All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #231 : Ap World History
In which of these centuries did nationalism emerge as a prominent force in European affairs?
Sixteenth
Nineteenth
Fifteenth
Twentieth
Seventeenth
Nineteenth
The concept of nationalism emerged as a prominent force in European affairs in the early nineteenth century. People in Europe had long held common and shared national identities, but the rising tide of nationalism in the nineteenth century was of a different order. It threatened the unity of multinational empires such as the Ottoman Empire, the Russian Empire, and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, as people campaigned for the right to self-determination throughout Europe.
Example Question #232 : Ap World History
Edmund Burke is often remembered as the father of which of these nineteenth-century movements?
Nationalism
Secularism
Liberalism
Conservatism
Socialism
Conservatism
Edmund Burke was a political theorist and philosopher in Britain in the eighteenth century. He is remembered for his writings on the American Revolution (of which he was in support) and the French Revolution (which he was opposed to the worst excesses of). Burke is widely credited as the founder of modern conservatism for his arguments in favor of gradual change and the preservation of the status quo.
Example Question #233 : Ap World History
Which of these enlightenment thinkers is most associated with religious tolerance?
Locke
Montesquieu
Voltaire
Hobbes
Descartes
Voltaire
Voltaire is the enlightenment thinker who is most readily associated with religious tolerance. Voltaire wrote letters to monarchs all over Europe decrying the insidious impact of Christianity on European society. He believed strongly in Deism and argued that all men were equal in the eyes of God and that all faiths deserved equal respect and merit in a free and open society. Voltaire was widely persecuted in his lifetime for his polemical attacks on the Catholic Church.
Example Question #234 : Ap World History
Friedrich Nietzsche proposed which of the following philosophical ideas in his work, Thus Spoke Zarathustra?
Transhumanism
Nihilism
Ubermensch
Existentialism
Modernism
Ubermensch
Though the translation of the term has long been disputed, Ubermensch relates to Nietzsche's concept of the death of God. It refers to one who spurns promises of other-worldliness commonly presented through religions and accepts "this worldliness."
Example Question #235 : Ap World History
The “consent of the governed” is most associated with which of these enlightenment thinkers?
Diderot
Voltaire
Hobbes
Locke
Smith
Locke
The enlightenment idea that political legitimacy rests in the “consent of the governed” is most closely associated with the writings of John Locke. Locke is often referred to as the father of modern liberalism. His writings on republicanism, religious tolerance, and the social contract have been widely influential in European and American history. The consent of the governed essentially states that the government only has legitimacy to rule over the people so long as the people accept the government. If the government is deemed deficient, the people have a right and duty to overthrow the government.
Example Question #236 : Ap World History
Which of these enlightenment thinkers authored The Social Contract?
Adam Smith
Voltaire
John Locke
Baron de Montesquieu
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
The Social Contract was written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in 1762. In it Rousseau argues against the authority of absolute monarchs in Europe. Rousseau states that only the people have absolute authority over the nature and form of government and that monarchs are beholden to the people, not the other way around. Rousseau’s ideas were influential in the formation of liberal and democratic constitutions throughout the world, including the framing of the constitution of the United States. Rousseau's ideas were also extremely influential in the outbreak of the French Revolution.
Example Question #237 : Ap World History
Which of these European rulers is not an example of an Enlightened despot?
Joseph II
Catherine the Great
Frederick the Great
Maria Theresa
King Henry VIII
King Henry VIII
King Henry VIII is the only one of these who is not an example of an enlightened despot. He reigned in the early sixteenth century, too early for the enlightenment. An enlightened despot is a ruler who tries to embrace some aspects of the enlightenment, but continues to preserve the authoritarian nature of their autocratic rule. Catherine the Great of Russia, Maria Theresa of Austria, and Frederick the Great of Prussia are the most famous enlightened despots.
Example Question #238 : Ap World History
Which of these people is most likely to have been a Deist?
Rene Descartes
Casimir III of Poland
Nikita Khrushchev
Oliver Cromwell
Eva Peron
Rene Descartes
In order to answer this question you first need to understand that a Deist is someone who ascribes to Deism - someone who believes in a “watchmaker God” who created the universe, but then left it to its own devices. Deism was widely embraced by scientists and thinkers during the enlightenment and the scientific revolution. Therefore, Rene Descartes (the famous enlightenment thinker) is the most likely of these answer choices to have been a Deist.
Example Question #239 : Ap World History
Which of these "-isms" is most associated with the unification of Italy and Germany in the second-half of the nineteenth century?
Conservatism
Authoritarianism
Socialism
Nationalism
Liberalism
Nationalism
The unifications of Germany and Italy (both completed in 1871) were inspired by the emergence of nationalism in the nineteenth century. Both countries had long been divided into small states and principalities, yet the people living there retained a shared language and a common heritage. It is generally accepted that the most important characteristic for the formation of a national identity is shared language and a common history.
Example Question #240 : Ap World History
Catherine the Great and Frederick the Great are both examples of __________.
the declining influence of the European monarchy
constitutional monarchs
Russian monarchs
Prussian rulers
enlightened despots
enlightened despots
Catherine the Great and Frederick the Great are both examples of enlightened despots. Enlightened absolutism emerged during the enlightenment period as many European monarchs sought to marry the principles of the enlightenment with the realities of their autocratic regimes.
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