Exam 11: The Later Middle Ages: Crisis and Disintegration in the Fourteenth Century
Exam 1: The Ancient Near East: the First Civilizations128 Questions
Exam 2: The Ancient Near East: Peoples and Empires122 Questions
Exam 3: The Civilization of the Greeks123 Questions
Exam 4: The Hellenistic World120 Questions
Exam 5: The Roman Republic130 Questions
Exam 6: The Roman Empire123 Questions
Exam 7: Late Antiquity and the Emergence of the Medieval World126 Questions
Exam 8: European Civilization in the Early Middle Ages, 750-1000125 Questions
Exam 9: The Recovery and Growth of European Society in the High Middle Ages128 Questions
Exam 10: The Rise of Kingdoms and the Growth of Church Power129 Questions
Exam 11: The Later Middle Ages: Crisis and Disintegration in the Fourteenth Century124 Questions
Exam 12: Recovery and Rebirth: the Age of the Renaissance129 Questions
Exam 13: Reformation and Religious Warfare in the Sixteenth Century126 Questions
Exam 14: Europe and the World: New Encounters, 1500-1800127 Questions
Exam 15: State Building and the Search for Order in the Seventeenth Century129 Questions
Exam 16: Toward a New Heaven and a New Earth: The Scientific Revolution and the Emergence of Modern Science122 Questions
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One of France's advantages toward the end of the Hundred Years' War was its adoption of cannon.
(True/False)
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All medical books, even after the impact of the Black Death, continued to be written in Latin, and all were highly theoretical rather than being practical.
(True/False)
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How did the adversities of the fourteenth century affect urban life and medical practices at the time?
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After the Black Death, money payments were increasingly substituted for military service in the lord-vassal relationship.
(True/False)
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Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio are best known for their works written in Latin.
(True/False)
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