Religions 600 CE to 1450 - AP World History

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Question

In which century was Islam founded?

Answer

Islam was founded by the Prophet Muhammad in the seventh century CE. It is an Abrahamic religion, which means it continues the same monotheistic tradition as Judaism and Christianity. Islam spread extremely rapidly around the Middle East and North Africa in the centuries after its foundation.

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Question

Mansa Musa, Emperor of Mali, made a famous pilgrimage to Mecca as he was a devout _____________.

Answer

Mansa Musa was a devout Muslim; pilgrimage to Mecca is considered a holy commandment by many devout Muslims. Devout Christians and Jews view Jerusalem as the holiest city and the most important pilgrimage site. Mali has never had a large Hindu or Buddhist community, nor have they ever had a ruler practice either of those religions.

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Question

Which sect of Christianity is most closely associated with Iconography?

Answer

The use of Icons to depict saints, the messiah, and Mary became synonymous with the orthodox churches of the Byzantine and Russian Empires. Quakerism, Puritanism, and Calvinism are all branches of Protestantism that admonished the Catholic traditions of iconography that they claim broke the commandment against idol worship.

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Question

Which religious practice is a fusion of Islamic and Hindu influences?

Answer

Sikhism emerged from the spread of Islamic powers into the Indian Sub-Continent. Because of its geo-political beginnings, Sikhism remains strongest in the southern part of Pakistan and Northern India where the two cultures clashed.

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Question

Which principle of Islam can be interpreted to mean "Holy War"?

Answer

Jihad refers to "struggle" while for some it means a struggle for purity and faith, others interpret it as a duty to protect the Islam faith by destroying threats (including non believers). The other terms refer to pillars of Islam such as charity, prayer, fasting, and pilgrimage.

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Question

What is the name of the Islamic Caliphate that descended from the Prophet Muhammad's uncle? They ruled an Islamic empire from their capital in Baghdad that lasted from 750 to 1258.

Answer

The Abbasid Caliphate was founded by descendants of the Prophet Muhammad's uncle, al-Abbas and overthrew the Umayyad Caliphate.

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Question

Which of the following is notone of the Five Pillars of Islam?

Answer

Muhammad and his followers fled to the city of Medina in 622 C.E., a date which marks the beginning of the Muslim calendar. For this reason, Medina is very significant to the history of Islam, but Muhammad's home city of Mecca is the designated location of the Hajj, or pilgrimage.

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Question

Which of the following is not one of the Five Pillars of Islam?

Answer

Faith--the belief that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his Prophet--is the missing pillar here, not marriage.

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Question

Which of these is not an ideological difference that contributed to the schism between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches?

Answer

The Virgin birth is a core tenet of Christian faith. The others are all examples of practices that different factions within the Church debated.

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Question

Which of the following is not a pillar of Islam?

Answer

Muslim clerics are encouraged to marry and have families in contrast to the Catholic Church. The other four listed answers are, indeed, pillars of Islam. The fifth pillar of Islam (not listed) refers to the purity of faith.

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Question

Which of the following societies was not defined by the belief in a polytheistic religion?

Answer

The Ottoman Empire was filled with believers of Judaism, Orthodox Christianity, and Islam, all monotheistic religions. The Mughal Empire was characterized by the peaceful co-existence of Muslim and Hindu believers. Ancient Greece was characterized by a polytheistic religious belief system, as were Ancient Greece and Egypt, as well as the Aztec Empire.

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Question

Which of the following best describes the source of the ideological split between Shiite and Sunni Muslims?

Answer

The original source of the break between Shiite and Sunni Muslims was the line of succession to the caliphate, or leadership, of the Islamic Empire after Muhammad's death. While Sunnis hold Ali in high regard, they do not believe that the caliphate needed to follow his line of succession. Although the fall of the Umayyad Dynasty and its replacement with the Abbasid Dynasty was brought about by Shiites, this event did not initiate the Shiite/Sunni split. Both sides were in favor of expanding the empire.

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Question

Which of the following is a belief shared by Judaism, Christianity, and Islam?

Answer

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam were the earliest religions to practice monotheism, or belief in a single god. While all three religions trace their origins to the prophet Abraham, only Jews consider him to be the founder of their faith. As members of the first monotheistic religion, Jews also see themselves as chosen ones, and do not place much emphasis on converting others to their faith. Neither Jews nor Muslims believe that Jesus was the son of God.

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Question

Which of the following correctly contrasts Orthodox Christianity in the Byzantine Empire with Roman Catholicism after the fall of the Roman Empire?

Answer

After the fall of the Roman Empire, the Roman Catholic Church became the most powerful institution in early medieval Europe. It was highly centralized, and therefore held a great deal of power over local rulers. The Catholic Church also mandated that services and prayers be performed only in Latin. On the other hand, the Orthodox Church of the Byzantines functioned as the official religion of a secular empire. It disagreed with the Roman Catholic Church on many points of theology, such as the Catholic concept of the Holy Trinity.

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Question

Select the correct rationale that led the Catholic Church to move its papal headquarters from Rome to Avignon in 1309.

