HIS118 - Test #2 Review

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Chapters 5-7
Dana Kerr
Quiz by Dana Kerr, updated more than 1 year ago
Dana Kerr
Created by Dana Kerr about 5 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Chinese civilization had features that were typical of other early civilization we have encountered, such as: 1. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 3. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 4. [blank_start]__________[blank_end]
Answer
  • Agrarian base
  • Warfare and invasion from nomadic tribes
  • Long series of dynastic monarchies
  • Bordered by desert and steppe lands

Question 2

Question
The Chinese developed [blank_start]________[blank_end] and [blank_start]________[blank_end] to grow millet, barley, soy, and hemp in the yellow, wind-blown soils called loess.
Answer
  • terracing
  • the iron plowshare
  • irrigation techniques
  • farming techniques

Question 3

Question
Eventually, the northern Chinese (called the Han) conquered the south, and the [blank_start]_____[blank_end] grown along the Yangtzi became even more important to their food supply than the [blank_start]_____[blank_end] cultivated in the areas drained by the Yellow River.
Answer
  • rice
  • corn
  • millet
  • soybean

Question 4

Question
The worship of [blank_start]_____[blank_end] and [blank_start]_____[blank_end] seems to have been an early feature of Chinese religion.
Answer
  • nature spirits
  • earth spirits
  • clan ancestors
  • the Chinese family

Question 5

Question
Around 2299 BCE, several Neolithic cultures along the central course of the Yellow River were drawn into an organized state for the first time. This state was the product of both military conquest and convergence through trade among Bronze Age peoples who came to be ruled by a dynastic monarchy called the _____, about whom little is known.
Answer
  • Xia
  • Zhou
  • Shang
  • Hans

Question 6

Question
The Shang Dynasty gave rise to two important innovations: 1. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]__________[blank_end]
Answer
  • More sophisticated bronze casting
  • The development of writing

Question 7

Question
According to Chinese religious belief, the key to societal welfare was the king's ability to discern his ancestors will and appease them. To accomplish this, they used _____, which provide us with some of the earliest examples of Chinese writing.
Answer
  • oracle bones
  • tea kettles
  • logographs
  • Pinyin

Question 8

Question
Several fundamental aspects of Chinese life were already visible in the Shang Epoch. Some of these resemble four traits that are typically of all early agrarian societies, including: 1. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 3. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 4. [blank_start]__________[blank_end]
Answer
  • The supreme importance of the family
  • The emphasis on this world
  • The importance of education and literacy
  • Ruler and his household ensures success

Question 9

Question
From its origins around 1250 BCE, the Chinese written language soon developed a huge vocabulary of signs that had no picture equivalents and were not alphabetic. These characters are called _____, or "words in signs".
Answer
  • logographs
  • lographs
  • oracle bones
  • Pinyin

Question 10

Question
The greatest artistic achievement of the ancient Chinese was undoubtedly their _____.
Answer
  • bronze work
  • war chariot
  • iron plowshare
  • silk weaving

Question 11

Question
With China's incessant need to defend itself against the nomads along its borders, the importation of the _____ from Western Asia led to a technical breakthrough of the first rank: a harness or collar that allowed a horse to pull with the full strength of its shoulders and body without chocking. This type of harness transformed the value of horses, not only in warfare but also as beasts of burden.
Answer
  • war chariot
  • catapult
  • bronze work
  • terracing

Question 12

Question
Royal workshops turned out all manner of weaponry, vessels, and statues, and reached an apex of perfection in Shang times. Much of it was produced using the lost method of __________, a technique that allowed greater production and more delicacy of form and design than that used in the West, where hammering and forging methods were practiced.
Answer
  • casting in wax molds
  • silk weaving
  • calligraphy
  • iron work

Question 13

Question
The _____ opened up huge areas of northern and central China to agriculture, enabling unprecedented growth of both the economy and population during the Zhou era.
Answer
  • iron plowshare
  • method of terracing
  • spade
  • method of crop rotation

