Palmer, A History of Europe in the Modern World, 11th Edition Test Bank
Prepare confidently with Palmer, A History of Europe in the Modern World, 11th Edition Test Bank, which includes a mix of multiple-choice questions and answers.
Violet Stevens
Contributor
4.9
46
4 months ago
Preview (16 of 766)
Sign in to access the full document!
1
Student: ___________________________________________________________________________
1. Most of what is now meant by "modern" made its first appearance in:
A. ancient Greece.
B. Imperial Rome.
C. Europe.
D. ancient Egypt.
2. Which of the following is least characteristic of modern civilizations?
A. Almost instantaneous communications
B. A wide network of finance and trade, loans and debts, investments and bank accounts
C. Pressures for increased democracy
D. A general increase in traditional customs and religion
3. Modern times were immediately preceded by a period of a thousand years that historians called:
A. the Ancient Period.
B. the Greco-Roman Period.
C. the Middle Ages.
D. the Dark Ages.
4. The major languages of Europe belong to the _____ language family.
A. Altaic
B. Austronesian
C. Finno-Ugric
D. Indo-European
5. The Greeks formed small city-states, all independent and:
A. cooperative with one another.
B. often at war with one another.
C. democratic.
D. pluralistic.
Student: ___________________________________________________________________________
1. Most of what is now meant by "modern" made its first appearance in:
A. ancient Greece.
B. Imperial Rome.
C. Europe.
D. ancient Egypt.
2. Which of the following is least characteristic of modern civilizations?
A. Almost instantaneous communications
B. A wide network of finance and trade, loans and debts, investments and bank accounts
C. Pressures for increased democracy
D. A general increase in traditional customs and religion
3. Modern times were immediately preceded by a period of a thousand years that historians called:
A. the Ancient Period.
B. the Greco-Roman Period.
C. the Middle Ages.
D. the Dark Ages.
4. The major languages of Europe belong to the _____ language family.
A. Altaic
B. Austronesian
C. Finno-Ugric
D. Indo-European
5. The Greeks formed small city-states, all independent and:
A. cooperative with one another.
B. often at war with one another.
C. democratic.
D. pluralistic.
6. Greek thinkers:
A. looked for rational or natural explanations of the human condition.
B. extended the web of myth.
C. ignored the variety and confusion they saw.
D. used demonic possession to explain human sickness.
7. Latin was the basis for all of the following languages except:
A. French.
B. Italian.
C. Romanian.
D. German.
8. The Romans conquered Greece in 146 B.C. and rapidly:
A. destroyed all that was Greek.
B. destroyed most of Greek culture.
C. absorbed much of Greek culture.
D. adopted the political system of the Greek city-states.
9. By the fifth century the entire Roman world:
A. was formally Christian and no other religion was officially tolerated.
B. had religious beliefs rooted in paganism.
C. were Gentiles, and Christianity was not to be tolerated.
D. was formally Christian, but the greatest thinkers remained outside the church.
10. On an intellectual level Christianity marked:
A. a return to Greek philosophy.
B. a rejection of individual dignity.
C. a revolution.
D. another elitist religious movement.
11. St. Augustine's book, City of God, proclaimed that:
A. the church should have control over political and temporal affairs.
B. the government should control religion.
C. the spiritual power of the city of Jerusalem would conquer Rome.
D. spiritual and political power were separate and independent.
A. looked for rational or natural explanations of the human condition.
B. extended the web of myth.
C. ignored the variety and confusion they saw.
D. used demonic possession to explain human sickness.
7. Latin was the basis for all of the following languages except:
A. French.
B. Italian.
C. Romanian.
D. German.
8. The Romans conquered Greece in 146 B.C. and rapidly:
A. destroyed all that was Greek.
B. destroyed most of Greek culture.
C. absorbed much of Greek culture.
D. adopted the political system of the Greek city-states.
9. By the fifth century the entire Roman world:
A. was formally Christian and no other religion was officially tolerated.
B. had religious beliefs rooted in paganism.
C. were Gentiles, and Christianity was not to be tolerated.
D. was formally Christian, but the greatest thinkers remained outside the church.
10. On an intellectual level Christianity marked:
A. a return to Greek philosophy.
B. a rejection of individual dignity.
C. a revolution.
D. another elitist religious movement.
11. St. Augustine's book, City of God, proclaimed that:
A. the church should have control over political and temporal affairs.
B. the government should control religion.
C. the spiritual power of the city of Jerusalem would conquer Rome.
D. spiritual and political power were separate and independent.
Loading page 6...
Loading page 7...
Loading page 8...
Loading page 9...
Loading page 10...
Loading page 11...
Loading page 12...
Loading page 13...
Loading page 14...
Loading page 15...
Loading page 16...
13 more pages available. Scroll down to load them.
Preview Mode
Sign in to access the full document!
100%