All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #38 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution 1750 To 1900
Which of these statements best describes the Haitian Revolution?
An independence movement that developed into a slave revolt
A slave revolt that developed into an independence movement
An independence movement led by the plantation owners against French rule
A slave revolt that was quickly suppressed, but served as an example to other slave colonies
An independence movement led by soldiers from Napoleon’s army returning from Europe
A slave revolt that developed into an independence movement
The Haitian Revolution began as a series of slave revolts led by Toussaint-L’ouverture in the 1790s. The successes of the rebellion encouraged L’ouverture and others to transform the slave rebellion into an independence movement. Although L’ouverture was captured and imprisoned in France, the fight continued in his absence and, in 1804, Jean-Jacques Dessalines declared the independence of the Haitian republic.
Example Question #63 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
The Tanzimat Reforms were a series of modernizing efforts in which empire?
Russian Empire
Parthian Empire
Ottoman Empire
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Spanish Empire
Ottoman Empire
The Tanzimat Reforms were enacted in the mid-nineteenth century by the government of the Ottoman Empire. The Tanzimat Reforms were designed to modernize the Ottoman Empire and to address the threat of rising nationalism within the Empire.
Example Question #472 : Political History
The Haitian Revolution was the rebellion of slaves against the control of which country?
Britain
Spain
Netherlands
France
USA
France
The Haitian Revolution ended colonial control of the island called Sainte Domingue by France and introduced independence and the renaming of the country to Haiti in 1804.
Example Question #64 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
Which of these colonies was the first in Latin America to gain independence?
Puerto Rico
Mexico
Argentina
Haiti
Colombia
Haiti
Of these Latin American colonies Haiti was the first to gain independence in 1804. Mexico, Argentina, and Colombia followed in the next few decades. Puerto Rico gained its independence from the Spanish Empire in 1898, although was immediately thereafter annexed and occupied by forces of the United States.
Example Question #65 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
Select the primary goal of the French Estate General’s “cahiers de doléances.”
Universal male suffrage
The merging of the First and Second Estates
Increased governmental spending on social improvement programs
The abolition of the monarchy
Equal rights for French citizens
Equal rights for French citizens
The “cahiers de doléances” were a set of complaints and suggested changes devised by many members of the Estates General, from both the Second and Third Estates. The overall aim of the “cahiers” was to secure equal rights for all (aka white male) French citizens. This goal was to be achieved through the implementation and removal of many monarchial procedures. For example, the Estates General was to be allowed to meet on a regular basis, without kingly interference. In addition, local and regional governing bodies were to be granted greater autonomy over themselves, taxes were to be apportioned on a more equitable basis, some aristocratic privileges (such as reserved hunting forests) were to be abolished, and the press was to be permitted to operate freely. The “cahiers” proved that many members of the Second and Third Estates held very similar ideas of reform, in spite of their social differences and classist outlooks.
Example Question #44 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution 1750 To 1900
Select the event which led to the creation of the French National Assembly in 1789.
Queen Marie Antoinette’s vocal support for Frenchwomen’s suffrage
The “Parlement” of Paris’s public denunciation of the Third Estate’s doubled membership quota
King Louis XVI’s refusal to allow the Third Estate to take part in the same session as the First and Second Estates
The institution of the Tennis Court Oath
The First Estate’s rejection of the “cahiers de doléances”
King Louis XVI’s refusal to allow the Third Estate to take part in the same session as the First and Second Estates
At the start of the summer of 1789, when the members of the Estates General finally gathered together to hold their first meeting, King Louis XVI (perhaps fearing a dilution of his own power) attempted to gain back some level of dominance over the group. Already made uneasy by the claims for equality expressed in the “cahiers de doléances,” the King vehemently distrusted the Third Estate and so he refused to allow their members to take part in the same session, at the same time, as their fellow First and Second Estate legislators. Naturally, the Third Estate saw the King’s new rule as a direct attack against themselves, and so they refused to follow his order. When the King made no move to retreat from his policy, the Third Estate abandoned the entire Estates General and decided to make their own legislature, along with any members of the First and Second Estates who wanted to join them. Many members of the First Estate, as well as the entire Second Estate, took the Third Estate up on its offer and so, on June 17th, 1789, they all converged to form the new National Assembly.
Example Question #71 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
Select the most important result of the French National Assembly’s Tennis Court Oath.
