Deck 2: Religions of Antiquity

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Question
To the peoples of the ancient world, religion meant ________.

A) honoring the gods by participating in customary practices
B) accepting a set of particular beliefs concerning the gods
C) union with a deity through meditation and asceticism
D) studying sacred texts to discover the divine will
Use Space or
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Question
Daimones was a Greek name for ________.

A) demigods
B) the omnipotent God
C) evil forces
D) minor gods
Question
Six of the twelve great deities who, according to the ancient Greeks, inhabited Mount Olympus, included _______.

A) Zeus, Aphrodite, Marduk, Apollo, Dionysus, and Isis
B) Hera, Athena, Aphrodite, Hermes, Asclepius, and Dionysus
C) Hera, Athena, Artemis, Hermes, Hephaestus, and Ares
D) Zeus, Hera, Ares, Athena, Poseidon, and Herodotus
Question
Ancient deities included ________.

A) gods, nymphs, the dead, and divinized emperors
B) gods and demigods (heroes, personified abstractions, etc.)
C) great gods, secondary gods, and minor gods
D) all of the above
Question
Gilgamesh was ________.

A) the patron of a Greek city
B) a Sumerian king elevated to god status
C) an Islamic prophet
D) the Egyptian supreme deity
Question
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Enkidu had to die for ________.

A) slaying the Bull of Heaven sent by the gods
B) choosing to associate with Gilgamesh, instead of liberating the citizens of Uruk from the oppressive king
C) rejecting the amorous advances of the goddess Ishtar
D) not offering the bull as a sacrifice
Question
In an Egyptian mythology, a primeval androgynous god, personifying the undifferentiated waters, was named ______.

A) Ptah
B) Amun
C) Atum
D) Ra
Question
Rivalry among Osiris and Seth, with their sister-consorts Isis and Nephthys, formed the basis of ________.

A) Greek mythology
B) an Egyptian myth
C) a Babylonian epic
D) a Sumerian epic
Question
A Mesopotamian epic that elevates Marduk, the patron of Babylon, to the position of supreme god is called ________.

A) Gilgamesh
B) Theogony
C) Enuma Elish
D) the Bible
Question
The parts of the cosmos in Egyptian, Greek, and Mesopotamian myths are ________.

A) heaven and earth
B) heaven and hell
C) heaven, earth, and a netherworld
D) There are no distinctive parts in these myths.
Question
In Sumerian myths, the Tablet of Destinies ________.

A) included the prophesies of an oracle
B) assigned a specific responsibility to every god in the cosmic state
C) was a manual on ancient magic
D) contained an older version of the Ten Commandments
Question
According to Mesopotamian mythology, humans were created ________.

A) to realize their own potential
B) to serve the gods
C) to build a civilization
D) to overthrow the gods
Question
Hesiod's concept of a "Golden Race" referred to ________.

A) the historical decline of humankind
B) the Olympian gods
C) an ideal state (paradise)
D) the superiority of Greeks over barbarians
Question
In his Odyssey, Homer explains the cause of human suffering to be ________.

A) disobeying the gods
B) the flaws inherent in human nature
C) fate
D) all of the above
Question
The reason for the flood in the Mesopotamian myths was ________.

A) rivalry among the gods
B) to punish the immoral behavior of humans
C) to stem the unlimited procreation of humans
D) to provide a fresh start for humankind
Question
In the myth related in Virgil's Aeneid, Aeneas was ________.

A) the son of the goddess Venus and a human father
B) the founder of Rome
C) a refugee from Troy, a city destroyed by the Greeks
D) all of the above
Question
The goddess whose cult had originated near Troy and who was introduced into Rome from Greece in 204 BCE was called ________.

A) Sibyl
B) Venus
C) Isis
D) Cybele
Question
The purpose of ritual in ancient religions was ________.

A) to honor the gods in exchange for practical benefits
B) to elevate one's soul
C) to fulfill the will of the gods
D) as entertainment during the festivals
Question
The main elements of a public festival in ancient Greece included ________.

A) procession, meditation, animal sacrifices, competitions, and a communal meal
B) procession, hymns to the deity, animal sacrifices, games, and a banquet
C) displaying the god's statue, praising the deity, human sacrifices, games, and a banquet
D) procession, pledge of allegiance to the god, scripture readings, solemn prayers of thanksgiving
Question
In ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, ritual purity was a requirement for ________.

A) priests and anyone entering a temple
B) gods and priests
C) priests and sacrificial animals
D) everyone
Question
In ancient world, women ________.

