English Civil War, 30 Years War, Philip II, Latin America, etc. Quiz
1. What English king theorized, lived by, and taught his sons to live by the general theory of Divine Right?
a. James Ib. Charles Ic. Charles IId. James II
2. Divine Right stems from the earlier idea(s) of:
a. The Princeb. Shakespearec. The Great Chain of Beingd.The Instrument of Government
3. Divine Right claims that:
a. Kings are chosen by Godb. Kings are more important that Popesc. Kings are infallibled. All of the above
4. The number one cause of the English Civil War was Charles I’s attempt to:
a. fight without a declaration of warb. tax without the consent of Parliamentc. Invade Irelandd. Invade France.
5. Charles I wanted to prove he was really ______and so he decided to put together a strong empire to counter Spain. To do this he first fought a series of costly wars in ______.
a. Catholic; Franceb. Catholic; the British Islesc. Protestant; Franced. Protestant; the British Isles
6. Once this failed he became determined to try and unite ______.
a. Spain and Franceb. England and the HREc. the British Islesd. Norway, Denmark and Sweden
7. Both of these cost Charles a lot of money, which according to English tradition required him to call Parliament and ask them to ______on his behalf.
a. create a declaration of warb. raise an armyc. levy taxesd. conscript the Irish
8. However Charles and Parliament could not agree and so he ______them for 11 years.
a. disbandedb. arrestedc. didn’t pay them
9. After a few more years of Charles’ rule things were peaceful until he tried to introduce and standardize a new ______in ______, causing riots
a. Magna Carta; Englandb. Book of Common Prayer; Scotlandc. Protestant archbishop; Ireland
10. To subdue those riots, Charles used troops from ______, creating a Religious War (Catholic vs. Protestant) and causinganger in another, Protestant, currently uninvolved country in the British Isles, ______.
a. Wales; Scotlandb. Norway; HREc. Ireland; Englandd. Scotland; Ireland
11. With a mess on his hands, Charles was forced to call Parliament again. When Parliament can back into session they had forgotten their old grievances from 11 years before.
a. trueb. falsec. maybe
12. In order to quell the problems in England, Parliament forced Charles to execute to Thomas Wentworth, the Catholic “governor” of ______, which now made this same country feel unprotected and led to more riots.
a. Englandb. Scotlandc. Irelandd. Wales
13. Feeling that they had made a mess of things, Charles sent his army to ______the leaders of Parliament.
a. executeb. arrestc. honord. conscript
14. This caused Parliament to say it needed to be ______the king, and as a result, it formed its own army.
a. separate fromb. in union withc. equal tod. protected from
15. Who became the leader of Parliament’s army?
a. John Pymb. William Laudc. Oliver Cromwelld. Charles IIe. Dorie Dalzell
16. Colloquially the Parliamentarians were known as ______while the Royalists were known as ______.
a. Protestants; Catholicsb. Catholics; Protestantsc. Roundheads; Cavaliersd. Cavaliers; Roundheads
17. Parliament won every major battle in the English Civil War
a. trueb. false
18. After nine years of fighting Charles I:
a. was caught, tried and executedb. fled to Francec. Tried to enlist the help of Spaind. died in battle
19. After 11 years of having a republic with a Lord Protector, the English asked Charles II to become king in a move known as:
a. The Gunpowder Plotb. The Glorious Revolutionc.The Return of the Kingd. The Restoration
20. After looking at the events of the English Civil War, Thomas Hobbes concluded it was best people be governed by:
a. a republicb. a democracyc. a fundamentalist governmentd. an absolute monarchy
21. After James II tried to make England Catholic again, Parliament invited his daughter and son-in-law to become King and Queen of England in an event known as:
a. The Gunpowder Plotb. The Glorious Revolutionc.The Return of the Kingd. The Restoration
22. Before William and Mary were crowned monarchs, Parliament forced them to sign into law the:
a. Magna Cartab. Petition to the kingc. Leviathand. English Bill of Rights
23. This document (question #22) is drastically different from the U.S. Bill of Rights.
a. trueb. falsec. maybe
24. Why did the founding fathers of the U.S. rebel against England in 1776?
a. They wanted to get rid of an oppressive countryb. They thought their natural rights as Englishmen had been denied.
25. The Thirty Years War began with:
a. the burning of Jan Husb. the Diet of Wormsc. the Augsburg Confessiond. The Defenestration of Prague
26. The Thirty Years War was originally based around ______but became a war based around ______andcreating and maintaining a balance of power.
a. politics; religionb. religion; politicsc natural rights; divine rightd. divine right; natural rights
27. The Thirty Years War had little to no impact on the population of the HRE.
a. trueb. false
28. What ended the Thirty Years War?
a. Peace of Augsburgb. Peace of Versaillesc. Peace of Ghentd. Peace of Westphalia
29. The idea that no country should become too powerful to conquer the rest of Europe is known as:
a. Political Systems Spectrum. b. Balance of Powerc. Structure of Versailles.d. Viceroy Check System.
30. Spain’s prominence as a leader in the Age of Exploration can generally be boiled down to a desire to prove it was:
a. an absolute monarchy.b. a Catholic country c. a power in Europe.d. a united country
31. The Treaty of Tordesilla “split” the world in half for what two powers to explore and conquer?
a. England & France.b. Holy Roman Empire & Sweden.c. Italy & Netherlands.d. Spain & Portugal.
32. Which of the following conflicts did not erode Spanish power?
a. Thirty Years War.b. Spanish Armada.c. Dutch Wars of Religion.d. Reconquista of Iberia
33. ______is the term used for someone born in Iberia who immigrated to Latin America; whereas ______is the term used for someone of Iberian descent born in Latin America
a. Mestizo; Native Americanb. Peninsular; Creolec. Creole; Peninsular d. Native American; Mestizo
34. Spain kept its economy going during the early colonial period by taxing how much of all goods from the New World?
a. One fifth.b. One quarter.c. One third.d. One half.
35. The idea that all people should act in an upstanding manner, similar to the ideas of chivalry, defending one’s reputation and family is known in Latin America as:
a. the caste system b. the peonage systemc. the encomienda systemd. the honor system
36. One of the major problems with Latin American colonial government is that it was very:
a. complicated.b. corrupt.c. revolutionaryd. ecclesiastical
37. Spanish colonies in the new world relied exclusively on slave labor.
a. true. b. false.
38. Hegemony is an example of:
a. hard power.b. soft power.