Deck 11: The Later Middle Ages: Crisis and Disintegration in the Fourteenth Century

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Question
Christine de Pizan agreed that killing Joan of Arc had been a good idea, as this execution protected the proper ideal of women everywhere.
Use Space or
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Question
The bubonic plague originated in

A)Africa.
B)Syria.
C)Italy.
D)the Azores.
E)Asia.
Question
In France the Estates-General represented the entire kingdom and reflects France's basic unity.
Question
The bubonic plague caused great mortality in Italy but had relatively limited impact on the rest of Europe.
Question
Because of the resulting economic depression, the price of labor was drastically reduced in the aftermath of the Black Death.
Question
The flagellants

A)were praised by the Catholic church for their miraculous deeds.
B)attracted attention and created mass hysteria wherever they went.
C)worked with both Jews and clergy to cope with the disorder and dislocation caused by the plague.
D)remained a popular religious movement throughout the fourteenth century.
E)were only found in isolated rural areas.
Question
Pogroms were

A)religious ceremonies convened to ask for God's help against the plague.
B)special indulgences granted to those infected with the plague.
C)organized massacres against the Jews.
D)the name given to people believed to be responsible for the Black Death.
E)mysterious sites where people could go to miraculously recover from the plague.
Question
During the Black Death

A)Western Europe became home to large Jewish communities because of persecutions in Russia and Poland.
B)the worst organized massacres of the Jews were carried out in England.
C)the Jews acted as partners of the flagellants in seeking to mitigate the effects of plague.
D)Strasbourg became the most important place of refuge for Jews.
E)Jews were accused of causing the plague by poisoning town wells.
Question
What was the main cause of the early fourteenth century famines?

A)a blight that struck the wheat crop
B)a lack of knowledge of scientific agriculture
C)droughts throughout most of Europe
D)a little ice age inducing bad weather with heavy rains
E)urban pollution that spread into nearby farming regions.
Question
One of France's advantages toward the end of the Hundred Years' War was its adoption of cannon.
Question
In contradiction to Thomas Aquinas, William of Occam claimed that the truths of religion could not be proved by reason but could be accepted only by faith.
Question
It is estimated that famine in the early fourteenth century killed 35 percent of the European population.
Question
The Visconti family ruled the Duchy of Milan throughout most of the fourteenth century.
Question
The Black Death resulted in a decline of the European population by

A)10 percent.
B)between 15 and 25 percent.
C)between 25 and 50 percent.
D)between 50 and 75 percent.
E)80 percent.
Question
Among the adverse economic and population changes in fourteenth-century Europe were

A)shrinking peasant land holdings below the size needed to support a family.
B)an exodus of residents from overpopulated rural areas.
C)rapidly rising numbers of poor people in cities.
D)all productive land was being farmed, including many marginal lands susceptible to changing weather patterns.
E)All of these are correct.
Question
After the Black Death, money payments were increasingly substituted for military service in the lord-vassal relationship.
Question
All of the following were reactions to the great plague EXCEPT

A)an increase in violence and murder due to a sense of life's cheapness.
B)the formation of groups like the flagellants, who flogged themselves to save the world.
C)a reduction in the persecution of religious minorities because of the displeasure it caused God.
D)morbidity and preoccupation with death in everyday life.
E)economic depression.
Question
All medical books, even after the impact of the Black Death, continued to be written in Latin, and all were highly theoretical rather than being practical.
Question
The term ars moriendi means

A)the art of dying.
B)the beauty of death.
C)the triumph of life.
D)the art of living well
E)the divine artist
Question
​Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio are best known for their works written in Latin.
Question
A key economic consequence of the plague was

A)the rapid expansion of European civic banking to rebuild industry.
B)a decline in manorialism and weakening of feudalism as noble landlords desperate for cash converted peasant labor service to market rents, freeing their serfs.
C)the more frequent bankruptcy of monarchs as they emptied their treasuries trying to provide poor relief.
D)the very slow enrichment of middling peasant laborers who began to dominate rural communities.
E)a long-term trend to abandon cities for the more secure rural environment.
Question
The Golden Bull of 1356 in Germany