A) were responsible for home rituals but never served as female priests (priestesses) in the temples
B) were the only ones who participated in religious activities
C) were responsible for home rituals and often served as female priests (priestesses) in the temples
D) were not allowed to participate in any religious activities
Question
The Iliad was believed to be written by ________.

A) Hesiod
B) Homer
C) Xenophanes
D) Ovid
Question
The Iliad describes a war between ________.

A) gods
B) the Greeks and the Trojans
C) humans and gods
D) all of the above
Question
The oracle at Delphi was believed to be ________.

A) a priestess through whom the god Apollo was said to speak
B) a temple of the goddess Aphrodite
C) a title of the high priest
D) a ritual performed by a priestess
Question
In Mesopotamia, shimtu meant ________.

A) a common method of divination
B) a cycle of reincarnation
C) that which has been decreed
D) the sacred texts
Question
Examination of a sheep's liver in Mesopotamia and Rome was ________.

A) part of food-based rituals for priests
B) part of the sacrifice ritual
C) a common method of divination
D) a ritual imitating the cosmic order
Question
The Egyptian Instruction for Merikare is a guide for ________.

A) lovers
B) kings/queens
C) priests/priestesses
D) warriors
Question
According to Egyptians, Ma'at, a member of the divine tribunal awaiting the deceased, was the goddess of ________.

A) truth, justice, and order
B) compassion and forgiveness
C) art and trades
D) love and fertility
Question
Who equated the Egyptian gods with their Greek counterparts?

A) Xeno
B) Homer
C) Herodotus
Question
The Egyptian goddess Isis was popular in the entire ancient world as a symbol of ________.

A) the moon
B) wisdom
C) justice
D) motherhood
Question
A __________ is an inscribed stone sculpture prominent in ancient Egyptian homes.

A) Magnus
B) Vesta
C) Gathas
D) Stela
Question
The Egyptian texts (e.g., tomb autobiographies, The Book of the Dead, and The Instruction for Merikare) and Greek writings (e.g., Cleanthes' Hymn to Zeus) emphasize ________.

A) the importance of rituals
B) giving to charity
C) a universal law of justice
D) mystical union with the deity
Question
The Greek thinker who rejected the anthropomorphic view of the divine and proposed the idea of a supreme universal god was ________.

A) Cicero
B) Hesiod
C) Euripides
D) Xenophanes
Question
In Greece, family "cults of the dead" included ________.

A) making offerings on the anniversaries of family members' deaths
B) building pyramids
C) magic rituals
D) building elaborate underground shrines for deceased relatives
Question
In Homer's Odyssey, the underworld is presented as ________.

A) a gloomy and meaningless existence
B) the ideal place to be
C) not different from our world
D) the kingdom of evil
Question
The Roman Empire's shift from traditional pagan beliefs to Christianity occurred under Emperor ________.

A) Constantine
B) Adrian
C) Nero
D) Julian
Question
Amun-Ra is the name of ________.

A) the supreme god of the Olympic pantheon
B) a Sumerian king elevated to god status
C) the original place of the Sibylline Oracles
D) the principal Egyptian state god
Question
Osiris is the name of ________.

A) an Egyptian god
B) the pre-eminent judge of the dead
C) the ruler of the netherworld
D) all of the above
Question
Tiamat is the name of ________.

A) the female monster who represented primeval chaos in Enuma Elish
B) a priestess of Apollo in Delphi
C) fate ("a decree of the gods") in Mesopotamian myths
D) the Egyptian goddess of truth who judges the dead at the divine tribunal
Question
Theogony is ________.

A) an Egyptian book describing the underworld
B) a Sumerian goddess of fertility
C) an account of the origin of the gods written by the Greek poet Hesiod
D) a divination ritual used in the Eleusinian mysteries
Question
The symbol of supernatural power of the Mesopotamian deities was ________.

A) a halo surrounding their heads
B) a bird on the shoulder
C) a crown
D) a sword
Question
The god _________ was the patron god of Babylon and later became the supreme ruler of the Mesopotamian pantheon.

A) Seth
B) Marduk
C) Amun-Ra
D) Jupiter
Question
The oldest known example of monumental architecture is found ________.

A) in Israel near Jerusalem
B) next to the Euphrates river
C) on a mountain top in northern Greece
D) at Gobekli Tepe
Question
Catalhoyuk is ________.

