Deck 17: Transformations in Europe

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Question
The English Reformation led by Henry VIII differed from what Martin Luther had started because the king

A) wanted an annulment from his Catholic wife.
B) seized the land of monasteries and churches to give to his supporters.
C) challenged the pope's authority in England.
D) had parliament make him the head of the Church of England.
E) All of these.
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Question
The movement that began with Martin Luther's denunciation of indulgences and led to the rejection of the pope's authority was the

A) Protestant Reformation.
B) Catholic Reformation.
C) Orthodox Reformation.
D) Peasant Movement.
E) Babylonian Captivity.
Question
John Calvin denied human faith could merit salvation, instead, he preached that salvation was granted by God to those

A) who are predestined.
B) who do good works.
C) who have sobriety.
D) who have good thoughts.
E) who follow the pope.
Question
The Scientific Revolution demonstrated that the workings of the universe could be explained by applying which of the following?

A) experimentation
B) careful observation
C) mathematical calculations
D) rational inquiry
E) all of the above
Question
The astronomer who discovered spots on the sun and mountains on the moon and who empirically demonstrated the heliocentric theory was

A) Tycho Brahe.
B) Johannes Kepler.
C) Isaac Newton.
D) Galileo Galilei.
E) Nicholas Copernicus.
Question
The critical cause of the scientific revolution was:

A) the reintroduction of ancient writings of Greek and Roman science
B) the rejection of religious authority by a population weary of Catholic corruption
C) the discovery of the New World by maritime explorers convinced many that their preconceived ideas of the world were incorrect.
D) a challenge to the prevailing conception of the universe by Aristotle.
E) none of these
Question
The most significant challenge posed by early modern astronomers was that of the "heliocentric" universe, first argued by:

A) Galileo Galilei.
B) Nicholas Copernicus
C) Johannes Keppler
D) Frances Bacon
E) Rene Descartes
Question
In response to criticisms leveled against Catholic practices, the church met from 1545-1564 at the

A) Council of Nicaea
B) Council of Constance
C) Council of Trent
D) Council of Florence
E) Council of Liubetch.
Question
Calvinism went further than Lutheranism in curtailing the power of the clerical hierarchy and

A) encouraging political rebellion.
B) empowering ordained clergy.
C) simplifying religious rituals.
D) building extravagant churches.
E) insisting on loyalty to the Vatican.
Question
One of the most important developments of the Catholic Church in response to the Protestant Reformation was when Ignatius of Loyola founded the

A) Dominicans.
B) Inquisition.
C) Council of Trent.
D) Society of Jesus (the Jesuits).
E) Franciscans.
Question
To promote his ideas, Luther first used

A) peasant armies.
B) indulgences.
C) troubadours to sing of his greatness.
D) tournaments, festivals, and games.
E) a debate.
Question
The challenge to the church and its supporters was intense and emotional, resulting in

A) a compromise representing theological common ground.
B) bitter "wars of religion."
C) the election of Pope Leo X.
D) European monarchs begging the pope for forgiveness.
E) all of these.
Question
Many religious and intellectual leaders viewed the new science with suspicion, as shown by the Catholic Church's renunciation of

A) Leopold and Loeb.
B) Newton.
C) Lavoisier.
D) Voltaire.
E) Galileo.
Question
Europeans viewed the natural world through two beliefs systems: belief based on Judeo-Christian scriptures, and

A) folklore, including magic.
B) science and ancestor worship.
C) conflict dualism and Greek mythology.
D) militarism and socialism.
E) pacifism and egalitarianism.
Question
In light of the challenges to the Catholic Church, many reforms were enacted, such as

A) mandating poverty for the Catholic institution.
B) instituting dietary restrictions to symbolize purity.
C) reforming the education of the clergy.
D) allowing priests and nuns to marry.
E) using the vernacular during mass.
Question
The witch trials focused on what as the explanation of witchcraft?

