Deck 9: The Recovery and Growth of European Society in the High Middle Ages

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Question
Marriages among the aristocracy of the High Middle Ages were

A) more frequently motivated by the love brides and grooms felt for one another.
B) still included violent blood rituals of betrothal dating back to pagan times.
C) usually occurred when both bride and groom were in their teens.
D) were expected to establish political alliances between families and increase their wealth.
E) required to be always performed by archbishops and popes.
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Question
The area that assumed a leading role in the revival of trade in the Early Middle Ages was

A) England.
B) Spain.
C) Germany.
D) France.
E) Italy.
Question
The main part of the medieval castle was called the

A) motte.
B) bailey.
C) moat.
D) tower.
E) keep.
Question
The center of the North Sea/Baltic trade route in northern Europe in the 1100s and 1200s, and an important center of woolen cloth production, was

A) Stockholm.
B) Novgorod.
C) Edinburgh.
D) Hamburg.
E) Flanders.
Question
By the twelfth century, divorce among nobles was

A) not possible except through official recognition that a marriage had never been valid.
B) increasingly common.
C) accepted and approved by the church.
D) not possible, even by annulment, as marriage was now a church sacrament.
E) possible only through a dispensation granted exclusively by kings.
Question
The dramatic increases in European population between 1000 and 1300

A) occurred despite detrimental climatic patterns.
B) especially benefited women of child-bearing age.
C) were the result of better urban planning.
D) led to populations with many more women than men due to constant warfare.
E) were primarily due to an increased birth rate outstripping high medieval mortality rates.
Question
The village church

A) was very harsh in its condemnation of pagan practices.
B) competed with pagan religions for converts.
C) was led by local priests who were often barely literate.
D) outlawed economic pursuits on its grounds.
E) was always built upon the site of a pagan worship center.
Question
The basic staple of the peasant diet was

A) potatoes.
B) rice.
C) pork.
D) beef.
E) bread.
Question
One consequence of the new agriculture of the Early Middle Ages was

A) the destruction of the forests.
B) the contamination of the water supply.
C) increased dependence of serfs on their lords.
D) increased famine.
E) polluted water systems.
Question
The "agricultural revolution" of the High Middle Ages

A) caused little change in the forested areas of Europe.
B) was in part brought about by a change from the two-field to the three-field system.
C) led to the demise of the cooperative agricultural villages.
D) was in large part due to the development of the aratum, an iron ploughshare.
E) was the result of corn imported from the New World.
Question
The knightly code of ethics known as chivalry included all of the following requirements except

A) knights were to fight to defend the church.
B) knights were to protect the weak and defenseless.
C) knights were to love the poor.
D) winning glory should be the knight's highest aim and motivating force.
E) knights should fight for their overlords.
Question
The high number of fights and accidents described in medieval court records may plausibly be attributed to

A) the violence of lords.
B) the high consumption of alcohol.
C) generally poor diet and nutrition.
D) fears of witchcraft.
E) religious heresy.
Question
Which of the following was not used as a source of power by medieval farmers?

A) horses
B) coal
C) water
D) windmills
E) oxen
Question
In northern European countries, the most common drink of the medieval peasant was

A) ale.
B) beer.
C) wine.
D) cider.
E) milk.
Question
In which of the following places was significant landmass "reclaimed" from the sea?

A) Ireland.
B) Genoa.
C) Netherlands.
D) Spain.
E) Russia.
Question
In medieval thought, women were considered

A) equal to men in most things, but still inferior in some.
B) by nature subservient and lesser beings than men.
C) an equal partner of men in theory, but not in practice.
D) totally evil and in need of discipline.
E) superior to men, because the Virgin Mary gave birth to Jesus as God.
Question
Male nobles of the High Middle Ages

A) were almost solely preoccupied with warfare.
B) gradually became more involved in economic pursuits.
C) had previously been successful merchants.
D) were very effeminate and shunned the warlike ways of their predecessors.
E) became less committed to war because of the influence of the church.
Question
Combative tournaments involving knights

A) were sanctioned by the church as a testing ground for religious faith.
B) consisted of the "melee" in which knights with a grudge fought to the death.
C) were considered excellent and necessary training for warfare.
D) were banned by 1100.
E) were popular only in England but not on the continent.
Question
The carruca was

A) a new type of blast furnace.
B) a Spanish dance involving four partners.
C) a heavy-wheeled, iron-tipped plow.
D) a harness for draft animals without collars.
E) a slender blade.
Question
Which of the following allowed for a more diversified and intelligent use of farmland?

