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heliocentrism |
Johannes Kepler |
Niccolo Machiavelli |
how to change lead into gold |
Johannes Kepler |
printing press |
False |
Albrecht Durer |
Andreas Vesalius |
reflected everyday life |
Henry VIII |
True |
Society of Jesus, or Jesuits |
Martin Luther posted his Ninety-Five Theses on a church door. |
indulgences |
printing press |
John Calvin |
France |
True |
Ferdinand Magellan |
Portuguese, as they were permitted to control that territory east of the imaginary line established in the Treaty of Tordesillas. |
Spain |
slaves from the Africans for labor. |
an economic theory that stressed the importance of colonies as sources of raw materials |
horse |
Africans became educated and translated correspondence between the French and Native Americans. |
production of blue-and-white porcelain |
False |
Sunni |
The Hagia Sophia Cathedral was demolished when Ottomans took control |
samurai |
belief in religious toleration |
The Tokugawa shoguns closed the country's borders which permitted its own unique culture to develop. |
Cervantes |
He brought elements of Western culture to Russia in effort to modernize the nation. |
Napoleon |
Thomas Jefferson |
The revolution was an attempt to break free from the motherland and create a new nation. |
Louis XVI |
Nicolaus Copernicus |
John Locke |
The Spanish Armada sent by Philip II was successful in defeating the English. |
laissez-faire |
He was hired by the National Child Labor Committee to identify ways factory owners could hide the exploitation of children to make more money. |
Thomas Edison |
The Industrial Revolution brought about the middle class, who had free time to travel and enjoy leisurely activities. |
true |
Henry Ford |
Great Britain |
Hundreds of protesters were shot after Father Gapon led them to the Winter Palace to demand reform; this was known as Bloody Sunday. |
Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín |
imperialism |
Matthew Perry |
Haiti |
Germany |
Britain |
Berlin Conference |
the desire of European nations to remain isolated, not forging relationships with neighbors |
Vladimir Lenin |
Austria-Hungary |
Mohandas Gandhi |
Treaty of Versailles |
Bloody Sunday. |
Manifest destiny |
He sold a large portion of central North America to President Jefferson for $15 million. |
U-boats |
Indians began to develop a transportation network of railroads, roads, and canals to make it easier to fight the British. |
India |
President Franklin D. Roosevelt started the New Deal. |
False |
the Long March |
President Roosevelt's New Deal |
Michelangelo |
heliocentrism |
the secret of eternal life |
Great thinkers looked to the accomplishments of the Middle Ages as inspiration. |
Galileo Galilee |
False |
Johannes Gutenberg |
Leonardo da Vinci |
Niccolo Machiavelli |
The Catholic Church started selling indulgences. |
humanism |
Rome and Greece |
reflection of everyday life |
Albrecht Dürer |
True |
Albrecht Durer |
True |
Andreas Vesalius |
William Shakespeare |
Council of Trent |
True |
True |
reflected everyday life |
Saint Peter's Basilica |
Johannes Kepler |
Akbar |
Peter the Great |
Karl Marx |
He was successful in uniting all of Europe in his Continental System. |
middle class |
England |
Ming |
ukiyo-e |
Communist ideology |
Louis Pasteur |
Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes |
samurai |
capitalism |
England |
Lewis Hine |
The Ottomans refused to permit anyone in the region that was not a Muslim. |
France |
England |
The first factories were powered by steam engines, but later converted to water mills because coal was scarce. |
Sunni Islam |
True |
true |
India |
Germany wanted to cut through Belgium to have easier access to France. |
Manifest destiny |
Armenians |
November 11, 1918 |
Russia |
Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism |
Haiti |
President Roosevelt's New Deal |
Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín |
the Long March |
Germany |
China |
the desire of European nations to remain isolated, not forging relationships with neighbors |
U-boats |
Egypt |
Haiti |
Austria-Hungary |
Austria-Hungary |
trench warfare |
President Franklin D. Roosevelt started the New Deal. |
He sold a large portion of central North America to President Jefferson for $15 million. |
Jewish businesses, places of worship, and homes were burned and destroyed during Kristallnacht. |
