Deck 10: Crisis,Unrest,and Opportunity,1300–1500

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Question
The social mobility of the fourteenth century was made possible largely due to:

A) the Crusades.
B) the Black Death.
C) the English Peasants' Revolt.
D) the beginning of the Hundred Years' War.
E) the creation of the Holy Roman Empire.
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Question
Which lower-class rebellion in the later Middle Ages involved the revolt of workers in the cloth industry who sought greater participation in local government?

A) the English Peasants' Revolt of 1381
B) the "Jacquerie" uprising of 1358
C) the Florentine Comp revolt of 1378
D) the Lübeck "taxpayers" revolt of 1408
E) the German Peasants' revolt of 1424
Question
The combined effects of famine,war,and plague in the fourteenth century reduced the total population of western Europe by:

A) 10 to 15 percent.
B) 25 percent.
C) at least one half.
D) at least two-thirds.
E) 90 percent.
Question
Why did masters at the University of Paris condemn Joan of Arc for wearing men's clothing?

A) The Gentiles (non-Christians) and Saracens (Muslims) wore men's clothing.
B) Men's clothing was not suitable for a person leading soldiers into battle.
C) Men's clothing on women revealed too much of the female body.
D) Men's clothing was considered "business attire," and therefore an area of society forbidden to women.
E) The men's clothing Joan wore was suitable only for monks within the monastery.
Question
The most important factor in the rise of Spain as a major European power was:

A) the exile of Jews from Spain.
B) the end of the Hundred Years' War.
C) the unification of the kingdoms of Aragon and Castile.
D) the defeat and annexation of Muslim Granada.
E) the construction of the Great Armada to subjugate the other European powers.
Question
The Black Plague probably originated in _________ and spread to western Europe along the trade routes.

A) Mongolia
B) upper Egypt
C) Sweden
D) the Crimea
E) India
Question
In late-medieval France,which dynasty eventually replaced the Capetians as rulers?

A) the Hohenzollern
B) the Habsburgs
C) the Medici
D) the Windsors
E) the Valois
Question
The first phase of the Hundred Years' War was marked by:

A) successive French victories over the English.
B) inconclusive battles, which were the reason for the long length of the war.
C) successive English victories over the French.
D) a few victories by the English over the Prussian allies of France.
E) an indecisive siege of Paris by the English.
Question
Compared to the western Europe of 1300,the western Europe of 1450 had _________ people and a(n)_________ standard of living.

A) more; higher
B) fewer; higher
C) fewer; lower
D) more; lower
E) equal; equal
Question
The general peace and prosperity of Italy was broken in 1494 when it was invaded by:

A) Ottoman Turks.
B) Germany.
C) France.
D) Spain.
E) England.
Question
A "noble" in Europe was defined as:

A) an individual who had been born into the class.
B) someone who had achieved the rank by their deeds in war.
C) a person who had achieved wealth through commerce.
D) one who lived according to a particular lifestyle.
E) an individual who had been made such by his king.
Question
In the early fourteenth century,the agricultural economy in Europe had begun to:

A) fail due to papal restrictions on monastic houses.
B) fail due to climate change and excessive cultivation.
C) regain levels achieved in the late Roman Empire.
D) improve due to rising average temperatures.
E) improve due to more sophisticated trade patterns.
Question
During the rise of national monarchies,which modern country resisted unification and remained divided among dozens of independent principalities throughout the later Middle Ages?

A) Germany
B) England
C) France
D) Poland
E) Portugal
Question
The English Peasants' Revolt differed from other revolts and rebellions of the fourteenth century as it was fueled by:

A) a protest against higher taxes.
B) a demand for full employment.
C) governmental corruption.
D) a demand for the end of serfdom.
E) perceived corruption in the Church.
Question
The Holy Roman Empire might be said to be anything but an empire due to:

A) the continual fighting between the territorial princes.
B) periodic fighting between the princes and the emperors.
C) the division of territory by princes among their heirs.
D) the selfish protection and expansion of individual territories by princes.
E) all of these
Question
One means by which the nobility of Europe asserted themselves was through membership in chivalric orders founded by the rulers of various countries.An example of such an order would be the:

A) Order of the Garter.
B) Order of the Phoenix.
C) Knights of Malta.
D) Teutonic Knights.
E) Knights of the Temple of Solomon.
Question
In fifteenth-century Europe,localities could expect a renewed outbreak of plague:

