Rights; Liberties; Persecution - AP European History

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Question

This concept emerged during the Enlightenment as a theocratic application of natural law.

Answer

Deism is the belief in a “watchmaker god,” a god who created the universe with a series of natural laws and then sat back and allowed the development of the universe to unfold. Deism emerged during the Enlightenment as a theocratic application of Enlightenment theories on natural law. It was widely embraced by Enlightenment thinkers, including Newton, Thomas Jefferson, and Voltaire and involved the rejection of the established Christian order in Europe.

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Question

French Protestants, inspired by Calvin, were called __________.

Answer

Protestantism did not take quick and dramatic root in France, as it did in many other European countries during the Protestant Reformation; however, by the middle of the sixteenth century, roughly an eighth of the French population was a “Huguenot,” or a French Calvinist. A series of proclamations encouraging, then revoking, toleration of religious freedom came to a head at the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, when the Catholic population of the city, urged on by certain members of government, massacred the Huguenot population.

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Question

The establishment of the English Bill of Rights occurred immediately after __________.

Answer

Throughout much of the seventeenth century, the relationship between Parliament, the people, and the monarchy was fraught to say the least. It first came to a head in the 1640s with the English Civil War and the execution of Charles I; however, when the English people tired of Cromwell and his Puritan government they invited the monarchy back into power. Once again the monarch (this time James II) managed to offend the people and Parliament by attempting to encourage toleration of Catholics in the Kingdom. This led Parliament to effectively “invite” William to invade (somewhat peacefully) from the Netherlands and take the English crown for himself. As James II fled and there was almost no bloodshed, it is called The Glorious Revolution in British parlance. Once William and Mary were established as ruling monarchs of England, Parliament was in no mood to court the absolute power of Kings again and insisted on the establishment of the English Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights limits the power of the Crown and describes the powers reserved for Parliament.

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Question

Which event in the twentieth century most dramatically accelerated the movement towards female suffrage in Europe?

Answer

The female suffrage movement really took off in the middle of the nineteenth century, but was unable to gain much ground in European society until early in the twentieth century. The turning point was the outbreak of World War One, when so many men were forced away from their workplaces to fight, and die, on the battlefield. After the women of this time period were given new responsibilities, they demanded new rights to go with them, and many governments found that they no longer could withhold the right to vote from women. The majority of European governments extended the right to vote to women either during or shortly after World War One; however, notable late adopters include France in 1944, Italy in 1947, and Switzerland in 1971.

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Question

Under Napoleon’s Civil Code, women were __________.

Answer

Under Napoleon’s Civil Code, the gains made by the previous generations of women were reversed and women were deprived of many of the rights they had temporarily enjoyed, such as the right to freely divorce and own property. France returned to the extremely patriarchal society of the Ancien Regime.

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Question

The Revolutions of 1848 were largely similar in arguing for __________.

Answer

Throughout 1848, revolutions spread through France, the German States, Poland, Austria, Hungary, and Denmark. While all stemming from different internal causes, the revolutionaries were largely arguing for universal suffrage, liberal governments, and widespread democratic ideals. The revolutions ended a number of monarchies and enacted some reforms, but were largely reversed by reactionary movements within just a few years.

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Question

All of these theories on government emerged during the Enlightenment except __________.

Answer

All of these theories emerged during the Enlightenment except for the Divine Right of Kings, which had its origins in the autocratic monarchies of the centuries that preceded the Enlightenment. The Divine Right of Kings stated that the right of the king to rule was divinely ordained by God and that to resist the king was therefore to resist the will of God.

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Question

“Man was born free, and everywhere he is in chains.”

The above quotation can best be attributed to __________.

Answer

The above quotation is the most famous quotation attributed to the French Enlightenment philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in The Social Contract. It reflects his belief that man is born free in a state of nature, but is corrupted and imprisoned by the constructs and constraints of society.

Quotation adapted from The Social Contract & Discourses by Jean-Jaques Rousseau (1762; 1920 J. M. Dent & Sons ed.)

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Question

Marquis de Condorcet is best known for his __________.

Answer

Marquis de Condorcet was a French Enlightenment thinker and writer who is popularly remembered for his writings advocating for equal rights for women and minorities. He remains an influential early feminist writer as well as influential in other areas of philosophy and political theory.

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Question

The feminist movement was born in Europe during __________.

Answer

The feminist movement emerged for the first time in Europe during the Enlightenment. Female writers like Mary Wollstonecraft did a great deal to advance the cause of female independence, and women made slow progress during the Enlightenment period. It was the first time that Europeans began to collectively consider the role and subjugation of women in European society.