A)made heredity rather than election the process by which German kings were selected.
B)ensured the independence of the ecclesiastical states.
C)gave seven electors the power to choose the "king of the Romans."
D)ensured strong central authority for Germany in the next century.
E)gave limited religious toleration to urban Jews.
Question
During the reign of Edward III of England, the Great Council of the barons

A)became the chief advisory body of the king.
B)relinquished most of its main powers.
C)became the House of Lords, forming a hereditary body of peers in Parliament.
D)became subservient to the House of Commons.
E)was abolished in favor of a unitary parliament.
Question
Prior to the Golden Bull of 1356, Germany was

A)composed the four kingdoms of Bavaria, Prussia, Hanover, and Austria.
B)under the sole authority of the pope.
C)a land of hundreds of virtually independent states.
D)a highly centralized monarchy under the power of the emperor.
E)None of these are correct.
Question
Economically, the great plague and the crises of the fourteenth century

A)devastated peasants but not nobles.
B)brought an economic boom to landlords.
C)caused only minor changes in agricultural practices.
D)raised wages because of a scarcity of labor.
E)had little impact.
Question
Joan of Arc

A)was captured by the Burgundians and turned over to their English allies.
B)was handed over to the Inquisition on charges of witchcraft.
C)was considered transgressive because she wore men's clothing.
D)was condemned as a heretic and burned at the stake.
E)All of these are correct.
Question
At the Battle of Crécy

A)the English defeated the French with cannons.
B)the English defeated the French after a lengthy siege of the castle of Crécy.
C)French pikemen defeated the English cavalry.
D)English archers devastated the French cavalry.
E)French mercenaries starved the English out of the city of Crécy.
Question
Politically, France by the end of the fourteenth century saw

A)the dominance of the Estates-General in determining government policy and administering taxes.
B)no new forms of government revenue due to royal opposition.
C)chaos and civil war as rival noble factions fought for control of the realm.
D)new rights of political participation in the Parlement of Paris for poor townspeople.
E)strongly unified as a result of the leadership of Joan of Arc.
Question
France's "first woman of letters" was

A)Catherine of Siena.
B)Joan of Arc.
C)Heloise.
D)Christine de Pizan
E)Hildegard.
Question
The Italian condottieri were

A)political leaders supporting the pope.
B)bankers with branch banks throughout much of Western Europe.
C)merchants working in northern Europe.
D)reformers within the Catholic Church.
E)leaders of mercenary bands, occasionally ruling as military dictators.
Question
Postplague socioeconomic relations between rich and poor in Europe

A)improved noticeably as Christians sought to make peace with one another to please an angry God.
B)did not alter from their preplague character.
C)deteriorated because a surplus of workers resulted in a dramatic downturn in wages.
D)improved radically as the economy entered into a period of sustained prosperity.
E)got much worse as the positions of landlords deteriorated, and they sought to limit the gains of the peasants.
Question
The English Peasants' Revolt of 1381

A)was caused by the rising economic expectations of ordinary people.
B)was halted when leaders Wat Tyler and John Ball betrayed the peasants' cause.
C)succeeded in getting the government to agree to the peasants' demands.
D)gained long-term results for the peasants.
E)led to the end of the Hundred Years' War.
Question
The European aristocracy responded to the adversity of the great plague by

A)seeking to lower wages by legal means, especially for farm laborers.
B)producing only the most basic foodstuffs, such as grain.
C)petitioning kings to order the relocation of laborers.
D)forming agricultural cooperatives linking landowners, laborers, and city consumers.
E)investing in trade and commerce rather than agricultural production.
Question
Joan of Arc saved France by inspiring the French soldiers to break the English siege of

A)Bordeaux.
B)Amiens.
C)Orléans.
D)Paris.
E)Geneva.
Question
The French government and aristocracy responded to the Jacquerie by

