All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : North And South America
Which of these groups were the first to settle the Hudson River Valley?
The Spanish
The English
The Dutch
The Portuguese
The French
The Dutch
The Dutch were the first to found colonies in the Hudson River Valley, the area comprising most of modern-day New York. They founded the colony of New Amsterdam, which would become New York City, in the early seventeenth century.
Example Question #2 : North And South America
Prior to the arrival of Columbus in the fifteenth century, which of these groups is believed to have arrived in North America?
The Celts
The Chinese
The Gauls
The French
The Vikings
The Vikings
The Vikings, led by the famous Leif Erikson, are believed to have arrived in what is modern-day Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in the eleventh century, four centuries before the arrival of the Dutch, English, French, Portuguese, and Spanish.
Example Question #3 : North And South America
Where were the first European colonies in the New World established?
Brazil
Honduras
Hispaniola
Florida
Virginia
Hispaniola
The first European colonies in the New World were established in Hispaniola on the initial voyages of Columbus in 1492 and 1493. The island of Hispaniola is now shared by the modern-day countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Example Question #475 : Sat Subject Test In World History
According to the Monroe Doctrine, the United States
Would intervene if any European power tried to establish new colonies in the American hemisphere.
Had a divine right and mandate to expand across the whole of the North American continent.
Would aid France in any future conflict with another European power.
Would aid Britain in any future conflict with another European power.
Could establish imperial colonies in the South Pacific.
Would intervene if any European power tried to establish new colonies in the American hemisphere.
The Monroe Doctrine was issued in 1823 following the independence of several South American countries. It stated that if the European powers tried to reestablish colonial control over South or Central America then the United States would intervene.
Example Question #4 : North And South America
Manifest Destiny states that __________.
the United States should police the involvement of European nations in Central and South America
the United States is fated to spread across the whole North American continent
the British will one day return to claim their former American colonies
there is fluidity and mobility in the American social and economic system
the United States should avoid getting involved in European conflicts
the United States is fated to spread across the whole North American continent
Manifest Destiny is an important and influential mythology of the early American Republic. Proponents of Manifest Destiny argued that the United States was fated to spread and expand across the whole North American conflict. Manifest Destiny was an important driving myth in the massive westward expansion of American settlers in the nineteenth century.
Example Question #4 : North And South America
The Declaration of Independence was written by __________.
Benjamin Franklin
John Adams
George Washington
Thomas Jefferson
Alexander Hamilton
Thomas Jefferson
The Declaration of Independence, in which the American colonies published a series of grievances against the colonial rule of the British Empire, was written by Thomas Jefferson in 1776.
Example Question #5 : North And South America
The Revolutionary War emerged over issues regarding __________.
the quartering of British troops in the homes of aristocrats in the American colonies
the right of the British government to tax the American colonists
the overthrow of the Puritan government at the end of the British Civil War
economic stagnation in the American colonies following the French and Indian War
the British government's refusal to honor freedom of religious practice in the American colonies
the right of the British government to tax the American colonists
The term Revolutionary War is generally used to describe the military campaign between 1775 and 1783, however in terms of a political revolution the period actually began in 1765 when the American colonists first officially rejected the right of the British government to levy taxes against the American colonists. You probably remember the rallying cry "no taxation without representation" from your various classes in American history. This was the central issue that led to the American War of Independence.
Example Question #6 : North And South America
The ideas of which philosophers influenced the American Revolution?
Karl Marx's belief in the importance of worker-run industry
Abbe Sieyes' belief in the importance of working people being represented by their government
John Stuart Mill's belief in utilitarianism and the promotion of happiness
John Locke's belief in a government that responded to the needs of the people
Thomas Hobbes' belief in the need for absolute monarchy
John Locke's belief in a government that responded to the needs of the people
All of these philosophers rose to prominence after the American Revolution, save Hobbes and Locke. Hobbes promoted absolute monarchy, something that the American Revolution fought against. Locke's ideas about a government that responded to the needs of its people influenced the American Revolution.
Example Question #7 : North And South America
A direct cause of the Spanish American Wars of Independence in the early nineteenth century was
military intervention by the Spanish government in colonial affairs.
Native American revolts.
new taxes on colonial products.
slave revolts.
the Napoleonic invasions of Spain.
the Napoleonic invasions of Spain.
Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France, invaded Spain in 1807, deposing the King and throwing the country into general chaos. This dissolution of authority made colonial governments assert their own authority over their own lands. By 1833, when King Ferdinand VII of Spain died and the Spanish government renounced claims, only Puerto Rico and Cuba remained as Spanish possessions in the Americas.
Example Question #8 : North And South America
The Triple Alliance was the association of city-states that in the fifteenth century ruled
the Amazon River basin.
Central Mexico.
Mid-Atlantic colonies.
the Yucatan Peninsula.
the highlands of Peru.
Central Mexico.
The Triple Alliance was the association of Tenochtitlan, Texoco, and Tlacopan, three city states in Central Mexico that came together in the early 1400s CE. This association ruled over much of central Mexico for the next hundred years, with authority vested in the king of Tenochtitlan, although most associated city states had some authority. When Hernan Cortes first encountered and then conquered the Alliance in the early sixteenth century, he and his fellow Spaniards related to it as an "Empire," which they named after the largest ethnic group in the Alliance, the Azteca.