A) women were more prone to witchcraft because they were weaker than men.
B) The Devil was the source of evil as the enemy of God.
C) Secular temptations led people away from righteous behavior
D) Petty jealousy and competition saw people use evil magic to harm others
E) Foreign influences (such as Jews and Ottomans) led people astray.
Question
Many Europeans believed that when natural disasters like earthquakes occurred, the cause was

A) plate tectonics.
B) punishment from God.
C) an imbalance of humors in the body.
D) that they were illusions.
E) an unvirtuous ruler.
Question
The scientist who asserted that mathematical laws governed the universe was

A) Isaac Newton.
B) Boethius.
C) Virgil.
D) John Harvey.
E) Henry the Navigator.
Question
In spite of opposition to new ideas, the church did embrace some findings, including:

A) Copernicus' ideas of retrograde planetary motion.
B) Robert Boyle's establishment of the Royal Society to study the natural world.
C) the Gregorian calendar based on the new astronomy, as issued by the pope.
D) Galileo's explanation of the sun in the Letter to the Duchess Christina
E) Newton's ideas of gravity and thermodynamics
Question
Martin Luther insisted that the only way to salvation was through

A) relying on "good works."
B) religious faith.
C) loyalty to the Vatican.
D) paying money to the church.
E) none of these.
Question
Who were not deemed part of the "unworthy poor" in the Netherlands?

A) recent migrants from impoverished rural areas
B) itinerant peddlers
C) criminals
D) beggars
E) permanent city residents called the "deserving poor"
Question
Despite the fact that privileged families were much more likely to arrange marriages, unlike in other parts of the world, marriage patterns in early modern Europe reflected

A) marrying younger and having larger families.
B) marrying younger and having smaller families.
C) a freer choice of one's marriage partner instead of an arranged marriage.
D) a high rate of infant mortality.
E) a celibate religious lifestyle.
Question
The Glorious Revolution of 1688 brought about what in England?

A) A constitution and a bill of rights.
B) A Puritan dominated church.
C) A House of Commons in parliament.
D) An empire more expansive than any other European power.
E) The Royal Scientific Society as a result of the Scientific Revolutionaries "winning" over the Church authorities.
Question
The Dutch East and West India Companies gained financial supremacy in all Europe by

A) establishing a monopoly on products from the Indies.
B) forming themselves as a joint-stock company.
C) reducing the risk of overseas cargo trade by attracting many investors, thus spreading out the financial burden.
D) allowing trade of stocks in the market in Amsterdam.
E) doing all of these.
Question
As the iron industry expanded, the consumption of fuel caused

A) a reduction in the use of iron and copper.
B) less destruction of forest woodlands because iron was used instead of wood.
C) deforestation.
D) the rise of a wealthy class of timber industrialists.
E) little to no change in the consumption of resources.
Question
Bourgeoisie means

A) wealthy urban class.
B) lower middle class.
C) nobility.
D) clergy.
E) royalty.
Question
The Holy Roman Empire was ruled by Charles V, a member of this dynasty, during the Counter Reformation:

A) Bourbons.
B) Huguenots.
C) Burgundians.
D) Habsburgs.
E) Romanovs.
Question
What was the overarching significance of the Versailles palace?

A) There were many exciting rides and attractions for foreign tourists.
B) It had a constantly changing theme.
C) Each year the national anthem was played to set the theme of the holiday season.
D) There was an annual contest to select the theme of the palace.
E) The gigantic palace symbolized the French monarch's triumph over the rights of the nobility.
Question
The business practice of selling shares to individuals to raise money for trading enterprises and to share the risk and profits was termed:

A) initial public offering.
B) joint stock company.
C) royal charter.
D) artisanal guildship.
E) mercantilism.
Question
The English Civil War started when

A) Charles II died without an heir and his Catholic brother James II took the throne.
B) James I inherited the throne after Elizabeth died, despite being an absolutist.
C) Charles I arrested his parliamentary critics.
D) Oliver Cromwell executed the king
E) England attempted to impose its authority on Ireland and Scotland.
Question
Like merchants in the Islamic world, European merchants relied on

A) family and ethnic networks.
B) religious persecution.
C) nobility to fund all excursions.
D) joint-stock companies.
E) luck.
Question
The English managed to overcome the Dutch trade monopolies by what means?

