All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1182 : Ap World History
The Sepoy Rebellion occurred during __________.
British occupation of India
The Great Partition
the Presidency of Indira Gandhi
Mughal occupation of India
the Presidency of Jawaharlal Nehru
British occupation of India
The Sepoy Rebellion occurred in British occupied India in 1857. The Sepoys were Indian soldiers who served in the armed forces of the British East India Company, who administered the Indian subcontinent directly prior to the Sepoy Rebellion. The rebellion began due to British abuses of the Hindu and Muslim troops serving in the armed forces and was quelled when the British government stepped in and began to oversee the administration of India directly (removing the East India Company from ultimate authority). The Sepoy Rebellion is usually called the First Indian War of Independence in India.
Example Question #61 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
As a result of the Sepoy Rebellion __________.
The Indian subcontinent was divided into two countries - India and Pakistan
the British East India Company took direct control of India
India gained its independence from Britain
the British government took direct control of India
Bangladesh gained its independence from Pakistan
the British government took direct control of India
Prior to the Sepoy Rebellion of 1857 the Indian subcontinent was administered by the British East India Company. However, after the outbreak of violence and rebellion in 1857 the British government took direct control of India (a period known as the rule of the British Raj) so as to prevent further disorder.
Example Question #62 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
Otto von Bismarck is often remembered as __________.
the man who led the unification of East and West Germany
an early advocate for Marxism
a leading academic figure in the field of utopian socialism
a successful German military leader during the early years of World War One
the driving force behind the unification of Germany
the driving force behind the unification of Germany
Otto von Bismarck was a conservative chancellor of Prussia and Germany in the second-half of the nineteenth century. He is remembered for leading the unification of Germany through his able diplomacy and timely military conquests. His efforts ensured that Germany would be unified at the exclusion of Austria, and would therefore be dominated by the Prussian state. He also is remembered for preserving the balance of power in Europe in the 1870s and 1880s.
Example Question #62 : Political Protest, Reforms, And Revolution
Simon Bolivar is a notable figure in the __________.
South American campaign for independence from Spain
Haitian Revolution
American Revolution
Mexican campaign for independence from Spain
French Revolution
South American campaign for independence from Spain
Simon Bolivar fought for South American independence from the Spanish Empire in the early nineteenth century. Bolivar was inspired by the enlightenment ideas he was exposed to during his education in Spain and returned to Latin America to lead the campaign for independence. His actions contributed to the independence of Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, and Bolivia. Bolivar served as President of Gran Colombia from its formation in 1819 until its demise in 1830.
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.
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