Winston Churchill in England |
It became an industrialized nation under strong military leaders. |
Joseph Stalin |
Japan |
fascism |
Hitler established the Nuremberg Laws, providing more rights to the Jews living in Germany. |
In Germany, Jewish-owned stores, homes, and places of worship were destroyed in a planned attack. |
An alliance was formed between Germany and the United States. |
They were forced to relocate to internment camps. |
blitzkrieg |
Winston Churchill |
True |
the Soviet Union |
containment. |
Robert Oppenheimer |
NATO and the Warsaw Pact |
the United States and the Soviet Union |
The Nuremberg Trials lasted nearly four years, and many key German leaders were found guilty and sentenced to death. |
racial segregation in American schools |
President Richard Nixon developed the theory of detente, in which two SALT treaties were created to increase U.S. holdings of nuclear weapons and anti-ballistic missiles. |
true |
Czechoslovakia |
Cuba |
His brother, Raul, has taken Fidel's place. |
France |
the North American Free Trade Agreement |
Argentina |
Mao Zedong |
false |
Hundreds of pro-democracy protesters were killed by the Chinese government. |
Israel |
true |
South Africa |
Iraq and Kuwait |
He was a farmer. |
Akbar |
Indians began to develop a transportation network of railroads, roads, and canals to make it easier to fight the British. |
Calvinist churches were filled with music. |
He was successful in uniting all of Europe in his Continental System. |
Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes |
Sunni Islam |
Galileo Galilei |
heliocentrism |
how to change lead into gold |
Catherine of Aragon |
A religious figure pardoned one's sins and could reduce the amount of time in purgatory if money was paid to the Church. |
ukiyo-e |
to give up their land in Europe to Chinese invaders |
Portugal |
Henry Hudson |
France |
Portugal |
Spain |
Spain |
Johannes Kepler |
Ming |
Austria-Hungary |
November 11, 1918 |
John Calvin and Ulrich Zwingli |
Martin Luther |
Peter the Great |
England |
The Ottomans refused to permit anyone in the region that was not a Muslim. |
China |
Germany wanted to cut through Belgium to have easier access to France. |
Ferdinand Magellan |
samurai |
England |
horses. |
England |
Manifest destiny |
In 1905, a Russian priest named Father Gapon led a group of protesters to the Winter Palace seeking reforms for the people of Russia. Several hundred protesters were shot and killed in what has come to be known as |
Louis Pasteur |
Armenians |
France |
He sold a large portion of central North America to President Jefferson for $15 million. |
Haiti |
Andreas Vesalius |
The first factories were powered by steam engines, but later converted to water mills because coal was scarce. |
Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism |
Russia |
trench warfare |
Mohandas Gandhi |
Joseph Stalin |
the Soviet Union |
Japan |
The United States refused to sell oil to Japan. |
Germany conquered the Soviet Union and exiled Joseph Stalin to Siberia. |
Businesses and homes of Jews were destroyed in an organized violent attack. |
Japan |
Robert Oppenheimer |
Holocaust |
An alliance was formed between Germany and the United States. |
Germans |
Austria and Sudetenland |
President Truman ordered that two atomic bombs be dropped on Japan. |
Winston Churchill in England |
communism |
after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor |
The Marshall Plan |
60 million |
Poland |
Poland |
The Nuremberg Trials lasted nearly four years, and many key German leaders were found guilty and sentenced to death. |
Robert Oppenheimer |
It became an industrialized nation under strong military leaders. |
In Germany, Jewish-owned stores, homes, and places of worship were destroyed in a planned attack. |
Winston Churchill |
Mikhail Gorbachev |
Pro-democracy protesters were killed by government troops. |
increasing the number of anti-ballistic missiles, which were used to shoot down missiles |
false |
India |
Iraq |
Members of terrorist groups are scattered throughout the world, so there is no one clear target. |
South Africa |
Israel |
the poor working class |
the United States |
Pakistan |
a free trade agreement between all three nations, which cut tariffs on imports |
Fidel Castro |
The Soviets placed missiles in Cuba. |
Pope John Paul II |
Boris Yeltsin |
pull the nation out of economic troubles. |
Lech Walesa |