A) establishing more overseas colonies
B) maintaining religious conformity among British colonies.
C) keeping business ventures solely under royal warrant
D) outlawing joint stock companies
E) building a larger navy to challenge overseas trade.
Question
The Enlightenment was termed such because it:

A) embraced the idea of a heliocentric universe in a society of devoted intellectuals.
B) was carried out by only a few "enlightened" thinkers who were often opposed by political and religious leaders.
C) proposed a fusion of religious ideas of Christianity and Buddhism
D) suggested that open criticism and change of society would lighten the oppression of absolutist leaders
E) provided that new science would "light" the way to a better society.
Question
In 1555, by the Peace of Augsburg, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V allowed German princes to choose

A) Catholicism or Calvinism.
B) Catholicism or Lutheranism.
C) Calvinism or Lutheranism.
D) a new emperor.
E) Islam or Christianity.
Question
Although European peasants were free during the early modern era,

A) they were obliged to provide ten years of military service.
B) they were forced to head the decision-making offices of the government.
C) their standards of living may have declined between 1500 and 1750.
D) they rarely lived to age fifty.
E) they were forced into overseas service as missionaries.
Question
The Enlightenment in Europe was

A) a uniform philosophical movement directed by the Royal Society.
B) derived from Aristotelian scientific thought.
C) the study of alchemy to make light on demand.
D) a blending of intellectual schools of thought from many diverse areas with the idea of improving the human condition.
E) based in Chinese and Amerindian naturalism.
Question
The class of landholding families below the aristocracy and nobility in England were called the

A) bourgeoisie.
B) peasants.
C) military.
D) gentry.
E) clerics.
Question
Charles V's son, Phillip II, inherited which of these states?

A) Germany.
B) Italy.
C) Portugal.
D) Spain.
E) All of the above.
Question
What new crops helped the rural poor of Europe avoid starvation?

A) Manioc and peas
B) Cassava and rice
C) Blueberries and cranberries
D) Potatoes and corn
E) Wheat and millet
Question
At the end of the English Civil War, the monarch was executed and replaced by

A) John Calvin.
B) John Smith.
C) Oliver Cromwell.
D) Thomas á Becket.
E) Samuel Adams.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
joint-stock company
Question
Identify the following term(s).
indulgence
Question
How did European rulers pay their large war expenses?

A) By enforcing high taxes on Jews and Muslims
B) By making alliances with the rising commercial elites and protecting markets overseas
C) By warring with countries with large treasuries
D) By stealing the art treasures of the lands they conquered
E) All of these
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Catholic Reformation
Question
The wars and devastation of the early modern era in Europe, especially the Thirty Years' War, resulted in

A) the destruction of the national museums.
B) better European armies, weapons, and maneuvers.
C) gang violence in the streets of Paris and London.
D) a unified European state called the Holy Roman Empire.
E) a widespread pacifist movement in Europe.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Scientific Revolution
Question
Identify the following term(s).
stock exchange
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Little Ice Age
Question
Identify the following term(s).
bourgeoisie
Question
English political philosopher John Locke disputed the absolute authority of the monarch and claimed that if he

A) was elected by the people, he could rule forever.
B) fed the people, the people should be loyal.
C) abused his or her power, the people had the right and the duty to rebel.
D) ruled absolutely without controls, harmony would ensue.
E) ruled with morality, society would be moral as well.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
witch-hunt
Question
What is meant by the "balance of power" in early modern Europe?

