All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1311 : Ap World History
Why did the conspirators want to assassinate Julius Caesar?
They feared he would try to worsen the standard of living and political rights of the plebeians
They were angered by their personal loss of prestige and power following Caesar’s rise to power
They were concerned by his attempts to reinstitute the constitution of the Roman Republic
They were angered by Caesar’s losses on the battlefield and feared retribution from Rome’s enemies
They feared his ambition might lead him to claim the dictatorship of Rome for himself
They were angered by their personal loss of prestige and power following Caesar’s rise to power
Julius Caesar was assassinated by a group of conspirators in the Roman Senate in 44 BCE. Those that assassinated him were motivated by their loss of power and their fears about the nature of Roman politics in the wake of Caesar’s declaring himself dictator for life.
Example Question #1312 : Ap World History
The Battle of Actium was instrumental _____________.
in the rise to power of Augustus Caesar
in the formation of Ptolemaic Egypt
in the decline of the Roman Empire
in the formation of the Roman Republic
in the rise to power of Julius Caesar
in the rise to power of Augustus Caesar
The Battle of Actium took place in 31 BCE. It was the final confrontation of the final civil war of the Roman Republic. It began as a naval engagement between the forces of Octavian (later Augustus Caesar) and the combined forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. It ended in victory for Octavian and cemented his rise to power. In 27 BCE he would be crowned as the first emperor of the nascent Roman Empire.
Example Question #1313 : Ap World History
The Peloponnesian War ended in __________.
victory for Ancient Greece and the declining power of Persia
victory for Persia and the complete destruction of Ancient Greece
victory for Athens and the complete destruction of Sparta
victory for Sparta and the complete destruction of Athens
victory for Ancient Greece and the complete destruction of Persia
victory for Sparta and the complete destruction of Athens
The Peloponnesian War was fought between an alliance of Greek city-states led by Athens and an alliance of Greek city-states led by Sparta in the fifth century BCE. It ended in total victory for Sparta, the destruction of Athens, and the decline of Athenian culture.
Example Question #1314 : Ap World History
The First Triumvirate of Rome was comprised of __________.
Julius Caesar, Marcus Crassus, and Pompey the Great
Mark Antony, Cleopatra, and Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar, Augustus Caesar, and Mark Anthony
Augustus Caesar, Cicero, and Brutus.
Augustus Caesar, Cicero, and Caligula
Julius Caesar, Marcus Crassus, and Pompey the Great
The First Triumvirate of Rome was comprised of an uneasy alliance between Julius Caesar, Marcus Crassus, and Pompey the Great. The alliance lasted until the death of Crassus when Pompey and Caesar began to compete with one another. Pompey was tasked by the Roman Senate with defending the city from Caesar after the latter’s famous crossing of the Rubicon in 49 BCE, but Pompey was defeated in battle paving the way for Caesar to declare himself dictator of Rome for life.
Example Question #1 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
The Islamic Conquests of the Seventh Century ultimately led Muslim forces to invade Hispania (modern day Spain and Portugal) in 723 CE. Which famous Frankish king helped repel the Muslim invaders on behalf of the Papacy?
Clovis
Pepin the Short
Carloman
Charlemagne
Louis I
Charlemagne
Charlemagne worked very closely with the Papacy, and both believed the expanding Muslim influence to be a threat to Christendom. In the Mid-Eighth Century, Charlemagne began a war with the Muslims under the Umayyad Caliphate to stop their expansion.
Example Question #2 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
Ghenghis Khan’s empire, one of the largest in history, stretched across Asia, until his forces were stopped by a force of newly self-liberated slave warriors called ___________.
the Boxers
the Mamluks
the Vietcong
the Confederates
the Red Guards
the Mamluks
Genghis Khan's empire stretched from China to Western Asia but his advance into Africa was arrested by Mamluks, a group of slaves who freed themselves and then immediately fought off the Mongol army.
The Red Guards were young Maoists during the Cultural Revolution in China, they existed hundreds of years after Genghis Khan's empire had already collapsed.
The Vietcong were Communist Vietnamese in the 20th century who fought against the United States, they existed hundreds of years after the Mongol empire had already collapsed.
The Confederates were a group of southern planters and soldiers who attempted to break away from the American union in order to protect their slavery based economy.
The Boxers were 19th century anti-Western fighters, they existed long after the Mongol empire had already collapsed.
Example Question #3 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
Which of the following is not one of the primary causes of the Hundred Years’ War?
