All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which of the following is true about Italy during the Renaissance?
Over the course of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Italy was extremely peaceful.
Italian city-states transitioned into elected republican governments.
Italy was a conglomeration of various city-states, lacking overall political unity.
All of Italy was ruled by the Holy Roman Empire.
The pope lost all political authority during the sixteenth century.
Italy was a conglomeration of various city-states, lacking overall political unity.
During the Renaissance, Italy consisted of five main city-states: Venice, Milan, Florence, the Papal States, and the Kingdom of Naples, each with its own system of government. There were struggles for power among these various political entities, and their internal and external struggles made Italy vulnerable to invasion. Continental powers (notably the French and Austrians under Charles V) fought for territorial control in Italy in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
Example Question #2 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
The Peace of Augsburg (1555) allowed for which of the following?
The accession of Phillip II to the Spanish throne
The end of intermittent warfare between northern Italian states and Austria
The ability of German princes to each choose the religion of their own territories
The quashing of Lutheranism in the German states
The end of the Thirty Years' War
The ability of German princes to each choose the religion of their own territories
In the wake of the Protestant reformation, some German princes embraced Lutheranism for myriad reasons, which increased political division within the German states of the Holy Roman Empire. Charles V and the French Valois dynasty went to war repeatedly throughout the sixteenth century, and much of the fighting took place in Germany. The French kings tended to support Lutheran princes to promote disunity and defy Charles V. Eventually, Charles V accepted the Peace of Augsburg, which recognized Lutheranism and permitted German princes to choose whether their states would be Catholic or Lutheran.
Example Question #3 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
What marked the end of the Thirty Years' War?
The Treaty of Paris
The Treaty of Ghent
The Peace of Utrecht
The Peace of Brandenburg
The Peace of Westphalia
The Peace of Westphalia
The Peace of Westphalia marked the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648. In Germany, it reinforced the previous stipulations of the Peace of Augsuburg, with the addition that Calvinism was also permissible. The northern German states were largely Protestant; the southern German states were Catholic.
Example Question #4 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which British Prime Minister is credited with appeasing Adolf Hitler?
Oliver Cromwell
Tony Blair
Winston Churchill
David Cameron
Neville Chamberlain
Neville Chamberlain
Neville Chamberlain was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1937 to 1940. He tried to maintain peace for his people, as the British were still weary from World War I. The strategy of appeasement had been used on Hitler since 1935, but the most notable measure of it was granting the Sudetenland, part of Czechoslovakia which had a large German population, to Germany, which Chamberlain agreed to in 1938. Hitler then conquered the rest of Czechoslovakia, which outraged Britain and France, but there was little else they could do at that point. When Hitler threatened to invade Poland, he was warned that it would mean war, and upon his invasion in 1939, Britain and France declared war on Germany.
Example Question #5 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which of the following was a major cause of the Thirty Years' War?
Growing animosity between England and France
Disunity between the Austrian and Spanish branches of the Hapsburg dynasties
Overwhelming Dutch support for Catholic causes in Germany
German attempts to acquire far-flung colonies in defiance of Austria and Spain
Rivalries in Germany between Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist interests
Rivalries in Germany between Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist interests
The Thirty Years' War erupted when the Peace of Augsburg (1555) no longer seemed to be sufficient to keep the peace in the various German states; the growth of Calvinism, which was not accounted for in the previous treaty, further threatened the status quo. Lutheran princes formed a Protestant Union (1608), and Catholic princes formed the Catholic League (1609). Tensions came to a head in 1618, when Protestants in Bohemia threw the representatives of a Catholic king out of a window (the Defenestration of Prague). The war lasted for thirty years, with both the Austrian and Spanish Hapsburgs siding with the Catholic princes.
Example Question #1 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which of these statements about the Edict of Nantes is NOT true?
It was revoked by King Louis XIV.
It was issued by King Henry IV.
