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Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Europe
The Sistine Chapel and David are works of art and architecture that are attributed to which Renaissance artist?
Jan van Eyck
Michelangelo
Leonardo da Vinci
Albrecht Durer
Raphael
Michelangelo
The Sistine Chapel and David are two of the most famous works of the famous Renaissance artist and sculptor Michelangelo.
Example Question #1 : Europe
The Renaissance most likely evolved first in Italy due to __________.
Italy's political and religious unity
Italy's urban society and emerging middle class
Italy's extensive mercenary class that protected the cities from barbarian raids
the wealth of the Papacy
Italy's cultural legacy of artistic and scientific accomplishment
Italy's urban society and emerging middle class
Italy's relatively large urban society and emerging middle class allowed for a large number of individuals to be free to pursue artistic or scientific pursuits. This was in contrast to most of the rest of Europe and the world, where the vast majority of people had no free time for pursuits unrelated to simply surviving. This allowed the Renaissance to flourish first in Italy.
Example Question #3 : Europe
The Decameron, by Giovanni Boccaccio, tells a series of stories about __________.
The Black Death
The Hundred Years' War
Greek mythology
The Roman Empire
The Italian Renaissance
The Black Death
The Decameron was written by Giovanni Boccaccio in the fourteenth century. It is considered one of the most important works of early Humanism and the Italian Renaissance. It is centered around a series of tales about the Black Death. The Black Death was a devastating plague that hit Europe in the fourteenth century and led to widespread death and suffering. By some estimates as many as a third of all Europeans perished as a direct result of the Black Death. It would take almost two hundred years for population levels to recover.
Example Question #7 : Europe
The Medici rose to prominence in which Italian city-state?
Venice
Milan
The Papal States
Naples
Florence
Florence
The Medici rose to prominence in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Florence. The Medici were a banking family, and in the fifteenth century, the Medici Bank was the largest in Europe. The Medici are significant because they were frequent and enthusiastic patrons of the early Renaissance in Italy. They funded artistic works and spectacular architectural wonders.
Example Question #8 : Europe
The School of Athens is one of the most famous works of which Renaissance artist?
Leonardo da Vinci
Raphael
Jan Van Eyck
Petrarch
Michaelangelo
Raphael
The School of Athens is one of the most famous Renaissance paintings, and it is still considered a masterpiece today. It was painted by the Renaissance artist, Raphael, in the early sixteenth century. The fresco can be found in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican.
Example Question #3 : Europe
Lorenzo the Magnificent is best remembered as __________.
a religious dissident
a patron of the arts
an Italian mercenary captain
a Northern Renaissance artist
an Enlightenment philosopher
a patron of the arts
Lorenzo the Magnificent was a ruler of Florence in the fifteenth century. At the time, Florence was an economic center of Europe and one of the most prominent cities of the Italian Renaissance. Lorenzo the Magnificent is most commonly remembered as a generous and enthusiastic patron of the arts. He sponsored the works of Michelangelo, among many others.
Example Question #2 : The Renaissance
Which of these treaties provided religious toleration for Huguenots in France, but required them to disarm?
The Peace of Westphalia
The Edict of Fontainebleau
The Peace of Lyon
The Peace of Alais
The Edict of Nantes
The Peace of Alais
The Peace of Alais was a treaty signed in 1629 between the French monarchy and the leaders of the Huguenots, French Protestants. The peace provided religious toleration for the Huguenots but required them to disarm so that they would no longer be a threat to the crown. The peace did not last, however, as later in the seventeenth century, Louis XIV revoked the arrangement and began official state persecution of Protestants in France.
Example Question #11 : The Renaissance
Which of these French rulers did the most to establish and strengthen the French nation-state?
Charles Martel
Henry IV
Louis XVIII
Louis XIV
Napoleon III
Louis XIV
Louis XIV, often known as the Sun King, is perhaps the most significant ruler (excluding, possibly, Napoleon) in French history. He ruled for an unprecedented period of time in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries and did a great deal to strengthen the French monarchy and country. His reforms, directed by his Chief Minister Cardinal Mazarin, established national standards for currency, taxes, and language and also helped codify French national identity.
Example Question #1 : England And The Renaissance
Which of the following is Geoffrey Chaucer famous for writing?
Inferno
The Prince
Gargantua
The Epic of Gilgamesh
The Canterbury Tales
The Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales was written in the fourteenth century in England. It is famous for helping popularize the use of the vernacular (local) language in writing and helped encouraged the spread of humanism during the English Renaissance.
Example Question #12 : The Renaissance
Which of these monarchs was the first to reign over a combined Kingdom of Scotland and England, later called Great Britain?
Henry VII
Elizabeth I
Henry VIII
James II
James I
James I
Following the death of the last Tudor ruler, Queen Elizabeth I, in 1603, the English crown was left without any direct heir. So the Scottish monarch James I, Elizabeth’s cousin, ascended to the throne. In doing so, he began the process of uniting the Scottish and English kingdoms into the Kingdom of Great Britain. Although James I could not himself unify the two kingdoms (he ruled over them both independently), they would be unified a century later during the reign of Queen Anne, the last Stuart monarch.
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