A)drafting the rebels into the army.
B)taking no action and letting it run its course.
C)negotiating a settlement with its leaders.
D)massacring the participants.
E)renouncing their historic privileges.
Question
Politically, Italy and Germany were similar in the fourteenth century because

A)the plague had equally devastated both regions.
B)both regions failed to develop a centralized monarchical state.
C)local nobles and town governments lost much influence over reigning kings.
D)mercenary captains usurped royal authority and ruled violently.
E)both had begun to develop industrial economies.
Question
The crucial battle of the Hundred Years' War that was won by Henry V in 1415 and that led to the treaty and apparent victory in the war for Henry and England was the Battle of

A)Brétigny.
B)Tours.
C)Poitiers.
D)Calais.
E)Agincourt.
Question
One major issue behind the Hundred Years' War was a claim to the French throne by the English king

A)John II.
B)Edward II.
C)Edward III.
D)William the Conqueror
E)Henry I.
Question
Merchants and manufacturers responded to the economic tribulations of the fourteenth century by

A)increasing their prices.
B)restricting competition and resisting the demands of the lower classes.
C)blaming the Jews and persecuting them.
D)pressuring the government to raise the prices of their products.
E)adopting laissez-faire policies.
Question
In the conduct of the Hundred Years' War, a sure sign of feudalism's decline was the

A)inability of feuding kings to raise armies of knights.
B)reliance of kings on artillery as the main component of royal armies.
C)decisive role of peasant foot soldiers rather than mounted knights.
D)clear intention of kings to destroy the estates of their own vassals.
E)use of heavier armor and larger horses.
Question
Concerning parent-child relationships in the Middle Ages

A)parents were mostly indifferent toward their children, who often died while very young.
B)parents lavished considerable attention and affection on their offspring.
C)children were increasingly given over to be raised by strict church tutors.
D)children often married very young due to parental pressures to establish their own families quickly.
E)because of the number of deaths in the Black Death, children were seen as special and unique and were thus raised in a permissive environment.
Question
The Great Schism reflected the divisions

A)among the Italian city-states.
B)between the French and the Burgundians.
C)among the German territorial princes.
D)between the English and the French in the Hundred Years' War.
E)between Christians and Muslims in Spain.
Question
Changed urban attitudes in the fourteenth century included

A)the promotion of equality between men and women in the workplace.
B)later marriages and increases in the number of extended families.
C)children being seen as valuable only in their capacity to work and earn money for the family.
D)the regulation and acceptance of prostitution in most communities.
E)the abolition of any property requirement for voting and political participation.
Question
In Defender of the Peace , Marsiglio of Padua took the position that

A)popes have authority over the commoners but not over nobles.
B)the church must consign itself solely to spiritual functions.
C)popes have ultimate authority over all men, even kings.
D)the church was entirely illegitimate.
E)each king ought to establish his own church in his country.
Question
The fourteenth-century theologian who claimed that reason could not prove spiritual truth was

A)Thomas Aquinas.
B)Peter Abelard.
C)Oddone Colonna.
D)William of Occam.
E)Meister Eckhart.
Question
Dante's Divine Comedy

A)is considered a supreme summary of medieval thought.
B)was one of the last fourteenth-century works to be written in Latin.
C)lashed out at the "barbarity" of the classical tradition.
D)attacked the science of Aristotle, the Holy Roman Emperor, and the Catholic church.
E)was a new interpretation of the Old Testament written in Italian.
Question
The Decameron is set

A)in London during the Hundred Years' War.
B)in Rome during the Great Schism.
C)in German lands after the Golden Bull.
D)in Paris during the Avignon papacy.
E)in Florence at the time of the Black Death.
Question
Mysticism in the fourteenth century

A)was especially advocated by the nominalist school of William of Occam.
B)particularly took hold in France and Spain.
C)emphasized an intensely personal feeling of oneness with God.
D)was fully endorsed and carefully controlled by the church.
E)abandoned orthodox Christianity for heterodox pantheism.
Question
Meister Eckhart