The First Estate seceded from the National Assembly and defected to the King’s side
The National Assembly’s members would have one vote each
The National Assembly began raising funds and amassing its own private army
King Louis XVI abdicated the throne
The French government declared the National Assembly an illegal and traitorous group
The National Assembly’s members would have one vote each
King Louis XVI was deeply alarmed by the creation of the National Assembly – he hadn’t at all foreseen this turn of events. Consequently, he decided to meet with the few remaining members of the Estates General, but, most portentously, he had the National Assembly’s meeting room locked and barred. When the members of the National Assembly turned up and saw the locked doors, however, they weren’t discouraged or demoralized, as the King had hoped. Instead, the National Assembly was all the more energized and more determined than ever to achieve their reformist aims. Defiantly, they held their meeting instead on a tennis court – hence, the name of the oath – and there passed a solemn resolution that they would continue to meet, no matter what the King did to oppose them, until they had drafted a new national constitution, with all of their changes included. They also renamed themselves the National Constituent Assembly. The King tried to quash this latest development but it was too late, especially as the remaining members of the Estates General defected in support of the Assembly. From now on, the King was going to have to try and cooperate with the Assembly if he hoped to have any say in his nation’s government.
Example Question #1191 : Ap World History
Select the type of government which the National Constituent Assembly was initially in favor of instituting in France.
Communism
Oligarchy
Constitutional monarchy
Representative democracy
Theocracy
Constitutional monarchy
Initially, during the summer of 1789, most members of the National Constituent Assembly were in favor of instituting some form of constitutional monarchy in France. Many looked to the constitutional monarchy already in place in England, in which the English monarch and the Parliament shared rule under the Magna Carta, as a good model. But as King Louis XVI continued to make one sociopolitical blunder after another, support for any government which included the monarchy at all swiftly began to evaporate. Increasingly, the King looked to be an untrustworthy, inept, and/or entirely disinterested potential participant and so the Assembly began to consider other forms of government, including more drastic types.
Example Question #44 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution 1750 To 1900
What event precipitated the storming of the Bastille on July 14th, 1789 by the citizens of Paris?
The re-appointment of Jacques Necker as the Minister of Finance
The presence of royal troops in Paris
King Louis XVI’s decision to use the Bastille as a fortress where he could hide in protected seclusion
The National Constituent Assembly’s denunciation of the Bastille as a place where political prisoners were being kept and tortured
Queen Marie Antoinette’s infamous ignorance of the city’s food shortage
The presence of royal troops in Paris
Following his failed attempt to disband the National Constituent Assembly, King Louis XVI decided to place contingents of royal troops around both Versailles and Paris. The King hoped that the presence of his soldiers would dissuade the Assembly from taking any sort of drastic actions but, like so many of the King’s other endeavors, this plan had unintended consequences. The citizens of Paris, who had been suffering food shortages without any reprieve from their own government, were very much in support of the Assembly and so they viewed the royal troops in their midst as a direct threat to the Assembly’s continued existence. Desperate to keep the Assembly in place, on July 14th, 1789, a mob of enraged Parisians decided to assault the nearby Bastille prison, a fortress which had once held political prisoners but now stored weapons instead. When the Bastille’s guards fired into the approaching crowd and killed ninety-eight people, the remaining citizens responded by storming the fortress. In the ensuing chaos, the mob released all seven of the Bastille’s prisoners, captured weapons for their National Guard militia, and killed the prison’s governor and several other guards.
Example Question #481 : Political History
Select the correct definition of the term “journées,” as it applies to the French Revolution.
Incidents in which groups of French citizens banded together to take the Revolution into their own hands
The National Constituent Assembly’s encouragement of mass public uprisings
King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette’s failed escape attempt from Paris
The destruction of prisons and aristocratic property by French citizens all across the country
The Marquis de Lafayette’s journey to America to seek support for the burgeoning French Revolution
Incidents in which groups of French citizens banded together to take the Revolution into their own hands
The July 14th, 1789 storming and destruction of the Bastille by the citizens of Paris marked the beginning of the “journées.” The “journées” were otherwise known as incidents in which groups of French citizens banded together to take the Revolution into their own hands, often through destructive and/or violent means. This pattern would persist, again and again, throughout the entire Revolution, culminating in and coinciding with the infamous Reign of Terror. After the fall of the Bastille, the National Constituent Assembly very quickly realized that it was no longer entirely in control of the Revolution; instead, the French people were determined to play a part and would continue to do so. The reaction to such events within the Assembly was decidedly mixed; many members were disturbed by these outbreaks of disruption, but many others (most notably Maximillian Robespierre), saw the “journées” as crucial opportunity for power and control of the building Revolutionary movement.
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