All AP World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
Which of the following lists, ordered from roles of greatest to least influence, most closely reflects the feudal hierarchy of Medieval Europe?
Monarchs, Nobles, Knights, Free Peasants, Serfs
Monarchs, Merchants, Peasants, Knights, Artisans
Republican Patricians, Merchants, Knights, Tenant Farmers
Nobles, Knights, Free Peasants, Priests, Merchants
Clerics, Landowning Farmers, Merchants, Artisans, Slaves
Monarchs, Nobles, Knights, Free Peasants, Serfs
The feudal system was organized with Monarchs as the primary rulers, whose rule was supported by Nobles. These nobles then had retinues of knights who served as professional soldiers. Below knights were free peasants who were not tied to the land, unlike the lowest rank of society -indentured peasants or serfs.
Example Question #2 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
Although the Japanese samurai were a social class traditionally associated with swordsmanship, originally they were ______________.
musketeers
infantry using tridents and nets
cavalry archers
naval officers
infantry pikemen
cavalry archers
The samurai were originally cavalry archers.
Although many samurai were proficient with spears and pikes, they were originally cavalry archers.
Although there may have been some individual exceptions, the samurai were not known to ever use nets and tridents.
Eventually the samurai became proficient with firearms like muskets, but only just before their extinction as a distinct social group.
Japan did have a maritime tradition, but the samurai were never a large part of that tradition.
Example Question #3 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
During the High Middle Ages, in Europe, jousting was a good way for ________________.
rulers to get rid of excess population
poor people to become rich.
heavy cavalry to prove themselves in an era of increased firearms usage
horse archers to prove their worth against lance bearing cavalry
young warriors to hone their skills
young warriors to hone their skills
Jousting afforded young knights excellent experience, if they survived.
A tiny proportion of the European population was involved in jousting, the male, aristocratic, warrior youths.
Poor people could not afford the expensive armor needed to joust, let alone the horse and years of training.
Heavy cavalry was well proven during the High Middle Ages. Only in the late Middle Ages did heavy cavalry lose their preponderance on the battlefield, as firearms technology enabled faster, unarmored, pistol bearing cavalry to shoot the slower, heavy horses out from under their riders.
Jousting was done with a lance, never a bow.
Example Question #4 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
What was the result of the new English and French restrictions and taxes upon the peasantry following the outbreak of plague?
Mass peasant migration into cities
Moral opposition from the clergy
Further decline in the peasant population
Popular peasant uprisings
Popular peasant uprisings
In an effort to cope with the economic instability caused by the plague, the English and French governments passed a series of restrictive laws and tax increases directed at the peasantry. In particular, France raised “tailles” or taxes specifically upon peasants, while England instituted the Statute of Laborers to prevent any wage increases and to make it as difficult as possible for any peasant to be legally permitted to leave their master’s lands. The two nations hoped that these new policies would bring increased revenue into governmental coffers and would also help preserve the crumbling social system, built upon peasant labor and exploitation, which the Black Death had badly eroded. Instead, as might be expected, these measures had quite the contrary effect – across England and France, outraged peasants, furious at what they saw as government insensitivity and worsening of their suffering, staged mass revolts.
Example Question #5 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
Which social class, in both France and England, suffered the greatest deprivations during the course of the Hundred Years’ War?
The peasantry
The clergy
Small landowners
The landed nobility
The peasantry
Although the Hundred Years’ War inflicted pain upon the entirety of both the French and English populations, in both countries, the peasantry was the most devastated of all social groups. This is largely due to the fact that prior to the war’s outbreak, the peasants were already the most vulnerable and troubled social class – their lowly status, coupled with their confinement to their masters’ lands, a lack of education, and chronic malnutrition, meant that any sufferings brought on by the war would already weaken them even further. Furthermore, the French and English governments compounded the peasants’ suffering by recruiting (either willingly or unwillingly) nearly every male of fighting age into the army – and the category of fighting age was set rather low. The national governments also raised taxes on the peasants and forced them to provide more services (such as food and raw materials) for either a reduced price or entirely for free, with the excuse of the necessity of the war effort as justification.
Example Question #6 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
What name is given to the Japanese feudal code of conduct that resembles the European concept of chivalry?
Daimyo
Seppuku
Shogunate
Bushido
Hokkaido
Bushido
The Japanese feudal code Bushido closely resembles the European concept of chivalry. Bushido means “way of the warrior” and it refers to a set of codes which define the values of Japanese samurai - stressing honor and loyalty above all other values. Both bushido and chivalry were necessary concepts to provide legitimacy to the feudal system.
Example Question #7 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
Which of these statements about merchants in the Byzantine Empire is most accurate?
Merchants were exiled by the extremely austere and severe Byzantine government
Merchants were widely respected due to their role in protecting the port
Merchants were held in high esteem due to the importance of trade to the empire
Merchants were relegated to an inferior class due to the supposedly unpleasant nature of their work
Merchants were condemned due to their supposedly ungodly practices
Merchants were held in high esteem due to the importance of trade to the empire
Trade was vital to the power and growth of the Byzantine Empire - situated as it was at the center of the known world, between North Africa, Europe, and Asia. As a result merchants in the Byzantine Empire were held in very high esteem and many contributed to the governing of society.
Example Question #7 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
The Mamluk concept of furusiyya might be compared to __________.
the Indian concept of karma
the French concept of Divine Right of Kings
the European concept of chivalry
the Aboriginal concept of dreamtime
the Chinese concept of Mandate of Heaven
the European concept of chivalry
Furusiyya is a Mamluk code of behavior that emerged when the Mamluks served as slave-warriors for the Abbasid Caliphate and was strengthened after they gained their independence and formed the Mamluk Sultanate. Furusiyya was a code of behavior for knights and warriors and was comparable to the European concept of chivalry.
Example Question #8 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
In which of these societies were merchants most esteemed during the medieval era?
Chinese
European
Southeast Asian
Ottoman
Indian
European
The status of merchants rose in European society during the medieval era more quickly than the status of merchants elsewhere. In European society, merchants were only behind the aristocracy and knights in the social hierarchy, whereas elsewhere they might be behind civil servants, scholars, priests, artisans, or even peasants.
Example Question #10 : Socioeconomic Classes 600 Ce To 1450
Which of these best describes the relationship between traditional elites and merchants during the early medieval period?
Elites generally viewed merchants with disgust and believed that trade should be illegal.
Elites generally viewed merchants favorably and were eager to profit from the growth of trade.
None of these answers accurately describes the relationship between elites and merchants during the early medieval period.
Elites generally viewed merchants favorably and engaged in many trading ventures of their own.
Elites generally viewed merchants with disdain and were reluctant to welcome them into the upper class.
Elites generally viewed merchants with disdain and were reluctant to welcome them into the upper class.
During the early medieval period, the upper classes of societies had generally already been established. The elites in society were the landowning classes. During this period, however, the growth of trade meant that some merchants grew immensely wealthy. The elites, in the vast majority of societies, viewed merchants disdainfully and were very reluctant to welcome merchants into the upper class.