AP European History
Period 1 Exam: 1450 -1648
Questions 1-2 are based on the following passage:
“… to compress into few words the entire summary of my voyage and speedy return, and of the advantages derivable therefrom, I promise, that with a little assistance afforded me by our most invincible sovereigns, I will procure them as much gold as they need, as great a quantity of spices, of cotton, and of mastic (which is only found in Chios), and as many men for the service of the Navy as their Majesties may require. I promise also rhubarb and other sorts of drugs, which I am persuaded the men whom I have left in the aforesaid fortresses have found already and will continue to find; for I myself have tarried n where longer than I was compelled to do by the winds, except in the city of Navidad, while I provided for the buildings of the fortress, and took the necessary precautions for the perfect security of the men I left there. Although all I have related may appear to be wonderful and unheard of, yet the results of my voyages would have been more astonishing if I had had at my disposal such ships I required. But these great and marvelous results are not to be attributed to any merit of mine, but to the holy Christian faith, and to the piety and religion of our sovereigns; for that which the unaided intellect of man could not compass, the spirit of God has granted to human exertions, for God is wont to hear the prayers of his servants who love his precepts even to the performance of apparent impossibilities.”
-“Epistola Christofori Colom (Christopher Columbus)…de insulis Indie supra Gangem, March 14, 1493. Published in
Rome, April 1493.”
Based on the passage above, which of the following is the primary motivation for exploring and establishing colonies?
Commercial motives
Religious motives
Nationalistic motives
Scientific motives
An historian studying the first contacts between Europeans and Native Americans would be most interested in which of the following details from the passage?
American products of interest to Europeans
The position of religion in Columbus’ worldview
The building of a fortress in a new world
Columbus’ plan for future expeditions
Questions 3-5 are based on the following passage:
“What now shall I say about literature and scholarship in which all concede that Florence is the chief and most splendid leader?... For who is able to name a poet in our generation of the last one who is not a Florentine? Who but our citizens recalled this skill at eloquence, already lost, to light, to practical use, and to life…. Now the knowledge of Greek literature, which had been decayed in Italy for more than seven hundred years, has been revived and restored by our city…. Finally, these humanities most excellent and of highest value, especially relevant for human beings, necessary for both public and private life, adorned with a knowledge of letters worthy of free men, have originated in our city....”
-Leonardo Bruni, Funeral oration for Nanni Strozzi, 1427
Bruni’s oration best illustrates which of the following elements of the Renaissance?
The use of the printing press to spread the Renaissance beyond Italy.
The ongoing influence of the Catholic Church in Renaissance life.
The revival of classical literature and ancient texts.
The critical role patrons played in humanist scholarship.
The approaches of humanist scholars such as Bruni led to which of the following developments by the early sixteenth century?
Christian humanists employing Renaissance learning in service of religious reform
increased tolerance for new ideas and approaches to theological and scientific debates
an increase in the Catholic Church’s receptivity to calls for reform
an increasing skepticism about the role of religion and its relevance in contemporary life
What characteristic of political thought during the Italian Renaissance is raised by Bruni’s oration?
the focus on creating a larger Italian state
the emphasis on secular models of individual and political behavior
the overlapping nature of religious and political power
the increased involvement of the people in political decision-making
Questions 6-7 are based on the following image:
Artemisia Gentileschi, Judith and Holofernes, 1610
Which of the following characteristics are best reflected in this painting?
an emphasis on irrationality, impulse, and abstraction
an emphasis on emotion, nature, individuality, and intuition
an emphasis on subjectivity, the subconscious, and satire
an emphasis on drama, emotion, intensity, distortion
The characteristics from the above painting best reflect which art genre
Northern Renaissance
Mannerism
Baroque
Italian Renaissance
Questions 8-9 are based on the following image:
“VI. And in order to leave no occasion for troubles or differences between our subjects, we have permitted, and herewith permit, those of the said religion called Reformed [Protestant] to live and abide in all the cities and places of this our kingdom and countries of our sway, without being annoyed, molested, or compelled to do anything in the matter of religion contrary to their consciences,…upon condition that they comport themselves in other respects according to that which is contained in this our present edict.”
-King Henri IV of France, The Edict of Nantes, 1598
What other condition was NOT part of the Edict of Nantes?
