All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation
Jan Hus and Jerome of Prague were both earlier reformers in __________.
Poland
Bohemia
Russia
Hungary
Lithuania
Bohemia
In the two centuries before the Protestant Reformation began (in 1517), there were still numerous reform movements going on around Europe. One of the most influential and widely known is the Hussite movement initially inspired by Jan Hus and Jerome of Prague. They were both Czech-speaking people living in the region of Central-Eastern Europe called Bohemia. Their reform was centered around rectifying abuses within the church, and their discourse and correspondence is rife with references to the Pope as the "Antichrist." Not surprisingly, given the atmosphere of this time period, they were also both executed for heresy in the early fifteenth century. It is believed that their writings and martyrdom laid the foundations for the swift rise of Protestantism in Bohemia and Poland.
Example Question #12 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation
In the sixteenth century, German speakers in Hungary were most likely to adopt __________, whereas Magyars were most likely to adopt __________.
Lutheranism . . . Zwinglianism
Anabaptism . . . Calvinism
Zwinglianism . . . Calvinism
Calvinism . . . Presbytarianism
Calvinism . . . Lutheranism
Lutheranism . . . Zwinglianism
The Lutheran movement was spread initially through the German-speaking princely states of central Europe and was primarily a German-speaking movement throughout. The German-speaking people of Hungary were influenced by the writings of Luther and his German compatriots more than anyone else, and the religion of Lutheranism took off far more swiftly with them. The Lutheran Confession was adopted in Hungary in 1545. The Magyar people of Hungary (people who speak Hungarian) favored the Reformed Church of Switzerland, of Zwinglianism, and they adopted the Helvetic Confession in 1567. A Confession, to help clarify, is an expression of faith or a definition of what the group believes.
Example Question #13 : Eastern Europe In The Reformation
This organization played a leading role in the Catholic Counter-Reformation that was so effective in Poland, Lithuania, and Hungary.
The Anabaptists
The Barnabites
The Ursulines
The Jesuits
The Capuchins
The Jesuits
By the beginning of the seventeenth-century Protestantism had taken a tenuous hold of the populations of Poland, Lithuania, and Hungary. The Catholic Counter Reformation started winning back the hearts and minds of the people—primarily by motivating the nobles to withhold funds from Protestant missionaries and by coercing those who still resisted. The Jesuit organization was extremely active in this work. The Jesuits were formed right before the Counter-Reformation began and were extremely active throughout the next few hundred years in "purifying" the church while attempting to eradicate the gains of the Protestant Reformation. They were particularly successful in Eastern Europe, where the majority of each country was reverted back to Catholicism.
Example Question #1 : Other Age Of Exploration History
Spain and Portugal divided up much of their newly found territory in 1492 with __________.
The Treaty of Lisbon
The Treaty of Versailles
The War of Austrian Succession
The Treaty of Tordesillas
The War of Spanish Succession
The Treaty of Tordesillas
The Treaty of Tordesillas was drawn up in 1492 between the Spanish and the Portuguese and signed by the Pope. It basically divided up the whole world, but especially the American hemisphere, into spheres of Spanish and Portuguese influence in an attempt to prevent future conflict.
Example Question #91 : Europe
John Cabot is notable for which of the following?
Spreading the Christian religion to the Native American people of the modern-day Northeastern United States
Discovering a passage through the Great Lakes to the interior of the North American continent
Being the first European to make contact with the Aztec people of Mesoamerica
Being the first European to set foot on the North American mainland since the Vikings
Being the first European to make contact with the Incan people of South America
Being the first European to set foot on the North American mainland since the Vikings
John Cabot was an Italian explorer who sailed for North America under the sponsorship of King Henry VII of England in 1497. He is credited as being the first European to set foot on the mainland of the North American continent, although most historians believe that the Vikings had previously done so in the eleventh century.
Example Question #3 : Other Age Of Exploration History
Which of these countries was the most successful and significant in the first wave of European exploration?
Holland
Portugal
France
England
Spain
Portugal
Although all of these countries would be significant throughout the period of European exploration and colonialism, it was the Portuguese who had the most early success. Portugal established colonies on the Atlantic coast of Brazil, and was the first to travel around Africa, the first to reach India, and the first to reach the Far East.
Example Question #4 : Other Age Of Exploration History
After victory over France in the Seven Years' War, Britain gained control of much of North America. In which of the following areas did Britain also take control of territory in the post-war treaty?
France
China
Mexico
South Africa
India
India
The Seven Years' War, often called the French and Indian War, was fought between France and Britain between 1756 and 1763. Due to the global nature of the two countries' empires, the war was fought around the world and resulted in numerous territories being exchanged between the two world powers. In the treaty that ended the war, Britain gained control of French holdings in North America and also in the Indian subcontinent.
Example Question #5 : Other Age Of Exploration History
Which of these countries was not a major player in the age of exploration and colonialism?
France
Portugal
The Netherlands
Britain
Germany
Germany
The six major players in the age of European exploration were France, Britain, the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, and Sweden. Germany, which was not a unified country until the 1870s, was not a major player in the age of exploration.
Example Question #6 : Other Age Of Exploration History
In 1487, the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias __________.
was executed by the the native population of an island in the West Indies
established a colony in St. Kitts
rounded the Cape of Good Hope
reached the Korean peninsula
attempted to navigate the Hudson River
rounded the Cape of Good Hope
Bartolomeu Dias rounded the Cape of Good Hope in 1487. The Cape of Good Hope is the southernmost tip of the African continent, and traversing it was vital to connecting Portugal with the lucrative trade it would soon develop with India and the Far East.
Example Question #7 : Other Age Of Exploration History
The discovery and mapping of the St. Lawrence River by Jacques Cartier eventually led to the territory of __________ falling under __________ control.
America . . . British
Canada . . . French
Brazil . . . Portuguese
Colombia . . . Spanish
Mexico . . . Spanish
Canada . . . French
Jacques Cartier was a French explorer and navigator who discovered the St. Lawrence River and claimed the surrounding territory, which would later come to be called Canada, for the French Empire. Like many early European explorers, Cartier thought he had found a passage through the continent to Asia, but like all other explorers of this time period, he was disappointed.
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