King Edward III’s claim to the French throne
Disputed ownership of Burgundy
Traditional societal hatred amongst both nations
England’s ownership of several former French lands
Disputed ownership of Burgundy
The Hundred Years’ War, which lasted, off and on, from 1337 to 1453, and was fought between England and France, was caused by a perfect storm of motivations. Taken together, various social, economic, and political factors conspired to push these two nations ever deeper into the throes of military and nationalistic conflict. One of the main causes was a long history of disputed ownership of the territory of Flanders – a prosperous center of cloth manufacturing, France technically owned Flanders, but many of the territory’s citizens and funds were far more loyal to England, which provided the territory with the wool it needed for its cloth industry. The English King Edward III also administered several former French pieces of land – but these lands were still nominally owned by the French crown, which had loaned the territories to England since the Norman Conquest. By the time of the outbreak of the Hundred Years’ War, neither nation was content with this system of land loaning, because each side believed that it deserved sole control over these territories. Relations were worsened when Edward III declared that he was the rightful heir to the French King Charles IV, who died in 1328 without a male heir. Enraged by the English king’s pretensions, the French nobility selected Philip VI as their new ruler, which outraged Edward III in turn. The long tradition of hatred between these two nations, nurtured within both English and French societies for centuries, at last came to a violent head.
Example Question #4 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
Select the one advantage which the French did not enjoy in the Hundred Years’ War.
Greater national wealth
The defensive fighting advantage
Greater military strength
A larger population
Greater military strength
While France wielded several advantages over England during the Hundred Years’ War, the strength of the French military cannot be counted as one of them. In fact, when it came to overall strength, the English military was by far more superior, especially in terms of both their level of training and their weaponry (English archers were known for their keen use of the treacherous longbow). By contrast, the French army, although larger – which reflected the overall greater size of the French population – was not nearly as well trained as their English counterparts. However, the French government was much richer than their English foes, which helped them to be able to procure more replacements (of both men and weapons) after every English victory, while the English army had a more difficult time finding replacement weapons and fighting men. Perhaps most crucially, France possessed the defensive advantage – because most of the fighting ended up occurring on French lands, the French soldiers were automatically able to benefit from their knowledge of the terrain and the support of the local peasant population. The English army, meanwhile, was forced to navigate across unfamiliar territory, coming up against obstacles put in their way by both nature and the local populace. Lastly, French morale received a substantial boost from the inspiration presence, speeches, and military engagement of the famous Joan of Arc. The so-called Maid of Orleans, with her courageous fighting spirit, encouraged the French people to fight onward, even after devastating defeats.
Example Question #3 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
Which infamous military leader conquered and ruled over Russia in the mid-thirteenth century?
Suleiman the Magnificent
Ivan the Great
Sultan Saladin
Genghis Khan
Genghis Khan
In 1233, Genghis Khan, with a massive force of highly skilled Mongol warriors behind him, attacked Russia. By this time, the Mongols had invaded and conquered various parts of China and the Middle East, and Moscow found itself hard-pressed to withstand the ruthlessly targeted invasion of its territory, as Genghis Khan gained control of more and more swathes of Russian land. With the final fall of Russia to Mongol forces in 1240, the country came under firm Mongol control and would remain a part of the Mongol Empire for almost three centuries (until Ivan the Great’s liberation of his people in 1480). As a Mongol-controlled state, Russia adopted a curious mixture of Christian, Mongol, and Islamic practices, although the Russian people were allowed to preserve a great deal of their religious and political policies. The Mongols moved the center of Russian political, social, economic, and cultural primacy from Moscow to Kiev; the city would remain a potent force within Russian life for centuries to come.
Example Question #4 : War And Civil Conflict 600 Ce To 1450
How did cannons revolutionize Medieval warfare?
They brought about the end of the longbow and the crossbow as tools of warfare.
They made castles and other defensive fortifications somewhat redundant.
They allowed armies to be more mobile and cover larger distances.
They allowed armies to defend their positions far more effectively.
They dramatically reduced the importance of standing armies and led to the rise of mercenaries.
They made castles and other defensive fortifications somewhat redundant.
Prior to the invention of the cannon in the fourteenth century, the most useful weapon a lord or a king could have was a castle. Castles were built of stone and could withstand constant barrage from trebuchets and catapults provided they were sufficiently manned; however, the invention and subsequent improvement of the cannon gradually rendered castles obsolete as the additional firepower of a cannon could blast right through the stone walls of a castle. This changed not only military life, but also social, economic, and political life in Europe as the feudal system, predicated in many ways on the protection offered by the lord's castle or stronghold, became gradually obsolete.