All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #171 : Ap European History
Cyrus Field is notable for __________.
founding the company that laid the first transatlantic telegraph cable
inventing the method of vulcanizing rubber to make it more durable
financing the first usage of the assembly line in a factory
pioneering a process by which steel could be produced from iron ore
developing a vaccination for polio
founding the company that laid the first transatlantic telegraph cable
Cyrus Field was an American inventor and businessman who, along with other financiers and pioneers, founded the Atlantic Telegraph Company. In 1858, they laid the first transatlantic telegraph cable that connected Great Britain with North America.
Example Question #7 : Literacy; Communication; Education
Which of these inventors is incorrectly paired with his invention?
John Kay - Flying shuttle
Alexander Graham Bell - Telephone
Richard Arkwright - Water frame
James Watt - Telegraph
Jethro Tull - Seed drill
James Watt - Telegraph
James Watt did not invent the telegraph; that honor belongs to Samuel Morse, who also developed Morse Code. James Watt did, however, invent the first reliably functioning and efficient steam engine.
Example Question #8 : Literacy; Communication; Education
__________ is remembered for helping to develop the modern form of the essay.
Boccaccio
Erasmus
Montaigne
Descartes
Marlowe
Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne was a French writer who lived in the sixteenth century (1533-1592). He is best remembered for developing the modern essay form. Montaigne wrote short treatments of a wide variety of topics, from historical figures to human nature in general. In his essays, he advocated for rationalism and logical reasoning and demonstrated these traits with the structure and style of his work.
Example Question #9 : Literacy; Communication; Education
Which of the following important works of the Renaissance period was written by Thomas à Kempis?
On the Solitary Life
The Divine Comedy
The Canterbury Tales
Imitation of Christ
Oration on the Dignity of Man
Imitation of Christ
In the fifteenth century, Thomas à Kempis helped spread the ideas of mysticism by writing in the vernacular German language. His most famous work, Imitation of Christ, is an argument in favor of each individual communing directly with God and being able to experience divinity without the assistance of conventional religious structures.
Example Question #11 : Literacy; Communication; Education
Universal state-sponsored education was first provided in France by which of these rulers?
Emperor Napoleon III
Francis I
Louis XIV
Napoleon
Louis XVIII
Napoleon
As a part of his sweeping reform of French domestic policy, Napoleon made universal state-sponsored education available to the masses for the first time in the early nineteenth century. Napoleon believed the introduction of universal state-sponsored education would both help the people of France and allow him to recruit more and better military officers.
Example Question #12 : Literacy; Communication; Education
Which of the following best summarizes Positivism as defined by Auguste Comte in the nineteenth century?
The progress of mankind to a utopian society is inevitable.
The role of government is to provide the greatest good for the greatest number of people.
Truth is never absolute; it can only be subjective.
Nothing exists, except for science and mathematics.
Only information derived from scientific inquiry possesses authority.
Only information derived from scientific inquiry possesses authority.
Positivism is a philosophy built on the belief that quantifiable information attained through scientific experimentation and inductive reasoning is the only source of authoritative knowledge. Auguste Comte stated that the only information people can trust and accept as true must be verifiable through experimentation or be supported by mathematical or scientific reasoning.
Example Question #172 : Ap European History
Relativism is the belief that __________.
the role of government is to provide the greatest good for the greatest number of people
truth is not absolute; it is subjective and informed by circumstance and perception
the progress of mankind to a utopian society is inevitable
only information derived from scientific inquiry possesses authority
nothing exists, except for science and mathematics
truth is not absolute; it is subjective and informed by circumstance and perception
Relativism, as a philosophy, has been in existence for many centuries, but only became widely understood and referenced by that name in the nineteenth century. According to relativism, truth is not absolute; rather, it is subjective and informed by the perception of the individual and the circumstances in which the information is perceived.
Example Question #173 : Ap European History
Along with writing Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes is remembered as __________.
a conquistador who led an expedition into Central America and defeated the Mayans
an important figure in the development the Spanish language
a leading figure in the Spanish Inquisition
a traitor for aiding the British in their conflict against Spain in the sixteenth century
Spain’s only great religious reformer of the Protestant Reformation
an important figure in the development the Spanish language
Miguel de Cervantes wrote possibly the most famous piece of Spanish literature, Don Quixote, in the sixteenth century. Cervantes wrote in vernacular Spanish, and is often credited as among the earliest and most influential proponents of vernacular Spanish as both a language of common interaction and high artistic achievement. Don Quixote remains one of the most lastingly culturally influential pieces of literature in any language; that it was written in vernacular Spanish at a key time in the language's development cannot be overlooked or understated.
Example Question #12 : Literacy; Communication; Education
Benvenuto Cellini is most famous for his work in which of these literary traditions?
Political philosophy
Poetry
Narrative fiction
Autobiography
The essay
Autobiography
Benvenuto Cellini wrote the most famous autobiography of the Renaissance period. His autobiography is celebrated as an early example of high-level life writing, and is also revered by historians for the insight it provides into sixteenth-century Italian life.
Example Question #13 : Literacy; Communication; Education
During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, which of these was the most widely used language in Europe?
Latin
German
Italian
Spanish
French
French
Early widely used languages in Europe were Greek and Latin. These languages were commonly used in trade, as they were read and spoken by people of many nations, regardless of their first language. By the time of the Renaissance, Greek and Latin were replaced by vernacular Italian. During the Golden Era of French history, the reign of Louis XIV in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, French became the common language of Europe— spoken by courtiers, diplomats, artists, and intellectuals.
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