All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #6 : Notable Historic Figures
Which of these figures was not a national representative at the Congress of Vienna?
Alexander I
Talleyrand
Metternich
Castlereagh
Louis XVIII
Louis XVIII
The Congress of Vienna was held in 1815, immediately following the climax of the Napoleonic Wars. The Wars had ended with the defeat of Napoleon and the French Empire, and the victorious European powers sought to ensure a lasting peace in Europe as well as maintenance of the traditional forms of power (monarchy, aristocracy, and suppression of individual freedoms). The Congress was attended by the four major European powers at the time: Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Britain. The French were also invited to attend so long as they abandoned their recent republican tendencies. Russia was represented by Tsar Alexander I, Prussia by Prince Karl von Hardenberg, Austria by Foreign Minister Metternich, Britain by Foreign Secretary Castlereagh, and France by Foreign Minister Talleyrand, who was there representing newly instated King Louis XVIII.
Example Question #55 : Major Developments
In the fourteenth century, the Chinese Emperor Ming Chengzu commissioned whose voyages of exploration?
Qin Shi Huang
Song Taizu
Sun Tzu
Tang Taizong
Zheng He
Zheng He
Zheng He was a Chinese naval commander in the fourteenth century who famously explored much of South East Asia, South Asia, the Middle East, and East Africa. He was for a long time forgotten in his own country, but rose to prominence in the twentieth century as is now seen as a Columbus-like figure; indeed, many historians believe it is possible that Zheng He may have arrived in the New World a full century before Europeans did, although this is primarily conjecture.
Example Question #811 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Thomas Malthus __________.
None of the other answer choices are correct.
believed that population would outgrow the supply of food without constant warfare and famine to keep the global population down
resisted the implementation of liberal policies in British society during the nineteenth century
argued for the greatest happiness of the greatest number of people as the most important aim of any government
contested that the only true legitimacy to rule comes from an electoral mandate of the people
believed that population would outgrow the supply of food without constant warfare and famine to keep the global population down
Thomas Malthus was a writer and philosopher who lived in England during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. He is most widely remembered for his essay titled An Essay on the Principle of Population. In this essay, he states that sooner or later the population of the earth would exceed the supply of resources needed to keep the population alive. In what is known as a "Malthusian catastrophe," he predicted that the continuing rise in population would precede a period of intense warfare and famine, which would then bring the population back to more manageable levels. His views were influential and affected the economic and sociopolitical thinking of his time.
Example Question #811 : Sat Subject Test In World History
The political slogan “Peace! Land! Bread!” is most accurately attributed to __________.
Vladimir Lenin
Joseph Stalin
Mao Tze Tung
Pol Pot
Emperor Hirohito
Vladimir Lenin
Following his return to Russia from exile in the spring of 1917, Lenin published his famous April Theses, in which he promised the Russian people “Peace! Land! Bread!” During World War One, the Russian people suffered horribly in unprecedented numbers; when Lenin returned to Russia, a large portion of the Russian population was ready for an end to the war with the Central Powers ("Peace!"); an end to the abhorrent policies of land distribution that saw the majority of the population unable to own property ("Land!"); and an end to the widespread famine that had gripped Russia in the previous two years ("Bread!").
Example Question #812 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Toussaint Louverture __________.
led the Haitian Revolution against France
None of the other answers is correct.
fought in the Battle of Yorktown for the United States
was imprisoned in France following the death of Napoleon
founded the African nation of Liberia
led the Haitian Revolution against France
Toussaint Louverture was the leader of the Haitian Revolution. He was a freed former slave who incited the Haitian slave community to rebellion against the French authorities. He was eventually captured and taken to France, where he died shortly after, but his legacy lived on and France was unable to suppress the rebellion, primarily due to massive losses sustained from Yellow Fever. Haiti has been an independent nation ever since.
Example Question #813 : Sat Subject Test In World History
David Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley __________.
contributed to the invention of the atomic bomb
wrote about life on the frontline during World War One
established schools and hospitals in Ethiopia
owned inflammatory newspapers at the time of the Spanish-American War
were missionaries who went on expeditions in Africa
were missionaries who went on expeditions in Africa
David Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley were two British explorers and missionaries who explored vast swathes of Central Africa and, amongst other things, established that Lake Tanganyika was not the source of the Nile River. (The source of the Nile River was a topic of much interest in the late-nineteenth century Europe.)
Example Question #814 : Sat Subject Test In World History
The Medici family was an important ruling family in __________.
medieval Florence
classical Rome
classical Athens
medieval Milan
industrial Rome
medieval Florence
The Medici family was an aristocratic family and banking dynasty that rose to prominence in fourteenth-century Florence under the leadership of Cosimo de Medici. The Medici family would go on to produce several popes, two queens of France, and the dynasty that ruled over Grand Duchy of Tuscany for two hundred years.
Example Question #91 : Overarching Themes And Philosophies
Which of these rulers was NOT in power in the eighteenth century?
Catherine the Great
Louis XIV
Frederick the Great
William Pitt the Younger
King Charles II
King Charles II
Frederick the Great reigned over the Kingdom of Prussia from 1740 to 1786 and, along with Catherine the Great, is most commonly remembered as an “enlightened despot”; Catherine, for her own part, reigned as Tsarina of Russia from 1762 to 1796; William Pitt the Younger served as British Prime Minister at various times throughout the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; and Louis XIV reigned over France for an astonishing seventy-two years from 1643 until his death in 1715. Of the presented answer choices, only King Charles II of England did not rule in the eighteenth century. Charles II reigned over England, Ireland, and Scotland at a time of great upheaval in British history. Depending on who you ask, his reign even began in 1649, following the execution of his father at the climax of the English Civil War, or, more practically, in 1660, following the death of Oliver Cromwell.
Example Question #62 : Major Developments
Which politician was most responsible for the unification of Germany in the 1870s?
Maximilian I
Angela Merkel
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Frederick the Great
Otto von Bismarck
Otto von Bismarck
German unification was achieved largely as a result of the territorial and political ambitions of its “iron chancellor,” Otto von Bismarck. German nationalism had long existed as a tenuous and optimistic ideal, but the fragmented nature of the Holy Roman Empire and the German principalities made such a unification very difficult. It was not until the ascension of Prussia as one of the preeminent powers in Europe that German national unification was anything more than a pipe dream. Bismarck governed Prussia effectively and realized the way to engender German nationalism was to create a common enemy—France and Austria. A series of wars with both these countries created support for a unified Germany.
Example Question #63 : Major Developments
Hammurabi ________.
was a philosopher and historian in Greece during the Peloponnesian War
was overthrown by Emperor Justinian I and sentenced to death
was a Persian Emperor who attacked the Greeks and was eventually defeated at Salamis
was a Babylonian King who introduced one of the earliest known legal codes
was an Assyrian King during the height of the Egyptian Empire and fought with the Egyptians against the Israelites
was a Babylonian King who introduced one of the earliest known legal codes
Hammurabi is the most famous of the Babylonian Kings who ruled vast areas of Ancient Mesopotamia from about 1850 B.C.E. until the Sack of Babylon in 1531 B.C.E. He is mostly remembered for the introduction of Hammurabi’s Code of Laws - one of the earliest known established legal codes in world history.