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

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

280 i STEP 5 Build Your Test-Taking Confidence



  1. A The slow population growth is a result of
    China’s one-child policy, while the age distri-
    bution and large GDP indicate a country in
    transition from a developing to an industrial-
    ized nation. The top two import partners also
    are logical trade partners for China. Bangladesh
    is not a major exporter and has a small adult
    population (B). Canada has a much larger older
    population (D). India has a much higher rate
    of population growth (C).

  2. A The stateless society, based on tribal or clan
    relationships, was the most common political
    form. After 1000, kingdoms (B), and empires
    (D) arose. Africans did not form city-states (C).

  3. A Europeans encountered Middle Eastern
    peoples who taught them about sugarcane
    cultivation. Europe expanded into the North
    Atlantic and Baltic territories (B). Australians
    did not develop agriculture until their encoun-
    ter with Europeans in the eighteenth century
    (C). Mongols and Turks continued their
    nomadic lives (D).

  4. D Swahili emerged from an encounter between
    the migrating Bantu and Arabs on the east
    coast of Africa. Urdu is a language of Pakistan
    (A). Proto-Bantu is the language family from
    which the Bantu languages developed (B).
    Arabic came from the Arabian peninsula (C).

  5. D The vast Mongol Empire stretched from
    Persia to China to Russia. While warfare tem-
    porarily interfered with trade on occasion, the
    Mongols were noted for their facilitation of
    trade along established Eurasian routes (A).
    They occupied Vietnam temporarily, but were
    unable to adapt to its climate and did not
    annex its territory (B). The Mongols controlled
    Russia by discouraging Russian trade with the
    West (C).

  6. B The Manila galleons carried trade between
    China and Mexico from the sixteenth to the
    nineteenth centuries. The other choices were
    societies that had no trade contacts.

  7. D Christian missionary journeys were dis-
    rupted during the time of the bubonic plague.
    Roman Catholicism was popular in Sicily and
    Spain (A) but unpopular among East Asians
    (B) and Mongols (C).

  8. C Whereas many slaves came from central
    Africa, the majority came from western Africa.


The Portuguese carried slaves to islands such as
the Madeira and Canary Islands (A). Africans
did not recognize private property; slaves were
a sign of wealth (B). Muslims tapped into Afri-
can slave routes to carry slaves to the Mediter-
ranean (D).


  1. B The monsoons could be used to facilitate
    navigation from China, throughout the Indian
    Ocean, and on to East Africa. Portuguese
    dominance decreased after 1600 (A). English
    merchants concentrated on Indian trade (C).
    Joint-stock companies limited commercial
    risks (D).

  2. B The time frame of the war (1756–1763) was
    during a period of Dutch and English domi-
    nance in the Indian Ocean. Because it involved
    Europe, the Americas, and India (D), it was
    the fi rst global war (A). It laid the basis for 150
    years of British imperial dominance (C).

  3. B Catherine the Great prevented Enlight en-
    ment thought from having too large a sway
    over Russian politics. Under the Tokugawa
    Shogunate, Japan became more centralized (C).
    Choices (A) and (D) are also correct.

  4. D By 1800, the most urbanized nation was
    Great Britain, with about 75 percent of its
    population living in cities. Britain was followed
    by Continental Europe, the United States, and
    Japan.

  5. A The Russians expanded into the territories
    of the Ottoman Empire, which was too weak
    to stop them. Siberia was opened up in the
    sixteenth century (B). In the late eighteenth
    century, Russia participated with Austria and
    Prussia in the partition of Poland (C). Russia’s
    pro-Slavic movement created an alliance with
    the Balkan Slavic states based on a common
    Slavic culture (D).

  6. B Although foreign merchants were allowed
    to trade in a few ports in China (C), the activi-
    ties of foreign merchants were closely moni-
    tored. The Chinese were especially impressed
    by European clocks (A). Chinese authorities
    denied their subjects opportunities to create
    trading companies (D).

  7. A Although Europeans brought their technol-
    ogy to Africa, they failed to adequately train
    indigenous peoples in its use and maintenance.
    Plantation products created a single cash crop

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