A) the dependence on naval forces to achieve the strongest military.
B) Which country had accumulated the greatest number of overseas colonies.
C) Forming alliances with other European states to ensure that no one state became too powerful.
D) The declaration by all European states that they would not engage in any further wars with other Christian nations.
E) Maintaining equal military resources divided between imperial army and navy.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
deforestation
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Renaissance (European)
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Enlightenment
Question
Identify the following term(s).
papacy
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Holy Roman Empire
Question
Identify the following term(s).
gentry
Question
The Netherlands revolted against Spain in the 1560s and 1570s because of

A) the Spanish military presence.
B) a worsening Dutch economy.
C) the imposition of the Spanish sales tax and Catholic orthodoxy.
D) an invasion by the Spanish navy.
E) a failing Spanish economy.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Protestant Reformation
Question
How can one explain the witch-hunts that swept through Europe in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries? Who were the victims? Why were so many of the accused women?
Question
Identify the following term(s).
tax farmer
Question
Identify the following term(s).
balance of power
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Glorious Revolution of 1688
Question
Discuss the failure of Charles V to unify Europe and the ability of European monarchies to centralize state control in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Question
Describe the Scientific Revolution. Why did it begin? Who were some of the notable minds responsible for this revolution? Was there widespread acceptance of their ideas?
Question
How did the ideas of the Renaissance, Reformation, and Scientific Revolution affect the Enlightenment? Was the Enlightenment only an intellectual concept?
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Isaac Newton
Question
Identify the following term(s).
English Civil War
Question
The economic prosperity of the papacy allowed the popes to _______________.
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Hapsburg
Question
Describe the disparities among the various social classes in European urban society between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Who were the bourgeoisie? What conditions did the poorer classes endure?
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Martin Luther
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Versailles
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Edict of Nantes
Question
Warfare was nearly constant in Europe during the early modern era. Using the chronology at the beginning of the chapter, list the wars and examine their economic and human costs. Why were these wars fought, what was their outcome, and what was their significance in European history?
Question
How did the basic tenets of Lutheranism and Calvinism differ from those of Catholicism? What was the Catholic response to the Protestant Reformation?
Question
From the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, how did the European states "pay the piper," as the chapter suggests? Were politics and warfare related to European economies and economic development?
Question
Identify the following term(s).
Nicholas Copernicus
Question
Describe the experiences of women in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe.
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Deck 17: Transformations in Europe
1
The English Reformation led by Henry VIII differed from what Martin Luther had started because the king

A) wanted an annulment from his Catholic wife.
B) seized the land of monasteries and churches to give to his supporters.
C) challenged the pope's authority in England.
D) had parliament make him the head of the Church of England.
E) All of these.
All of these.
2
The movement that began with Martin Luther's denunciation of indulgences and led to the rejection of the pope's authority was the

A) Protestant Reformation.
B) Catholic Reformation.
C) Orthodox Reformation.
D) Peasant Movement.
E) Babylonian Captivity.
Protestant Reformation.
3
John Calvin denied human faith could merit salvation, instead, he preached that salvation was granted by God to those

A) who are predestined.
B) who do good works.
C) who have sobriety.
D) who have good thoughts.
E) who follow the pope.
who are predestined.
4
The Scientific Revolution demonstrated that the workings of the universe could be explained by applying which of the following?

A) experimentation
B) careful observation
C) mathematical calculations
D) rational inquiry
E) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The astronomer who discovered spots on the sun and mountains on the moon and who empirically demonstrated the heliocentric theory was

A) Tycho Brahe.
B) Johannes Kepler.
C) Isaac Newton.
D) Galileo Galilei.
E) Nicholas Copernicus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The critical cause of the scientific revolution was:

A) the reintroduction of ancient writings of Greek and Roman science
B) the rejection of religious authority by a population weary of Catholic corruption
C) the discovery of the New World by maritime explorers convinced many that their preconceived ideas of the world were incorrect.
D) a challenge to the prevailing conception of the universe by Aristotle.
E) none of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The most significant challenge posed by early modern astronomers was that of the "heliocentric" universe, first argued by:

A) Galileo Galilei.
B) Nicholas Copernicus
C) Johannes Keppler
D) Frances Bacon
E) Rene Descartes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In response to criticisms leveled against Catholic practices, the church met from 1545-1564 at the

A) Council of Nicaea
B) Council of Constance
C) Council of Trent
D) Council of Florence
E) Council of Liubetch.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Calvinism went further than Lutheranism in curtailing the power of the clerical hierarchy and