A) a Turkish term meaning burial place
B) an ancient site of prophecy in Sumer
C) an ancient center that produced rituals and food and was both a settlement and a cemetery
D) a Greek term meaning burial ritual
Question
The signature artifact at Catalhoyuk is a _______________.

A) large breasted female about to give birth
B) a ancient statue of Isis surrounded by the sun and moon
C) a temple devoted to Marduk
D) one of the world's first Christian crosses
Question
Nabta Playawas an ancient site which is ________.

A) important for our understanding of where monuments were situated
B) considered foundational for much of what would become central to Egyptian civilization, including religion, for the next several millennia
C) crucial for our understanding of astral religion
D) thought to be the only place to have revered cows
Question
Even among the many gods found in ancient civilizations, there was found one god who ________.

A) dealt only with human concerns
B) was supreme
C) was never represented by a statue
D) interacted with humans more than any other god
Question
The earliest gods corresponded to ________.

A) natural phenomena
B) human characteristics
C) astral bodies
D) creatures in the sea
Question
One major characteristic of the gods in the ancient world was their ________.

A) omniscience
B) refusal to descend to earth
C) ability to deal with earthly problems
D) ability to foretell
Question
The trend of appropriating different gods of similar character from different cultures is understood as ________.

A) a lack of imagination
B) syncretism
C) always indicating the decline of a religious tradition
D) rarely successful
Question
The intellectual's mode of understanding the world was generally written in the form of ________.

A) poetry
B) song
C) myth
D) philosophy
Question
The foremost ritual act for people of the ancient world was ________.

A) bathing
B) prayer
C) sacrifice
D) worshipping with a statue of a god
Question
In the ancient world, anyone entering a sacred space needed first ________.

A) to consult with a priest
B) to seek the advice of an oracle
C) enter a trance-like state
D) to be pure both physically and morally
Question
Extispicy is the ________.

A) scribal act of writing down prophecy
B) priestly act of purification
C) prophetic act of renunciation
D) examination of the inner organs (exta), primarily livers, of sacrificed animals
Question
One important function of Egyptian tombs was ________.

A) to serve as everlasting homes for the dead
B) to promote the practice of worshipping the dead
C) to provide a place for prayers
D) to show the prosperity of the deceased
Question
Regarding death, peoples of the ancient world believed that ________.

A) only the spirit of the righteous lived on
B) a person's importance in this world determined his life in the next.
C) the body of the deceased contained the spirit
D) the spirit of the deceased lived on
Question
For the Stoic philosopher Seneca, death ________.

A) resulted in a number of different stages
B) was a place of shades
C) was not something to be feared as it was either an end or a transition
D) did not entail a series of tests that had to be passed
Question
Eleusis was home to the ________.

A) mystery cult of Demeter and her daughter Persephone
B) goddesses of the home
C) gods of the north
D) fertility cult of Astarte
Question
The roots of the worship of Magna Mater can be traced back at least to ________.

A) Persia
B) Mesopotamia
C) Turkey
D) Rome
Question
The Greek term hubris means ________.

A) folly
B) loving kindness
C) arrogant pride
D) holiness
Question
While encountering other religions, ancients would identify foreign gods with their own.
Question
Creation out of nothing is a concept fundamental to the Egyptian creation myths.
Question
Classical Mesopotamian myth regarded humanity as flawed from the beginning.
Question
. Ancient Egyptian priests were circumcised, observed food taboos, and washed themselves several times each day.
Question
. Some Sumerian women held high priestly offices.
Question
. Ancient pantheons had as many goddesses as gods.
Question
. In the ancient world, diagnostic omens were based on physical or behavioral characteristics
Question
. The creation of humans was not a major theme in ancient Egypt.
Question
. Gobekli Tepe's builders were pre-agricultural foragers.
Question
. Catalhoyuk, located in modern-day Turkey, was an early agricultural town, inhabited from 7400 to 6000 BCE.
Question
. One part of the complex at Nabta Playa, labelled the Valley of Sacrifices, held several burials, including the remains of entire cattle.
Question
. The Egyptian goddess Hathor was depicted as a fox.
Question
. Ptah was a Mesopotamian creator god.
Question
A hagiography is a biographical account of a saintly figure.
Question
Ahura Mazda translates into "Wise Lord" and is the omnipotent god in Zoroastrianism,
Question
The central scriptural text in Zoroastrianism is the Avesta.
Question
One of the major teachings of Zoroastrianism is cosmic dualism between good and evil.
Question
The Zoroastrians who left Iran for Western India are called Manicheans
Question
Mani and his Elect were tasked with liberating darkness from the light
Question
One of the most famous former Manicheans was St. Augustine
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Deck 2: Religions of Antiquity
1
To the peoples of the ancient world, religion meant ________.

