All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Islam
Which of the following is the name of the sect of Islam that believes that the Caliph should be selected by the community of the faithful?
Salafists
Shi'ite
Muezzin
Sunni
Wahabi
Sunni
Shortly after the death of the prophet Muhammad, the growing Islamic faith was fractured along ideological lines. The two groups that emerged, and have continued as distinct groups ever since, were the Sunnis and the Shi'ites (sometimes just Shias). Shi'ites believed that the Caliph should be led by the cousin of Muhammad or someone directly related to him. The Sunni believed that his advisor should rule the Caliphate and favor choosing a leader based on more meritocratic means.
Example Question #1 : Islam
What name is given to laws based on tenets of the Islamic faith?
Sunni law
Sharia law
Shia law
Medina law
Wahhabi law
Sharia law
Sharia law exists in many countries in the Islamic world. In a country governed by Sharia law, the laws of the nation reflect the laws and tenets of Islam as laid out in the Quran and the hadith.
Example Question #1 : Islam
The Qur'an, written by Muhammad, was produced in what century?
7th century CE
8th century CE
4th century CE
5th century CE
10th century CE
7th century CE
The Qur'an was written in the span of several years - from 609 to 632 (7th century) - by the Prophet Muhammad. It remains today as one of the most influential documents ever produced in human history.
Example Question #2 : Islam
Sunni and Shi’ite are two prominent sects of which religion?
Sikhism
Taoism
Confucianism
Judaism
Islam
Islam
Sunni and Shi’ite are the two most prominent sects of the Islamic faith. They have been divided since almost the very beginning of their religion and the original disagreement between the two sects has to do with the continuation of the caliphate under the Prophet Muhammad’s son-in-law Ali (for the record the Shia believed Ali should rule, most of the rest did not). In modern times the distinction is particularly important because it has led to sectarian conflict in several Middle Eastern countries - particularly countries like Iran and Iraq where the Shia are in the majority or countries like Syria which have a history of oppression by the majority Sunni.
Example Question #1 : Judaism
Which of these major religions was the first to arise?
Confucianism
Judaism
Christianity
Islam
Sikhism
Judaism
Judaism was the first of these religions to arise; it is the first of the Abrahamic monotheistic religions. It was followed, in the west, by Christianity, and then Islam.
Example Question #2 : Judaism
The term "diaspora" refers to __________.
The funeral traditions of ancient Jewish culture
The holy writings of Jewish prophets found in the Torah
The relationship between Jewish people and the "gentiles"
The dispersal of Jewish people from their ideal homeland
The enslavement of the Jewish people by the Pharaohs of Egypt
The dispersal of Jewish people from their ideal homeland
The term "Jewish diaspora" is used to refer to the forced dispersal of the Jewish people around Europe, the Middle East, and other locations around the world. The Jewish people have a long history of suffering and existing as a minority in empires, many of which were unfriendly or malevolent towards the Jews. At various times in Jewish history, the people have migrated to parts of Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Americas to escape persecution. This global collection of the Jewish population is referred to as the "diaspora."
Example Question #2 : Judaism
Who was the first Jewish king to unite all the tribes of Israel under one centralized government?
Solomon
Saul
David
Jacob
Moses
Saul
The first Jewish king to unite the tribes of Israel under one centralized government was Saul, in approximately 1000 CE. He was succeeded by David, who was in turn followed by Solomon.
Example Question #3 : Judaism
The Jewish sacred book is called __________.
the Bible
the Four Noble Truths
the Hadith
the Qu'ran
the Torah
the Torah
The Jewish sacred book is called the Torah; The Christian sacred book is called the Bible; The Islamic sacred book is called the Qu'ran. The Hadith is a collection of lessons and morals in the Islamic faith, and the Four Noble Truths are tenets of Buddhist philosophy.
Example Question #4 : Judaism
According to Jewish tradition, where did Moses receive the Ten Commandments from God?
Galilee
Mount of Beatitudes
Alexandria
Mount Sinai
Jerusalem
Mount Sinai
According to Jewish religious tradition, Moses led the Jewish people out of Egypt and into the desert in search of the Holy Land. During their forty-year walk through the desert, God delivered the Ten Commandments to Moses when Moses was praying on Mount Sinai in modern-day eastern Egypt.
Example Question #5 : Judaism
Which of these best describes the term "talmud"?
The forced dispersal of the Jewish population around Europe, and later, the world
The Jewish book of God
A collection of Jewish lessons and laws passed down over generations
The belief that the Jewish Messiah will one day come to Earth to provide salvation for his people
The distrusting, negative, and often violent relationship that has frequently existed between Jewish and non-Jewish people
A collection of Jewish lessons and laws passed down over generations
The Talmud is a Judaic text that contains lessons, laws, and rabbinical traditions passed down over generations as a guide to living a Jewish life. The term "diaspora" is used to refer to the forced spread of the Jewish population around the world.