Towns could be walled and fortified for defensive purposes
Establishment of Protestant universities
Practice Protestantism freely throughout all of France
Appointment of local city officials
The excerpt above most directly reflects Henry as a “politique”
religious conflicts that challenged European monarchs’ control of religious institutions.
Christian motivations for exploration, as governments sought to spread the faith.
some Protestants’ refusal to recognize the subordination of the church to the state.
monarchs’ tolerance of religious pluralism in order to maintain domestic peace.
Questions 10-12 are based on the following passage:
“The basic question to be answered is; why did Europeans reach and conquer the lands of Native Americans, instead of vice versa?
Thus we have identified three sets of ultimate factors that tipped the advantage to European invaders of the Americas: Eurasia’s long head start on human settlement; its more effective food production, resulting from greater availability of domesticable wild plants and especially of animals; and its less formidable geographic and ecological barriers to intercontinental diffusion [of goods, ideas, and people].
Such differences in food production constituted a major ultimate cause of the disparities between Eurasian and Native American societies. Among the resulting proximate factors behind the conquest, the most important included the differences in germs, technology, political organization, and writing. Of these, the one linked most directed to the differences in food production was germs… Eurasia harbored many domestic animal species and hence developed many such microbes, while the Americas had very few of each.”
-Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, 1997
According to Diamond’s argument, the most important factor for the success of European colonization of the Americas lay in
The military and naval technological advantages held by Europeans
The biological and environmental advantages held by Europeans
The establishment of a plantation economy among indigenous peoples
The actions of key European explorers
Which of the following was a consequence of the Columbian exchange referenced by diamond?
Population stagnation in Europe due to diseases brought from the New World
Increases in the Native American population due to the introduction of new European food sources
Increases in trade and wealth throughout the Mediterranean
Europeans’ expansion of the African slave trade
Exploration and colonization of the New World in the sixteenth century impacted the European balance of power by
Increasing the power of England
Limiting the power of France
Enriching the Italian city-states
Increasing the power of Spain and Portugal
Question 13 is based on the following image:
heads of drunken religious dissidents in Geneva, Switzerland, 1555
The image above serves as evidence to support the argument that, in the 16th century,
population shifts and growing commerce caused the expansion of cities.
city governments had taken on the task of regulating public morality.
accusations of witchcraft reflected folk ideas and social upheaval.
landlords’ attempts to restrict the traditional rights of peasants led to revolt.
All of the following are reasons for the revolt against the Spanish in the Netherlands EXCEPT:
The closing of Catholic churches in the Netherlands by Spain
Attempts by Phillip II to strengthen his control over the Netherlands
Residents of the Netherlands realized that their taxes were being used for Spanish grain
Phillip II attempted to crack down on Calvinism in the Netherlands
Questions 15-18 are based on the following passage:
JULIUS:
What's the trouble here? Won't the gates open? I believe the lock has been changed.
GENIUS:
Better check to see if you've brought the right key. The one for the treasury won't open this door, you know. Why didn't you bring both keys? This is the key of power, not of knowledge.
JULIUS:
Why, this is the only one I've ever used! I've never seen what good the other one was.
GENIUS:
Meanwhile we're locked out.
JULIUS:
I'm losing my temper. I'm going to beat on the gate. Hey there! Somebody open this door instantly! What's holding up the doorman? Asleep, I suppose, probably drunk.
GENIUS:
(Aside) This fellow judges everyone by himself.
- Dialogue: Julius Locked Out of Heaven; Desiderius Erasmus
The passage above represents the employment of Renaissance learning in the service of?
religious reform
state building
civic humanism
absolutism
Based on the passage above and your knowledge Christian Humanism led most directly to which of the following?
The Catholic Reformation
Development of National Monarchies
The Protestant Reformation
The Thirty Years War
Which of the following would be most likely to disagree with the views represented in the document?
Protestant reformers
Protestant monarchs
Anabaptists
Habsburg rulers
Which of the following groups would be most likely to use the document to support their political beliefs?