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Question

According to Thomas Hobbes, the role of the state is __________.

Answer

Thomas Hobbes was an Enlightenment philosopher who is usually contrasted against John Locke. Both men wrote extensively on the state of nature, the social contract, and the role of the state, but came to very different conclusions. While Locke believed the role of the state was to preserve each individual’s right to life, liberty, and property ownership, Hobbes believed that the role of the state was to protect each individual from the aggression of other individuals. Hobbes had little faith in mankind in its natural state and believed the state existed to prevent people from killing one another and stealing from one another.

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Question

Which of these statements about the status of women in the Renaissance is most accurate?

Answer

During the Renaissance, the status of upper- and middle-class women suffered dramatically. Women’s minds were considered inadequate for higher learning, and women’s bodies were considered to be owned by their father or husband. Noticeably, the standard punishment for rape across Europe changed dramatically from the Medieval period (castration or death) to the Renaissance period (a fine payable to the father or husband). The status of peasant women remained relatively stable during the transition from the Medieval period to the Renaissance period.

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Question

Why was the impact of the Renaissance felt less keenly in Spain than elsewhere in Western Europe?

Answer

During the Renaissance period, the Spanish government enforced a strict religious orthodoxy that prevented the spread of Renaissance ideals like individualism and faith in the ability of humans. Furthermore, the Jews and the Muslims, who made up much of Spain's middle classes, were forced to leave the country, taking with them the resources and inclination that might have spread Renaissance values in Spain.

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Question

After Cromwell and the Roundheads defeated the Scottish during the English Civil War, Cromwell was able to force __________ out of Parliament, allowing him to solidify control over the government.

Answer

Cromwell defeated the Scottish forces during the English Civil War, which allowed him to take full control over Parliament. You might not have known the correct answer, but you should know that Scottish Calvinists were called Presbyterians, and that if Cromwell defeated the Scottish, he would be able to force the Scottish religious group out of Parliament. After he took control of Parliament, it voted to execute King Charles for treason.

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Question

Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Men was written as a retort to the conservative writings of __________.

Answer

Mary Wollstonecraft is most famous for her Enlightenment feminist work A Vindication of the Rights of Woman; however, she was also a notable advocate for republicanism and a supporter of the French Revolution. In A Vindication of the Rights of Men, Wollstonecraft attacks the conservative arguments that Edmund Burke had made in Reflections of the Revolution in France.

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Question

Which of these statements best reflects the view of Thomas Hobbes on the basic rights of humankind?

Answer

Thomas Hobbes was a famous Enlightenment-era thinker whose opinion that the life of people in an ungoverned state of nature is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” is usually contrasted against John Locke’s belief in natural human rights. Hobbes would contend that people only have the right to that which they can protect for themselves.

Quotation adapted from Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes (1651; ed. A. R. Waller, 1904 ed.)

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Question

Pugachev's Rebellion happened during the reign of __________.

Answer

Pugachev's Rebellion happened in Russia during the reign of the so-called "enlightened despot" Catherine the Great. It began as a rebellion of the Cossacks and some of the Russian nobility and spread rapidly through the peasantry until it was quashed violently by the forces of Tsarist Russia.

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Question

The Civil Constitution of the Clergy __________ .

Answer

The Civil Constitution of the Clergy was adopted by the National Assembly in 1790, during the first state of the French Revolution. It established that all clergymen were to be elected by the population and were prohibited from owing allegiance to the authority of the Vatican.

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Question

The persecution of Jews and Muslims in Spain in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was primarily undertaken in order to __________.

Answer

For centuries, Spain had been a region divided into various kingdoms, and had a famously wealthy polyglot society. Beginning with the reign of Isabella and Ferdinand over a united Spain, however, the Jews and Muslims were persecuted and forced to flee the country. The primary motivation was to centralize power under the new Spanish monarchs and develop a cohesive Spanish national identity that was centered around Catholicism.

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Question

During the reign of King Louis XIV of France, the French kingdom racked up huge debts. This would contribute to the outbreak of revolution a century later because the __________ was the only part of the population subject to taxation in order to pay off these debts.

Answer

King Louis XIV’s many wars and extravagant building works (like the palace at Versailles) contributed to the “golden era” of France, but they also mired the whole country in exorbitant debt. In French society in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, only the Third Estate (the peasantry and the lower middle class) was subject to taxation. As the debt kept climbing, so did the rate of taxation of the poorest in French society. This would directly contribute to the outbreak of the French Revolution.

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