A) honoring the gods by participating in customary practices
B) accepting a set of particular beliefs concerning the gods
C) union with a deity through meditation and asceticism
D) studying sacred texts to discover the divine will
A
2
Daimones was a Greek name for ________.

A) demigods
B) the omnipotent God
C) evil forces
D) minor gods
D
3
Six of the twelve great deities who, according to the ancient Greeks, inhabited Mount Olympus, included _______.

A) Zeus, Aphrodite, Marduk, Apollo, Dionysus, and Isis
B) Hera, Athena, Aphrodite, Hermes, Asclepius, and Dionysus
C) Hera, Athena, Artemis, Hermes, Hephaestus, and Ares
D) Zeus, Hera, Ares, Athena, Poseidon, and Herodotus
C
4
Ancient deities included ________.

A) gods, nymphs, the dead, and divinized emperors
B) gods and demigods (heroes, personified abstractions, etc.)
C) great gods, secondary gods, and minor gods
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Gilgamesh was ________.

A) the patron of a Greek city
B) a Sumerian king elevated to god status
C) an Islamic prophet
D) the Egyptian supreme deity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Enkidu had to die for ________.

A) slaying the Bull of Heaven sent by the gods
B) choosing to associate with Gilgamesh, instead of liberating the citizens of Uruk from the oppressive king
C) rejecting the amorous advances of the goddess Ishtar
D) not offering the bull as a sacrifice
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In an Egyptian mythology, a primeval androgynous god, personifying the undifferentiated waters, was named ______.

A) Ptah
B) Amun
C) Atum
D) Ra
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Rivalry among Osiris and Seth, with their sister-consorts Isis and Nephthys, formed the basis of ________.

A) Greek mythology
B) an Egyptian myth
C) a Babylonian epic
D) a Sumerian epic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A Mesopotamian epic that elevates Marduk, the patron of Babylon, to the position of supreme god is called ________.

A) Gilgamesh
B) Theogony
C) Enuma Elish
D) the Bible
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The parts of the cosmos in Egyptian, Greek, and Mesopotamian myths are ________.

A) heaven and earth
B) heaven and hell
C) heaven, earth, and a netherworld
D) There are no distinctive parts in these myths.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
In Sumerian myths, the Tablet of Destinies ________.

A) included the prophesies of an oracle
B) assigned a specific responsibility to every god in the cosmic state
C) was a manual on ancient magic
D) contained an older version of the Ten Commandments
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
According to Mesopotamian mythology, humans were created ________.

A) to realize their own potential
B) to serve the gods
C) to build a civilization
D) to overthrow the gods
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Hesiod's concept of a "Golden Race" referred to ________.

A) the historical decline of humankind
B) the Olympian gods
C) an ideal state (paradise)
D) the superiority of Greeks over barbarians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In his Odyssey, Homer explains the cause of human suffering to be ________.

A) disobeying the gods
B) the flaws inherent in human nature
C) fate
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The reason for the flood in the Mesopotamian myths was ________.

A) rivalry among the gods
B) to punish the immoral behavior of humans
C) to stem the unlimited procreation of humans
D) to provide a fresh start for humankind
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In the myth related in Virgil's Aeneid, Aeneas was ________.

A) the son of the goddess Venus and a human father
B) the founder of Rome
C) a refugee from Troy, a city destroyed by the Greeks
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The goddess whose cult had originated near Troy and who was introduced into Rome from Greece in 204 BCE was called ________.

A) Sibyl
B) Venus
C) Isis
D) Cybele
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The purpose of ritual in ancient religions was ________.

A) to honor the gods in exchange for practical benefits
B) to elevate one's soul
C) to fulfill the will of the gods
D) as entertainment during the festivals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The main elements of a public festival in ancient Greece included ________.

A) procession, meditation, animal sacrifices, competitions, and a communal meal
B) procession, hymns to the deity, animal sacrifices, games, and a banquet
C) displaying the god's statue, praising the deity, human sacrifices, games, and a banquet
D) procession, pledge of allegiance to the god, scripture readings, solemn prayers of thanksgiving
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, ritual purity was a requirement for ________.

A) priests and anyone entering a temple
B) gods and priests
C) priests and sacrificial animals
D) everyone
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
In ancient world, women ________.