Answer

For several years prior to the papal move to Avignon, the Pope had been involved in numerous instances of confrontations, arguments, and other high-pressure situations with both the English King Edward I and the French ruler Philip IV. King Philip IV was particularly persistent and oppositional, challenging several Popes – both Pope Boniface VIII and Pope Benedict XI faced off against Philip IV, struggling to assert political dominance and expand their influence over the French king. Philip IV was equally determined not to cede dominance within French territory to the Papacy; he felt that as the French monarch, the ultimate influence over the French people, both politically and religiously, should stem from his direction. After numerous instances of conflict, including an incident in 1303 in which the French Army attacked Boniface VIII and nearly killed him, the new Pope Clement V made the fateful decision to move himself and his Papacy outside of French reach. To that end, in 1309, Pope Clement V departed Rome and the Vatican for Avignon, setting up headquarters on land privately owned by the Pope himself. Avignon would remain the new Papal headquarters – a substitute Vatican City – until 1377.

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Question

Mohammed is known by Muslims as _________________, the final messenger in a line of religious prophets including Jesus, Moses, and Abraham.

Answer

Muslims recognize Abraham, Moses, and Jesus as important religious figures and prophets. However, the name "the seal of the prophets" denotes that Muhammad is the last in the line of prophets and he has given the world the true word of Allah. Muslims do not believe there will be another prophet after Muhammad, thus denoting him as "the seal".

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Question

Select the most controversial of all the Catholic Church’s practices and/or policies during the Avignon papacy.

Answer

Although the Catholic Church had certainly been the subject of controversy before the papal move to Avignon in 1309, the new practices and policies instituted by the Avignon papacy drew criticism on an entirely new level. Before very long, the papacy at Avignon became synonymous across Western Europe as a hotbed of political scheming and economic hypocrisy, even in the eyes of the some of the Church’s formerly loyal laypeople. Many clergymen had been utilizing their lofty social status as ripe opportunities for personal enrichment for many years, but this practice expanded in Avignon, opening up the Church to charges of hypocrisy and economic corruption. Other individuals assailed the judgments issued by the Curia, or the official papal court, as being unduly politically motivated, rather than religiously inspired, while others began to question the Church’s practice of collecting taxes, also known as annates, from a wide sector of essentially every social stratus. But perhaps the most controversial of all Church policies was the selling of indulgences - aka papal guarantees of alleged reprieve from punishment or time spent in Purgatory for the souls of already-deceased individuals. These indulgences, which were greatly expanded under Pope Clement V after the move to Avignon, were aimed at living Catholics who wanted to somehow spare their deceased loved ones from any suffering in the afterlife, which the Church promised it could prevent, provided that first a bill of sale for indulgence was purchased.

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Question

Select the primary cause of the Great Schism within the Catholic Church.

Answer

The Great Schism, as the conflict is known, first began in 1378, when, after the death of Pope Gregory XI, a new Pope, Urban IV, was elected from Rome. The recently deceased Pope Gregory XI had moved the papacy back to Rome from Avignon before his passing, but many of the cardinals, including a large French majority, favored a return to Avignon and hoped that the new Pope Urban IV would agree. As a native citizen of Rome, with mass support from the local Italian populace, Pope Urban IV naturally wanted to remain in his home region. When it began to seem increasingly unlikely that the new Pope would support another departure from Rome for Avignon, several cardinals gathered together in secret that same year and, of their volition, elected a new Pope, Clement VII, who, as a cousin of the French King Charles V, had his own ties to Avignon. Suddenly, the Church had two Popes, one in Rome and one that began to ensconce himself in Avignon, each with powerful supporters and popular attendants – and, of course, neither Pope was going to step down in favor of the other. And thus the Great Schism, the competing reign of two separate but simultaneous Popes, was born. This situation would last until 1417, despite several attempts by Church administrators to resolve the matter.

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Question

The division between Sunni and Shia Islam revolve around ___________________.

Answer

The division between Sunni and Shia Islam largely revolves around who should have been appointed Caliph of the early Muslim community.

Both Sunnis and Shias perceive Mohammed as a prophet.

There were political disagreements amongst the early Muslim community about the size of the empire, but this was not the split between Sunnis and Shias.

War with Rome was not the reason for the Sunni-Shia split.

While some contemporary Shia sects are said to believe in reincarnation (it's incredibly difficult to determine whether they do because these sects are officially closed to outsiders) the vast majority of both Shia and Sunni do not, and reincarnation was not the cause of the split between these two groups.

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Question

Which of the following best describes the spread of world religions from 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E.?

Answer

Any explanation of religious diffusion from 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E. should account for more than one faith and include some reference to religious warfare, which is exemplified by major events such as the Crusades and the spread of the Islamic Empire. Religious ideas did spread in other ways, but missionary work is a more widely relevant example than trade routes. Religious tolerance was not practiced by many of these nascent world religions, a reality that European explorers quickly made clear to New World civilizations. Finally, the Spanish Inquisition drove out most non-Christians as opposed to creating new devotees to the faith.

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