5 Steps to a 5 AP World History, 2014-2015 Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

278 i STEP 5 Build Your Test-Taking Confidence



  1. D Only about 5 percent of Africans who
    crossed the Atlantic were destined for British
    North America, and most of them arrived in
    the West Indies before being sent to British
    North America. Slaves were used extensively on
    the sugar plantations of Spanish America (B), the
    Caribbean (C), and Brazil, as well as in the mines
    of Mexico (A).

  2. B The Spanish had already completed the
    reconquest of Christian territories from the
    Muslims in 1492. The remaining responses
    describe European motives for colonization.

  3. C The panel is from the façade of the Cathe-
    dral of Florence and was designed during the
    Italian Renaissance.

  4. D During the same time period as the Ital-
    ian Renaissance, Mesoamerican societies
    constructed massive pyramids and temples in
    addition to the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán
    with its system of causeways. European women
    experienced a decline in their status during
    the same time period (A). European serfs were
    beginning to escape to towns and to Eastern
    European lands to work for pay (B). Japan was
    isolated during its feudal era (C).

  5. D Portuguese and other Europeans simply
    magnifi ed African trade routes already in exis-
    tence. All parts of Africa were involved (A).
    While some African monarchs opposed the
    slave trade, many supported it as a source of
    wealth and technology (B). Within Africa,
    women were more highly valued as domestic
    slaves (C).

  6. D Neo-Confucianism’s emphasis on respect
    for authority made the Chinese philosophy
    popular throughout the Tokugawa Shogunate.
    Christians were persecuted (A). The Dutch
    gained trading privileges (B). Japan developed
    its own art forms, such as Kabuki theater (C).

  7. B The decline of the power of the papacy as a
    result of the Protestant Reformation strength-
    ened the power of monarchs and nation-states.
    The Roman Catholic Church preserved its
    traditional teachings (A). Both the new Protes-
    tant churches and the Roman Catholic Church
    emphasized education as a result of the Ref-
    ormation (C). Protestants allowed, and even
    encouraged, capitalist ventures (D).
    23. D Byzantium was weakened by both the Seljuk
    and Ottoman Turks, as well as by states estab-
    lished by Germanic invaders of the Western
    empire. Byzan tium had adequate military tech-
    nology, including “Greek fi re” (A). Byzantium
    was losing, not expanding, its territory (B).
    Trade routes continued to fl ourish, even after
    the fall of Byzantium (C).
    24. B “Proletariat” is a term used in The Com-
    munist Manifesto to describe the working class.
    The other documents listed do not speak of the
    “proletariat.”
    25. A The proletariat refers to the working class.
    26. C African commercial institutions did not
    transfer to American culture. Elements of Afri-
    can language have infl uenced the Gullah lan-
    guage of the southeastern United States as well
    as dialects used by some African Americans (A).
    Agricultural knowledge of African slaves was
    prized, especially on the sugar plantations of
    the Caribbean and Brazil, and the rice paddies
    of the southern United States (B). African reli-
    gious practices often blended with Catholicism,
    especiallyin Latin America (D).
    27. A Submarine cables, invented in the 1850s,
    made possible the transmission of messages
    between Europe and Asia in a few hours. There
    were no intense rivalries among major Asian
    nations until the very end of the nineteenth
    century, long after imperialism was well estab-
    lished (B). Christianity was unpopular in Asia
    in the nineteenth century (C). Asian economies
    were prosperous from regional and long-dis-
    tance trade (D).
    28. C In 1904–1905, Japan engaged in war with
    Russia over domination of Korea. Japan forced
    Korea to accept an unequal treaty with Japan
    (A) and negotiated an unequal treaty between
    itself and China (B). Japan restored its tradi-
    tional imperial family (D).
    29. D The Indian people learned to use the
    monsoons to their advantage in trade and
    agriculture.India’s religious diversity (Hindu,
    Buddhist, Muslim) has prevented social and
    political unity (A). Its landscape (mountains,
    plateaus, fertile farmlands, and seacoasts) and its
    economic variety (farming, fi shing, trading, and
    textile manufacturing) created a number of dis-
    tinct societies within one sub-continent (B, C).

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