All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #185 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations argues passionately in favor of __________.
state-owned property
Mercantilism
free-market Capitalism
Imperialism and nationalism
Christian theocratic absolutism
free-market Capitalism
Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations is the seminal economic text of the Enlightenment era. In it, Smith presents his arguments in favor of laissez-faire economics, or free-market Capitalism. The book was widely influential among the governments and thinkers of his era and continues to be influential to this day.
Example Question #186 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
The Encyclopedie is the seminal work of __________.
David Hume
Diderot
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Voltaire
Montesquieu
Diderot
The Encyclopedie is one of the most famous works of the Enlightenment period. It was written by Diderot, with the help of many other famous writers of his era. The aim of the Encyclopedie was to collate all the knowledge of the Enlightenment into one book that could be widely disseminated around Europe. It was read by the Enlightened despots Catherine the Great and Maria Theresa, among others.
Example Question #187 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Which Enlightenment philosopher was known primarily for condemning the use of torture and the death penalty?
Denis Diderot
John Locke
Voltaire
None of these
Cesare Beccaria
Cesare Beccaria
Cesare Beccaria was an Italian thinker of the Enlightenment who is best known for his treatise On Crimes and Punishments, in which he condemned torture and the death penalty. John Locke and Voltaire were philosophers whose works covered a greater variety of ideas, such as natural and civil rights, religion, and political philosophy. Denis Diderot was a French Enlightenment philosopher best known for leading the effort to compile the Encyclopedie, a massive general encyclopedia that was meant to incorporate all of the world's knowledge.
Example Question #188 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Tsar Alexander II of Russia is best remembered for doing which of the following?
Establishing St. Petersberg as the Russian capital
Gaining control of the Crimea by defeating the French and the British
Modernizing the Russian army
Ushering in the Russian Revolution by being murdered
Emancipating the serfs
Emancipating the serfs
Alexander II is often called "Alexander the Liberator" because in 1861, he ended the centuries long economic system of serfdom by emancipating the serfs. Serfdom was effectively slavery by another name. A serf was the property of his or her landowner and could not move without the landowner's permission. Serfs were expected to work the land and provide for their master's prosperity.
Example Question #189 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
In what century were the Russian serfs emancipated?
The eighteenth century
The twentieth century
The seventeenth century
The nineteenth century
The sixteenth century
The nineteenth century
The Russian serfs were emancipated in 1861 by Tsar Alexander II. The institution of serfdom was very similar to the institution of slavery and underpinned the whole feudal system of economic and social life throughout much of Europe from the fall of the Roman empire until the Industrial Revolution. It is worth noting that the emancipation of the serfs in Russia and the slaves in the United States happened at very much the same time. Clearly there was a global movement away from forced labor.
Example Question #191 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
In pre-revolution France, the First Estate was comprised of __________.
Nobility
Royalty
The peasants
The clergy
The press
The clergy
In France, under the Old Regime (before the French Revolution), France was partially governed by the Estates-General. This was a form of political representation where various classes of people, or “estates,” were represented as a group. The First Estate was composed of clergymen; the Second Estate was made up of noblemen; and the Third Estate was comprised of the common man (everyone else).
Example Question #192 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Catherine the Great, Frederick the Great, and Maria Theresa of Austria are all examples of __________.
Holy Roman Emperors
All of these answers are correct.
enlightened despots
Protestant supporters
constitutional monarchs
enlightened despots
Catherine the Great of Russia, Frederick the Great of Prussia, and Maria Theresa of Austria are three well-known examples of "enlightened despots." During the Enlightenment era, many absolute rulers came to embrace the practices and ideals of the Enlightenment thinkers. These rulers did little to encourage democracy or constitutionalism in their countries and still ruled in an autocratic style, but they were more likely to favor freedom of speech, along with freedom of religion and expression.
Example Question #1 : Other Enlightenment History
Which of these statements about the "Grand Tour" is NOT true?
It was primarily undertaken by young men, after finishing university.
Only aristocrats were able to undertake a Grand Tour.
It was meant to serve as an education in art and the origins of western civilization.
A Grand Tour involved an organized trip around Europe.
It only became practical with the advent of the railroad.
It only became practical with the advent of the railroad.
Throughout the Enlightenment period, it was common for young aristocratic men, particularly from Britain or Northern Europe, to undergo a "Grand Tour." This involved a months-long trip around the major sites of Enlightenment Europe. It was particularly focused on Italy and France. The purpose was to gain a greater understanding of art history and the history of western civilization. The only one of these statements that is not true is that it only became practical with the advent of the railroad—the railroad merely made it easier; people had been doing it since the early-seventeenth century.
Example Question #3 : Other Enlightenment History
The War of Austrian Succession began with challenges to which ruler?
Joseph I
Joseph II
Leopold II
Maria Theresa
Marie Antoinette
Maria Theresa
The War of Austrian Succession was fought in the 1740s over the issue of whether Maria Theresa was fit to inherit the Hapsburg throne of Austria from her father. Those contending that she was unfit were doing so on the premise that, as a woman, she was ineligible for the throne. The war ended with Maria Theresa victorious and sitting on the throne of Austria, which she would continue to do for the next several decades.
Example Question #195 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
How did the declining influence of the Catholic Church most directly contribute to the commercial and banking revolution?
It allowed investors to lend money and charge interest in return.
It opened up the New World to European colonialism and flooded the European economy with gold and silver specie.
All of these answers are correct.
None of these answers are correct; the decline of the Catholic Church had no influence on the commercial and banking revolution.
It freed individuals in Northern Europe to pursue a more academic and secular life.
It allowed investors to lend money and charge interest in return.
Under Catholic tradition, it is forbidden to lend money with the expectation that the loanee will then pay back the money plus interest. This is called usury. When Catholicism was the dominant expression of Christianity in Europe, any type of business venture (as we understand them now) was largely impossible, or relied on one incredibly wealthy patron making himself slightly more wealthy. The rise of Protestantism and the decline of Catholicism allowed many of the Northern European countries in particular to start funding colonizing missions, explorations, and long-distance trading ventures through lending money. This radically altered the direction of European history and inspired the commercial and banking revolutions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
All SAT II World History Resources