A) The two-field system.
B) The iron-tipped plow.
C) Serfdom.
D) Riparian water rights.
E) The three-field system.
Question
Artisan guilds were organizations of

A) businesses trying to keep prices high.
B) citizens trying to defend their political rights.
C) workers trying to improve their wages.
D) consumers trying to assure free competition.
E) nobles trying to keep a tight reign on society.
Question
The growing independence of medieval urban areas was largely attributable to the

A) refusal of lords and kings to grant liberties to the townspeople.
B) granting of self-government to the townspeople by bishops, especially in cathedral cities.
C) huge populations of High Medieval cities.
D) revival of commerce.
E) increase of manorialism.
Question
A major cause of pollution in medieval cities was

A) the smell and waste of animals and humans.
B) spills of oil, a common fuel of the era.
C) the production of iron in urban smelters.
D) the use of lead paint in private and public buildings.
E) the lack of any sanitation facilities.
Question
The renaissance of the twelfth century was primarily caused by

A) the university movement of the previous century.
B) circulation in the west in Latin translation of many ancient philosophical and scientific works previously saved by Muslim scholars.
C) the elaborate and dialectical writings of St. Thomas Aquinas.
D) the generous financial support of scholars by new European monarchs.
E) renewed contacts with the Byzantine Empire after centuries of separation.
Question
The first university to be founded in Europe appeared in

A) Cambridge.
B) Paris.
C) Oxford.
D) Frankfurt.
E) Bologna.
Question
The primary preoccupation of scholasticism was

A) to prove the superiority of Christianity over Islam and Judaism.
B) to prove the superiority of faith over rational thought.
C) to disprove the writings of the church fathers through rational thought.
D) to show the superiority of Greek thought over medieval theological thought.
E) the reconciliation of faith with reason.
Question
The medieval theological debate between the scholastic realists and nominalists

A) was finally resolved by Thomas Aquinas.
B) centered around the problem of universals and the nature of reality.
C) was a philosophical issue that only lasted as long as the thirteenth century.
D) had little to do with earlier traditions of Greek thought.
E) was ended by papal decree.
Question
Students in medieval universities

A) came strictly from the upper class.
B) usually started their instruction while in their late twenties.
C) often engaged in quarrels with one another and in confrontations with townspeople.
D) were both male and female.
E) learned in the vernacular.
Question
On the whole, medieval cities tended to be

A) huge, rivaling modern cities in population.
B) relatively undemocratic; the wealthy usually ruled and voted in civic elections.
C) totally dominated by rural nobles.
D) devoid of sophisticated internal systems of government.
E) under the control of democratic communes.
Question
Peter Abelard's most famous work was

A) the Confessions.
B) Yes and No.
C) Summa Theologica.
D) consumers trying to assure free competition.
E) Song of Roland.
Question
To protect their interests against nobles, townspeople often formed

A) militias.
B) trade unions.
C) chambers of commerce.
D) municipal police forces.
E) communes.
Question
The first medical school was established in

A) Padua, Italy.
B) Vatican City.
C) Salerno, Italy.
D) Geneva, Switzerland.
E) Moscow.
Question
Drinking water in the cities of the Middle Ages usually came from

A) mountain streams, piped in by aqueducts.
B) rivers.
C) evaporation mats and holding tanks.
D) rainwater.
E) wells.
Question
The most important six-times-a-year trade fair during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries was sponsored by the counts of

A) Languedoc.
B) Provence.
C) Gascony.
D) Champagne.
E) Flanders.
Question
Concerning the curriculum of the medieval university

A) students studied the trivium and quadrivium.
B) it allowed for a wide degree of student choice.
C) it was determined by the professors of the universities.
D) it was based on the classics of Rome.
E) it was based upon the Bible and the writings of the church fathers.
Question
The first university in northern Europe was

A) Paris.
B) Oxford
C) Cambridge.
D) Heidelberg.
E) Bruges.
Question
Merchant cities in northern Europe, frequently ending in "-burg" or "-borough", grew up in the 1100s around

A) clearings deep in the forests.
B) national universities.
C) the castles of noblemen.
D) abandoned monasteries.
E) large rivers.
Question
A major motive contributing to the revolutionary political behavior of European townspeople was

