism
+
<br>(c) Judaism
+
<br>(d) Islam
+
<br>(e) Atheism
+
+
HONORS (all should attempt to answers all these questions):
+
 
+
51.  We should all be grateful to the Phoenicians for which reason?
+
 
+
(a) discovering the phoenix, a beautiful bird
+
<br>(b) defeating the Romans
+
<br>(c) inventing the alphabet
+
<br>(d) proving the Pythagorean Theorem
+
<br>(e) being the first to transcribe the Gospels
+
 
+
52.  The “miracle of Dunkirk” was what?
+
 
+
(a) A magnificent Renaissance painting by Rembrandt while he was staying in Belgium
+
<br>(b) When the Nazis had trapped over 300,000 Allied forces in a harbor town on the northernmost tip of France, by the grace of God they were able to escape across the Channel to England.
+
<br>(c) It is a German expression for how German soldiers survived England’s trick maneuver of planting 19 huge land mines during a battle in World War I
+
<br>(d) A victory by the British forces during a battle in World War I
+
<br>(e) A book written by a leading philosopher during the Enlightenment
+
 
+
53.  The Magna Charta provided which of the following rights to nobles, at the expense of the king’s power?
+
 
+
I.  Trial by jury
+
<br>II.  Equal protection under the law
+
<br>III.  No taxation without representation
+
<br>IV.  Freedom of speech
+
 
+
(a) I and II
+
<br>(b) I and III
+
<br>(c) I, II and III
+
<br>(d) I, II, III and IV
+
<br>(e) II only
+
 
+
54.  The term “divine right” (of kings) has which date of origin in the English language?
+
 
+
(a) 500 B.C.
+
<br>(b) A.D. 500
+
<br>(c) A.D. 1000
+
<br>(d) A.D. 1600
+
<br>(e) A.D. 1900
+
 
+
55.  From which era or movement did the concept that “beauty is solely in the eye of the beholder” (in other words, there is no objective beauty) arise?
+
 
+
(a) Renaissance
+
<br>(b) Scholasticism
+
<br>(c) Enlightenment
+
<br>(d) Ancient World
+
<br>(e) Great Awakening
+
 
+
56.  For more than a billion people, the history of the 20th century can be summed up in one phrase: ___________.
+
 
+
(a) death by war
+
<br>(b) independence for their nations
+
<br>(c) conversion to Hinduism
+
<br>(d) monarchy
+
<br>(e) violent revolution
+
 
+
57.  An American soldier who refused to serve under the command of the United Nations was:
+
  
(a) Bill Clinton
+
53.  Which statement is true about Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo?
<br>(b) Jimmy Carter
+
<br>(a) Copernicus built on Galileo’s work, which Kepler then modified.
<br>(c) Barack Obama
+
<br>(b) Kepler built on Copernicus’s work; Galileo wrote his own book about the discoveries.
<br>(d) Michael New
+
<br>(c) Kepler built on Galileo’s work; Copernicus then expanded on both.
<br>(e) Arnold Schwarzenegger
+
<br>(d) Copernicus disagreed with Kepler; Galileo had a better understanding than both.
  
58Who first said, “Power should be a check to power.”
+
54All of the following were influential in world history by drawing strength from their Christianity EXCEPT
 +
<br>(a) Christopher Columbus
 +
<br>(b) Alexander the Great
 +
<br>(c) Louis Pasteur
 +
<br>(d) Isaac Newton
  
(a) Abraham Lincoln
+
55. Which was the longest battle of World War I, causing casualties of nearly 1 million people?
<br>(b) Napoleon
+
<br>(a) The First Battle of Marne
<br>(c) Hitler
+
<br>(b) The Battle of the Bulge
<br>(d) Montesquieu
+
<br>(c) The Gallipoli Campaign
<br>(e) Mussolini
+
<br>(d) The Battle of Verdun
  
59How was the “Enigma” “solved”?
+
56The Great Schism consisted of:
 +
<br>(a) Martin Luther nailing 95 theses to the door of a church in Germany.
 +
<br>(b) the separation of the eastern and western Christian churches in AD 1054.
 +
<br>(c) King Henry VIII founding the Anglican Church.
 +
<br>(d) Atheists groups dividing in AD 1905.
  
