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World History Review Day 1

World History Review Day 1. Ms. Hatchell 5/20/2014. California State Standards. 10.3 Students analyze the effects of the Industrial Revolution in England, France, Germany, Japan, and the United States. 10.4

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World History Review Day 1

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  1. World HistoryReview Day 1 Ms. Hatchell 5/20/2014

  2. California State Standards • 10.3 • Students analyze the effects of the Industrial Revolution in England, France, Germany, Japan, and the United States. • 10.4 • Students analyze patterns of global change in the era of New Imperialism in at least two of the following regions or countries: Africa, Southeast Asia, China, India, Latin America, and the Philippines • 10.5 • Students analyze the causes and course of the First World War. • 10.6 • Students analyze the effects of the First World War.

  3. Jewish and Christian beliefs differ from the Greco-Roman tradition in matters concerning the importance of: • A. The Role of Law • B. Individual Morality • C. Belief in One God • D. Family Unit

  4. Jewish and Christian beliefs differ from the Greco-Roman tradition in matters concerning the importance of: • C. Belief in One God

  5. Who believed that in an ideal society the government should be controlled by a class of “philosopher kings”? • A. Muhammad • B. Plato • C. Lao-Tzu • D. Thomas Aquinas

  6. Who believed that in an ideal society the government should be controlled by a class of “philosopher kings”? • B. Plato

  7. Which of the following is a concept from classical Athens that is central to Western political thought today? • A. Individuals should fight against nature & society to achieve greatness. • B. Individual Achievement, dignity, and worth are of great importance. • C. Individual recognition impedes a societal progress. • D. Individuals play an insignificant role in shaping ideas, society, and the state.

  8. Which of the following is a concept from classical Athens that is central to Western political thought today? • B. Individual Achievement, dignity, and worth are of great importance.

  9. ..for the administration of justice..is the principle order in political society. Aristotle “Politics” • From Aristotle’s statement above it can be inferred that: • A. Monarchs protect citizens from tyranny • B. Only elected officials should impose laws • C. Laws maintain the stability of a nation • D. Majority rule ensures a stable government

  10. ..for the administration of justice..is the principle order in political society. Aristotle “Politics” • From Aristotle’s statement above it can be inferred that: • C. Laws maintain the stability of a nation

  11. When a country’s constitution requires the branches of government to remain independent of each other, it is adhering to the constitutional principle of: • A. Popular Sovereignty • B. Separation of Powers • C. Federalism • D. Direct Democracy

  12. The English Philospher John Locke argued that Life, Liberty, and Property are: • A. Natural Rights • B. Political Rights • C. Economic Rights • D. Social Rights

  13. The English Philospher John Locke argued that Life, Liberty, and Property are: • A. Natural Rights

  14. Both the US Declaration of Independence and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man emphasized the idea that governments must: • A. Guarantee Economic Prosperity • B. Protect the rights of people • C. Support Established religious beliefs • D. Protect the rights of the people

  15. Both the US Declaration of Independence and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man emphasized the idea that governments must: • B. Protect the rights of people

  16. How did the Magna Carta (1215) contribute to the development of the English Government? • A. Created a 2 house parliament • B. Extended voting rights • C. Provided a bill of rights • D. Limited the power of the monarch

  17. How did the Magna Carts (1215) contribute to the development of the English Government? • D. Limited the power of the monarch

  18. Unlike the French Revolution, the American Revolution produced: • A. Women’s suffrage • B. Short term military rule • C. Strategic alliances • D. Lasting Constitution

  19. Unlike the French Revolution, the American Revolution produced: • D. Lasting Constitution

  20. Which leader was inspired by the ideas of the American Revolution and the Enlightenment to lead the liberation of much of S. America from Spain? • A. Simon Bolivar • B. Padre Miguel Hidalgo • C. Jose Martu • D. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna

  21. Which leader was inspired by the ideas of the American Revolution and the Enlightenment to lead the liberation of much of S. America from Spain? • A. Simon Bolivar

  22. When members of the Third Estate took the Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the French Revolution, they were attempting to: • A. Est. a military government • B. Draft a new constitution • C. Restore the king to power • D. Persuade Napoleon to take power

  23. When members of the Third Estate took the Tennis Court Oath (1789) at the start of the French Revolution, they were attempting to: • B. Draft a new constitution

  24. Which of these demonstrated that popular protest would play a role on the French Revolution? • A. Reign of the Committee on Public Safety • B. Trial of Louis XIV • C. Fall of the Bastille • D. Civil Constitution of the clergy.