A) their early embrace of religious heresy.
B) their constant need to ally themselves with more heavily armed aristocrats.
C) their great need for unfettered mobility to conduct trade efficiently.
D) their unwillingness to pay lay and clerical lords for privileges of self-government.
E) the Black Death.
Question
The revival of Classical Antiquity in Europe was spurred after 1150 by the recovery of many of the lost works of

A) Boethius.
B) Plato.
C) Ptolemy.
D) Cicero.
E) Aristotle.
Question
Medieval cities

A) were generally clean and covered a large area.
B) had low population densities.
C) had skylines dominated by the towers of churches, castles, and town halls.
D) had low standards of hygiene due to the absence of public or private baths.
E) usually experienced low death rates.
Question
Gothic cathedrals seem to soar upward as light and airy constructions due to all of the following innovations except

A) ribbed vaults.
B) flying buttresses.
C) thin walls pierced by huge stained glass windows.
D) the wide use of classical columns on Greek models.
E) pointed arches.
Question
Representative of the enforced subordination and assumed inferiority of women in the Middle Ages was Eleanor of Aquitaine, born into the aristocracy but who was forced to spend her entire adult life in a rural nunnery.
Question
The Song of Roland is one of the finest examples of

A) the medieval chanson de geste.
B) twelfth-century courtly romance.
C) the Arthurian legend.
D) Latin religious verse.
E) troubadour epic.
Question
In northern Europe, the center of trade and manufacturing in the Middle Ages was Flanders, famous for its production of high-quality woolen cloth.
Question
The first fully Gothic church was the abbey church of Saint-Denis outside of Paris, under the leadership of Abbot Suger in the mid-twelfth century.
Question
The Gothic style of architecture emerged and was perfected in

A) England.
B) the Netherlands.
C) Spain.
D) Sweden.
E) France.
Question
The word "vernacular" means

A) church language.
B) myth.
C) ribald song.
D) local language.
E) Latin.
Question
Much of the surplus resources of medieval urban society went into

A) the salaries of more numerous royal officials.
B) the purchase of modern weaponry by kings for expanded royal armies.
C) the construction of castles and churches reflecting its basic preoccupations, warfare and God.
D) new church taxes going directly to the pope in Rome.
E) revolutionizing agricultural production patterns.
Question
Troubadour poetry was chiefly concerned with

A) religious imagery.
B) the courtly love of nobles, knights, and ladies.
C) the highly irreverent life of wine, women, and song.
D) rhyme and a meter based on accent.
E) religious crusades and military conquests.
Question
The church figure who tried to reconcile faith with reason in his Summa Theologica was

A) Peter Abelard.
B) Saint Augustine.
C) Boethius.
D) Thomas Aquinas
E) Peter Lombard.
Question
Because of the revival of cities and trade, by the thirteenth century Medieval Europe was largely an urban society.
Question
By the thirteenth century, the increased agricultural production reduced the price of food in spite of increased urban demand.
Question
Because of the depredations caused by Justinian's reconquest of Italy and the later assaults of the Arabic Muslims, urban life in the Mediterranean almost completely disappeared, unlike in northern Europe, where cities and trade readily survived the Dark Ages.
Question
Peter Abelard was castrated because of his book Sic et Non.
Question
Which of the following statements does not apply to the revival of Roman law?

A) It was short-lived as the orderliness of Roman law no longer appealed to Europeans.
B) It sparked creation of an elaborate, systematic compilation by Italian jurists of all previous legal commentaries known as "the ordinary gloss."
C) It contributed to the decline of older, more barbaric forms of conflict resolution.
D) It changed how professors in law school taught their subject.
E) It replaced the old system of the ordeal by a rational process based upon the collection and analysis of evidence.
Question
The dominant style of the church architecture in the eleventh and twelfth centuries was

A) Gothic.
B) Baroque.
C) Romanesque.
D) Naturalistic.
E) Graeco-Roman.
Question
The windmill and the watermill were the most important methods for the harnessing of power before the invention of the coal-driven steam engine of the eighteenth century.
Question
The revival of trade led to a decline of cities.
Question
Which of the following was not a characteristic of Romanesque architecture?