Question 14

Question
The high demand for _____ made it an obvious target for government control and an important source of revenue for Chinese emperors, who need to support their large armies. There have been estimates of 50 to 80 percent of the emperors' treasuries have come from this monopoly.
Answer
  • salt
  • pepper
  • maize
  • silk

Question 15

Question
From its inception, _____ was a craft specifically associated with women in Ancient China.
Answer
  • silk weaving
  • casting in wax molds
  • rice cultivation
  • stone carving

Question 16

Question
The great model for Confucius's politics was __________.
Answer
  • the Chinese family
  • Five Classics
  • legalism
  • clan ancestors

Question 17

Question
Confucius insisted on benevolence and righteousness (ren and yi) as their chief virtues of human society, especially for those serving in public roles. A corps of official educated on Confucian principles came into existence. These shi-- or _____, as the West later called them-- were the actual administrative class of China for 2000 years.
Answer
  • mandarin
  • mandar
  • menteri
  • mantri

Question 18

Question
_____ is a philosophy centered on nature and following "the Way". This more passive philosophy has a skeptical attitude toward knowledge that meant it was often best to do nothing rather than act on the basis of limited information, and seeing the best government as the least government.
Answer
  • Daoism
  • Buddhism
  • Confucianism

Question 19

Question
In the later Zhou Period, sometimes called the __________, many rival philosophies arose to challenge Confucian views.
Answer
  • Hundred Schools period
  • Xia period
  • Ten Schools period
  • One School period

Question 20

Question
The Chinese philosophy of government called _____ taught that most people were inclined to evil selfishness and that it was the task of government to restrain them and simultaneously guide them toward a well-ordered society. This was to be administered through the use of a system of rewards and punishments, given through a code of laws that were public and were to be impartially enforced for all subjects.
Answer
  • legalism
  • daoism
  • legitimacy
  • mohism

Question 21

Question
The first Americans were migrants from Asia that came in three to four waves between 20,000 and 10,000 BCE. These people crossed a narrow land bridge during the last ice age called the __________.
Answer
  • Levantine Corridor
  • Beringia land bridge
  • Woodland bridge
  • Mesoamerican bridge

Question 22

Question
The _____ was amongst the earliest-known hunting cultures, dating between about 1,000 and 8,000 BCE. Named for their use of large and deeply notched, leaf-shaped spearheads, which early Native Americans used to kill their mega-fauna prey.
Answer
  • Clovis culture
  • Clover culture
  • Adena culture
  • Lapita culture

Question 23

Question
After the climate became progressively drier around 9,000 BCE and the mega-fauna son disappeared, hunters turned increasingly to bison, elk, and deer as their prey, and the smaller, fluted Folsom points as spearheads. Overtime the Folsom hunters attached them to the tips of spear throwers called _____.
Answer
  • atlatls
  • clovis spearheads
  • cutlass
  • bolas

Question 24

Question
Native American societies east of the Mississippi River, called the __________, emerged from the Archaic period and improvised novel forms of livelihood that helped give rise to the Neolithic revolution north of the Rio Grande River.
Answer
  • Woodland civilizations
  • Mississippian civilizations
  • Lapita culture
  • Austronesians

Question 25

Question
The best known of the Woodland civilizations were the __________, known best for their burial practices of covering the dead under large mounds of earth.
Answer
  • Adena culture
  • Woodland culture
  • Lapita culture
  • Olmec culture

Question 26

Question
In the New World, drier conditions fostered a gradual transition from hunting and gathering to food production. __________ spread along trade routes that connected Mesoamerica with Peru to the south with North American. This crop eventually became the staple grain in the Native American diet throughout the Western Hemisphere.
Answer
  • maize cultivation
  • rice cultivation
  • bean cultivation
  • fishmeal cultivation

Question 27

Question
The main Andean carbohydrate staple, the freeze-dried potato from the highlands, provided more energy per acre than most other crops. In addition, the Andean people raised guinea pigs and ate the meat of _____.
Answer
  • llamas
  • pigs
  • jaguars
  • elk