A)challenged the works of Thomas Aquinas in public disputations.
B)was a mystic who claimed that one could achieve a union of the soul with God.
C)was a noted leader of the flagellants who turned to persecution of the Jews.
D)led the reform of the Franciscan order in Germany.
E)rejected the leadership of the pope and was burnt at the stake.
Question
In fourteenth-century Venice, the real executive power of the state came to be held by the

A)doge.
B)duce.
C)Council of Merchants.
D)Council of Ten.
E)popolo minuto.
Question
The chief ambition of the Venetian city-state in the fourteenth century was

A)financial control of the Holy Roman Empire.
B)inducing the bankruptcy of the papacy.
C)to create a maritime commercial empire throughout the Mediterranean and Black seas.
D)monopolizing the shipping of English wool to Flanders.
E)to wage a Crusade against the Turks in order to gain access to the Holy Land.
Question
All of the following are correct about Petrarch EXCEPT he

A)was a Florentine.
B)wrote in the vernacular.
C)wrote sonnets in Latin.
D)perfected the sonnet form.
E)wrote love poems to Laura.
Question
Florence was ruled throughout most of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by the

A)grandi .
B)popolo grasso .
C)popolo minuto .
D)ciompi .
E)duce.
Question
From 1305 to 1377, the Papacy resided across the French border in the town of

A)Avignon.
B)Bordeaux.
C)Provence.
D)Dijon.
E)Paris.
Question
The Great Schism

A)put an end to the church's previous financial abuses.
B)badly damaged the faith of many Christian believers.
C)rejuvenated Christianity as it had been on the decline throughout Europe.
D)prohibited the abuse of pluralism.
E)lasted for ten years.
Question
The artist Giotto

A)acquired his painting skills in Paris.
B)completed his most famous works while visiting Venice and Constantinople.
C)is considered to represent the perfection of traditional medieval art.
D)painted abstract sacred figures to emphasize the inability of humans to comprehend the divine.
E)created works displaying a new kind of realism.
Question
The most revolutionary of thirteenth and fourteenth-century inventions was/were

A)the printing press.
B)paper.
C)eyeglasses.
D)clocks.
E)telescope.
Question
The conflict between Pope Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France began when Philip

A)tried to end corruption in the French Church.
B)tried to buy the papacy for his nephew, Henry.
C)taxed churchmen without the Church's permission.
D)denied the existence of witches.
E)authorized a French translation of the Bible.
Question
The mystic who founded the Modern Devotion movement and led the group known as the Brothers of the Common Life was

A)Meister Eckhart.
B)Marsiglio of Padua.
C)Thomas Aquinas.
D)William of Occam.
E)Gerard Groote.
Question
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales

A)celebrated English victories in the Hundred Years' War.
B)portrayed characters from a variety of status levels, both high- and low-born.
C)justified the English Peasants' Revolt.
D)praised the church and its clergy.
E)All of these are correct.
Question
Talk about:
"little ice age" and great famine
Question
Talk about:
the Hundred Years' War
Question
Talk about:
Florence's ciompi
Question
Talk about:
Statute of Laborers
Question
Talk about:
pogroms
Question
Talk about:
Henry V and the Battle of Agincourt
Question
Talk about:
Charles VII
Question
Talk about:
Joan of Arc
Question
Talk about:
pneumonic plague
Question
Talk about:
Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron
Question
Talk about:
flagellants
Question
Talk about:
Orléans
Question
Talk about:
the Jacquerie
Question
Talk about:
the longbow
Question
Talk about:
Black Death
Question
Talk about:
bubonic plague
Question
Talk about:
Yersinia pestis
Question
Talk about:
Wat Tyler, John Ball, and the English Peasants' Revolt
Question
Women benefited from the Black Death because