A) encouraging political rebellion.
B) empowering ordained clergy.
C) simplifying religious rituals.
D) building extravagant churches.
E) insisting on loyalty to the Vatican.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
One of the most important developments of the Catholic Church in response to the Protestant Reformation was when Ignatius of Loyola founded the

A) Dominicans.
B) Inquisition.
C) Council of Trent.
D) Society of Jesus (the Jesuits).
E) Franciscans.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
To promote his ideas, Luther first used

A) peasant armies.
B) indulgences.
C) troubadours to sing of his greatness.
D) tournaments, festivals, and games.
E) a debate.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The challenge to the church and its supporters was intense and emotional, resulting in

A) a compromise representing theological common ground.
B) bitter "wars of religion."
C) the election of Pope Leo X.
D) European monarchs begging the pope for forgiveness.
E) all of these.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Many religious and intellectual leaders viewed the new science with suspicion, as shown by the Catholic Church's renunciation of

A) Leopold and Loeb.
B) Newton.
C) Lavoisier.
D) Voltaire.
E) Galileo.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Europeans viewed the natural world through two beliefs systems: belief based on Judeo-Christian scriptures, and

A) folklore, including magic.
B) science and ancestor worship.
C) conflict dualism and Greek mythology.
D) militarism and socialism.
E) pacifism and egalitarianism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In light of the challenges to the Catholic Church, many reforms were enacted, such as

A) mandating poverty for the Catholic institution.
B) instituting dietary restrictions to symbolize purity.
C) reforming the education of the clergy.
D) allowing priests and nuns to marry.
E) using the vernacular during mass.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The witch trials focused on what as the explanation of witchcraft?

A) women were more prone to witchcraft because they were weaker than men.
B) The Devil was the source of evil as the enemy of God.
C) Secular temptations led people away from righteous behavior
D) Petty jealousy and competition saw people use evil magic to harm others
E) Foreign influences (such as Jews and Ottomans) led people astray.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Many Europeans believed that when natural disasters like earthquakes occurred, the cause was

A) plate tectonics.
B) punishment from God.
C) an imbalance of humors in the body.
D) that they were illusions.
E) an unvirtuous ruler.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The scientist who asserted that mathematical laws governed the universe was

A) Isaac Newton.
B) Boethius.
C) Virgil.
D) John Harvey.
E) Henry the Navigator.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In spite of opposition to new ideas, the church did embrace some findings, including:

A) Copernicus' ideas of retrograde planetary motion.
B) Robert Boyle's establishment of the Royal Society to study the natural world.
C) the Gregorian calendar based on the new astronomy, as issued by the pope.
D) Galileo's explanation of the sun in the Letter to the Duchess Christina
E) Newton's ideas of gravity and thermodynamics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Martin Luther insisted that the only way to salvation was through

A) relying on "good works."
B) religious faith.
C) loyalty to the Vatican.
D) paying money to the church.
E) none of these.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Who were not deemed part of the "unworthy poor" in the Netherlands?

A) recent migrants from impoverished rural areas
B) itinerant peddlers
C) criminals
D) beggars
E) permanent city residents called the "deserving poor"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Despite the fact that privileged families were much more likely to arrange marriages, unlike in other parts of the world, marriage patterns in early modern Europe reflected

A) marrying younger and having larger families.
B) marrying younger and having smaller families.
C) a freer choice of one's marriage partner instead of an arranged marriage.
D) a high rate of infant mortality.
E) a celibate religious lifestyle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The Glorious Revolution of 1688 brought about what in England?