  25. Which of these demonstrated that popular protest would play a role on the French Revolution? • C. Fall of the Bastille

  26. What was one factor that enable Napoleon to seize control of France? • A. Weakness of French Government • B. Endorsements by foreign governments • C. Support Napoleon received from French Aristocrats • D. Strong Democratic reforms Napoleon advocated.

  27. What was one factor that enable Napoleon to seize control of France? • A. Weakness of French Government

  28. In the 1800’s Labor Unions were a response to what? • A. Increasing unemployment • B. Government ownership of business • C. Wages and working conditions • D. Racial/Gender discrimination

  29. In the 1800’s Labor Unions were a response to what? • C. Wages and working conditions

  30. To increase production output during the Industrial Revolution, businesses primarily invested in what? • A. Workers wages • B. Machinery • C. Training • D. Marketing

  31. To increase production output during the Industrial Revolution, businesses primarily invested in what? • B. Machinery

  32. In the mid 1700’s how did trade contribute to the early growth of an industrial economy in Great Britain? • A. It allowed the British to educate their workforce • B. Provided funds to pay higher wages to the new labor class • C. Enable British Merchants to hire skilled foreign laborers. • D. Gave British entrepreneurs the capital needed to open new factories

  33. In the mid 1700’s how did trade contribute to the early growth of an industrial economy in Great Britain? • D. Gave British entrepreneurs the capital needed to open new factories

  34. What late 18th century European artistic movement arose as a reaction against Classicism’s emphasis on reason? • A. Impressionism • B. Realism • C. Romanticism • D. Surrealism

  35. What late 18th century European artistic movement arose as a reaction against Classicism’s emphasis on reason? • C. Romanticism

  36. The social criticism of Charles Dickens’s novels Hard Times and David Copperfield was a response to conditions brought about by ________________? • A. Colonial Conflicts • B. Industrialization • C. Unionization • D. Parliamentary reforms

  37. The social criticism of Charles Dickens’s novels Hard Times and David Copperfield was a response to conditions brought about by ________________? • B. Industrialization

  38. At the end of the 1800’s colonies were generally seen as a ____________? • A. Place to banish criminals • B. Sign of a country’s relative power • C. Location to train military forces • D. Method for suppressing nationalism

  39. At the end of the 1800’s colonies were generally seen as a ____________? • B. Sign of a country’s relative power

  40. Economically, what enabled Japan to become a colonial power after 1894? • A. Agricultural Advances • B. Japanese trade wars against the U.S • C. Industrialization • D. Forced to acquire colonies in Asia when European trade was banned

  41. Economically, what enabled Japan to become a colonial power after 1894? • C. Industrialization

  42. In 1900, anti-foreign sentiment in China led to an uprising known as the _____ Rebellion? • A. Nian Rebellion • B. Boxer Rebellion • C. Taiping Rebellion • D. Sepoy Rebellion

  43. In 1900, anti-foreign sentiment in China led to an uprising known as the _____ Rebellion? • B. Boxer Rebellion

  44. The collapse of the last Chinese Empire in 1912 was caused by the imperial government’s failure to _________. • A. Control Foreign Influence • B. Educate the masses • C. Enter into alliances with other nations • D. Repel communist guerillas

  45. The collapse of the last Chinese Empire in 1912 was caused by the imperial government’s failure to _________. • A. Control Foreign Influence

  46. Mohandas Gandhi used his philosophy of nonviolent non-cooperation in an effort to : • A. Form a Marxist government in India • B. Convince his fellow Indians to support the allies in WWII • C. Persuade Pakistani’s to separate from India • D. Achieve India’s independence from Great Britain

  47. Mohandas Gandhi used his philosophy of nonviolent non-cooperation in an effort to : • D. Achieve India’s independence from Great Britain

  48. By 1914, Ethiopia and Liberia were the only two African Countries to retain their _____________. • A. Democratic Governments • B. Develop industry • C. Retain their Independence • D. Overseas colonies

  49. By 1914, Ethiopia and Liberia were the only two African Countries to retain their _____________. C. Retain their Independence

  50. Triple Entente • Why did Britain, France, and Russia form the Triple Entente in 1907? • A. To Respond to the increased power of Germany. • B. To respond to the economy. • C. To go shopping. • D. To surrender to the Triple Alliance.

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