A)they were able to find refuge in nunneries.
B)they were immune because of herbs taken in conjunction with pregnancy.
C)of social custom they were isolated, being restricted to their houses.
D)there were new employment opportunities.
E)women always lived longer than men.
Question
Talk about:
the Battle of Crécy
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Deck 11: The Later Middle Ages: Crisis and Disintegration in the Fourteenth Century
1
Christine de Pizan agreed that killing Joan of Arc had been a good idea, as this execution protected the proper ideal of women everywhere.
False
2
The bubonic plague originated in

A)Africa.
B)Syria.
C)Italy.
D)the Azores.
E)Asia.
Asia.
3
In France the Estates-General represented the entire kingdom and reflects France's basic unity.
False
4
The bubonic plague caused great mortality in Italy but had relatively limited impact on the rest of Europe.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Because of the resulting economic depression, the price of labor was drastically reduced in the aftermath of the Black Death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The flagellants

A)were praised by the Catholic church for their miraculous deeds.
B)attracted attention and created mass hysteria wherever they went.
C)worked with both Jews and clergy to cope with the disorder and dislocation caused by the plague.
D)remained a popular religious movement throughout the fourteenth century.
E)were only found in isolated rural areas.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Pogroms were

A)religious ceremonies convened to ask for God's help against the plague.
B)special indulgences granted to those infected with the plague.
C)organized massacres against the Jews.
D)the name given to people believed to be responsible for the Black Death.
E)mysterious sites where people could go to miraculously recover from the plague.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
During the Black Death

A)Western Europe became home to large Jewish communities because of persecutions in Russia and Poland.
B)the worst organized massacres of the Jews were carried out in England.
C)the Jews acted as partners of the flagellants in seeking to mitigate the effects of plague.
D)Strasbourg became the most important place of refuge for Jews.
E)Jews were accused of causing the plague by poisoning town wells.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
What was the main cause of the early fourteenth century famines?

A)a blight that struck the wheat crop
B)a lack of knowledge of scientific agriculture
C)droughts throughout most of Europe
D)a little ice age inducing bad weather with heavy rains
E)urban pollution that spread into nearby farming regions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
One of France's advantages toward the end of the Hundred Years' War was its adoption of cannon.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
In contradiction to Thomas Aquinas, William of Occam claimed that the truths of religion could not be proved by reason but could be accepted only by faith.
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k this deck
12
It is estimated that famine in the early fourteenth century killed 35 percent of the European population.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
13
The Visconti family ruled the Duchy of Milan throughout most of the fourteenth century.
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k this deck
14
The Black Death resulted in a decline of the European population by

A)10 percent.
B)between 15 and 25 percent.
C)between 25 and 50 percent.
D)between 50 and 75 percent.
E)80 percent.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Among the adverse economic and population changes in fourteenth-century Europe were

A)shrinking peasant land holdings below the size needed to support a family.
B)an exodus of residents from overpopulated rural areas.
C)rapidly rising numbers of poor people in cities.
D)all productive land was being farmed, including many marginal lands susceptible to changing weather patterns.
E)All of these are correct.
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k this deck
16
After the Black Death, money payments were increasingly substituted for military service in the lord-vassal relationship.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
All of the following were reactions to the great plague EXCEPT

A)an increase in violence and murder due to a sense of life's cheapness.
B)the formation of groups like the flagellants, who flogged themselves to save the world.
C)a reduction in the persecution of religious minorities because of the displeasure it caused God.
D)morbidity and preoccupation with death in everyday life.
E)economic depression.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
All medical books, even after the impact of the Black Death, continued to be written in Latin, and all were highly theoretical rather than being practical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The term ars moriendi means

A)the art of dying.
B)the beauty of death.
C)the triumph of life.
D)the art of living well
E)the divine artist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
​Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio are best known for their works written in Latin.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A key economic consequence of the plague was

A)the rapid expansion of European civic banking to rebuild industry.
B)a decline in manorialism and weakening of feudalism as noble landlords desperate for cash converted peasant labor service to market rents, freeing their serfs.
C)the more frequent bankruptcy of monarchs as they emptied their treasuries trying to provide poor relief.
D)the very slow enrichment of middling peasant laborers who began to dominate rural communities.
E)a long-term trend to abandon cities for the more secure rural environment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The Golden Bull of 1356 in Germany