(a) by asking Caesar for the answer
+
57.  The Central Powers in World War I included:
<br>(b) by using the Rosetta Stone
+
<br>I.  Germany
<br>(c) by applying mathematics to how often letters (such as vowels) appear in messages
+
<br>II.  Italy
<br>(d) by torturing someone with “water-boarding” until they gave the answer
+
<br>III.  Bulgaria
<br>(e) by sending spacecraft into outer space
+
<br>IV.  the Ottoman Empire
 +
<br>V. Austria-Hungary
  
60.  Who were the “Anglo-Saxons”?
+
(a) I, II, III, IV and V
 +
<br>(b) I, II, IV and V
 +
<br>(c) I, III, IV and V
 +
<br>(d) I, III and V
  
(a) Germanic tribes that conquered England ruled it in a chaotic manner until A.D. 1066
+
58.  Which of the following was true about “neoclassicism”?
<br>(b) Germanic tribes that conquered England ruled it after A.D. 1066
+
<br>(a) Painters emphasized fuzzy “impressions” and colors.
<br>(c) Norman tribes that conquered England ruled it in a chaotic manner until A.D. 1066
+
<br>(b) Painters emphasized clear linear design, using classical themes as subject matter
<br>(d) Norman tribes that conquered England ruled it after A.D. 1066
+
<br>(c) Scholars rejected the works of Greek philosophers and mathematicians.
<br>(e) English nobility
+
<br>(d) Architects emphasized the use of much glass in modern buildings.
  
'''EXTRA CREDIT:'''
+
59.  What was the Silk Road?
 +
<br>(a) an ancient road that had a remarkable silk-like surface
 +
<br>(b) a road that connected North and Central Africa
 +
<br>(c) a trade route from East China to Central Asia and Europe
 +
<br>(d) a road for the evangelism of Hinduism in Vietnam and Korea
  
(Boys only)  
+
60.  “9-11” was on the anniversary of which historical event?
An example of the great benefits of chivalry is:
+
<br>(a) the battle at the Gates of Vienna in 1683
 +
<br>(b) the beginning of the American Civil War
 +
<br>(c) the American Revolutionary War
 +
<br>(d) Bastille Day
  
(a) parents and adults will give you more respect when you treat girls and others with respect
+
EXTRA CREDIT:
<br>(b) you’ll get better job opportunities when you treat girls and others with respect
+
<br>(c) chivalry is a free and easy way to improve the lives of people around you
+
<br>(d) when you are chivalrous, you’ll benefit from chivalry in return
+
<br>(e) there is an art and skill to chivalry and it is enjoyable perfecting it
+
(f) all of the above
+
  
(Girls only)  
+
(for girls only)
An example of the great benefits of chivalry is:
+
<br>Each of the following was a great composer of classical music EXCEPT:
 +
<br>(a) Beethoven
 +
<br>(b) Bach
 +
<br>(c) Mozart
 +
<br>(d) Marx
  
(a) chivalry encourages protection of others, including the unborn
+
(for boys only)
<br>(b) you will find that others prefer to be chivalrous when given the opportunity
+
<br>A reason the people of North Korea have suffered under communist rule for more than 50 years:
<br>(c) when you are chivalrous, you’ll benefit from chivalry in return
+
<br>(a) North Koreans defeated American soldiers there.
<br>(d) chivalry is fun and helps reduce conflicts and accidents
+
<br>(b) North Korea is a Muslim nation, and Islam prefers communism.
<br>(e) all of the above
+
<br>(c) President Truman did not allow General Douglas MacArthur to win the Korean War.
 +
<br>(d) Japan is a close friend of North Korea and continues to give it much support.
  
 
'''THE END.  CONGRATULATIONS!!!'''
 
'''THE END.  CONGRATULATIONS!!!'''
 
[[Category:World History lectures]]
 
[[Category:World History lectures]]

Latest revision as of 01:28, December 21, 2011

Instructions: Closed book; No penalty for wrong answers; 60 questions; 45 minutes long.

Post your own answers at Talk:World History Final Exam.

1. This Christian – considered one of the most influential persons in all of world history – read the Bible nearly every day for intellectual inspiration, and discovered both calculus and gravity:
(a) Abraham
(b) Alexander the Great
(c) Isaac Newton
(d) Nero

2. Which group of people first discovered and developed the concept of zero?
(a) the ancient Egyptians
(b) Enlightenment philosophers
(c) the Jacobins
(d) Indians (in South Asia)

3. About what percentage of the world is Christian today?
(a) 90%
(b) 66%
(c) 50%
(d) 33%

4. Which of the following made this statement in German: “I do not see why man should not be just as cruel as nature.”
(a) Martin Luther
(b) Adolf Hitler
(c) Benito Mussolini
(d) Isaac Newton

5. Karl Marx is best known for writing:
(a) the Bible.
(b) the Communist Manifesto
(c) the Art of War
(d) the Wealth of Nations

6. The “Great War” was the original name for what?
(a) World War I
(b) World War II
(c) the Thirty Years’ War
(d) the Franco-Prussian War