Question 28

Question
During the early phases of the Neolithic Revolution, Native Americans lived in villages that included a type of dwelling called a __________. Although varied according to available material, these structures typically consisted of a framework of wooden poles thatched with tree branches and leaves, or animal hides, built over a shallow pit.
Answer
  • pit house
  • quipus
  • sand house
  • dome house

Question 29

Question
Olmec masonry skills enabled them to build two great features of the Olmec civilization: [blank_start]__________[blank_end] and [blank_start]__________[blank_end].
Answer
  • ceremonial stone pyramids
  • thrones
  • Basalt heads
  • calendar

Question 30

Question
The Olmec Civilization was among the most advanced civilizations of the ancient world. Identify the following features of the Olmec Civilization: 1. The pervasive religious faith of the Olmec's centered on the worship of ancient feline gods inspired much of their art and architecture, the [blank_start]_____[blank_end] was particularly reversed. 2. Ways in which the colossal heads were moved land was by using [blank_start]_____[blank_end] in addition to heavy manpower. 3. The Olmec Civilization developed geographically between the future [blank_start]_____[blank_end] and [blank_start]_____[blank_end] civilizations. 4. As the Olmec population grew, the built artificial [blank_start]_____[blank_end] to expand the high ground and surface areas of plateaus. 5. Archeologists believe that the colossal heads are not representative of gods but rather were made in the likeness of a [blank_start]_____[blank_end]. 6. The Olmec colossal heads may, in fact, be carvings made out of reused [blank_start]_____[blank_end]. 7. The Olmec's would use natural asphalt made from native tar for the practical purpose of [blank_start]__________[blank_end], utilized both in travel and in the transportation of the colossal heads.
Answer
  • jaguar
  • puma
  • sledges or rollers
  • rocks
  • Aztec
  • Woodland
  • Mayan
  • Yucatan
  • terraces
  • irrigation systems
  • king
  • emperor
  • thrones
  • waterproofing boats

Question 31

Question
Andeans used ______ (knotted ropes) to calculate and record data.
Answer
  • quipus
  • peruvian textiles
  • beads
  • millets

Question 32

Question
During the Chavin era, widespread use of the _____, a small but sure-footed pack animal, fomented trade and led to the construction of roads.
Answer
  • llama
  • sheep
  • elk
  • dear

Question 33

Question
The __________ (ancestors of Polynesians, Indonesians, Malaysians) migrated to coasts and islands of the Pacific Ocean, circa 3000 BCE. This group used stone and shell tools, built outrigger canoes, developed uncanny navigation skills, and valued exploration and colonization, thus spreading Neolithic culture and developing trade networks.
Answer
  • Austronesians
  • Amerindians
  • Chavins
  • Olmecs

Question 34

Question
The __________, 1500 BCE, inhabited the islands north of New Guinea, were descendants of Polynesians and built large double-hulled outrigger canoes that could carry colonizers to distant islands.
Answer
  • Lapita culture
  • Chavin culture
  • Adena culture
  • Clovis culture

Question 35

Question
The __________ were a Semitic tribal group who emerged from nomadism in what is now northern Iraq in the twelfth century BCE, following the decline of the Hittite monarchy based in Turkey.
Answer
  • Assyrians
  • Phoneicians
  • Iranians
  • Achaemenids

Question 36

Question
Assurbanipal (one of the last Assyrian kings) built the largest _____ of ancient times.
Answer
  • library
  • church
  • temple
  • school

Question 37

Question
The unwarlike ________, a small but significant Semitic people, became the greatest maritime traders and colonizers of the ancient Near East.
Answer
  • Phonecians
  • Assyrians
  • Babylonians
  • Persians

Question 38

Question
The Phonecians' most notable contribution came in the linguistic field. They were the first to use a __________, a system of twenty-two written marks ("letters"), each of which corresponded to a specific consonant sound of the oral language.
Answer
  • phonetic alphabet
  • logographic alphebet
  • hieroglyphic alphabet
  • persian alphabet