A)made heredity rather than election the process by which German kings were selected.
B)ensured the independence of the ecclesiastical states.
C)gave seven electors the power to choose the "king of the Romans."
D)ensured strong central authority for Germany in the next century.
E)gave limited religious toleration to urban Jews.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
During the reign of Edward III of England, the Great Council of the barons

A)became the chief advisory body of the king.
B)relinquished most of its main powers.
C)became the House of Lords, forming a hereditary body of peers in Parliament.
D)became subservient to the House of Commons.
E)was abolished in favor of a unitary parliament.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Prior to the Golden Bull of 1356, Germany was

A)composed the four kingdoms of Bavaria, Prussia, Hanover, and Austria.
B)under the sole authority of the pope.
C)a land of hundreds of virtually independent states.
D)a highly centralized monarchy under the power of the emperor.
E)None of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Economically, the great plague and the crises of the fourteenth century

A)devastated peasants but not nobles.
B)brought an economic boom to landlords.
C)caused only minor changes in agricultural practices.
D)raised wages because of a scarcity of labor.
E)had little impact.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Joan of Arc

A)was captured by the Burgundians and turned over to their English allies.
B)was handed over to the Inquisition on charges of witchcraft.
C)was considered transgressive because she wore men's clothing.
D)was condemned as a heretic and burned at the stake.
E)All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
At the Battle of Crécy

A)the English defeated the French with cannons.
B)the English defeated the French after a lengthy siege of the castle of Crécy.
C)French pikemen defeated the English cavalry.
D)English archers devastated the French cavalry.
E)French mercenaries starved the English out of the city of Crécy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Politically, France by the end of the fourteenth century saw

A)the dominance of the Estates-General in determining government policy and administering taxes.
B)no new forms of government revenue due to royal opposition.
C)chaos and civil war as rival noble factions fought for control of the realm.
D)new rights of political participation in the Parlement of Paris for poor townspeople.
E)strongly unified as a result of the leadership of Joan of Arc.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
France's "first woman of letters" was

A)Catherine of Siena.
B)Joan of Arc.
C)Heloise.
D)Christine de Pizan
E)Hildegard.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The Italian condottieri were

A)political leaders supporting the pope.
B)bankers with branch banks throughout much of Western Europe.
C)merchants working in northern Europe.
D)reformers within the Catholic Church.
E)leaders of mercenary bands, occasionally ruling as military dictators.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Postplague socioeconomic relations between rich and poor in Europe

A)improved noticeably as Christians sought to make peace with one another to please an angry God.
B)did not alter from their preplague character.
C)deteriorated because a surplus of workers resulted in a dramatic downturn in wages.
D)improved radically as the economy entered into a period of sustained prosperity.
E)got much worse as the positions of landlords deteriorated, and they sought to limit the gains of the peasants.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The English Peasants' Revolt of 1381

A)was caused by the rising economic expectations of ordinary people.
B)was halted when leaders Wat Tyler and John Ball betrayed the peasants' cause.
C)succeeded in getting the government to agree to the peasants' demands.
D)gained long-term results for the peasants.
E)led to the end of the Hundred Years' War.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The European aristocracy responded to the adversity of the great plague by

A)seeking to lower wages by legal means, especially for farm laborers.
B)producing only the most basic foodstuffs, such as grain.
C)petitioning kings to order the relocation of laborers.
D)forming agricultural cooperatives linking landowners, laborers, and city consumers.
E)investing in trade and commerce rather than agricultural production.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Joan of Arc saved France by inspiring the French soldiers to break the English siege of

A)Bordeaux.
B)Amiens.
C)Orléans.
D)Paris.
E)Geneva.
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35
The French government and aristocracy responded to the Jacquerie by

