All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Agriculture
The introduction of which of the following crops from the New World dramatically improved nutrition in Europe and contributed to population growth in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries?
Potatoes
Wheat
Rice
Tobacco
Bananas
Potatoes
The potato is said to have first been brought back to Europe by Sir Walter Raleigh, though this fact may be apocryphal. The potato grows easily in a wide variety of climates and terrains and was quickly adopted and grown across a diverse area of Europe. In countries like Ireland, it led to a dramatic growth in population in a relatively short time. Potatoes are susceptible to disease, and when a potato blight affected Ireland, much of the population died or was forced to emigrate.
Example Question #11 : Social And Economic History
Thomas Newcomen’s original steam engine was first used to __________.
power steamboats
power trains
remove water from coal and iron mines
power factories, particularly in the textile industry
improve the efficiency of agricultural machinery
remove water from coal and iron mines
Of course the steam engine would eventually be employed to match all of these purposes, but it was first envisioned, developed, and used to try and pump water from coal mines more effectively. In those days, coal miners were often delayed by water for long periods of time or else forced to work in even more dangerous and deplorable conditions. The invention of the steam engine helped in this regard immensely, particularly as it was improved over the course of the eighteenth century.
Example Question #13 : Social And Economic History
Cornelius Vermuyden __________.
spread the use of the horse drawn plow around Northern Europe
led the movement in Parliament away from the “open field” system and towards the “enclosure” system
introduced Dutch land reclamation projects to Northern England
pioneered the Norfolk Crop Rotation system
developed the seed drill
introduced Dutch land reclamation projects to Northern England
Cornelius Vermuyden was a Dutch engineer who in the seventeenth century introduced Dutch land reclamation projects to Yorkshire and Lancashire in Northern England. This project turned land in Yorkshire and Lancashire into some of the most fecund and productive land area in England and was an important part of the massive increase in food production in England in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Example Question #14 : Social And Economic History
Which of these best describes the Enclosure Movement?
The process by which the crown acquired much of the land once held by the monasteries
The process of dividing plots of land to be worked by the peasants within a community
The process of consolidating many small farms into fewer large farms
None of these answers describes the Enclosure Movement.
The process by which the crown acquired much of the land once held by the aristocracy
The process of consolidating many small farms into fewer large farms
The Enclosure Movement took place gradually in England beginning around the thirteenth century, but really accelerated in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries during the British Agricultural Revolution. The process involved consolidating all the small agricultural landholdings that existed under the “open field” system into a smaller number of much larger farms. This would have many consequences, but the most notable were the dramatic increase in food production and the forced migration of peasants from the countryside to urban areas in search of work.
Example Question #12 : Agriculture
The invention of the flying shuttle transformed which of these industries during the Industrial Revolution?
Transportation
Coal mining
Construction
Textiles
Iron mining
Textiles
The flying shuttle was developed by John Kay in the 1730s and quickly revolutionized the textile industry in Britain. Along with the spinning jenny and the water frame, the flying shuttle encouraged the budding industrial revolution and gave extra life to cottage industry, as textiles became immensely cheaper and quicker to produce.
Example Question #13 : Agriculture
During the Agricultural Revolution, the population of England __________.
stayed roughly the same
more than doubled
emigrated in massive numbers
decreased slightly
increased slightly
more than doubled
During the Agricultural Revolution, the population of England more than doubled. The Agricultural Revolution meant that fewer workers could produce a greater surplus of food. A much higher population could be supported by a smaller number of workers than ever before. Many of the displaced rural population moved to cities providing the raw human manpower to spur the Industrial Revolution.
Example Question #14 : Agriculture
The spinning jenny was invented by __________.
Henry Ford
James Hargreaves
Thomas Newcomen
Robert Fulton
James Watt
James Hargreaves
The spinning jenny was invented by James Hargreaves in the middle of the eighteenth century. It was an extremely important invention of the early period of industrialization. It mechanized the spinning wheel and made textile production far cheaper and more efficient.
Example Question #15 : Agriculture
The development of the water frame by __________ increased the productivity of the agricultural and textile industries in the eighteenth century.
Charles Townshend
Jeremy Bentham
Richard Arkwright
Nikola Tesla
Jethro Tull
Richard Arkwright
Richard Arkwright developed the water frame in the second half of the eighteenth century. Along with the flying shuttle and the spinning jenny, it quickly revolutionized the textile and agricultural industries.
Example Question #16 : Agriculture
“Gentleman farmers” are so named because __________.
they do not have to work the land they own in order to generate food or profit, but can do so for leisure
they are more concerned with the arts than with agricultural endeavors
they were continental Europeans who came over to take advantage of the fertile land in England
they are extremely politically organized and influential
they contributed a great deal to the advance of agricultural science and understanding
they do not have to work the land they own in order to generate food or profit, but can do so for leisure
The term “Gentleman farmers” describes a class of people who own so much land that they no longer have to work it for either sustenance or profit.
Example Question #20 : Social And Economic History
Although the capabilities of coal as a source of fuel had long been known, it was generally rejected as inefficient and harmful to the environment until __________.
the invention of the railroad
Britain’s supply of wood was almost exhausted
the vulcanization process was discovered
the Bessemer process was discovered
the invention of the steam engine
Britain’s supply of wood was almost exhausted
Coal had always been in abundant supply in Britain and its properties as a source of fuel had long been understood; however, it was genuinely considered too inefficient and harmful to the environment to be worth the effort it took to mine it. This was until Britain’s forests and supply of wood became depleted and the nation was forced to experiment with other means of fueling machinery. This led to several innovations in the mining of coal and the conversion of coal into fuel.
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