A) every year.
B) every two years.
C) every ten years.
D) every twenty years.
E) every generation.
Question
England's good fortunes in the Hundred Years' War turned for the bad:

A) when Edward III was taken captive by the dauphin at Crecy.
B) when the French acquired large siege cannons with which to batter English cities.
C) when the French acquired longbows.
D) when the use of chevauchee ruined the land and brought on a famine.
E) when Edward III died, leaving a young Richard to rule.
Question
After 1450,European towns grew significantly in size and economic power because they:

A) banned monasteries and offered tax breaks for married couples and families.
B) successfully controlled price variations and limited business risk.
C) developed strategies for managing outbreaks of the plague.
D) attracted more people and developed specialized products and services.
E) offered tax incentives to new businesses to locate in the towns.
Question
The battle of Agincourt and its aftermath represents the apex of English supremacy over France in the Hundred Years' War as:

A) the battle was a crushing defeat for the French and from which they never recovered.
B) it led to the French king recognizing Henry V as the heir to the French throne.
C) it secured English control over Normandy, Aquitaine, and Burgundy.
D) the French king, Charles VI, was forced to abdicate in favor of the English king, Henry V.
E) the English retained control of northern France from that point.
Question
The Roman Catholic Church during the later Middle Ages:

A) remained essentially unchanged from the late Roman Empire.
B) came very close to being supplanted by orthodoxy.
C) underwent a radical transformation with the power of the papacy completely dissipated.
D) changed a great deal as it suffered from the same economic hardships caused by the Black Death as the rest of Europe did.
E) returned to its earliest manifestation as a decentralized community of believers who held all property in common.
Question
Boccaccio's Decameron is historically significant because it:

A) recounts an actual pilgrimage trip from London to Canterbury.
B) is written in the vernacular and portrays men and women as they really were.
C) represents the culmination of the late-medieval Latin prose style.
D) describes with great creativity the Church's position on sin, salvation, and hell.
E) recounts the trip the author took through the inferno, Purgatory, and paradise.
Question
After 1300,the Mongols ruled Russia by:

A) moving their power base to Moscow.
B) controlling local Slavic states and demanding tribute from them.
C) acquiring the grand duchy of Lithuania and using it as a buffer state.
D) adopting western Christianity and receiving assistance from the pope.
E) the systematic use of terror on the civilian population.
Question
The English Lollards were the lay followers and successors of which late-medieval theologian?

A) Jan Zizka
B) Jan Hus
C) Master Eckhart
D) John Wyclif
E) Ulrich Zwingli
Question
The Golden Horde was:

A) the Mongol dynasty that controlled Russia.
B) the payment for release of King John of France.
C) the name of the Black Prince's new chivalric order of knights.
D) the nickname given to the first Spanish ship to return from the New World.
E) the gold amassed by the English crown after the Hundred Years' War.
Question
The thirteenth century had witnessed the development of the philosophical belief that the world was rational,organized,and comprehensible to human beings.In the fourteenth century,William of Ockham:

A) denied that human reason could prove fundamental theological truths.
B) confirmed such a belief theologically.
C) argued that theological questions could all be resolved through reason, but questions concerning the natural world could not all be so resolved.
D) determined that human reason could resolve nothing with regards to the world, with the exception of the truths of mathematics, provided the axioms were correct.
E) argued that the only knowledge human beings could attain came through divine revelation alone.
Question
The largest multiethnic empire of the premodern world was:

A) the Mongol empire.
B) Byzantium.
C) Russia.
D) the British empire.
E) China.
Question
Although Jan Hus adopted the ideas of John Wyclif,he did diverge from Wyclif in his view:

A) of the centrality of confession.
B) of the primacy of the pope in setting dogma.
C) on the Eucharist being fully available to all people.
D) on Baptism, which he believed was only for adults.
E) on the need for a priesthood.
Question
The theological system called nominalism was based on William of Ockham's fundamental insight that:

A) God is limited in his ability to control human events and circumstances.
B) only individual things, not collective entities, can be known and understood.
C) knowledge gained through experiment is the only trustworthy source of information.
D) the characteristics of a single object can be inferred by making reference to a group.
E) nothing truly exists except in the mind of God.
Question
The rebellion of the Mongol leader Timur the Lame created a power vacuum that allowed:

A) the Byzantine emperor to reclaim territory lost to the Mongol the previous century.
B) the Muscovite grand duke, Ivan III, to launch a series of conquests to forward his imperial agenda.
C) Poland-Lithuania to begin its expansion eastward.
D) the Khanate of the Golden Horde to reclaim its territory surrounding Moscow.
E) the Holy Roman Empire to expand eastward to encompass the lands of the orthodox church.
Question
Moscow replaced _________ as the center of Russian power in the late Middle Ages.