A) were responsible for home rituals but never served as female priests (priestesses) in the temples
B) were the only ones who participated in religious activities
C) were responsible for home rituals and often served as female priests (priestesses) in the temples
D) were not allowed to participate in any religious activities
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The Iliad was believed to be written by ________.

A) Hesiod
B) Homer
C) Xenophanes
D) Ovid
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The Iliad describes a war between ________.

A) gods
B) the Greeks and the Trojans
C) humans and gods
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The oracle at Delphi was believed to be ________.

A) a priestess through whom the god Apollo was said to speak
B) a temple of the goddess Aphrodite
C) a title of the high priest
D) a ritual performed by a priestess
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In Mesopotamia, shimtu meant ________.

A) a common method of divination
B) a cycle of reincarnation
C) that which has been decreed
D) the sacred texts
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Examination of a sheep's liver in Mesopotamia and Rome was ________.

A) part of food-based rituals for priests
B) part of the sacrifice ritual
C) a common method of divination
D) a ritual imitating the cosmic order
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The Egyptian Instruction for Merikare is a guide for ________.

A) lovers
B) kings/queens
C) priests/priestesses
D) warriors
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
According to Egyptians, Ma'at, a member of the divine tribunal awaiting the deceased, was the goddess of ________.

A) truth, justice, and order
B) compassion and forgiveness
C) art and trades
D) love and fertility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Who equated the Egyptian gods with their Greek counterparts?

A) Xeno
B) Homer
C) Herodotus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The Egyptian goddess Isis was popular in the entire ancient world as a symbol of ________.

A) the moon
B) wisdom
C) justice
D) motherhood
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
A __________ is an inscribed stone sculpture prominent in ancient Egyptian homes.

A) Magnus
B) Vesta
C) Gathas
D) Stela
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The Egyptian texts (e.g., tomb autobiographies, The Book of the Dead, and The Instruction for Merikare) and Greek writings (e.g., Cleanthes' Hymn to Zeus) emphasize ________.

A) the importance of rituals
B) giving to charity
C) a universal law of justice
D) mystical union with the deity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The Greek thinker who rejected the anthropomorphic view of the divine and proposed the idea of a supreme universal god was ________.

A) Cicero
B) Hesiod
C) Euripides
D) Xenophanes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In Greece, family "cults of the dead" included ________.

A) making offerings on the anniversaries of family members' deaths
B) building pyramids
C) magic rituals
D) building elaborate underground shrines for deceased relatives
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
In Homer's Odyssey, the underworld is presented as ________.

A) a gloomy and meaningless existence
B) the ideal place to be
C) not different from our world
D) the kingdom of evil
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The Roman Empire's shift from traditional pagan beliefs to Christianity occurred under Emperor ________.

A) Constantine
B) Adrian
C) Nero
D) Julian
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Amun-Ra is the name of ________.

A) the supreme god of the Olympic pantheon
B) a Sumerian king elevated to god status
C) the original place of the Sibylline Oracles
D) the principal Egyptian state god
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Osiris is the name of ________.

A) an Egyptian god
B) the pre-eminent judge of the dead
C) the ruler of the netherworld
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Tiamat is the name of ________.

A) the female monster who represented primeval chaos in Enuma Elish
B) a priestess of Apollo in Delphi
C) fate ("a decree of the gods") in Mesopotamian myths
D) the Egyptian goddess of truth who judges the dead at the divine tribunal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Theogony is ________.

A) an Egyptian book describing the underworld
B) a Sumerian goddess of fertility
C) an account of the origin of the gods written by the Greek poet Hesiod
D) a divination ritual used in the Eleusinian mysteries
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The symbol of supernatural power of the Mesopotamian deities was ________.

A) a halo surrounding their heads
B) a bird on the shoulder
C) a crown
D) a sword
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The god _________ was the patron god of Babylon and later became the supreme ruler of the Mesopotamian pantheon.

A) Seth
B) Marduk
C) Amun-Ra
D) Jupiter
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The oldest known example of monumental architecture is found ________.

A) in Israel near Jerusalem
B) next to the Euphrates river
C) on a mountain top in northern Greece
D) at Gobekli Tepe
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Catalhoyuk is ________.

A) a Turkish term meaning burial place
B) an ancient site of prophecy in Sumer
C) an ancient center that produced rituals and food and was both a settlement and a cemetery
D) a Greek term meaning burial ritual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 94 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The signature artifact at Catalhoyuk is a _______________.