A) churches in this style were built in rectangular shape
B) massive pillars and walls were required for support
C) interiors were designed to be as bright as possible
D) heavy barrel vaults with rounded stone roofs replaced flat wooden roofs
E) few windows.
Question
Between 1100 and 1300, the population of Europe trebled.
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Deck 9: The Recovery and Growth of European Society in the High Middle Ages
1
Marriages among the aristocracy of the High Middle Ages were

A) more frequently motivated by the love brides and grooms felt for one another.
B) still included violent blood rituals of betrothal dating back to pagan times.
C) usually occurred when both bride and groom were in their teens.
D) were expected to establish political alliances between families and increase their wealth.
E) required to be always performed by archbishops and popes.
were expected to establish political alliances between families and increase their wealth.
2
The area that assumed a leading role in the revival of trade in the Early Middle Ages was

A) England.
B) Spain.
C) Germany.
D) France.
E) Italy.
Italy.
3
The main part of the medieval castle was called the

A) motte.
B) bailey.
C) moat.
D) tower.
E) keep.
keep.
4
The center of the North Sea/Baltic trade route in northern Europe in the 1100s and 1200s, and an important center of woolen cloth production, was

A) Stockholm.
B) Novgorod.
C) Edinburgh.
D) Hamburg.
E) Flanders.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
By the twelfth century, divorce among nobles was

A) not possible except through official recognition that a marriage had never been valid.
B) increasingly common.
C) accepted and approved by the church.
D) not possible, even by annulment, as marriage was now a church sacrament.
E) possible only through a dispensation granted exclusively by kings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The dramatic increases in European population between 1000 and 1300

A) occurred despite detrimental climatic patterns.
B) especially benefited women of child-bearing age.
C) were the result of better urban planning.
D) led to populations with many more women than men due to constant warfare.
E) were primarily due to an increased birth rate outstripping high medieval mortality rates.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The village church

A) was very harsh in its condemnation of pagan practices.
B) competed with pagan religions for converts.
C) was led by local priests who were often barely literate.
D) outlawed economic pursuits on its grounds.
E) was always built upon the site of a pagan worship center.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The basic staple of the peasant diet was

A) potatoes.
B) rice.
C) pork.
D) beef.
E) bread.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
One consequence of the new agriculture of the Early Middle Ages was

A) the destruction of the forests.
B) the contamination of the water supply.
C) increased dependence of serfs on their lords.
D) increased famine.
E) polluted water systems.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The "agricultural revolution" of the High Middle Ages

A) caused little change in the forested areas of Europe.
B) was in part brought about by a change from the two-field to the three-field system.
C) led to the demise of the cooperative agricultural villages.
D) was in large part due to the development of the aratum, an iron ploughshare.
E) was the result of corn imported from the New World.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The knightly code of ethics known as chivalry included all of the following requirements except

A) knights were to fight to defend the church.
B) knights were to protect the weak and defenseless.
C) knights were to love the poor.
D) winning glory should be the knight's highest aim and motivating force.
E) knights should fight for their overlords.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The high number of fights and accidents described in medieval court records may plausibly be attributed to

A) the violence of lords.
B) the high consumption of alcohol.
C) generally poor diet and nutrition.
D) fears of witchcraft.
E) religious heresy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following was not used as a source of power by medieval farmers?

A) horses
B) coal
C) water
D) windmills
E) oxen
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In northern European countries, the most common drink of the medieval peasant was

A) ale.
B) beer.
C) wine.
D) cider.
E) milk.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In which of the following places was significant landmass "reclaimed" from the sea?

A) Ireland.
B) Genoa.
C) Netherlands.
D) Spain.
E) Russia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In medieval thought, women were considered

A) equal to men in most things, but still inferior in some.
B) by nature subservient and lesser beings than men.
C) an equal partner of men in theory, but not in practice.
D) totally evil and in need of discipline.
E) superior to men, because the Virgin Mary gave birth to Jesus as God.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Male nobles of the High Middle Ages

A) were almost solely preoccupied with warfare.
B) gradually became more involved in economic pursuits.
C) had previously been successful merchants.
D) were very effeminate and shunned the warlike ways of their predecessors.
E) became less committed to war because of the influence of the church.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Combative tournaments involving knights

A) were sanctioned by the church as a testing ground for religious faith.
B) consisted of the "melee" in which knights with a grudge fought to the death.
C) were considered excellent and necessary training for warfare.
D) were banned by 1100.
E) were popular only in England but not on the continent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The carruca was

A) a new type of blast furnace.
B) a Spanish dance involving four partners.
C) a heavy-wheeled, iron-tipped plow.
D) a harness for draft animals without collars.
E) a slender blade.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which of the following allowed for a more diversified and intelligent use of farmland?