A) Saint Petersburg
B) Kiev
C) Odessa
D) Novgorod
E) Vladivostok
Question
The sacraments of the Church:

A) were valid only if administered by an upstanding priest of good moral character.
B) could be administered by any Christian regardless of his position within the Church.
C) could be negated by an individual who no longer professed to be a Christian.
D) were reserved for those Christians who had passed through all levels of initiation.
E) were valid if administered by a properly ordained priest.
Question
When it fought against Poland-Lithuania in the late fifteenth century,Moscow appealed to its citizens by:

A) asking the pope in Rome for help.
B) joining forces with the Ottoman Turks.
C) emphasizing the Roman Catholicism of Poland-Lithuania.
D) emphasizing the Orthodox beliefs of Poland-Lithuania.
E) emphasizing the large proportion of Jews living in Poland-Lithuania.
Question
Master Eckhart taught that:

A) by renouncing the senses, one could draw inward and ultimately find God.
B) secular leadership of the Church would purify its doctrine and discipline its clergy.
C) the laity should stop attending church and focus instead on the miracles of Christ.
D) the most practical devotional act for the laity was pilgrimage.
E) the laity should renounce marriage and enter monasteries and convents.
Question
The Great Schism ended in 1417 when:

A) the papacy moved its administrative offices back to Rome.
B) the Council of Basel dismissed all rival popes.
C) the pope defeated the consular movement.
D) the Council of Constance elected a new pope.
E) the French king returned the pope to Rome.
Question
Before the fall of Constantinople in 1453,the Byzantine empire tried to shore up its defensive position against the Ottoman Turks by:

A) restoring the ancient office of tsar (Caesar).
B) forging a peace treaty with Ivan the Great.
C) submitting to papal (Roman) authority in religious matters.
D) equipping foot soldiers with hand-held firearms called muskets.
E) agreeing to a mutual defense treaty with England and France.
Question
During the so-called Babylonian Captivity of the fourteenth century,the papacy was:

A) divided between two rival popes.
B) moved to Avignon, France.
C) disbanded for seventy-five years.
D) controlled by the Persian aristocracy.
E) removed from Rome to Babylon.
Question
Compared to the High Middle Ages,the later Middle Ages:

A) was a highpoint for the authority and prestige of the papacy.
B) signaled the beginning of vernacular poetry and popular stories of courtly romance.
C) witnessed the dissolution of significant national governments and bureaucratic institutions.
D) identified nature less with God and more as an entity that could be manipulated to meet human needs.
E) signaled the end of the authority of the Church within Europe.
Question
One way people of the medieval period came to understand the divine in their own lives was through:

A) Magister theologia by Master Eckhart.
B) The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio.
C) Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love by Julianna of Norwich.
D) The Imitation of Christ by Thomas à Kempis.
E) The Book of Margery Kempe by Margery Kempe.
Question
Spain was made whole with the reconquest of 1492 but was not truly a single nation until:

A) 1525.
B) 1648.
C) 1714.
D) 1812.
E) 1918.
Question
Jews were victims of attack by both Christians and Muslims during the plague.
Question
The invention of movable type printing and the printing press made possible:

A) the creation of a bureaucratic class in the major European countries.
B) the creation of universities, not possible prior to printed books.
C) the creation of the entirely new business of bookstores.
D) the Protestant Reformation in the following century.
E) the creation of the modern nation-state.
Question
The development of artillery in late-medieval Europe affected military strategy in that:

A) foot soldiers were no longer useful on the battlefield.
B) mounted knights were no longer useful on the battlefield.
C) stone castles became less viable as defensive strongholds.
D) national monarchies could no longer control rebellious aristocrats.
E) monasteries could now defend themselves as well as any town.
Question
An apparent late-medieval fascination with death and dying might be seen in:

A) aristocratic dress.
B) sermons on the miracles of Christ.
C) literature about the Hundred Years' War.
D) the literature and art of the period.
E) the rise in suicide as the Black Plague spread.
Question
The Flemish painter Rogier van der Weyden expressed piety and the ever present message of the Bible by:

A) presenting biblical figures in contemporary settings.
B) placing contemporary figures in biblical settings.
C) presenting idealized settings of sites in the Holy Land for his portraits.
D) presenting biblical figures in otherworldly settings.
E) renouncing painting and entering a monastery.
Question
The medieval painter Giotto is remembered especially because he:

A) rendered architectural details with photographic precision.
B) specialized in individual portraits, which were highly lifelike.
C) developed a new technique for painting on canvas with oil paints.
D) brought a deep humanity and naturalism to his religious images.
E) developed a new technique for painting on wood using pigment mixed with egg white.
Question
Having been invented during the High Middle Ages,eyeglasses might have been used by:

A) Ivan the Terrible.
B) Giovanni Boccaccio.
C) Giotto di Bondone.
D) Jan van Eyck.
E) Augustine of Hippo.
Question
A fresco painting is essentially:

A) pigment mixed with plaster that is applied to a wall.
B) pigment mixed with egg white that is applied to a wood panel.
C) pigment mixed with oil that is applied to a stretched canvas.
D) an image that is modeled and executed on an outside wall.
E) pigment mixed with oil that is applied to a wall.
Question
When merchants were ennobled by a king or prince,they were expected to abandon their old employment and take up a noble lifestyle.
Question
The conversos were a group of Christians who had secretly converted to Islam in Spain and were the subject of the Inquisition.
Question
The title tsar means "caesar."
Question
One stood a chance of being charged with heresy simply by:

A) having a mystical view of Christianity that did not submit to Church authority.
B) publishing one's ideas, moderate though they might be, in the vernacular.
C) questioning any of the sacraments or the manner in which they were administered.
D) questioning the authority of the pope or Church councils.
E) all of these
Question
The late Middle Ages was a period of aristocratic crisis and peasant prosperity.
Question
It is more a mark of helplessness in King Charles's position than his faith in Joan that he gave troops and authority to Joan of Arc in 1429.
Question
Henry IV's seizure of the crown from Richard was met with a series of rebellions and made it impossible for him to engage in the war with France.
Question
Just as Boccaccio wrote about a group of people telling stories to one another while sitting out the Black Death,_________ wrote about a group of people telling stories to one another while on a pilgrimage.

A) Augustine
B) Chaucer
C) de Pisan
D) di Bondone
E) More
Question
The Black Death struck and disappeared from Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
Question
The Jacquerie was a group of French nobles who were effective in passing legislation against peasant demands for lower prices and an end to serfdom.
Question
What is the central theme of Christine de Pisan's The City of Ladies?

A) The book is an attack on the patriarchal social organization of feudalism.
B) The book describes a mythic journey through Africa in search of powerful "Amazon" women.
C) The book is a courtly romance about love, sacrifice, and betrayal in the tradition of Romance of the Rose.
D) The book is an attack on the failures of the late-medieval clergy.
E) The book is an allegory that defends women against the misogynistic claims of men.
Question
The Black Death moved about 10 miles a day.
Question
In Chapter 10,concordat is defined as a treaty that grants the kings power over the churches in their own territories.
Question
What events sparked the Great Schism,and how was it resolved?
Question
The Lollard movement gained great support in the fourteenth century due to the number of nobles who supported the movement.
Question
What circumstances account for the rebellions between 1300 and 1450?
Question
What were the causes of the Hundred Years' War?
Question
In the rule of the Papal States the pope,as a churchman,was unable to lead armies or make alliances with other princes.
Question
What determined nobility in the late Middle Ages?
Question
Realism and naturalism were the key trends in both art and literature in the late Middle Ages,as opposed to Romanticism.
Question
Compare and contrast the effect of the plague on the towns as opposed to the countryside.
Question
What impact did the Hundred Years' War have on the English and French monarchies?
Question
How did people respond to the plague?
Question
Why did Russia develop so differently from western Europe?
Question
How did the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella change Spain?
Question
The Middle Ages gave rise to few if any intellectual or artistic achievements; such would have to wait until the Renaissance.
Question
In what ways did people of the late Middle Ages show their piety?
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Deck 10: Crisis,Unrest,and Opportunity,1300–1500
1
The social mobility of the fourteenth century was made possible largely due to:

A) the Crusades.
B) the Black Death.
C) the English Peasants' Revolt.
D) the beginning of the Hundred Years' War.
E) the creation of the Holy Roman Empire.
the Black Death.
2
Which lower-class rebellion in the later Middle Ages involved the revolt of workers in the cloth industry who sought greater participation in local government?