A)drafting the rebels into the army.
B)taking no action and letting it run its course.
C)negotiating a settlement with its leaders.
D)massacring the participants.
E)renouncing their historic privileges.
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36
Politically, Italy and Germany were similar in the fourteenth century because

A)the plague had equally devastated both regions.
B)both regions failed to develop a centralized monarchical state.
C)local nobles and town governments lost much influence over reigning kings.
D)mercenary captains usurped royal authority and ruled violently.
E)both had begun to develop industrial economies.
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37
The crucial battle of the Hundred Years' War that was won by Henry V in 1415 and that led to the treaty and apparent victory in the war for Henry and England was the Battle of

A)Brétigny.
B)Tours.
C)Poitiers.
D)Calais.
E)Agincourt.
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38
One major issue behind the Hundred Years' War was a claim to the French throne by the English king

A)John II.
B)Edward II.
C)Edward III.
D)William the Conqueror
E)Henry I.
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39
Merchants and manufacturers responded to the economic tribulations of the fourteenth century by

A)increasing their prices.
B)restricting competition and resisting the demands of the lower classes.
C)blaming the Jews and persecuting them.
D)pressuring the government to raise the prices of their products.
E)adopting laissez-faire policies.
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40
In the conduct of the Hundred Years' War, a sure sign of feudalism's decline was the

A)inability of feuding kings to raise armies of knights.
B)reliance of kings on artillery as the main component of royal armies.
C)decisive role of peasant foot soldiers rather than mounted knights.
D)clear intention of kings to destroy the estates of their own vassals.
E)use of heavier armor and larger horses.
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41
Concerning parent-child relationships in the Middle Ages

A)parents were mostly indifferent toward their children, who often died while very young.
B)parents lavished considerable attention and affection on their offspring.
C)children were increasingly given over to be raised by strict church tutors.
D)children often married very young due to parental pressures to establish their own families quickly.
E)because of the number of deaths in the Black Death, children were seen as special and unique and were thus raised in a permissive environment.
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42
The Great Schism reflected the divisions

A)among the Italian city-states.
B)between the French and the Burgundians.
C)among the German territorial princes.
D)between the English and the French in the Hundred Years' War.
E)between Christians and Muslims in Spain.
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43
Changed urban attitudes in the fourteenth century included

A)the promotion of equality between men and women in the workplace.
B)later marriages and increases in the number of extended families.
C)children being seen as valuable only in their capacity to work and earn money for the family.
D)the regulation and acceptance of prostitution in most communities.
E)the abolition of any property requirement for voting and political participation.
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44
In Defender of the Peace , Marsiglio of Padua took the position that

A)popes have authority over the commoners but not over nobles.
B)the church must consign itself solely to spiritual functions.
C)popes have ultimate authority over all men, even kings.
D)the church was entirely illegitimate.
E)each king ought to establish his own church in his country.
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45
The fourteenth-century theologian who claimed that reason could not prove spiritual truth was

A)Thomas Aquinas.
B)Peter Abelard.
C)Oddone Colonna.
D)William of Occam.
E)Meister Eckhart.
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46
Dante's Divine Comedy

A)is considered a supreme summary of medieval thought.
B)was one of the last fourteenth-century works to be written in Latin.
C)lashed out at the "barbarity" of the classical tradition.
D)attacked the science of Aristotle, the Holy Roman Emperor, and the Catholic church.
E)was a new interpretation of the Old Testament written in Italian.
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47
The Decameron is set

A)in London during the Hundred Years' War.
B)in Rome during the Great Schism.
C)in German lands after the Golden Bull.
D)in Paris during the Avignon papacy.
E)in Florence at the time of the Black Death.
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48
Mysticism in the fourteenth century

A)was especially advocated by the nominalist school of William of Occam.
B)particularly took hold in France and Spain.
C)emphasized an intensely personal feeling of oneness with God.
D)was fully endorsed and carefully controlled by the church.
E)abandoned orthodox Christianity for heterodox pantheism.
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49
Meister Eckhart

