All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #561 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Russia’s involvement in World War One ended with __________.
the death of Josef Stalin
the forces of the Red Army reaching Berlin
complete capitulation to the Germans
the rise of the tsarist monarchy
the Russian Revolution
the Russian Revolution
During World War One the Russians, like many European nations, suffered catastrophic and unprecedented losses of military personnel. Millions of Russians died on the frontline and millions more starved in the interior of the country itself. This provided the impetus for the Russian Revolution when the tsarist monarchy was overthrown and replaced with Communism led by the Bolsheviks and Vladimir Lenin. Lenin withdrew Russia from the First World War.
Example Question #1 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
The Munich Agreement allowed Germany to annex a portion of which of the following areas?
France
Belgium
The Netherlands
Czechoslovakia
Poland
Czechoslovakia
The Munich Agreement was signed by various major European powers in 1938. It allowed the Nazi government of Germany to annex territory (the Sudetenland) in Czechoslovakia. The European powers conceded this because they feared Hitler's aggressive ambitions and sought to placate him with the policy of appeasement.
Example Question #1 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
Which of these individuals was not a head of state during the Second World War?
Harry Truman
Douglas MacArthur
Josef Stalin
Winston Churchill
Benito Mussolini
Douglas MacArthur
Benito Mussolini was the ruler of fascist Italy; Winston Churchill the Prime Minister of imperial Britain; and Josef Stalin the leader of the communist USSR. Harry Truman became President of the United States in the waning months of the war following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Douglas MacArthur, however, was an American general who led a large number of forces in the Pacific theatre of the war.
Example Question #562 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Which of these was not a condition of the Atlantic Charter signed by Roosevelt and Churchill prior to America's entrance into the Second World War?
All of the other answer choices were conditions of the Atlantic Charter.
Freedom of the seas
Nuclear nonproliferation
No territorial gains to be made by either power
Reduced trade restrictions
Nuclear nonproliferation
The Atlantic Charter was an agreement signed by the leaders of the United States and the United Kingdom in 1941 prior to America's entrance into the Second World War. The purpose of this charter was to establish the post-war goals of the Allied powers. Namely, it specified that neither power would seek to make territorial gains and that in the post-war era both powers would seek to promote economic prosperity, social equality, and national autonomy around the world. All of these answer choices were part of the charter except the disarmament of nuclear weapons. The atomic bomb was not invented for another few years.
Example Question #3 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
Which of the following treaties ended World War One and provided much of the motivation for World War Two?
The Treaty of Moscow
The Treaty of Versailles
The Treaty of Berlin
The Treaty of Paris
The Treaty of Alsace-Lorraine
The Treaty of Versailles
The Treaty of Versailles ended World War One, but it imposed a series of strict regulations on German recovery and encumbered the already-struggling German nation with an almost unpayable debt. This caused Germany to feel as if the terms were too harsh and to resent them, and contributed to the rise of Hitler and Nazism.
Example Question #4 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
Which of these events was the last to occur?
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
V-E Day
The Battle of Iwo Jima
V-J Day
The Battle of Midway
V-J Day
The various options given that were battles or attacks (Iwo Jima, Pearl Harbor, and Midway) cannot possibly have occurred after the war was over, so they can be ruled out. V-E Day is the day when victory was secured for the allied forces in Europe. This came a couple of months before V-J Day—"Victory over Japan" Day. V-J Day was August 15th, 1945.
Example Question #1 : World War Ii
The Axis Powers were __________.
France, the USSR, and Britain
Germany, China, and Japan
The USSR, Britain, and the United States
Germany, Italy, and Japan
Japan, Germany, and the USSR
Germany, Italy, and Japan
In World War Two, the Allied Powers were Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States. Opposing them were the Axis Powers of Germany, Italy, and Japan.
Example Question #3 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
The fascist Italian government of Benito Mussolini invaded which country in 1935?
France
Greece
Ethiopia
Serbia
Algeria
Ethiopia
Benito Mussolini and his Fascist party came to power in the 1920s and promptly suspended several freedoms in the Italian state. In 1935 Italy invaded and occupied Ethiopia. The move was widely condemned by the League of Nations and helped further allign Italy with Nazi Germany against much of the rest of Europe.
Example Question #8 : Causes And Effects Of World War Ii
Francisco Franco became the leader of which European country following a civil war in the 1930s?
Switzerland
Finland
Spain
Poland
Italy
Spain
Fransisco Franco was a deeply conservative general in the burgeoning Spanish Republic of the 1930s. Franco was dismayed by the movement towards leftist poilitical thinking in Spain and, along with other generals, began the Spanish Civil War to overthrow the Republic. He was succesful (backed by the Italian and German governments) and became a fascist dictator in 1939. He would remain dictator until 1975, but famously kept Spain out of World War Two.
Example Question #1 : France And Britain In World War Ii
How was Germany able to overcome the Maginot Line?
They sent more forces than the French had thought possible.
They sailed their forces around the Mediterranean and attacked France from the South coast.
None of the other answers is correct; the forces of Germany were repelled by the Maginot Line.
They attacked France from Belgium, where the line was nonexistent.
They decimated the fortifications with aerial assaults before attempting an attack.
They attacked France from Belgium, where the line was nonexistent.
Germany was able to overcome the French line of defense, known as the Maginot Line, by simply invading Belgium first and marching its troops into France through Belgium. The French overreliance on the Maginot Line contributed to its rapid surrender in the first few weeks of the Second World War.