A) the English Peasants' Revolt of 1381
B) the "Jacquerie" uprising of 1358
C) the Florentine Comp revolt of 1378
D) the Lübeck "taxpayers" revolt of 1408
E) the German Peasants' revolt of 1424
the Florentine Comp revolt of 1378
3
The combined effects of famine,war,and plague in the fourteenth century reduced the total population of western Europe by:

A) 10 to 15 percent.
B) 25 percent.
C) at least one half.
D) at least two-thirds.
E) 90 percent.
at least one half.
4
Why did masters at the University of Paris condemn Joan of Arc for wearing men's clothing?

A) The Gentiles (non-Christians) and Saracens (Muslims) wore men's clothing.
B) Men's clothing was not suitable for a person leading soldiers into battle.
C) Men's clothing on women revealed too much of the female body.
D) Men's clothing was considered "business attire," and therefore an area of society forbidden to women.
E) The men's clothing Joan wore was suitable only for monks within the monastery.
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k this deck
5
The most important factor in the rise of Spain as a major European power was:

A) the exile of Jews from Spain.
B) the end of the Hundred Years' War.
C) the unification of the kingdoms of Aragon and Castile.
D) the defeat and annexation of Muslim Granada.
E) the construction of the Great Armada to subjugate the other European powers.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The Black Plague probably originated in _________ and spread to western Europe along the trade routes.

A) Mongolia
B) upper Egypt
C) Sweden
D) the Crimea
E) India
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k this deck
7
In late-medieval France,which dynasty eventually replaced the Capetians as rulers?

A) the Hohenzollern
B) the Habsburgs
C) the Medici
D) the Windsors
E) the Valois
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The first phase of the Hundred Years' War was marked by:

A) successive French victories over the English.
B) inconclusive battles, which were the reason for the long length of the war.
C) successive English victories over the French.
D) a few victories by the English over the Prussian allies of France.
E) an indecisive siege of Paris by the English.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
9
Compared to the western Europe of 1300,the western Europe of 1450 had _________ people and a(n)_________ standard of living.

A) more; higher
B) fewer; higher
C) fewer; lower
D) more; lower
E) equal; equal
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k this deck
10
The general peace and prosperity of Italy was broken in 1494 when it was invaded by:

A) Ottoman Turks.
B) Germany.
C) France.
D) Spain.
E) England.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
A "noble" in Europe was defined as:

A) an individual who had been born into the class.
B) someone who had achieved the rank by their deeds in war.
C) a person who had achieved wealth through commerce.
D) one who lived according to a particular lifestyle.
E) an individual who had been made such by his king.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
In the early fourteenth century,the agricultural economy in Europe had begun to:

A) fail due to papal restrictions on monastic houses.
B) fail due to climate change and excessive cultivation.
C) regain levels achieved in the late Roman Empire.
D) improve due to rising average temperatures.
E) improve due to more sophisticated trade patterns.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
During the rise of national monarchies,which modern country resisted unification and remained divided among dozens of independent principalities throughout the later Middle Ages?

A) Germany
B) England
C) France
D) Poland
E) Portugal
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The English Peasants' Revolt differed from other revolts and rebellions of the fourteenth century as it was fueled by:

A) a protest against higher taxes.
B) a demand for full employment.
C) governmental corruption.
D) a demand for the end of serfdom.
E) perceived corruption in the Church.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The Holy Roman Empire might be said to be anything but an empire due to:

A) the continual fighting between the territorial princes.
B) periodic fighting between the princes and the emperors.
C) the division of territory by princes among their heirs.
D) the selfish protection and expansion of individual territories by princes.
E) all of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
One means by which the nobility of Europe asserted themselves was through membership in chivalric orders founded by the rulers of various countries.An example of such an order would be the:

A) Order of the Garter.
B) Order of the Phoenix.
C) Knights of Malta.
D) Teutonic Knights.
E) Knights of the Temple of Solomon.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In fifteenth-century Europe,localities could expect a renewed outbreak of plague:

A) every year.
B) every two years.
C) every ten years.
D) every twenty years.
E) every generation.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
England's good fortunes in the Hundred Years' War turned for the bad:

A) when Edward III was taken captive by the dauphin at Crecy.
B) when the French acquired large siege cannons with which to batter English cities.
C) when the French acquired longbows.
D) when the use of chevauchee ruined the land and brought on a famine.
E) when Edward III died, leaving a young Richard to rule.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
After 1450,European towns grew significantly in size and economic power because they:

A) banned monasteries and offered tax breaks for married couples and families.
B) successfully controlled price variations and limited business risk.
C) developed strategies for managing outbreaks of the plague.
D) attracted more people and developed specialized products and services.
E) offered tax incentives to new businesses to locate in the towns.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The battle of Agincourt and its aftermath represents the apex of English supremacy over France in the Hundred Years' War as:

A) the battle was a crushing defeat for the French and from which they never recovered.
B) it led to the French king recognizing Henry V as the heir to the French throne.
C) it secured English control over Normandy, Aquitaine, and Burgundy.
D) the French king, Charles VI, was forced to abdicate in favor of the English king, Henry V.
E) the English retained control of northern France from that point.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The Roman Catholic Church during the later Middle Ages:

A) remained essentially unchanged from the late Roman Empire.
B) came very close to being supplanted by orthodoxy.
C) underwent a radical transformation with the power of the papacy completely dissipated.
D) changed a great deal as it suffered from the same economic hardships caused by the Black Death as the rest of Europe did.
E) returned to its earliest manifestation as a decentralized community of believers who held all property in common.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Boccaccio's Decameron is historically significant because it:

A) recounts an actual pilgrimage trip from London to Canterbury.
B) is written in the vernacular and portrays men and women as they really were.
C) represents the culmination of the late-medieval Latin prose style.
D) describes with great creativity the Church's position on sin, salvation, and hell.
E) recounts the trip the author took through the inferno, Purgatory, and paradise.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
After 1300,the Mongols ruled Russia by:

A) moving their power base to Moscow.
B) controlling local Slavic states and demanding tribute from them.
C) acquiring the grand duchy of Lithuania and using it as a buffer state.
D) adopting western Christianity and receiving assistance from the pope.
E) the systematic use of terror on the civilian population.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The English Lollards were the lay followers and successors of which late-medieval theologian?

A) Jan Zizka
B) Jan Hus
C) Master Eckhart
D) John Wyclif
E) Ulrich Zwingli
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The Golden Horde was:

A) the Mongol dynasty that controlled Russia.
B) the payment for release of King John of France.
C) the name of the Black Prince's new chivalric order of knights.
D) the nickname given to the first Spanish ship to return from the New World.
E) the gold amassed by the English crown after the Hundred Years' War.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The thirteenth century had witnessed the development of the philosophical belief that the world was rational,organized,and comprehensible to human beings.In the fourteenth century,William of Ockham:

A) denied that human reason could prove fundamental theological truths.
B) confirmed such a belief theologically.
C) argued that theological questions could all be resolved through reason, but questions concerning the natural world could not all be so resolved.
D) determined that human reason could resolve nothing with regards to the world, with the exception of the truths of mathematics, provided the axioms were correct.
E) argued that the only knowledge human beings could attain came through divine revelation alone.
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27
The largest multiethnic empire of the premodern world was:

A) the Mongol empire.
B) Byzantium.
C) Russia.
D) the British empire.
E) China.
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28
Although Jan Hus adopted the ideas of John Wyclif,he did diverge from Wyclif in his view:

A) of the centrality of confession.
B) of the primacy of the pope in setting dogma.
C) on the Eucharist being fully available to all people.
D) on Baptism, which he believed was only for adults.
E) on the need for a priesthood.
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29
The theological system called nominalism was based on William of Ockham's fundamental insight that:

A) God is limited in his ability to control human events and circumstances.
B) only individual things, not collective entities, can be known and understood.
C) knowledge gained through experiment is the only trustworthy source of information.
D) the characteristics of a single object can be inferred by making reference to a group.
E) nothing truly exists except in the mind of God.
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30
The rebellion of the Mongol leader Timur the Lame created a power vacuum that allowed:

A) the Byzantine emperor to reclaim territory lost to the Mongol the previous century.
B) the Muscovite grand duke, Ivan III, to launch a series of conquests to forward his imperial agenda.
C) Poland-Lithuania to begin its expansion eastward.
D) the Khanate of the Golden Horde to reclaim its territory surrounding Moscow.
E) the Holy Roman Empire to expand eastward to encompass the lands of the orthodox church.
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31
Moscow replaced _________ as the center of Russian power in the late Middle Ages.

