5 Steps to a 5 AP World History, 2014-2015 Edition
Practice Test One h 271
- Which of the following is true of the African
slave trade between 1450 and 1750?
(A) East Africa was not involved in the slave
trade.
(B) African monarchs united in an effort to
abolish the slave trade.
(C) Within African societies, male slaves were
valued more highly than female slaves.
(D) Europeans tapped into African slave trade
routes already in existence.
- During the period of the Tokugawa Shogunate
(A) Buddhist and Confucian scholars prac ticed
tolerance toward Christians
(B) the Portuguese gained unique trading privi-
leges with Japan
(C) dependence on Chinese traditions pre-
vented the development of Japanese art
forms
(D) Japan continued to be infl uenced by neo-
Confucian thought from China
22. The Protestant Reformation
(A) produced sweeping reforms in the teachings
of the Roman Catholic Church
(B) strengthened the rise of nation-states in
Europe
(C) resulted in a decline in European education
(D) discouraged capitalist ventures among
members of the Christian faith
23. Prior to its conquest by the Ottoman Turks,
Byzantium was weakened by
(A) inadequate military technology
(B) its policy of continued expansion
(C) the decline of regional trade routes
(D) the political ambitions of neighboring
peoples
24. When the Mexican liberal Ponciano Arriaga
referred to the Indians of Mexico as “proletar-
ians,” he was echoing
(A) the proclamation of the Young Turks
(B) Marx and Engels
(C) the Declaration of the Rights of Man
(D) the Monroe Doctrine
- In calling the Mexican Indians “proletariat,”
Arriaga was referring to their role as
(A) workers
(B) indentured servants
(C) slaves
(D) revolutionaries
- African infl uences on American culture
included all of the following EXCEPT
(A) language
(B) agricultural knowledge
(C) commerce
(D) religious practices
- Which of the following facilitated European
advances into Asia in the nineteenth century?
(A) Communication cables that linked Asia
with Europe
(B) Intense rivalries among major Asian nations
(C) The popularity of Christianity in East Asia
(D) Weakening Asian economies that welcomed
European trade
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