Question 39

Question
Until the twentieth century, present-day Iran was called Persia. For a millennium-- 500 BCE to 500 CE-- Persia was comprised of three dynasties. The [blank_start]__________[blank_end], the [blank_start]__________[blank_end], and [blank_start]__________[blank_end].
Answer
  • Achaemenids
  • Assyrians
  • Parthians
  • Iranians
  • Sassanians

Question 40

Question
Under the leadership of Cyrus the Great during the Achaemenid dynasty, the government showed tolerance toward non-Persian subjects by allowing: 1. Subjects to keep [blank_start]__________[blank_end]. 2. Jews to [blank_start]__________[blank_end]. 3. Local authorities to stay in power if non-Persians: >>[blank_start]__________[blank_end] >>[blank_start]__________[blank_end] >>[blank_start]__________[blank_end] >>[blank_start]__________[blank_end]
Answer
  • their customs, laws, and religion
  • return to their native Judea
  • remained loyal
  • paid taxes
  • provided conscript soldiers
  • provide aid and comfort to Persia

Question 41

Question
In order to maintain closer control over his empire, Cyrus the Great delegated authority to Persian supervisors called [blank_start]_____[blank_end], who ruled smaller provinces called [blank_start]_____[blank_end].
Answer
  • satraps
  • messiah
  • satrapies
  • city-states

Question 42

Question
Darius I was the third great Persian ruler, following Cyrus and Cambyses. During his reign, the empire reached its maximal extent. Four of these key achievements include: 1. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]__________[blank_end] 3. [blank_start]__________[blank_end]
Answer
  • Extended the empire to greater size
  • Introduced stable coinage
  • Advanced and refined early law codes

Question 43

Question
What we know of the ancient Twelve Tribes of the Hebrews is derived in large part from the _____, or Hebrew Bible.
Answer
  • Tanakh
  • Torah
  • Zealots
  • Yahweh

Question 44

Question
Israel remained under the leadership of Saul, David, and Solomon between circa 1020 - 930 BCE. The height of Israel's power occurred under the leadership of _____, who is most known for expanding political and military establishments, trade, and the building of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.
Answer
  • Solomon
  • Babylon
  • Cyrus the Great
  • Darius I

Question 45

Question
The northern and southern tribes of Hebrews split after the death of King Solomon, establishing two separate kingdoms; [blank_start]_____[blank_end] and [blank_start]_____[blank_end].
Answer
  • Israel
  • Iran
  • Judah
  • Arabia

Question 46

Question
The northern and southern tribes of Hebrews split after the death of King Solomon. Of the original twelve tribes of Israel, [blank_start]_____[blank_end] tribes became the northern kingdom. While [blank_start]_____[blank_end] tribes became the southern kingdom.
Answer
  • ten
  • eleven
  • two
  • three

Question 47

Question
A failed rebellion in 722 BCE against an Assyrian army of occupation resulted in the scattering of the Israelites far and wide (the first _____, or scattering) and the eventual loss of them to history.
Answer
  • diaspora
  • dispersion
  • dissipation

Question 48

Question
By about 1000 BCE the Hebrews had overcome the Canaanites and set up their own small kingdom, with [blank_start]_____[blank_end] as their first king, [blank_start]_____[blank_end] as their second king, and [blank_start]_____[blank_end] as their third king.
Answer
  • Saul
  • David
  • Solomon
  • Darius

Question 49

Question
Another ill-fated attempt in 586 BCE to throw off their Assyrian yolk by the Jews led to their crushing defeat at the hands of King Nebuchadnezzar and the ensuing exile of the Jews to [blank_start]_____[blank_end] captivity (586 - 539 BCE). Thousands of Jews were taken to [blank_start]_____[blank_end] as hostages to ensure the good behavior of the rest.
Answer
  • Babylonian
  • Judah
  • Babylon

Question 50

Question
Jewish believers in a powerful messiah who would liberate Israel, who were therefore unwilling to bend before any nonbeliever, were called _____. This created tensions between the Jewish nation and their Roman overlords resulting in rebellion.
Answer
  • zealots
  • peasants
  • zoroasters
  • untouchables
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