A) Saint Petersburg
B) Kiev
C) Odessa
D) Novgorod
E) Vladivostok
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32
The sacraments of the Church:

A) were valid only if administered by an upstanding priest of good moral character.
B) could be administered by any Christian regardless of his position within the Church.
C) could be negated by an individual who no longer professed to be a Christian.
D) were reserved for those Christians who had passed through all levels of initiation.
E) were valid if administered by a properly ordained priest.
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33
When it fought against Poland-Lithuania in the late fifteenth century,Moscow appealed to its citizens by:

A) asking the pope in Rome for help.
B) joining forces with the Ottoman Turks.
C) emphasizing the Roman Catholicism of Poland-Lithuania.
D) emphasizing the Orthodox beliefs of Poland-Lithuania.
E) emphasizing the large proportion of Jews living in Poland-Lithuania.
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34
Master Eckhart taught that:

A) by renouncing the senses, one could draw inward and ultimately find God.
B) secular leadership of the Church would purify its doctrine and discipline its clergy.
C) the laity should stop attending church and focus instead on the miracles of Christ.
D) the most practical devotional act for the laity was pilgrimage.
E) the laity should renounce marriage and enter monasteries and convents.
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35
The Great Schism ended in 1417 when:

A) the papacy moved its administrative offices back to Rome.
B) the Council of Basel dismissed all rival popes.
C) the pope defeated the consular movement.
D) the Council of Constance elected a new pope.
E) the French king returned the pope to Rome.
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36
Before the fall of Constantinople in 1453,the Byzantine empire tried to shore up its defensive position against the Ottoman Turks by:

A) restoring the ancient office of tsar (Caesar).
B) forging a peace treaty with Ivan the Great.
C) submitting to papal (Roman) authority in religious matters.
D) equipping foot soldiers with hand-held firearms called muskets.
E) agreeing to a mutual defense treaty with England and France.
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37
During the so-called Babylonian Captivity of the fourteenth century,the papacy was:

A) divided between two rival popes.
B) moved to Avignon, France.
C) disbanded for seventy-five years.
D) controlled by the Persian aristocracy.
E) removed from Rome to Babylon.
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38
Compared to the High Middle Ages,the later Middle Ages:

A) was a highpoint for the authority and prestige of the papacy.
B) signaled the beginning of vernacular poetry and popular stories of courtly romance.
C) witnessed the dissolution of significant national governments and bureaucratic institutions.
D) identified nature less with God and more as an entity that could be manipulated to meet human needs.
E) signaled the end of the authority of the Church within Europe.
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39
One way people of the medieval period came to understand the divine in their own lives was through:

A) Magister theologia by Master Eckhart.
B) The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio.
C) Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love by Julianna of Norwich.
D) The Imitation of Christ by Thomas à Kempis.
E) The Book of Margery Kempe by Margery Kempe.
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40
Spain was made whole with the reconquest of 1492 but was not truly a single nation until:

A) 1525.
B) 1648.
C) 1714.
D) 1812.
E) 1918.
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41
Jews were victims of attack by both Christians and Muslims during the plague.
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42
The invention of movable type printing and the printing press made possible:

A) the creation of a bureaucratic class in the major European countries.
B) the creation of universities, not possible prior to printed books.
C) the creation of the entirely new business of bookstores.
D) the Protestant Reformation in the following century.
E) the creation of the modern nation-state.
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43
The development of artillery in late-medieval Europe affected military strategy in that:

A) foot soldiers were no longer useful on the battlefield.
B) mounted knights were no longer useful on the battlefield.
C) stone castles became less viable as defensive strongholds.
D) national monarchies could no longer control rebellious aristocrats.
E) monasteries could now defend themselves as well as any town.
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44
An apparent late-medieval fascination with death and dying might be seen in:

A) aristocratic dress.
B) sermons on the miracles of Christ.
C) literature about the Hundred Years' War.
D) the literature and art of the period.
E) the rise in suicide as the Black Plague spread.
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45
The Flemish painter Rogier van der Weyden expressed piety and the ever present message of the Bible by:

A) presenting biblical figures in contemporary settings.
B) placing contemporary figures in biblical settings.
C) presenting idealized settings of sites in the Holy Land for his portraits.
D) presenting biblical figures in otherworldly settings.
E) renouncing painting and entering a monastery.
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46
The medieval painter Giotto is remembered especially because he:

A) rendered architectural details with photographic precision.
B) specialized in individual portraits, which were highly lifelike.
C) developed a new technique for painting on canvas with oil paints.
D) brought a deep humanity and naturalism to his religious images.
E) developed a new technique for painting on wood using pigment mixed with egg white.
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47
Having been invented during the High Middle Ages,eyeglasses might have been used by:

A) Ivan the Terrible.
B) Giovanni Boccaccio.
C) Giotto di Bondone.
D) Jan van Eyck.
E) Augustine of Hippo.
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48
A fresco painting is essentially:

A) pigment mixed with plaster that is applied to a wall.
B) pigment mixed with egg white that is applied to a wood panel.
C) pigment mixed with oil that is applied to a stretched canvas.
D) an image that is modeled and executed on an outside wall.
E) pigment mixed with oil that is applied to a wall.
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49
When merchants were ennobled by a king or prince,they were expected to abandon their old employment and take up a noble lifestyle.
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50
The conversos were a group of Christians who had secretly converted to Islam in Spain and were the subject of the Inquisition.
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51
The title tsar means "caesar."
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52
One stood a chance of being charged with heresy simply by:

A) having a mystical view of Christianity that did not submit to Church authority.
B) publishing one's ideas, moderate though they might be, in the vernacular.
C) questioning any of the sacraments or the manner in which they were administered.
D) questioning the authority of the pope or Church councils.
E) all of these
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53
The late Middle Ages was a period of aristocratic crisis and peasant prosperity.
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54
It is more a mark of helplessness in King Charles's position than his faith in Joan that he gave troops and authority to Joan of Arc in 1429.
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55
Henry IV's seizure of the crown from Richard was met with a series of rebellions and made it impossible for him to engage in the war with France.
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56
Just as Boccaccio wrote about a group of people telling stories to one another while sitting out the Black Death,_________ wrote about a group of people telling stories to one another while on a pilgrimage.

A) Augustine
B) Chaucer
C) de Pisan
D) di Bondone
E) More
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57
The Black Death struck and disappeared from Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
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58
The Jacquerie was a group of French nobles who were effective in passing legislation against peasant demands for lower prices and an end to serfdom.
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59
What is the central theme of Christine de Pisan's The City of Ladies?

A) The book is an attack on the patriarchal social organization of feudalism.
B) The book describes a mythic journey through Africa in search of powerful "Amazon" women.
C) The book is a courtly romance about love, sacrifice, and betrayal in the tradition of Romance of the Rose.
D) The book is an attack on the failures of the late-medieval clergy.
E) The book is an allegory that defends women against the misogynistic claims of men.
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60
The Black Death moved about 10 miles a day.
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61
In Chapter 10,concordat is defined as a treaty that grants the kings power over the churches in their own territories.
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62
What events sparked the Great Schism,and how was it resolved?
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63
The Lollard movement gained great support in the fourteenth century due to the number of nobles who supported the movement.
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64
What circumstances account for the rebellions between 1300 and 1450?
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65
What were the causes of the Hundred Years' War?
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66
In the rule of the Papal States the pope,as a churchman,was unable to lead armies or make alliances with other princes.
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67
What determined nobility in the late Middle Ages?
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68
Realism and naturalism were the key trends in both art and literature in the late Middle Ages,as opposed to Romanticism.
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69
Compare and contrast the effect of the plague on the towns as opposed to the countryside.
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70
What impact did the Hundred Years' War have on the English and French monarchies?
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71
How did people respond to the plague?
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72
Why did Russia develop so differently from western Europe?
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73
How did the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella change Spain?
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74
The Middle Ages gave rise to few if any intellectual or artistic achievements; such would have to wait until the Renaissance.
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75
In what ways did people of the late Middle Ages show their piety?
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