7. The Industrial Revolution began where?
(a) the United States
(b) England
(c) Germany
(d) Russia

8. The Concert of Vienna was which of the following:
(a) a masterful performance of Beethoven’s work
(b) where Mozart preferred to have his music played
(c) a set of alliances between nations requiring each to assist the other if war broke out
(d) a brilliant plan of Napoleon for invading Russia

9. The author of the Books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes was probably:
(a) Solomon
(b) David
(c) Moses
(d) Jesus

10. The founder of Islam was:
(a) Saint Augustine
(b) Muhammad
(c) Attila the Hun
(d) Charles Martel

11. Which leader unintentionally paved the way for Christianity to expand later?
(a) Napoleon
(b) Mussolini
(c) Alexander the Great
(d) Hammurabi

12. This great American general, who was homeschooled and mastered the art of tank warfare, once said, “You need to overcome the tug of people against you as you reach for high goals.” Who was he?
(a) Douglas MacArthur
(b) George Washington
(c) Dwight Eisenhower
(d) George Patton

13. Who proposed the Strategic Defense Initiative, or “Star Wars,” to a surprised world?
(a) Barack Obama
(b) Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(c) Ronald Reagan
(d) Bill Clinton

14. What developed in Western Europe and Japan at about the same time?
(a) feudalism
(b) scholasticism
(c) the Renaissance
(d) the Enlightenment

15. All of the following are true about utilitarianism EXCEPT:
(a) throwing two people off of a lifeboat in order to save the remaining ten
(b) refusing to destroy an evil city if there are merely ten good people in it
(c) John Stuart Mills was a big supporter of utilitarianism
(d) it is OK to convict and imprison an innocent man if causes many others not to commit crime

16. The person who developed the concept of the “social contract” that was used by the American Declaration of Independence was:
(a) Gottfried Leibniz
(b) William Blackstone
(c) Charles-Louis Baron de Montesquieu
(d) John Locke

17. Which philosopher emphasized the value of experience, and founded the Lyceum school?
(a) Socrates
(b) Hippocrates
(c) Plato
(d) Aristotle

18. After whom is the State of Virginia named?
(a) Queen Mary of William and Mary
(b) the wife of Christopher Columbus
(c) Queen Elizabeth
(d) the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus

19. What and when was the Pax Romana?
(a) From 27 B.C. to A.D. 180, it was a time of peace and prosperity for the Roman empire
(b) From 200 B.C. to the birth of Christ, it was a time of peace and prosperity for the Roman empire
(c) From the birth of Christ to A.D. 300, it was a time of peace for the Roman empire
(d) It was the peaceful period between World Wars I and II

20. Each of the following is an example of monotheism EXCEPT:
(a) Judaism
(b) Buddhism
(c) Christianity
(d) Islam

21. Which movement in the arts coincided with the Age of Revolution?
(a) Romanticism
(b) Neo-classicism
(c) Cubism
(d) the Renaissance

22. Who was Constantine the Great?
(a) a leader of the Roman Republic, prior to Julius Caesar
(b) a Roman leader who freed Peter the Apostle from jail
(c) the Roman emperor who first legalized Christianity
(d) the last of the great Greek philosophers

23. The following caused the downfall of belief in the “divine right of kings”:
I. the French Revolution
II. religious wars in England
III. the Renaissance

(a) III only.
(b) I and III
(c) I and II
(d) I, II and III

24. Which of the following are forms of imperialism, and rank them from strongest to weakest
I. Merger, as in adding new states to the United States
II. Colonizing, as in England starting the American colonies
III. Spheres of influence, as in influencing elections
IV. Economic influence, as in using the same currency
V. Protectorates, as in providing military defense
VI. Trade, as in exchanging goods with Latin America

(a) I, II, III, IV, V, and VI
(b) II, V, III, IV
(c) I, III, and VI
(d) II only

25. The time period between Jesus and Attila the Hun is roughly equal to (within a few hundred years) of the time period between:
(a) the fall of the Roman Empire and the Great War
(b) the writing of the Old Testament and the King James Version of the Bible
(c) the peak of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment
(d) the Crusades and the peak of the Renaissance

26. About how long did the Age of Exploration last?
(a) 50 years
(b) 100 years
(c) 200 years
(d) 300 years

27. How does Christianity differ most from the other major religions of the world?
(a) The emphasis of Christianity on submission to God.
(b) The emphasis of Christianity on faith.
(c) The emphasis of Christianity on wisdom and justice.
(d) The emphasis of Christianity on ending desire, because desire causes suffering.