The Jesuit Order
The Anabaptists
Catholic bishops
Nicolo Machiavelli
Questions 19-20 are based on the following passage:
Christopher Columbus took his fantastic proposal to the king of Portugal and his advisers just after Bartholomew Diaz had returned to Lisbon in 1488 with news that there was definitely a sea passage between the Atlantic and Indian Ocean… When eventually they too discovered America, sending their fishermen and whalers to Newfoundland in about 1497, and landing on the coast of Brazil in 1501, they were already years behind. But who could have foretold that they made a major miscalculation, when Vasco de Gama’s return in 1498 meant that the race for the pepper trade had been won and could be exploited immediately, when all the merchants of Europe were hastily sending their most energetic representatives to Lisbon; when Venice, hitherto the queen of eastern trade seemed to be staggering as if stabbed in the back? In 1504, when the Venetian galleys arrived in Alexandria, Egypt, they found not a single sack of pepper waiting for them.”
- Fernand Braudel (1982). Civilization and Capitalism, 15th-18th century: the perspective of the world. University of California Press
According to the passage, which nation was primed for economic supremacy by 1498?
Spain
Venice
Portugal
Egypt
Which of the following economic patterns does the passage describe?
Shifting of economic power in Europe from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic states
Increase in tensions between Portugal and Spain
The decline of Asia in international trade
The increasing importance of trade in the Americas over Asian trade
Questions 21-24 are based on the following passage:
My loving people,
We have been persuaded by some that are careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit our selves to armed multitudes, for fear of treachery; but I assure you I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let tyrants fear. I have always so behaved myself that, under God, I have placed my chiefest strength and safeguard in the loyal hearts and good-will of my subjects; and therefore I am come amongst you, as you see, at this time, not for my recreation and disport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat of the battle, to live and die amongst you all; to lay down for my God, and for my kingdom, and my people, my honour and my blood, even in the dust. I know I have the body but of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a king of England too, and think foul scorn that Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade the borders of my realm: to which rather than any dishonour shall grow by me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your general, judge, and rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field. I know already, for your forwardness you have deserved rewards and crowns; and We do assure you in the word of a prince, they shall be duly paid you. In the mean time, my lieutenant general shall be in my stead, than whom never prince commanded a more noble or worthy subject; not doubting but by your obedience to my general, by your concord in the camp, and your valour in the field, we shall shortly have a famous victory over those enemies of my God, of my kingdom, and of my people.
-Elizabeth I, Speech at Tilbury, 1588
This speech, given by Elizabeth I served which of the following purposes?
It rallied the troops to oppose Catholic heretics who threatened Elizabeth’s reign
It rallied the troops to fight against the imminent attack of the Spanish armada
It rallied the troops to protect the queen from traitors who wished to free Mary Queen of Scots and place her on the throne of England
It rallied the troops to fight against the imminent attack of the French navy
The speech by Queen Elizabeth was most likely addressed to which of the following groups?
Members of the British Parliament
Members of the British military forces
Members of the upper classes
British Catholics
The speech by Queen Elizabeth I contradicted the traditional, accepted role of a sixteenth-century women in all of the following ways EXCEPT:
Queen Elizabeth was very well educated, as seen in her speech
Queen Elizabeth took an active interest in the political and military affairs of her nation
Queen Elizabeth portrayed the typical image of a woman, asserting she had a weak and feeble body
Queen Elizabeth served in a position of authority in her nation
Queen Elizabeth I is known as a politique for which of the following reasons?
She supported her nation, rallying the troops when foreign dangers threatened English safety
She implemented a harsh policy of religious persecution of Puritans, believing they threatened the stability of her nation
She supported the arts, initiating a strong interest in theater
She implemented a religious settlement that put political unity ahead of theological differences
The Portuguese gained control of Brazil as a colony as a consequence of
The need for it as a base on the route to India
The Treaty of Tordesillas
The fact that the Spanish mistakenly believed it to be of no value
Spain ceding it to Portugal in return for the Philippines islands
The policy of France in the Thirty Year’s War was
To remain neutral
To ally with all other Catholic rulers against the Protestants
To ally with the Spanish against Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden
To ally with the Protestants to prevent a Habsburg victory
All of the following were results of the Treaty of Westphalia EXCEPT
The reduction of the German population through military action and disease
The toleration of the major Protestant churches
The recognition of the independence of the Netherlands
The union of all German speaking states under a strong emperor
When the influx of silver and gold from the New World slowed dramatically about 1620, this trend damaged the economy of
Spain
The Dutch Republic
England
France
Questions 29-31 are based on the following image:
Musee Cantonal de Beaux-Arts, Lausanne/De Agostini Picture Library/G. Dagli Orti/The Bridgeman Art Library
During the French Wars of Religion, which of the following groups were massacred?
