SAT II World History : Age of Exploration and Protestant Reformation

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT II World History

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Example Questions

Example Question #103 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.

The Act for the Submission of the Clergy ruled that __________.

Possible Answers:

the Catholic faith was heretical within the English Kingdom, and those clergy who remained loyal to Catholicism would be executed 

None of these answers is correct; the Submission of the Clergy took place in the Netherlands

the English King could sieze Church property for his own purposes 

the Church of England could no longer make laws without the permission of the King of England 

the English King remained subservient to the laws of God and those of the Pope in Rome 

Correct answer:

the Church of England could no longer make laws without the permission of the King of England 

Explanation:

The Act for the Submission of the Clergy was passed in England in 1534, shortly after Henry VIII broke away from the Catholic Church and began the English Reformation. The act was passed to ensure that the clergy understood their new place in Henry's Kingdom—they were unable to pass laws without his assent and were now his subjects, rather than the subjects of the Pope in Rome.

Example Question #5 : France, England, And Italy In The Reformation

Which of these rulers of England in the sixteenth century ruled over a Catholic kingdom for at least part of their reign? 

Possible Answers:

Henry VII and Mary Tudor

Henry VII, Henry VIII, and Mary Tudor

Mary Tudor and Elizabeth I

Henry VIII, Mary Tudor, and Elizabeth I

Only Henry VII

Correct answer:

Henry VII, Henry VIII, and Mary Tudor

Explanation:

At the time of Henry VII's death, England was a Catholic Kingdom and remained so for the first twenty three years of Henry VIII's reign; however, when Henry VIII met with objections from the Pope in 1532 to divorce the Queen Catherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn, he broke with the Catholic Church and formed the Church of England. Thus began the Protestant Reformation in England. After Henry VIII died, his son, Edward VI, continued the reformation movement. Edward was a sickly king and soon died, however. Mary Tudor took the throne and re-established Catholicism in England. Finally, Elizabeth I took the throne from Mary and permanently established Protestantism and the Church of England as the dominant religion in England. 

Example Question #71 : Europe

This French King was the first Bourbon to sit on the French throne and famously converted to Catholicism to ensure the loyalty of the Parisian people.

Possible Answers:

Louis XV

Louis XIV

Louis XIII

Henry IV

Henry V

Correct answer:

Henry IV

Explanation:

In the middle of the sixteenth century, France was embroiled in a bitter civil war between the aristocratic families of Valois, Bourbon, and Guise. The war ended in victory for the Bourbon family and marked the beginning of the reign of Henry IV. Henry famously converted to Catholicism upon claiming the throne in Paris, in order to appease the majority of Parisians, who were Catholic. His famous quote is "France is worth a mass."

Example Question #1 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation

Which of these factors contributed the most to the rise of Protestantism in Hungary? 

Possible Answers:

The execution of Catholic Hungarian nobles

Ottoman invasion and defeat of the Hapsburg Empire

None of these answers is correct; the Protestant Reformation had no success in Hungary.

The spread of the writings of Ulrich Zwingli

The excommunication of the Hungarian king by the Pope

Correct answer:

Ottoman invasion and defeat of the Hapsburg Empire

Explanation:

During the Protestant Reformation, the Ottoman Empire invaded Hungary (then under control of the Hapsburg Holy Roman, and Catholic, Empire). The Ottomans conquered the territory and the Hungarian people lost faith in their Catholic rulers, and in Catholicism itself, to protect them. By 1600, the vast majority of the country had converted to Protestantism, although this would be undone by the Catholic Counter-Reformation.

Example Question #331 : Sat Subject Test In World History

The Protestant Reformation in Poland was most likely to be embraced by which of the following groups?

Possible Answers:

None of these answers; Poland remained staunchly Catholic throughout the Reformation. 

The nobility

The peasantry

The royal family

The merchant class

Correct answer:

The nobility

Explanation:

The ruling family of Poland remained Catholic throughout the Protestant Reformation, but the nobles and landed aristocracy were quick to embrace Protestantism. Interestingly, the peasantry generally sided with the King and with not the nobles and remained fiercely Catholic. 

Example Question #332 : Sat Subject Test In World History

By the time the Thirty Years' War came to an end, most of Poland and Hungary was __________.

Possible Answers:

Catholic

Anabaptist

Hussite

Lutheran

Calvinist

Correct answer:

Catholic

Explanation:

The Thirty Years' War, fought from 1618 to 1648, was primarily fought as a war of religion between Protestants and Catholics. In Poland and Hungary, it contributed to the declining influence of Protestantism and the resurgence of Catholicism.

Example Question #3 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation

The Hussite Church was most influential in __________.

Possible Answers:

Bohemia

Poland

Germany

Romania

Hungary

Correct answer:

Bohemia

Explanation:

The Hussite Church emerged from the teachings of Jan Hus. Hus preached reform in the century before the beginning of the more widely impactful Protestant Reformation, but his reforming movement may be seen as part of the wider European trend. The Hussites were centered in Bohemia, in the modern day Czech Republic.

Example Question #4 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation

Which of these factors was most important in determining the flourishing of different religious sects in Poland, Germany, and Hungary during the Protestant Reformation?

Possible Answers:

The proximity to Wittenburg

The religious beliefs of the princes

The economic prosperity of the middle class

The relative poverty of the peasantry

The relative threat of Islamic invasion

Correct answer:

The religious beliefs of the princes

Explanation:

Throughout Europe, but especially in Germany, Poland, and Hungary the most important factor in determining the religious beliefs of a region or group of people was the religious beliefs of the prince or ruler of that region. If the prince embraced Lutheranism, then a large number of the people under his control would also do so.

Example Question #2 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation

Which of these statements about the Protestant Reformation in Poland and Hungary is most accurate? 

Possible Answers:

The Protestant Reformation failed to take off and Catholicism remained the only legally accepted religion.

The Protestant Reformation failed to take off and Catholicism remained the dominant religion.

The Protestant Reformation was only embraced by the poorest in society and was suppressed when much of the peasantry was massacred.

The Protestant Reformation took off rapidly but was soon quashed by the Catholic Counter-Reformation.

The Protestant Reformation was very successful and led to the long-term conversion of almost all of the peoples of Hungary and Poland.

Correct answer:

The Protestant Reformation took off rapidly but was soon quashed by the Catholic Counter-Reformation.

Explanation:

The Protestant Reformation made rapid initial gains in both Poland and Hungary. In the century or so that followed the Protestant Reformation, the majority of both countries converted to Protestantism (either Lutheranism or Calvinism); however, both countries were overwhelmed by the Catholic Counter-Reformation, and most of the gains made by Protestants in the sixteenth century were undone in the seventeenth century.

Example Question #7 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation

What name is given to the systematic destruction of Jewish communities in nineteenth-century Russia?

Possible Answers:

Pogroms

Tsarists

The Holocaust

Mensheviks

The Duma

Correct answer:

Pogroms

Explanation:

Pogroms were organized attacks on Jewish communities in Russia carried out by the state in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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