28. Order these by chronology, beginning with the earliest:
I. Hernando Cortes
II. the Treaty of Tordesillas
III. Francisco Pizzaro
IV. Oliver Cromwell

(a) I, II, III and IV
(b) II, I, III, IV
(c) IV, I, II and III
(d) III, I, II and IV

29. Who comprised the “Triple Entente”?
(a) Great Britain, Russia and France
(b) France, Great Britain and the United States
(c) Italy, France and Russia
(d) Austria, Germany and Hungary

30. The Crusades were:
(a) two military expeditions over a 100-year period, beginning in AD 1050, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
(b) four military expeditions over a 100-year period, beginning in AD 1099, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
(c) five military expeditions over a 200-year period, beginning in AD 1001, by Christians to free Jerusalem and make it safe for pilgrimages
(d) one military beginning in AD 1050, by Christians to conquer the world

31. Of the modern theories of math and physics, which one led to the most new technology and products?
(a) Bernhard Riemann’s geometry
(b) Quantum Mechanics
(c) the Big Bang
(d) the Theory of Relativity

32. Who was Ho Chi Minh?
(a) a Korean leader who sought unification of North and South Korea
(b) a Vietnamese leader who sought a unified, communist Vietnam
(c) a Japanese military commander who led the invasion of China
(d) a Chinese leader who was defeated by Chairman Mao

33. When a student does well on an exam because he started studying sooner than the other students, he is proving what [fill in] declared in about [fill in].
(a) Aesop … 600 B.C.
(b) Aesop … 100 B.C.
(c) the Bible … A.D. 500
(d) Aristotle … 700 B.C.

34. Put the following events in chronological order:
I. D-Day
II. the Communist Revolution
III. the sinking of the Lusitania
IV. the construction of the Berlin Wall

(a) III, II, I and IV
(b) I, II, III and IV
(c) III, IV, I and II
(d) II, I, III and IV

35. Who broke the German’s Enigma?
(a) the “Red Baron”
(b) American bombers flying over Berlin
(c) a Polish mathematician
(d) an unknown soldier while in trench warfare

36. The following example best illustrates the nature of the Cold War:
(a) Stalin may have known more about the progress of the Manhattan Project than Truman did.
(b) 500,000 German soldiers froze to death when Germany invaded Russia.
(c) the 9-11 attack on the World Trade Centers.
(d) the internment of American Japanese during World War II.

37. Order these civilizations or empire chronologically, from the earliest to the latest:
I. the First French Empire
II. Mesopotamia
III. the Roman Empire
IV. ancient Greece

(a) I, II, III and IV
(b) II, IV, III, and I
(c) II, III, IV, and I
(d) I, II, IV, and III

38. The ideas or actions of each of the following contributed to the French Revolution EXCEPT:
(a) Rousseau
(b) Burke
(c) Voltaire
(d) Robespierre

39. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt would not have underestimated how difficult it would be to defeat the Japanese in World War II if he had learned about this group in world history:
(a) the Roman Empire.
(b) the Korean Empire.
(c) the Mongol Empire.
(d) the Indian Empire.

40. Order these leaders chronologically, from the earliest to the latest:
I. Augustus Caesar
II. Julius Caesar
III. Charlemagne
IV. Romanov

(a) I, II, III and IV
(b) III, I, II and IV
(c) II, I, III and IV
(d) IV, I, II and III

41. All of the following were Christian leaders EXCEPT:
(a) Constantine the Great
(b) Charlemagne
(c) Maria Theresa
(d) Philip of Macedon

42. Did most Europeans prefer North or South America during the Age of Exploration, and why?
(a) North America, because it had better natural resources.
(b) North America, because it had a better climate.
(c) South America, because it had more gold and silver.
(d) South America, because it was easier to reach by boat.

43. Causes of World War II include:
I. the Great Depression
II. the terms in the Treaty of Versailles
III. the rise in nationalism

(a) I only
(b) I and III
(c) I, II and III
(d) II and III

44. The best example of “realpolitik” is:
(a) Napoleon’s invasion of Russia.
(b) Otto von Bismarck’s war with France.
(c) the Mongol’s invasion of Japan.
(d) Germany’s invasion of Poland in 1939.

45. Immanuel Kant would most likely illustrate his view of what is morally right and wrong by which of the following examples:
(a) littering is morally wrong because the result would be unacceptable if everyone did it.
(b) throwing two people off of a lifeboat to save the remaining ten is morally right because ten people are worth more than two people.
(c) disobeying your parents is morally wrong because of the example of the Prodigal Son in the Bible.
(d) based on the theory of relativity, everything is relative so the only things that are morally right and wrong are what you decide are right and wrong.

