All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #711 : Ap European History
Andreas Vesalius is most closely associated with which branch of medical study?
Genetics
Psychiatry
Physiology
Anatomy
Microbiology
Anatomy
Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician who wrote a very important book on human anatomy called On the Fabric of the Human Body in the early sixteenth century. Vesalius produced the first accurate and detailed depiction of the human body in European history and greatly advanced the sum of medical understanding.
Example Question #91 : Social And Economic History
The Germ Theory of disease propounded by Louis Pasteur replaced this earlier theory of disease which stated that bad smells in the air caused diseases.
Aristotelian Medicine
The Vitriolic Theory
The Miasmatic Theory
The Gallic Theory
The Hippocratic Theory
The Miasmatic Theory
Up until the nineteenth century, when Louis Pasteur revolutionized our understanding of what causes diseases, it was commonly believed throughout Europe that noxious smells in the air caused and spread diseases. This theory was called the Miasmatic Theory.
Example Question #93 : Social And Economic History
The introduction of this crop into European society dramatically improved nutrition and led to a marked population growth.
Barley
Tomatoes
Wheat
Potatoes
Corn
Potatoes
The introduction of the potato in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries dramatically improved nutrition for the poorest people in European society. Potatoes can be grown in highly variable climates. This improved nutrition in turn contributed to a massive population growth in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, though a potato famine would doom much of the Irish population in the nineteenth century.
Example Question #92 : Social And Economic History
Bubonic Plague was no longer a massive threat to European society beginning in which century?
The seventeenth century
The twentieth century
The nineteenth century
The sixteenth century
The eighteenth century
The nineteenth century
Bubonic Plague, sometimes called the Black Death, devastated European society routinely from the fourteenth century to the eighteenth century. It remained occasionally threatening into the nineteenth century, but by the time the nineteenth century came to an end, improvements in sanitation and the widespread usage of quarantines rendered the plague far less threatening and virtually eradicated.
Example Question #713 : Ap European History
This physician authored On the Movement of the Heart and Blood, which correctly explained the movement of blood through arteries and veins for the first time.
Henry Cavendish
Florence Nightingale
Robert Owen
William Harvey
Robert Hooke
William Harvey
William Harvey was an English physician in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He is most famous for his work On the Movement of the Heart and Blood, which explained the circulation of blood around the body. Harvey was a prolific writer on the craft of being a doctor in general and his ideas about hospitals, medical science, and medical practice were widely influential for centuries to come.
Example Question #714 : Ap European History
The Sadler Report was primarily concerned with __________.
alleviating poverty in London during the Second World War
understanding the nature of infections disease during the Stuart Restoration
limiting factory working hours for children during the Industrial Revolution
improving hospital conditions in Britain in the late nineteenth century
providing clean water to urban areas in Britain in the eighteenth century
limiting factory working hours for children during the Industrial Revolution
The Sadler Report was published by a British parliamentary committee in 1832. Its primary concern was alleviating poverty in industrial centers during the early years of the Industrial Revolution. Of particular importance was limiting factory working hours for children and providing safer and healthier living conditions.
Example Question #93 : Social And Economic History
Louis Pasteur’s groundbreaking work in the nineteenth century has primarily impacted ___________.
the availability of medicine
inoculations and vaccinations
water purification
hospital sanitation
food preservation
food preservation
Louis Pasteur was a French scientist who in the nineteenth century discovered that heating beer was enough to kill the bacteria that was responsible for causing the beer to go bad. His process of pasteurization allowed food to be preserved far more effectively and completely revolutionized the dairy industry, among others.
Example Question #716 : Ap European History
The eruption of this disease in urban areas in the nineteenth century led to the Public Health Act of 1848 in Britain.
Bubonic plague
Influenza
Syphilis
Cholera
Polio
Cholera
In the early years of the Industrial Revolution, the urban centers of Europe were filthy, and the mortality rates from disease were very high. In Britain, social reformers like Edwin Chadwick and, earlier, Jeremy Bentham worked to improve sanitation and living conditions for the very poor. The frequent eruption of the disease cholera provided the necessary impetus for the British government to adopt the Public Health Act of 1848, which focused on providing clean running water and an efficient and sanitary sewage system. It would have dramatic effects on the mortality rate of urban Britain.
Example Question #715 : Ap European History
Edward Jenner was an English scientist and physician. In 1798, he developed the __________ vaccine and is consequently known as "the father of immunology.
Swine flu
Chickenpox
Polio
Smallpox
Rubella
Smallpox
Jenner noted that milkmaids who received cowpox were protected against smallpox. He inoculated an eight-year old boy by infecting him first with cowpox. He later observed that when Philipps was exposed to smallpox he did not become infected. The smallpox vaccine was the first sucsessful vaccine in history, and thus one of the most important scientific developments in history.
Example Question #94 : Social And Economic History
The late-eighteenth-century idea that an overgrowth in population would inevitably lead to famine and disease is known as __________.
the Hegelian dialectic
Cartesian dualism
the categorical imperative
the Malthusian catastrophe
the invisible hand
the Malthusian catastrophe
Thomas Robert Malthus was an English cleric and economist who wrote An Essay on the Principle of Population in 1798, initially under a pseudonym. Malthus argued in his essay that the increasing population of Great Britain would be unable to feed itself with its current agricultural output and would face famine and disease, a condition known as "the Malthusian catastrophe." Malthus' predictions did not come to pass largely because of the technological advances of the Industrial Revolution and the Agricultural Revolution.
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