All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #101 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Which of the following does NOT describe the beliefs of Martin Luther?
Political authority was illegitimate, and peasants had the right to revolt against those who ruled over them.
The church should be a community of believers, rather than a hierarchical institution headed by the pope in Rome.
Faith alone was all that was needed for salvation.
Religious authority resides in the word of God as revealed through the Bible, rather than in the church.
The Eucharist should not be viewed as a literal transformation of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ.
Political authority was illegitimate, and peasants had the right to revolt against those who ruled over them.
The Protestant reformer Martin Luther emphasized four central beliefs: 1) That faith alone, rather than good works, was all that was necessary for salvation, 2) That religious authority rests in the Bible alone, 3) That the church exists as a community of believers, rather than a hierarchy of clergymen, and 4) That the priesthood was not superior to the laity. Luther also emphasized the dogma of consubstantiation (the Eucharist representing Christ's Last Supper), as opposed to the Catholic transubstantiation (the literal transformation of bread and wine into Christ's body and blood). While Luther's ideas spurred German peasant revolts in the sixteenth century, he ultimately sided with the rulers crushing the revolts, and Lutheranism tended to uphold secular leaders.
Example Question #102 : Cultural And Intellectual History
The term "Huguenots" refers to __________.
French Calvinists who frequently clashed with Catholics in the mid-sixteenth century
A group of Catholic priests who hoped to reform the church from within
French traitors who defected to the armies of Charles V
Moderate French aristocrats who bolstered the authority of the king
Peasants who rebelled against the abuses of the French monarchy
French Calvinists who frequently clashed with Catholics in the mid-sixteenth century
Huguenots were the name for French Calvinists. During the mid-sixteenth century, many aristocrats converted to Calvinism as part of an ongoing power struggle to decrease the authority of the French monarchy and increase the power of the aristocracy. Huguenot lords clashed with Catholic lords, leading to all-out civil war. The moderate politiques and the eventual ascension of Henry of Navarre to the throne paved the way for peace. King Henry IV passed the Edict of Nantes, which granted some religious liberties to the Huguenots.
Example Question #103 : Cultural And Intellectual History
For whom did Niccolò Machiavelli write The Prince?
The Black Prince
King Henry VIII of England
The Medici Family
The Grand Duke of Sicily
Pope Innocent VIII
The Medici Family
The Medici family was one of the most powerful and influential families in Italy whose connections reached from the Papacy and the French Monarchy to local nobility in various cities. Machiavelli was a diplomat and civil servant in Italy who fell out of grace with the Medicis and attempted to regain their support through his writings on how to be an effective ruler. He believed that he held the key to attaining and maintaining power and wished for the Medici family to utilize it and extend its influence. The Prince later became a fundamental lesson for any ruler on how to govern by any means necessary.
Example Question #104 : Cultural And Intellectual History
A chief cause of the Thermidorian Reaction during the French Revolution was __________
the invasion of France by the armies of the Holy Roman Emperor.
the leadership of Napoleon Bonaparte over the Revolutionary Army.
the economic troubles caused by the French Directory.
the personal unpopularity of Maximilien Robespierre.
the political turmoil in Revolutionary France's "Sister Republics."
the personal unpopularity of Maximilien Robespierre.
The Thermidorian Reaction ocurred at the very end of the most radical period of the French Revolution, taking its name from the month of the Revolutionary Calendar in which it took place. The Thermidorian Reaction involved the overthrow of the Committee of Public Safety, in particular its leader Maximillien Robespierre, who was essentially the last man standing among the radical revolutionaries after he had ordered the executions of most of his fellow radicals. His opponents invaded a meeting of the Committee, branded Robespierre an outlaw, and executed him the next day.
Example Question #105 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution in France is centered around arguing in favor of __________.
nationalism
conservatism
liberalism
theocracy
republicanism
conservatism
Edmund Burke wrote his Reflections on the Revolution in France in 1790. In it, Burke condemns the chaos and violence of the French Revolution and argues in favor of the importance of conservatism and the preservation of established institutions of authority. The text has been widely employed in the centuries after it was written to argue in favor of maintaining the status quo and preventing movements towards republicanism, liberalism, and later, socialism.
Example Question #106 : Cultural And Intellectual History
“It is much safer to be feared than loved because . . . love is preserved by the link of obligation which, owing to the baseness of men, is broken at every opportunity for their advantage; but fear preserves you by a dread of punishment that never fails.”
This quote appears in __________.
Two Treatises of Government by John Locke.
The Prince by Machiavelli
The Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding by John Locke.
The Social Contract by Jean Jacques Rousseau.
The Prince by Machiavelli
The quote appears in the famous sixteenth-century work by Machiavelli called The Prince. While you might not have recognized the quote itself, you should have recognized it’s primary argument, which is basically the main argument of Machiavelli’s work. Essentially, The Prince is intended as a guideline for ruling Princes and Kings and advises them to do whatever is necessary to maintain their own rule. Machiavelli argued that morality should be considered less significant than the maintenance of power and stability—"It is safer to be feared than loved . . ."
Example Question #107 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Machiavelli’s The Prince revolutionized political theory by advocating for __________ above all else.
deception
secularization
violence
piety
pragmatism
pragmatism
Machiavelli wrote The Prince in 1513. It quickly became one of the most widely read and influential political books in history. Machiavelli advocated heavily that states and rulers should always do whatever is in the best interest of the continuation of their power. Machiavelli believed in pragmatism above all else, advising that princes should make war or peace, betray alliances or remain loyal, as long as they acted in the best interest of the state.
Example Question #106 : Ap European History
Which of the following is true about political life in France after the Hundred Years’ War?
Government was centralized under the authority of the king.
Government was decentralized as the power of the nobility rose.
Government was heavily weakened and fragmented by defeat to the English.
Politics was dominated by the army and the power of the generals.
Politics was dominated by religious concerns and the power of the cardinals.
Government was centralized under the authority of the king.
After the Hundred Years’ War, the power of the French nobility was weakened, and their finances were nearly exhausted. This allowed the king to centralize power under the monarchy. It also led to a slight opening of French society as the bourgeoise began to emerge as the primary source of revenue for the king.
Example Question #105 : Ap European History
The Peace of Westphalia brought about the end of __________ and ushered in the era of __________.
continental wars . . . civil wars
class-based wars . . . religious wars
wars over the balance of power . . . class-based wars
civil wars . . . continental wars
religious wars . . . wars over the balance over power
religious wars . . . wars over the balance over power
The Peace of Westphalia brought to an end the Thirty Years’ War in 1648. Most historians consider the Thirty Years’ War to be the culmination of more than a century of religious wars in Europe. With the signing of the Peace of Westphalia limited religious tolerance was provided throughout the majority of Europe. But, a new political and social order was established that led to war and atrocity for the next three centuries. “Balance of power” politics was established, whereby all the nations of Europe agree to collectively prevent any one European power from becoming hegemonic.
Example Question #108 : Cultural And Intellectual History
The “Golden Age of France” is generally said to have coincided with the reign of which French ruler?
King Henry IV
Emperor Napoleon III
Napoleon Bonaparte
King Louis XIV
Charles de Gaulle
King Louis XIV
The so-called “Golden Age of France” took place during the seventeenth century and the early eighteenth century. This mostly coincided with the reign of the Sun King Louis XIV. It was a time when French culture, particularly art and literature, were widely embraced around Europe, and French became the international language in much the same way that English is in the twenty-first century.