46. If this influential person in World History were able to speak to our class for a few minutes, he might give you the following advice: “Master a trade or useful activity as a teenager, as I did. Become the world’s greatest expert at it. Develop an ambition for it that has no limits. Then persevere in finding someone to support your dream. Add to that the fearless advantage of Christian faith, and you will be able to unlock a great discovery that will change the world more than you will ever realize.” Who would be most likely to give you that advice?
(a) David Hume
(b) Christopher Columbus
(c) Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
(d) Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

47. How was Nicolae Ceausescu different from virtually all other communists?
(a) Ceausescu defeated Hitler
(b) Ceausescu did not defeat Hitler, but slowed him down
(c) Ceausescu was pro-life and he prohibited abortion
(d) Ceausescu was Stalin’s favorite communist

48. Who developed the concept of the “invisible hand”?
(a) James Clerk Maxwell
(b) Adam Smith
(c) Friedrich Engels
(d) Anwar Sadat

49. Each of the following was an Enlightenment thinker EXCEPT:
(a) Voltaire.
(b) Rousseau.
(c) Hume.
(d) Descartes.

50. Which revolution was named the “Glorious Revolution”?
(a) a revolution in 1688 in England, replacing the Catholic King James II with the Anglican King and Queen, William and Mary
(b) French Revolution, through the eyes of the peasants
(c) the American Revolution
(d) the communist revolution

51. What were some results from Magellan’s voyage around the world?
(a) Italy gained control of colonies in Africa and a new trade route to Asia
(b) Spain gained access to South America and the Southwest region of North America
(c) Portugal gained the colony of Brazil
(d) Spain gained control of much of South America and the Philippines

52. Which of the following is true about the Seven Years’ War?
I. Britain and Prussia were allies on one side
II. It occurred sometime in the mid-1700s
III. France was on the winning side
IV. William Pitt was a reason Britain was on the winning side

(a) I, II, III and IV.
(b) I, II, and III
(c) II, III and IV
(d) I, II and IV

53. Which statement is true about Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo?
(a) Copernicus built on Galileo’s work, which Kepler then modified.
(b) Kepler built on Copernicus’s work; Galileo wrote his own book about the discoveries.
(c) Kepler built on Galileo’s work; Copernicus then expanded on both.
(d) Copernicus disagreed with Kepler; Galileo had a better understanding than both.

54. All of the following were influential in world history by drawing strength from their Christianity EXCEPT
(a) Christopher Columbus
(b) Alexander the Great
(c) Louis Pasteur
(d) Isaac Newton

55. Which was the longest battle of World War I, causing casualties of nearly 1 million people?
(a) The First Battle of Marne
(b) The Battle of the Bulge
(c) The Gallipoli Campaign
(d) The Battle of Verdun

56. The Great Schism consisted of:
(a) Martin Luther nailing 95 theses to the door of a church in Germany.
(b) the separation of the eastern and western Christian churches in AD 1054.
(c) King Henry VIII founding the Anglican Church.
(d) Atheists groups dividing in AD 1905.

57. The Central Powers in World War I included:
I. Germany
II. Italy
III. Bulgaria
IV. the Ottoman Empire
V. Austria-Hungary

(a) I, II, III, IV and V
(b) I, II, IV and V
(c) I, III, IV and V
(d) I, III and V

58. Which of the following was true about “neoclassicism”?
(a) Painters emphasized fuzzy “impressions” and colors.
(b) Painters emphasized clear linear design, using classical themes as subject matter
(c) Scholars rejected the works of Greek philosophers and mathematicians.
(d) Architects emphasized the use of much glass in modern buildings.

59. What was the Silk Road?
(a) an ancient road that had a remarkable silk-like surface
(b) a road that connected North and Central Africa
(c) a trade route from East China to Central Asia and Europe
(d) a road for the evangelism of Hinduism in Vietnam and Korea

60. “9-11” was on the anniversary of which historical event?
(a) the battle at the Gates of Vienna in 1683
(b) the beginning of the American Civil War
(c) the American Revolutionary War
(d) Bastille Day

EXTRA CREDIT:

(for girls only)
Each of the following was a great composer of classical music EXCEPT:
(a) Beethoven
(b) Bach
(c) Mozart
(d) Marx

(for boys only)
A reason the people of North Korea have suffered under communist rule for more than 50 years:
(a) North Koreans defeated American soldiers there.
(b) North Korea is a Muslim nation, and Islam prefers communism.
(c) President Truman did not allow General Douglas MacArthur to win the Korean War.
(d) Japan is a close friend of North Korea and continues to give it much support.

THE END. CONGRATULATIONS!!!