A) The two-field system.
B) The iron-tipped plow.
C) Serfdom.
D) Riparian water rights.
E) The three-field system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Artisan guilds were organizations of

A) businesses trying to keep prices high.
B) citizens trying to defend their political rights.
C) workers trying to improve their wages.
D) consumers trying to assure free competition.
E) nobles trying to keep a tight reign on society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The growing independence of medieval urban areas was largely attributable to the

A) refusal of lords and kings to grant liberties to the townspeople.
B) granting of self-government to the townspeople by bishops, especially in cathedral cities.
C) huge populations of High Medieval cities.
D) revival of commerce.
E) increase of manorialism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
A major cause of pollution in medieval cities was

A) the smell and waste of animals and humans.
B) spills of oil, a common fuel of the era.
C) the production of iron in urban smelters.
D) the use of lead paint in private and public buildings.
E) the lack of any sanitation facilities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The renaissance of the twelfth century was primarily caused by

A) the university movement of the previous century.
B) circulation in the west in Latin translation of many ancient philosophical and scientific works previously saved by Muslim scholars.
C) the elaborate and dialectical writings of St. Thomas Aquinas.
D) the generous financial support of scholars by new European monarchs.
E) renewed contacts with the Byzantine Empire after centuries of separation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The first university to be founded in Europe appeared in

A) Cambridge.
B) Paris.
C) Oxford.
D) Frankfurt.
E) Bologna.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The primary preoccupation of scholasticism was

A) to prove the superiority of Christianity over Islam and Judaism.
B) to prove the superiority of faith over rational thought.
C) to disprove the writings of the church fathers through rational thought.
D) to show the superiority of Greek thought over medieval theological thought.
E) the reconciliation of faith with reason.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The medieval theological debate between the scholastic realists and nominalists

A) was finally resolved by Thomas Aquinas.
B) centered around the problem of universals and the nature of reality.
C) was a philosophical issue that only lasted as long as the thirteenth century.
D) had little to do with earlier traditions of Greek thought.
E) was ended by papal decree.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Students in medieval universities

A) came strictly from the upper class.
B) usually started their instruction while in their late twenties.
C) often engaged in quarrels with one another and in confrontations with townspeople.
D) were both male and female.
E) learned in the vernacular.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
On the whole, medieval cities tended to be

A) huge, rivaling modern cities in population.
B) relatively undemocratic; the wealthy usually ruled and voted in civic elections.
C) totally dominated by rural nobles.
D) devoid of sophisticated internal systems of government.
E) under the control of democratic communes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Peter Abelard's most famous work was

A) the Confessions.
B) Yes and No.
C) Summa Theologica.
D) consumers trying to assure free competition.
E) Song of Roland.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
To protect their interests against nobles, townspeople often formed

A) militias.
B) trade unions.
C) chambers of commerce.
D) municipal police forces.
E) communes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The first medical school was established in

A) Padua, Italy.
B) Vatican City.
C) Salerno, Italy.
D) Geneva, Switzerland.
E) Moscow.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Drinking water in the cities of the Middle Ages usually came from

A) mountain streams, piped in by aqueducts.
B) rivers.
C) evaporation mats and holding tanks.
D) rainwater.
E) wells.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The most important six-times-a-year trade fair during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries was sponsored by the counts of

A) Languedoc.
B) Provence.
C) Gascony.
D) Champagne.
E) Flanders.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Concerning the curriculum of the medieval university

A) students studied the trivium and quadrivium.
B) it allowed for a wide degree of student choice.
C) it was determined by the professors of the universities.
D) it was based on the classics of Rome.
E) it was based upon the Bible and the writings of the church fathers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The first university in northern Europe was

A) Paris.
B) Oxford
C) Cambridge.
D) Heidelberg.
E) Bruges.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Merchant cities in northern Europe, frequently ending in "-burg" or "-borough", grew up in the 1100s around

A) clearings deep in the forests.
B) national universities.
C) the castles of noblemen.
D) abandoned monasteries.
E) large rivers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A major motive contributing to the revolutionary political behavior of European townspeople was