A) large breasted female about to give birth
B) a ancient statue of Isis surrounded by the sun and moon
C) a temple devoted to Marduk
D) one of the world's first Christian crosses
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46
Nabta Playawas an ancient site which is ________.

A) important for our understanding of where monuments were situated
B) considered foundational for much of what would become central to Egyptian civilization, including religion, for the next several millennia
C) crucial for our understanding of astral religion
D) thought to be the only place to have revered cows
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47
Even among the many gods found in ancient civilizations, there was found one god who ________.

A) dealt only with human concerns
B) was supreme
C) was never represented by a statue
D) interacted with humans more than any other god
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48
The earliest gods corresponded to ________.

A) natural phenomena
B) human characteristics
C) astral bodies
D) creatures in the sea
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49
One major characteristic of the gods in the ancient world was their ________.

A) omniscience
B) refusal to descend to earth
C) ability to deal with earthly problems
D) ability to foretell
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50
The trend of appropriating different gods of similar character from different cultures is understood as ________.

A) a lack of imagination
B) syncretism
C) always indicating the decline of a religious tradition
D) rarely successful
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51
The intellectual's mode of understanding the world was generally written in the form of ________.

A) poetry
B) song
C) myth
D) philosophy
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52
The foremost ritual act for people of the ancient world was ________.

A) bathing
B) prayer
C) sacrifice
D) worshipping with a statue of a god
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53
In the ancient world, anyone entering a sacred space needed first ________.

A) to consult with a priest
B) to seek the advice of an oracle
C) enter a trance-like state
D) to be pure both physically and morally
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54
Extispicy is the ________.

A) scribal act of writing down prophecy
B) priestly act of purification
C) prophetic act of renunciation
D) examination of the inner organs (exta), primarily livers, of sacrificed animals
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55
One important function of Egyptian tombs was ________.

A) to serve as everlasting homes for the dead
B) to promote the practice of worshipping the dead
C) to provide a place for prayers
D) to show the prosperity of the deceased
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56
Regarding death, peoples of the ancient world believed that ________.

A) only the spirit of the righteous lived on
B) a person's importance in this world determined his life in the next.
C) the body of the deceased contained the spirit
D) the spirit of the deceased lived on
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57
For the Stoic philosopher Seneca, death ________.

A) resulted in a number of different stages
B) was a place of shades
C) was not something to be feared as it was either an end or a transition
D) did not entail a series of tests that had to be passed
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58
Eleusis was home to the ________.

A) mystery cult of Demeter and her daughter Persephone
B) goddesses of the home
C) gods of the north
D) fertility cult of Astarte
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59
The roots of the worship of Magna Mater can be traced back at least to ________.

A) Persia
B) Mesopotamia
C) Turkey
D) Rome
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60
The Greek term hubris means ________.

A) folly
B) loving kindness
C) arrogant pride
D) holiness
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61
While encountering other religions, ancients would identify foreign gods with their own.
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62
Creation out of nothing is a concept fundamental to the Egyptian creation myths.
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63
Classical Mesopotamian myth regarded humanity as flawed from the beginning.
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64
. Ancient Egyptian priests were circumcised, observed food taboos, and washed themselves several times each day.
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65
. Some Sumerian women held high priestly offices.
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66
. Ancient pantheons had as many goddesses as gods.
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67
. In the ancient world, diagnostic omens were based on physical or behavioral characteristics
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68
. The creation of humans was not a major theme in ancient Egypt.
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69
. Gobekli Tepe's builders were pre-agricultural foragers.
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70
. Catalhoyuk, located in modern-day Turkey, was an early agricultural town, inhabited from 7400 to 6000 BCE.
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71
. One part of the complex at Nabta Playa, labelled the Valley of Sacrifices, held several burials, including the remains of entire cattle.
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72
. The Egyptian goddess Hathor was depicted as a fox.
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73
. Ptah was a Mesopotamian creator god.
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74
A hagiography is a biographical account of a saintly figure.
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75
Ahura Mazda translates into "Wise Lord" and is the omnipotent god in Zoroastrianism,
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76
The central scriptural text in Zoroastrianism is the Avesta.
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77
One of the major teachings of Zoroastrianism is cosmic dualism between good and evil.
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78
The Zoroastrians who left Iran for Western India are called Manicheans
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79
Mani and his Elect were tasked with liberating darkness from the light
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80
One of the most famous former Manicheans was St. Augustine
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