Roman Catholics
Lutherans
Anabaptists
Huguenots
The St. Bartholemew’s Day massacre can be considered to be a turning point in French history because
It established the supremacy of Calvinist beliefs in France
It led to a civil war that eventually established the Bourbon monarchy and led to a degree of religious tolerance
It led to a civil war that clearly established the power of the Valois monarchy and led to the domination of the Roman Catholic Church
It established the supremacy of the Guise family and their control of the nation’s religious beliefs
During the civil wars in France in the second half of the sixteenth century, the Huguenots
Were led by a noble family known as the Guise who hoped to secure the throne
Perpetrated the infamous St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre to wipe out the Catholic leadership
Achieved limited toleration after their leader converted to Catholicism to gain the throne
Organized a foreign alliance with the Spanish
Which of the following was a major factor in preventing the union of the Protestants led by Zwingli and Luther?
Allowance of clerical marriages
Closing of monasteries
Interpretation of the Eucharist
The age of baptism
One of the important Renaissance changes that impacted artists was that
Artists began to be treated as artistic geniuses rather than artisans
Artists began to paint with watercolors rather than oil paints
Artists began to paint in a fanciful style rather than stressing realism in their works
Artists began to be treated as common tradesmen rather than creative geniuses
Questions 34-37 are based on the following passage:
“He who desires to fight for God under the banner of the cross in our society, which we wish to distinguish by
the name of Jesus, - and to serve God alone and the Roman pontiff, his vicar on earth, after a solemn vow of
perpetual chastity, shall set this thought before his mind, that he is a part of society founded for the especial
purpose of providing for the advancement of souls in Christian life and doctrine and for the propagation of faith
through public preaching and the ministry of the word of God, spiritual exercises and deeds of charity, and in
particular through the training of the young and ignorant in Christianity […] All the members shall realize, and
shall recall daily , as long as they live, that this society as a whole and in every part is fighting for God under
faithful obedience to […] the pope […] sacrific[ing] of our own wills, we should each be bound by a peculiar vow,
in addition to the general obligation, that whatever the present Roman pontiff, or any future one, may from time
to time decree regarding the welfare of souls and the propagation of the faith, we are pledged to obey without
evasion or excuses, instantly, so far as in us lies, whether he send us to the Turks or any other infidels, even to
those who inhabit the regions men call the Indies; whether to heretics or schismatics, or on the other hand, to
certain of the faithful.
-An offered constitution; proposed to Pope Paul III, approved in 1540
Which of the following is described above?
Jesuit Order
Spanish Conquistadors
Hanseatic League
Ultra-Catholic League
What is the purpose associated with this group (identified in the previous question) as described in the passage?
Campaign against the Schmalkaldic League
Assist the Holy Roman Emperor in Italian Wars
Missionary work in New World and Asia
Crusades to gain the Holy Land for Christians
All of the following were additional efforts as part of this period, EXCEPT:
Index of Prohibited Books
Renaissance patronage of pope and Medici
Ursulines and other new orders
Council of Trent
Which of the following treaties enabled this group to successfully implement their mission without much dispute from political leaders?
Peace of Augsburg
Edict of Nantes
Treaty of Tordesillas
Treaty of Westphalia
Questions 38-41 are based on the following image:
The event depicted that led to the above map was?
The Thirty Years War.
The Protestant Reformation.
The English Civil War
The Columbian Exchange.
The losses reflected on the map above refer to?
Catholic losses during that time.
The loss of Protestant princess during that time.
The loss of German population during that time.
The slaughter of Anabaptists during that time.
Based on your knowledge and the map above, which of the following statements is true?
The French Wars of Religion was responsible for the losses shown on the map.
The Columbian Exchange was partly responsible for the losses shown on this map
Wars by monarchs to put down rebellions by feudal nobles contributed to the losses shown.
European states exploiting religious conflicts to promote their own political and economic interests contributed to the losses shown.
The treaty that ended this conflict also contributed to all of the following EXCEPT?
The increase in religious conflicts such as the French Wars of Religion.
Marking the effective end of universal Christendom.
The granting of control over religion to local leaders.
The acceleration of the decline of the Holy Roman Empire.
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