A) their early embrace of religious heresy.
B) their constant need to ally themselves with more heavily armed aristocrats.
C) their great need for unfettered mobility to conduct trade efficiently.
D) their unwillingness to pay lay and clerical lords for privileges of self-government.
E) the Black Death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The revival of Classical Antiquity in Europe was spurred after 1150 by the recovery of many of the lost works of

A) Boethius.
B) Plato.
C) Ptolemy.
D) Cicero.
E) Aristotle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 60 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Medieval cities

A) were generally clean and covered a large area.
B) had low population densities.
C) had skylines dominated by the towers of churches, castles, and town halls.
D) had low standards of hygiene due to the absence of public or private baths.
E) usually experienced low death rates.
Unlock Deck
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41
Gothic cathedrals seem to soar upward as light and airy constructions due to all of the following innovations except

A) ribbed vaults.
B) flying buttresses.
C) thin walls pierced by huge stained glass windows.
D) the wide use of classical columns on Greek models.
E) pointed arches.
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42
Representative of the enforced subordination and assumed inferiority of women in the Middle Ages was Eleanor of Aquitaine, born into the aristocracy but who was forced to spend her entire adult life in a rural nunnery.
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43
The Song of Roland is one of the finest examples of

A) the medieval chanson de geste.
B) twelfth-century courtly romance.
C) the Arthurian legend.
D) Latin religious verse.
E) troubadour epic.
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44
In northern Europe, the center of trade and manufacturing in the Middle Ages was Flanders, famous for its production of high-quality woolen cloth.
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45
The first fully Gothic church was the abbey church of Saint-Denis outside of Paris, under the leadership of Abbot Suger in the mid-twelfth century.
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46
The Gothic style of architecture emerged and was perfected in

A) England.
B) the Netherlands.
C) Spain.
D) Sweden.
E) France.
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47
The word "vernacular" means

A) church language.
B) myth.
C) ribald song.
D) local language.
E) Latin.
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48
Much of the surplus resources of medieval urban society went into

A) the salaries of more numerous royal officials.
B) the purchase of modern weaponry by kings for expanded royal armies.
C) the construction of castles and churches reflecting its basic preoccupations, warfare and God.
D) new church taxes going directly to the pope in Rome.
E) revolutionizing agricultural production patterns.
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49
Troubadour poetry was chiefly concerned with

A) religious imagery.
B) the courtly love of nobles, knights, and ladies.
C) the highly irreverent life of wine, women, and song.
D) rhyme and a meter based on accent.
E) religious crusades and military conquests.
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50
The church figure who tried to reconcile faith with reason in his Summa Theologica was

A) Peter Abelard.
B) Saint Augustine.
C) Boethius.
D) Thomas Aquinas
E) Peter Lombard.
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51
Because of the revival of cities and trade, by the thirteenth century Medieval Europe was largely an urban society.
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52
By the thirteenth century, the increased agricultural production reduced the price of food in spite of increased urban demand.
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53
Because of the depredations caused by Justinian's reconquest of Italy and the later assaults of the Arabic Muslims, urban life in the Mediterranean almost completely disappeared, unlike in northern Europe, where cities and trade readily survived the Dark Ages.
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54
Peter Abelard was castrated because of his book Sic et Non.
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55
Which of the following statements does not apply to the revival of Roman law?

A) It was short-lived as the orderliness of Roman law no longer appealed to Europeans.
B) It sparked creation of an elaborate, systematic compilation by Italian jurists of all previous legal commentaries known as "the ordinary gloss."
C) It contributed to the decline of older, more barbaric forms of conflict resolution.
D) It changed how professors in law school taught their subject.
E) It replaced the old system of the ordeal by a rational process based upon the collection and analysis of evidence.
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56
The dominant style of the church architecture in the eleventh and twelfth centuries was

A) Gothic.
B) Baroque.
C) Romanesque.
D) Naturalistic.
E) Graeco-Roman.
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57
The windmill and the watermill were the most important methods for the harnessing of power before the invention of the coal-driven steam engine of the eighteenth century.
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58
The revival of trade led to a decline of cities.
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59
Which of the following was not a characteristic of Romanesque architecture?

A) churches in this style were built in rectangular shape
B) massive pillars and walls were required for support
C) interiors were designed to be as bright as possible
D) heavy barrel vaults with rounded stone roofs replaced flat wooden roofs
E) few windows.
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60
Between 1100 and 1300, the population of Europe trebled.
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