A) A constitution and a bill of rights.
B) A Puritan dominated church.
C) A House of Commons in parliament.
D) An empire more expansive than any other European power.
E) The Royal Scientific Society as a result of the Scientific Revolutionaries "winning" over the Church authorities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The Dutch East and West India Companies gained financial supremacy in all Europe by

A) establishing a monopoly on products from the Indies.
B) forming themselves as a joint-stock company.
C) reducing the risk of overseas cargo trade by attracting many investors, thus spreading out the financial burden.
D) allowing trade of stocks in the market in Amsterdam.
E) doing all of these.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
As the iron industry expanded, the consumption of fuel caused

A) a reduction in the use of iron and copper.
B) less destruction of forest woodlands because iron was used instead of wood.
C) deforestation.
D) the rise of a wealthy class of timber industrialists.
E) little to no change in the consumption of resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Bourgeoisie means

A) wealthy urban class.
B) lower middle class.
C) nobility.
D) clergy.
E) royalty.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The Holy Roman Empire was ruled by Charles V, a member of this dynasty, during the Counter Reformation:

A) Bourbons.
B) Huguenots.
C) Burgundians.
D) Habsburgs.
E) Romanovs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
What was the overarching significance of the Versailles palace?

A) There were many exciting rides and attractions for foreign tourists.
B) It had a constantly changing theme.
C) Each year the national anthem was played to set the theme of the holiday season.
D) There was an annual contest to select the theme of the palace.
E) The gigantic palace symbolized the French monarch's triumph over the rights of the nobility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The business practice of selling shares to individuals to raise money for trading enterprises and to share the risk and profits was termed:

A) initial public offering.
B) joint stock company.
C) royal charter.
D) artisanal guildship.
E) mercantilism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The English Civil War started when

A) Charles II died without an heir and his Catholic brother James II took the throne.
B) James I inherited the throne after Elizabeth died, despite being an absolutist.
C) Charles I arrested his parliamentary critics.
D) Oliver Cromwell executed the king
E) England attempted to impose its authority on Ireland and Scotland.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Like merchants in the Islamic world, European merchants relied on

A) family and ethnic networks.
B) religious persecution.
C) nobility to fund all excursions.
D) joint-stock companies.
E) luck.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The English managed to overcome the Dutch trade monopolies by what means?

A) establishing more overseas colonies
B) maintaining religious conformity among British colonies.
C) keeping business ventures solely under royal warrant
D) outlawing joint stock companies
E) building a larger navy to challenge overseas trade.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The Enlightenment was termed such because it:

A) embraced the idea of a heliocentric universe in a society of devoted intellectuals.
B) was carried out by only a few "enlightened" thinkers who were often opposed by political and religious leaders.
C) proposed a fusion of religious ideas of Christianity and Buddhism
D) suggested that open criticism and change of society would lighten the oppression of absolutist leaders
E) provided that new science would "light" the way to a better society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In 1555, by the Peace of Augsburg, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V allowed German princes to choose

A) Catholicism or Calvinism.
B) Catholicism or Lutheranism.
C) Calvinism or Lutheranism.
D) a new emperor.
E) Islam or Christianity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Although European peasants were free during the early modern era,

A) they were obliged to provide ten years of military service.
B) they were forced to head the decision-making offices of the government.
C) their standards of living may have declined between 1500 and 1750.
D) they rarely lived to age fifty.
E) they were forced into overseas service as missionaries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The Enlightenment in Europe was

A) a uniform philosophical movement directed by the Royal Society.
B) derived from Aristotelian scientific thought.
C) the study of alchemy to make light on demand.
D) a blending of intellectual schools of thought from many diverse areas with the idea of improving the human condition.
E) based in Chinese and Amerindian naturalism.
Unlock Deck
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37
The class of landholding families below the aristocracy and nobility in England were called the

A) bourgeoisie.
B) peasants.
C) military.
D) gentry.
E) clerics.
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38
Charles V's son, Phillip II, inherited which of these states?

A) Germany.
B) Italy.
C) Portugal.
D) Spain.
E) All of the above.
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39
What new crops helped the rural poor of Europe avoid starvation?

A) Manioc and peas
B) Cassava and rice
C) Blueberries and cranberries
D) Potatoes and corn
E) Wheat and millet
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40
At the end of the English Civil War, the monarch was executed and replaced by

A) John Calvin.
B) John Smith.
C) Oliver Cromwell.
D) Thomas á Becket.
E) Samuel Adams.
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41
Identify the following term(s).
joint-stock company
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42
Identify the following term(s).
indulgence
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43
How did European rulers pay their large war expenses?

