All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #3 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Bce To 600 Ce
Most of the major early civilizations of South America were established __________.
in the mountains of modern-day Venezuela
in the Amazon River Basin
in the Andean foothills
in the plains of modern-day Argentina
on the coast of modern-day Brazil
in the Andean foothills
Almost all of the major early civilizations of South America emerged in the Andean foothills. These civilizations include the Moche, the Nazca, the Chavin, and the Inca.
Example Question #2 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Bce To 600 Ce
The Celts migrated __________.
from the British Isles to Greenland and North America in the eleventh century
around southern Europe from their home in the Italian peninsula
from the British Isles to the Middle East and Asia Minor in the third century
around eastern Europe from their home in modern-day Hungary
around western Europe from their home in modern-day France
around western Europe from their home in modern-day France
The Celts are an ancient ethnic group who emerged in modern-day France and migrated around Western Europe, settling in places like Spain, Germany, and (most impactfully) the British Isles.
Example Question #3 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Bce To 600 Ce
The Nazca emerged in modern-day __________.
Argentina
Brazil
Cuba
Peru
Mexico
Peru
The Nazca people emerged in modern-day Peru, on the Pacific coast, around 100 CE.
Example Question #4 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Bce To 600 Ce
The Anasazi culture emerged in __________.
the plains of midwest North America
Central America
northeast North America
the Andean foothills of South America
southwest North America
southwest North America
The Anasazi culture emerged in the southwest of the modern-day United States. The Anasazi lived in this part of North America from about 300 - 1300 CE.
Example Question #1 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Ce To 1450
Which of the following most closely outlines the demography of Medieval Europe during the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries?
Rapid increase at high level, slow decrease, rapid increase at high level
Rapid decline at low level , slow increase, rapid increase at low level
Slow decline at high level, rapid decline, slow decline at low level
Slow increase at high level, massive decline, slow recovery at low level
Rapid increase at low level, slow increase, slow decline at high level
Slow increase at high level, massive decline, slow recovery at low level
During the High Middle Ages up until the 1340s, the relatively large European population continued to slowly increase over the course of a few centuries. The Black Death of the 1340s and early 1350s resulted in a massive demographic collapse, followed by slow but steady growth amongst a much smaller population during the 1400s.
Example Question #2 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Ce To 1450
The Toltec civilization was native to which of these modern-day countries?
Canada
Mexico
Vietnam
Nepal
Brazil
Mexico
The Toltec civilization existed in modern-day Mexico between approximately 900-1100 C.E. Much of what we know comes from recent architectural digs, but also from the Aztecs who saw the Toltecs as their cultural predecessors. They are famous for the construction of pyramids, much like those used by the Mayans and Aztecs.
Example Question #3 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Ce To 1450
The Vikings established colonies in __________ in the tenth and eleventh centuries.
Siberia and Eastern Europe
Greenland and North America
Britain and Greece
North Africa and South America
Iceland and the Mediterranean
Greenland and North America
The Vikings were seafaring warriors, traders, and settlers who were widely influential from the eighth to the thirteenth centuries. The longship was developed by the Vikings in the ninth century and was instrumental in allowing the Vikings to traverse long distances at icy northern latitudes. It allowed the Vikings to cross the Atlantic and establish colonies in Greenland and North America in the tenth and eleventh centuries.
Example Question #58 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography
Who were the Moors?
A Western Asian tribe that migrated into Europe fleeing the advance of the Huns
A European barbaric tribe that was among the tribes that crossed the Rubicon and sacked Rome
Muslims who lived in Spain and Portugal in the Middle Ages
Scottish people who lived in the lowlands
Muslims who lived in Spain and Portugal in the Middle Ages
The Moors were North African Muslims who had conquered the Iberian Peninsula in the 800s. Religious conflict with the Christian powers of Europe led to frequent conflicts, with their loss of regional power in 1492 with the fall of Grenada, and the full elimination of Muslims from Spain in 1609.
Example Question #4 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography 600 Ce To 1450
Zheng He visited all of these places except __________.
South America
East Africa
the Middle East
Ceylon
Indonesia
South America
Although some historians theorize that Zheng He might have eventually made a voyage across the vast Pacific Ocean, to the New World, this is merely conjecture. The voyages of Zheng He, and his fleet, were primarily conducted in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. He did reach such distant places as the Swahili city-states of East Africa and Red Sea.
Example Question #60 : Migration, Settlement, And Demography
Al-Andalus is the name given to __________.
Roman Egypt
Islamic India
Ottoman Greece
Roman Britain
Islamic Spain
Islamic Spain
Al-Andalus is the name given to Islamic Spain. After the initial expansion of Islam, under the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates in the seventh and eighth centuries, much of the Iberian peninsula (modern-day Spain and Portugal) was under the control of Islam. This region was called Al-Andalus and was under almost complete control of the Umayyad dynasty until the tenth century. Islamic control over parts of Spain would persist until the fifteenth century.
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