A)challenged the works of Thomas Aquinas in public disputations.
B)was a mystic who claimed that one could achieve a union of the soul with God.
C)was a noted leader of the flagellants who turned to persecution of the Jews.
D)led the reform of the Franciscan order in Germany.
E)rejected the leadership of the pope and was burnt at the stake.
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50
In fourteenth-century Venice, the real executive power of the state came to be held by the

A)doge.
B)duce.
C)Council of Merchants.
D)Council of Ten.
E)popolo minuto.
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51
The chief ambition of the Venetian city-state in the fourteenth century was

A)financial control of the Holy Roman Empire.
B)inducing the bankruptcy of the papacy.
C)to create a maritime commercial empire throughout the Mediterranean and Black seas.
D)monopolizing the shipping of English wool to Flanders.
E)to wage a Crusade against the Turks in order to gain access to the Holy Land.
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52
All of the following are correct about Petrarch EXCEPT he

A)was a Florentine.
B)wrote in the vernacular.
C)wrote sonnets in Latin.
D)perfected the sonnet form.
E)wrote love poems to Laura.
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53
Florence was ruled throughout most of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by the

A)grandi .
B)popolo grasso .
C)popolo minuto .
D)ciompi .
E)duce.
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54
From 1305 to 1377, the Papacy resided across the French border in the town of

A)Avignon.
B)Bordeaux.
C)Provence.
D)Dijon.
E)Paris.
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55
The Great Schism

A)put an end to the church's previous financial abuses.
B)badly damaged the faith of many Christian believers.
C)rejuvenated Christianity as it had been on the decline throughout Europe.
D)prohibited the abuse of pluralism.
E)lasted for ten years.
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56
The artist Giotto

A)acquired his painting skills in Paris.
B)completed his most famous works while visiting Venice and Constantinople.
C)is considered to represent the perfection of traditional medieval art.
D)painted abstract sacred figures to emphasize the inability of humans to comprehend the divine.
E)created works displaying a new kind of realism.
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57
The most revolutionary of thirteenth and fourteenth-century inventions was/were

A)the printing press.
B)paper.
C)eyeglasses.
D)clocks.
E)telescope.
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58
The conflict between Pope Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France began when Philip

A)tried to end corruption in the French Church.
B)tried to buy the papacy for his nephew, Henry.
C)taxed churchmen without the Church's permission.
D)denied the existence of witches.
E)authorized a French translation of the Bible.
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59
The mystic who founded the Modern Devotion movement and led the group known as the Brothers of the Common Life was

A)Meister Eckhart.
B)Marsiglio of Padua.
C)Thomas Aquinas.
D)William of Occam.
E)Gerard Groote.
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60
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales

A)celebrated English victories in the Hundred Years' War.
B)portrayed characters from a variety of status levels, both high- and low-born.
C)justified the English Peasants' Revolt.
D)praised the church and its clergy.
E)All of these are correct.
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61
Talk about:
"little ice age" and great famine
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62
Talk about:
the Hundred Years' War
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63
Talk about:
Florence's ciompi
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64
Talk about:
Statute of Laborers
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65
Talk about:
pogroms
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66
Talk about:
Henry V and the Battle of Agincourt
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67
Talk about:
Charles VII
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68
Talk about:
Joan of Arc
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69
Talk about:
pneumonic plague
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70
Talk about:
Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron
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71
Talk about:
flagellants
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72
Talk about:
Orléans
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73
Talk about:
the Jacquerie
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74
Talk about:
the longbow
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75
Talk about:
Black Death
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76
Talk about:
bubonic plague
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77
Talk about:
Yersinia pestis
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78
Talk about:
Wat Tyler, John Ball, and the English Peasants' Revolt
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79
Women benefited from the Black Death because

A)they were able to find refuge in nunneries.
B)they were immune because of herbs taken in conjunction with pregnancy.
C)of social custom they were isolated, being restricted to their houses.
D)there were new employment opportunities.
E)women always lived longer than men.
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80
Talk about:
the Battle of Crécy
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