All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Feudalism
Which of the following is a title that was given to someone who fought for a lord in the feudal system in exchange for land and payment?
Pauper
Vassal
Baron
Serf
Fiefdom
Vassal
In the feudal system, there were lords (the owners of land and the offerers of protection); vassals (those who fought for the lords in exchange for tracts of land or payment); and serfs (those who worked the land in exchange for protection).
Example Question #1 : Feudalism
In the feudal system, the land was worked by __________.
barons
knights
vassals
serfs
plebeians
serfs
In the feudal system, the land was worked by the serfs, who essentially entered into a state of voluntary slavery in exchange for protection from invasion. The lords offered protection and the vassals were paid to carry out the protection. Of course, only the first generation of serfs "volunteered" for the slavery; later generations were stuck working as effective slaves even once the threat of invasion was lessened, hence the longevity of feudalism in Europe, which in some places lasted for as long as a thousand years.
Example Question #11 : Europe
The rise of feudalism in Europe in the Middle Ages was primarily a response to __________.
the need for protection from invaders
political instability caused by the rise of the Ottoman Empire
the migration patterns of the nomadic people of Western Europe
the growing economic wealth of the Italian city-states
the growing influence of Christianity
the need for protection from invaders
Feudalism arose in Europe during the so-called "Dark Ages" in response to the power vacuum left behind by the Roman Empire. The institution was then strengthened in the ninth and tenth centuries after the fall of the Carolingian Empire. The people of Western and Central Europe were being relentlessly invaded and plundered by the Vikings, the Magyars, the people of the Asiatic Steppe, and Muslim Caliphates. Without a strong king to protect them, the people turned to local landowners, who established a system whereby the lords would provide protection in exchange for the common people working their lands. Labor for protection is the underlying tenet of feudalism.
Example Question #2 : Feudalism
Which of these best describes a "fief" in Feudalism?
A pledge of loyalty to a landowner in exchange for protection
A pledge of loyalty to a landowner in exchange for territory
A noble who owns property and controls the lives of the workers
Territory given to a vassal by a landowner in exchange for loyalty
A worker who toils in the fields
Territory given to a vassal by a landowner in exchange for loyalty
Feudalism was the prevailing economic and social system throughout much of Europe during the Middle Ages. Under the Feudal System a landowner would grant a "fief" or "fiefdom" to a vassal who in exchange would pledge "fealty" or allegiance to the landowner and agree to fight to defend his lands.
Example Question #4 : Feudalism
Which of these best describes a "villein?"
A serf who had no political rights whatsoever
A serf who was tied to feudal land
A knight who owed allegiance to a noble, but owned no property of his own
A nobleman who did not use serfs or other forms of slave labor
A knight who owed allegiance to a noble, but had serfs of his own
A serf who was tied to feudal land
"Villeins" were peasant farmers, or serfs, in Feudalism. They were tied to the land and many of their rights were directly granted and controlled by the nobleman who owned the land. They were distinct from slaves, who had no political rights of their own, and freemen, who were free to leave the land and seek work elsewhere.
Example Question #1 : Feudalism
The Feudal System was introduced to England by _______________.
King Henry VIII
William the Conqueror
Harold of Wessex
King Henry II
Edward the Confessor
William the Conqueror
The Feudal System was introduced to England following the Norman Conquest in 1066. The Norman Conquest is the name given to the invasion of William the Conqueror, also called William Duke of Normandy, who invaded from modern-day Northern France and defeated the Anglo-Saxon King of England Harold of Wessex.
Example Question #12 : Europe
The term "motte-and-bailey" refers to _______________.
a legal code of Feudal France
an open-market in southern England
an economic system of Feudal Russia
a religious settlement during the reign of King Henry I
a type of Feudal castle
a type of Feudal castle
A "motte-and-bailey" is a type of early Feudal castle. The Feudal System emerged in response to the chaos of the Dark Ages. It relied upon a landowner giving grants of land to knights - in exchange for loyalty and protection of his land. And rights to work given to serfs - in exchange for the assurance of their safety and the ownership of their labor. The system necessarily relied upon defensive fortifications that could protect small communities. A "motte-and-bailey" castle was a type of early castle, where the "motte" was a raised-earth stone or wood castle and the "bailey" was an accompanying enclosed area surrounded by a palisade.