It extended religious tolerance to some Protestants within the Kingdom of France.
All of these statements are true.
It can be understood as an extension of the Edict of St. Germain.
All of these statements are true.
The Edict of Nantes was issued in 1598 by the French King Henry IV. It brought to an end the French Wars of Religion, which had raged violently for almost forty years. The Edict extended religious tolerance to Calvinists (known as Huguenots) within the Kingdom of France, although they were still persecuted on both a state and local level on a frequent basis. The Edict was revoked in 1685 by King Louis XIV, who issued the Edict of Fontainebleau. The Edict of Nantes can also be understood as an extension of the Edict of St. Germain, which was issued by Catherine de Medici during the period of time when she reigned as regent of the French Kingdom. The Edict of St. Germain allowed for French Calvinists to worship privately, but was widely ignored and came at the height of tensions between the Catholic and Protestant populations, tensions that would very soon break out into civil war through the French Wars of Religion.
Example Question #1 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
The Peace of Utrecht ended which country’s designs on hegemony on the European continent?
France
Sweden
Great Britain
Austria
Spain
France
The Peace of Utrecht ended the War of Spanish Succession (1701-1714). The War of Spanish Succession broke out when King Charles II, the last Hapsburg monarch of Spain, died childless and without a clear legitimate heir to the throne. It was Charles’ wish that the throne, and the entire Spanish colonial inheritance, be left to Philip, Duke of Anjou, who just so happened to be the grandson of the French King Louis XIV. During this time period, the Kingdom of France was growing dramatically in power and influence, and the idea of a Kingdom of France and Spain, with all their overseas holdings, all under the dominion of King Louis XIV, troubled the other ruling princes of Europe, who were worried that France would become a hegemonic power and upset the balance of power in Europe. The Peace of Utrecht allowed Philip to inherit the Spanish throne on the condition that he renounce any future claims to being King of France.
Example Question #6 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which of these conflicts was ended by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle?
The War of Austrian Succession
The War of Spanish Succession
The French Wars of Religion
The Seven Years’ War
The Napoleonic Wars
The War of Austrian Succession
The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was signed in 1748 and brought to an end the hostilities of the Austrian War of Succession. The Treaty was understood, even at the time, as little more than a truce, particularly between France and Great Britain, as it settled few of their disputes over North America, Europe, and the Indian subcontinent. These issues would reemerge only six years later with the outbreak of the Seven Years’ War.
Example Question #7 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
Which of these representatives is incorrectly matched with the nation he represented at the Congress of Vienna?
Viscount Castlereagh - Great Britain
Prince Metternich - Prussia
Alexander I - Russia
They are all correctly matched.
Talleyrand - France
Prince Metternich - Prussia
The Congress of Vienna convened in 1815 to decide how to divide Europe among the major European powers in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars. All of these representatives are correctly matched except for Prince Metternich, who was the Austrian diplomatic representative. Prussia was represented by Karl von Hardenberg.
Example Question #1 : Treaties; Diplomacy; International Organizations
The Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 was designed to ensure that __________.
the Italian city states would remain divided and in constant economic competition with one another
the Hapsburg imperial possessions could be inherited by a woman
the Dutch Provinces would be unable to rebel due to external pressure from the major European powers
the French would not become a hegemonic power in Europe
the British would not gain territory on the European continental mainland
the Hapsburg imperial possessions could be inherited by a woman
The Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 was issued by the Hapsburg ruler Charles VI to ensure that in the event of there being no legitimate male heir, his throne and the various inheritances of the Hapsburgs would pass to his eldest daughter Maria Theresa. Prior to the Pragmatic Sanction, ancient German law prevented a daughter from inheriting lands and titles from her father. Charles VI did indeed die without leaving a legitimate male hair and Maria Theresa did succeed him as ruler of Austria and the diverse Hapsburg lands, but her accession nonetheless resulted in the outbreak of conflict in 1740 with the War of Austrian Succession.