All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #9 : War And Civil Conflict
Where were Nazi officials tried for war crimes after they had been defeated?
Rome
London
Nuremberg
United Nations’ Headquarters
The Hague
Nuremberg
The trials of Nazi war criminals were conducted in Nuremberg, Germany due to the fact that the Palace of Justice located there was undamaged and provided enough space needed to detain the prisoners and hold trials. The trials started with the most significant war criminals in 1945, and those trials lasted almost a year. Of the most significant tried, twenty-four people were found guilty by an international tribunal. The rest of the trials were carried out from 1946 to 1949 by the U.S. military.
Example Question #11 : War And Civil Conflict
What system of fortifications was developed by the French following World War I?
The Royal French Defense System
The Maginot Line
Fort Dover
The Iron Triangle
The Bastille
The Maginot Line
After World War I, France was concerned about Germany becoming militarized again and invading France. In an attempt to preempt this, France developed a protective barrier along the German and Swiss borders. The Maginot Line was built between 1929 and 1938 with some of the best military technology of the time and seemed impenetrable. Unfortunately for the French, they decided not to build the Maginot Line at full strength by the Belgian border, as Belgium was a country that remained neutral, and France did not want to do anything that could bring conflict into Belgium. The Germans realized this and invaded France through Belgium, rendering the Maginot Line useless to stop an outside invasion. While the Line initially seemed like a deterrent to invasion, the decision not to fortify it fully was what ultimately lead to France’s downfall in World War II.
Example Question #12 : War And Civil Conflict
The Peace of Utrecht ended which European conflict?
The Wars of the Roses
The Seven Years' War
The French-Swiss Conflict of 1709
The Prussian Campaign of 1865
The War of the Spanish Succession
The War of the Spanish Succession
The War of the Spanish Succession began in 1701 over who would rule over the Spanish Empire after the death of Charles II. The empire that the Habsburgs had built up extended all over Europe and was of great interest to many European leaders. After some attempts to achieve a practical solution, Charles II declared that Philip, Duke of Anjou, a grandson of the King of France, would become the next emperor. This would have given France a tremendous amount of power, and this worried many countries, particularly England, the Netherlands, and Austria, who worked to counteract this expansion of French power. The ensuing conflicts lasted until 1714, when a variety of treaties, collectively called the Peace of Utrecht, were reached that broke down to most of the empire being divided up among the European powers and Philip ruling Spain after agreeing not to seek the French crown.
Example Question #13 : War And Civil Conflict
Which initiative was implemented immediately after World War II to rebuild Western Europe and curb the spread of communism?
The Marshall Plan
The Western Alliance Pact
The Truman Initiative
The Eisenhower Aid System
The European New Deal
The Marshall Plan
Following the end of World War I, much of Europe lay in ruins, and most of the European governments did not have the money or the resources to rebuild. The United States realized that it needed to take a lead in rebuilding Europe, not only to help the countries, but also to lower the chances that communism would take hold in Western European countries. Some of the Eastern European countries had already succumbed to communism, and the USSR was in a position to expand its influence. The plan was named after the Secretary of State, George Marshall, and was implemented in 1948 with support from Congress and President Truman. The plan, which spent billions of dollars helping to rebuild Europe and its economy, was quite successful and is credited with helping Europe to recover. It also showed the disadvantages of communism when the USSR refused American aid to help East Germany and other countries within the Soviet Bloc.
Example Question #14 : War And Civil Conflict
The War of the Austrian Succession began because of the ascension of which member of the House of Habsburg to the Austrian throne?
Charles VI
Joseph II
Maria Theresa
Margaret of Austria
Frederick III
Maria Theresa
The War of the Austrian Succession began in 1740 when Frederick the Great invaded Austria-controlled Silesia under the pretense of Maria Theresa not being a lawful heir to the Austrian throne, which she obtained following the death of her father Charles VI in that same year.
Example Question #15 : War And Civil Conflict
Which of the following was NOT a result of the Seven Years' War?
Prussia maintained control of Silesia
The British national debt doubled
The deportation of the French-Canadian colonists
France had to remove all of its fortifications in India
France had to give up its North American territories
The deportation of the French-Canadian colonists
When France ceded Canada to Britain in 1763, the colonists living there became British subjects. The Quebec Act of 1774 was meant to appease them and win over their loyalty to Britain, not deport them from the country. The incredibly sparse colonial population of Canada at the time necessitated measures to keep subjects in Canada, not expel them.
Example Question #16 : War And Civil Conflict
What is the correct chronological order of the four conflicts provided in the answers?
Thirty Years' War, War of the Austrian Succession, Seven Years' War, War of the Spanish Succession
Thirty Years' War, War of the Spanish Succession, Seven Years' War, War of the Austrian Succession
Thirty Years' War, War of the Spanish Succession, War of the Austrian Succession, Seven Years' War
Seven Years' War, War of the Austrian Succession, War of the Spanish Succession, Thirty Years' War
Thirty Years' War, War of the Austrian Succession, War of the Spanish Succession, Seven Years' War
Thirty Years' War, War of the Spanish Succession, War of the Austrian Succession, Seven Years' War
The Thirty Years' War occurred in the 17th century, lasting from 1618 to 1648. The other three conflicts spanned the 18th century: War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748), and Seven Years' War (1754-1763).
Example Question #17 : War And Civil Conflict
Which of the following does NOT directly pertain to the Thirty Years' War?
Albrecht von Wallenstein
The Peace of Westphalia
Klemens von Metternich
King Gustavus Adolphus
The Battle of White Mountain
Klemens von Metternich
Klemens von Metternich lived over a century after the close of the Thirty Year's War, and is best known as being the Foreign Minister of the Austrian Empire and presiding over the Congress of Vienna. The Peace of Westphalia was the treaty that ended the Thirty Years' War. The Battle of White Mountain was a significant conflict in the early part of the war. Albrecht von Wallenstein was a prominent mercenary leader during the war. Gustavus Adolphus was the king of Sweden who intervened on behalf of the Protestant cause.
Example Question #17 : War And Civil Conflict
Which of the following armed groups did not participate in the Spanish Civil War?
Spanish anarchists
The International Brigades of socialist volunteers
The French navy
The Italian Fascist army
The Nazi German air force
The French navy
The Italians provided forces in excess of 50,000 land troops, and the Nazi regime tested bombing strategies and technologies during the war, as famously depicted in Picasso’s Guernica. Tens of thousands of foreign volunteers fought in the International Brigades, and Spanish anarchists resisted the fascist and conservative forces. The French Popular Front government of Leon Blum was officially neutral.
Example Question #301 : Political History
What brought about the end of hostilities for Russia during World War I?
The Battle of Tannenberg
The Battle of the Somme
The Spring Offensive of 1918
The Treaty of Brest-Livotsk
The Treaty of Versailles
The Treaty of Brest-Livotsk
The Treaty of Brest-Livotsk was signed between the newly formed Bolshevik government of the Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (the USSR) and the Central Powers, granting the Baltic States to Germany and the Kars Oblast to the Ottomans, while also paying the Germans massive reparations. Germany’s defeat and acceptance of the Treaty of Versailles negated Brest-Livotsk. The first Battle of the Somme was an inconclusive but bloody engagement between Britain, France and Germany in Western Europe in 1916. The Battle of Tannenberg was a decisive defeat of the Russians by the German General von Hindenburg at the beginning of World War I. The Spring Offensive of 1918 was a series of advances by Germany in Western Europe using storm troopers that were ultimately reversed by American reinforcements.
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