A) By enforcing high taxes on Jews and Muslims
B) By making alliances with the rising commercial elites and protecting markets overseas
C) By warring with countries with large treasuries
D) By stealing the art treasures of the lands they conquered
E) All of these
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44
Identify the following term(s).
Catholic Reformation
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45
The wars and devastation of the early modern era in Europe, especially the Thirty Years' War, resulted in

A) the destruction of the national museums.
B) better European armies, weapons, and maneuvers.
C) gang violence in the streets of Paris and London.
D) a unified European state called the Holy Roman Empire.
E) a widespread pacifist movement in Europe.
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46
Identify the following term(s).
Scientific Revolution
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47
Identify the following term(s).
stock exchange
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48
Identify the following term(s).
Little Ice Age
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49
Identify the following term(s).
bourgeoisie
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50
English political philosopher John Locke disputed the absolute authority of the monarch and claimed that if he

A) was elected by the people, he could rule forever.
B) fed the people, the people should be loyal.
C) abused his or her power, the people had the right and the duty to rebel.
D) ruled absolutely without controls, harmony would ensue.
E) ruled with morality, society would be moral as well.
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51
Identify the following term(s).
witch-hunt
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52
What is meant by the "balance of power" in early modern Europe?

A) the dependence on naval forces to achieve the strongest military.
B) Which country had accumulated the greatest number of overseas colonies.
C) Forming alliances with other European states to ensure that no one state became too powerful.
D) The declaration by all European states that they would not engage in any further wars with other Christian nations.
E) Maintaining equal military resources divided between imperial army and navy.
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53
Identify the following term(s).
deforestation
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54
Identify the following term(s).
Renaissance (European)
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55
Identify the following term(s).
Enlightenment
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56
Identify the following term(s).
papacy
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57
Identify the following term(s).
Holy Roman Empire
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58
Identify the following term(s).
gentry
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59
The Netherlands revolted against Spain in the 1560s and 1570s because of

A) the Spanish military presence.
B) a worsening Dutch economy.
C) the imposition of the Spanish sales tax and Catholic orthodoxy.
D) an invasion by the Spanish navy.
E) a failing Spanish economy.
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60
Identify the following term(s).
Protestant Reformation
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61
How can one explain the witch-hunts that swept through Europe in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries? Who were the victims? Why were so many of the accused women?
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62
Identify the following term(s).
tax farmer
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63
Identify the following term(s).
balance of power
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64
Identify the following term(s).
Glorious Revolution of 1688
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65
Discuss the failure of Charles V to unify Europe and the ability of European monarchies to centralize state control in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
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66
Describe the Scientific Revolution. Why did it begin? Who were some of the notable minds responsible for this revolution? Was there widespread acceptance of their ideas?
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67
How did the ideas of the Renaissance, Reformation, and Scientific Revolution affect the Enlightenment? Was the Enlightenment only an intellectual concept?
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68
Identify the following term(s).
Isaac Newton
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69
Identify the following term(s).
English Civil War
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70
The economic prosperity of the papacy allowed the popes to _______________.
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71
Identify the following term(s).
Hapsburg
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72
Describe the disparities among the various social classes in European urban society between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Who were the bourgeoisie? What conditions did the poorer classes endure?
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73
Identify the following term(s).
Martin Luther
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74
Identify the following term(s).
Versailles
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75
Identify the following term(s).
Edict of Nantes
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76
Warfare was nearly constant in Europe during the early modern era. Using the chronology at the beginning of the chapter, list the wars and examine their economic and human costs. Why were these wars fought, what was their outcome, and what was their significance in European history?
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77
How did the basic tenets of Lutheranism and Calvinism differ from those of Catholicism? What was the Catholic response to the Protestant Reformation?
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78
From the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, how did the European states "pay the piper," as the chapter suggests? Were politics and warfare related to European economies and economic development?
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79
Identify the following term(s).
Nicholas Copernicus
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80
Describe the experiences of women in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe.
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locked card icon
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