All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #42 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Which of these French rulers did the most to establish and strengthen the French nation-state?
Henry IV
Louis XVIII
Charles Martel
Napoleon III
Louis XIV
Louis XIV
Louis XIV, often known as the Sun King, is perhaps the most significant ruler (excluding, possibly, Napoleon) in French history. He ruled for an unprecedented period of time in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries and did a great deal to strengthen the French monarchy and country. His reforms, directed by his Chief Minister Cardinal Mazarin, established national standards for currency, taxes, and language and also helped codify French national identity.
Example Question #43 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Which of the following is Geoffrey Chaucer famous for writing?
The Prince
Inferno
Gargantua
The Canterbury Tales
The Epic of Gilgamesh
The Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales was written in the fourteenth century in England. It is famous for helping popularize the use of the vernacular (local) language in writing and helped encouraged the spread of humanism during the English Renaissance.
Example Question #13 : Europe
Which of these monarchs was the first to reign over a combined Kingdom of Scotland and England, later called Great Britain?
Henry VIII
James II
Henry VII
James I
Elizabeth I
James I
Following the death of the last Tudor ruler, Queen Elizabeth I, in 1603, the English crown was left without any direct heir. So the Scottish monarch James I, Elizabeth’s cousin, ascended to the throne. In doing so, he began the process of uniting the Scottish and English kingdoms into the Kingdom of Great Britain. Although James I could not himself unify the two kingdoms (he ruled over them both independently), they would be unified a century later during the reign of Queen Anne, the last Stuart monarch.
Example Question #44 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
The Glorious Revolution of 1688 established the supremacy of __________ in Great Britain.
the Catholic church
the Protestant faith
Parliament
the monarchy
the French
Parliament
The Glorious Revolution of 1688 was the culminating point of a centuries-long battle between the English monarchy and the British parliament. Earlier in the seventeenth century, Parliamentarians had defeated Royalists in the English Civil War, but the rule of Parliament proved too puritanical for the English people, so the crown was restored, but only temporarily. By 1688, Parliament had grown weary with the ruling James II and "invited" William and Mary to seize power on the condition that they pledge to abide by constitutional laws that placed Parliament above the king. This system of constitutional monarchy has existed in Britain ever since with Parliament constantly and steadily gaining in power and influence.
Example Question #45 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Cardinal Mazarin and Cardinal Richelieu are most famous for __________.
strengthening the power of Parliament in France
strengthening the power of absolute monarchs in France
weakening the power of Parliament in England
weakening the power of Parliament in Spain
strengthening the power of absolute monarchs in Spain
strengthening the power of absolute monarchs in France
Cardinal Richelieu and Cardinal Mazarin were the chief advisors to the French kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV, respectively. They were collectively responsible for suppressing the power of the French nobility and increasing the absolute power of the French monarchy. The French monarchy under Louis XIV is generally considered the supreme example of absolutism in seventeenth-century Europe.
Example Question #46 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Cardinal Mazarin was the Chief Minister of __________.
Charles V
Louis XIV
Henry IV of France
Maximilian I
Henry VIII
Louis XIV
Cardinal Mazarin was the Chief Minister to Louis XIV throughout the King's childhood and early adult life. Mazarin was responsible for crushing a revolt of the French nobility and for strengthening the power of the French monarchy.
Example Question #47 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Napoleon emerged as ruler of France __________.
after the French Revolution
after the Franco-Prussian War
after the War of 1812
after the Seven Years' War
after the Congress of Vienna
after the French Revolution
The chaos of the French Revolution created an immense power vacuum in Paris and the infant republican French nation. This vacuum was filled, in spectacular style, by a Corsican member of the French military called Napoleon Bonaparte. He would go on to become one of the most famous and succesful conquerors in European history before extending himself too far and getting exiled not once, but twice.
Example Question #48 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
King James I and his parliament primarily disagreed over __________.
religious reforms
taxation and tariffs
economic reforms
foreign relations
who would inherit the throne following James’ death
foreign relations
King James I inherited a throne that was at odds with the world’s one dominant superpower at the time, Spain. James, fearing Spanish invasion, wanted to make peace with the Catholic kingdom, but the English Parliament, entirely dominated by Protestants, favored war. Eventually, Parliament would win out and James and the English would side with the French against the Spanish.
Example Question #51 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
What name was given to the French parliament formed by French King Philip IV that contributed to the rise of the French nation-state?
The Palatinate
The Duma
The Estates General
The House of Commons
The Reichstag
The Estates General
The formation of the French Estates General in the fourteenth century by French King Philip IV led to the rise of the French nation-state. The Estates General was a form of rudimentary representative democracy in which certain members of society were able to influence the political direction of the country.
Example Question #52 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
The Directory, which took power during the French Revolution, was far more __________ than the National Assembly, which preceded it.
egalitarian
conservative
autocratic
liberal
theocratic
conservative
The French Revolution initially replaced a monarchy with a democratic government founded on universal suffrage; however, this so-called “First Republic” proved ineffective and was quickly replaced by the Directory. The Directory was a group of powerful and wealthy conservative-minded men who replaced the National Assembly and the Convention and began undoing many of the changes wrought by the Revolution.
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All SAT II World History Resources
