All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Trade
The Phonecian people of Europe and the Near East are best described as __________.
seafaring traders
barbarian invaders
aggressive expansionists
devoutly pious
pacifists
seafaring traders
The Phoencian people were seafaring traders who established trading outposts all over the Mediterranean from approximatley 1200 BCE to 500 BCE. Their importance in human history is twofold: they helped connect the peoples and cultues of Mediterranean Europe, and their alphabet developed into the Greek and Latin alphabets.
Example Question #21 : Prehistory To 500 C.E.
The Silk Road ran __________.
from China to the Mediterranean
from Rome to China
from India to Persia
from India to Rome
from Spain to China
from China to the Mediterranean
The Silk Road is the name given to a series of trading routes that ran from Han China to the Mediterranean. First established in the second century CE, the Silk Road connected the East to the West via trade for the first time in human history. This would facilitate the spread of ideas, religions, resources, as well as disease and economic catastrophes.
Example Question #1 : Europe
The Peleponnesian War was contested by
Athens and its allies against the Persian Empire.
Sparta and its allies against the Persian Empire.
the Greek city states and the Roman Republic.
Athens and its allies against Sparta and its allies.
the Greek city states against the Kingdom of Macedon.
Athens and its allies against Sparta and its allies.
The Peleponessian War (431-404 BCE) completely transformed Greek politics, economics, and culture. The war pitted the democratic Athens and its similarly minded allies with authoritarian Sparta and its allies, which saw the entirety of ancient Greece divided along geographic and philosophical lines in a contested series of cil wars. Sparta's eventual victory in the conflict made Athens destitute and greatly weakened their allies as well, restructuring the power based of the entire Greek lands.
Example Question #2 : Ancient Greece
Pericles is best remembered as a(n) __________.
tyrant who ended democracy in ancient Greece
military leader in Sparta
inventor and scientist in Athens
historian who wrote about the Peloponnesian War
champion of Athenian democracy
champion of Athenian democracy
Pericles is remebered as a champion of Athenian democracy in the fifth Century BCE. He led the Athenian democracy throughout much of its conflict with Sparta.
Example Question #3 : Ancient Greece
The Peloponnesian Wars were fought between __________.
Greece and Persia
Athens and Sparta
Sparta and Rome
Greece and Rome
Athens and Egypt
Athens and Sparta
The Peloponnesian Wars were fought between Athens and Sparta in the fifth century BCE. The Greek city states had grown powerful and wealthy after defeating the invading Persians in the Persian Wars. Athens began to emerge as a hegemonic power in the region and worried Sparta with its expansionist tendencies. The two city-states went to war. The war ended in victory for the Sparta, destruction of Athens, and the disunity of the Greek city-states.
Example Question #2 : Europe
Phillip of Macedon was the father of __________.
Homer
Pericles
Darius I
Alexander the Great
Xerxes
Alexander the Great
In the years after the Peloponnesian War, as the influence of the Greek city-states waned, the power of Macedon (to the north of Greece) rose spectacularly. Phillip of Macedon expanded Macedonian power greatly, and then his son Alexander the Great incorporated Greece into Macedonian control and proceeded to conquer much of the known world, reaching as far east as India.
Example Question #4 : Ancient Greece
What name is given to a self-governing city-state in Ancient Greek history?
parliament
Pericles
polis
duma
metropole
polis
The Ancient Greeks are often credited by historians with developing the world’s first representative democracy - particularly in the city state of Athens, where philosophy and democracy most prominently flourished. The Ancient Greek city-state was called a polis.
Example Question #5 : Ancient Greece
In Ancient Spartan society helots were __________.
captured people forced into slavery
religious figures who interpreted the word of the Gods for men
concubines owned by the aristocratic class
ruling figures who served little purpose in peace time, but commanded the Spartan forces in battle
carriors who trained constantly together to perfect the cooperative fighting methods that made Sparta so successful
captured people forced into slavery
Spartan society, as you probably know, was famous for its extreme militarization and organization. The Spartan army was the most accomplished in Ancient Greece and was victorious in numerous conflicts. These conflicts led to an influx of captured prisoners who were enslaved and used to work the fields and provide for the agricultural growth of Spartan society. They were called Helots.
Example Question #1 : Ancient Greece
Solon and Draco were political reformers in which Ancient Greek city-state?
Syracuse
Corinth
Athens
Sparta
Thebes
Athens
Solon and Draco are two notable political reformers in Ancient Athenian society. Before Solon democracy in Athens was virtually non-existent (indeed Solon himself was essentially a tyrannical figure). Solon instituted reforms to provide for direct democracy for many members of Athenian society. He also forbade debt-slavery. Draco is famous for instituting a code of laws in Athenian society - these laws were considered harsh, but just.
Example Question #2 : Ancient Greece
What name was given to the colleciton of city-states led by Athens originally against Persian invasion?
The Helicarnassian League
The Peloponnesian League
The Athenian League
The Attican League
The Delian League
The Delian League
In response to the continuous threat of Persian invasion in the fifth century B.C.E. Athens formed the extensive Delian League with dozens of islands and city-states dotted around the Aegean Sea and Asia Minor. The original purpose of the Delian League was to provide for a shared navy to protect against Persian invasion, but as the threat of Persian invasion waned Athens began to use the Delian League for its own purposes. This led to an outbreak of war with Sparta (and Sparta's Peloponnesian League) in 431 B.C.E.