AP Unit 1 Test
AP Unit 1 Test
History
Unit I Test
Multiple Choice
1. Prior to the arrival of Columbus, the peoples of the present United States had
A) all of the answers below
B) less elaborate political systems than the peoples in Central and South America had
C) larger empires than the peoples in Central and South America had
D) a larger population than the peoples of Central and South America had
E) a larger reliance on written language than the peoples of Central America and South America had
2. Before the coming of Europeans, civilizations in Central and South America had developed all of the following
cultural achievements except
A) organized religion
B) a written language
C) an accurate calendar
D) wheeled vehicles
E) advanced agriculture
3. Before 1492, the many different Native American societies that existed in what is now the United States filled
their food needs by
A) all of the answers below
B) gathering foods
C) fishing
D) farming
E) hunting
4. Before the coming of Europeans, the peoples who lived in what is now the United States had not developed
A) large, permanent settlements
B) a common language
C) division of labor
D) complex agricultural systems
E) elaborate religious practices
5. Before the arrival of Columbus, all Native American tribes assigned women the tasks of
A) all of the answers below
B) performing farming chores
C) tending to the fields
D) caring for children
E) controlling the social organization of the tribe
6. By 1500, the incentives for Europeans to engage in overseas exploration included all of the following except
A) a belief in fulfilling a divine mission
B) a significant growth in their population
C) more powerful and united governments
D) an increased prosperity and desire for commerce
E) the return of the bubonic plague
7. The first European country to launch long ocean voyages of exploration was
A) Portugal
B) Spain
C) Holland
D) England
E) Italy
8. When Christopher Columbus made his famous voyages to the New World, he
A) obtained his financing from the Portuguese queen
B) refused to search for gold
C) explored much of the North American coastline
D) acted out of strictly religious motives
E) believed that he had reached the Far East
9. By 1550, Spanish explorers had achieved all of the following objectives except
A) exploring much of the Caribbean
B) crossing the Isthmus of Panama
C) devoting great resources for voyages
D) sailing around the world
E) discovering Brazil
10. Between 1500 and 1550, exploration of the New World was dominated by the
A) Dutch
B) English
C) French
D) Spanish
E) Portuguese
11. The Spanish conquest of the Aztecs was, in part, due to
A) all of the answers below
B) an overwhelming superiority in numbers
C) the diseases the Spaniards had given the Indians
D) the pacifism of the Aztecs
E) the Spaniards’ humane treatment of the natives
12. Between 1500 and 1600, the reasons that the Spanish traveled to the Americas included all of the following
motives except
A) getting rich by finding gold and silver
B) replacing Portugal as the leading seafaring nation
C) spreading the Christian religion
D) destroying large English colonies in South America
E) creating a profitable agricultural economy
13. One result of the contact between the Spanish and the Pueblos from 1550 to 1650 was
A) the empowerment of Pueblo warlords
B) a loss of Spanish power in Mexico
C) a vast decline in the Pueblo population
D) the pope’s decision to stop sending missionaries
E) a treaty of cooperation between England and Spain
14. Spanish colonial enterprises exhibited all of the following characteristics except
A) by the end of the 1500s, Spanish colonies were tightly controlled by the Spanish monarchy
B) the wide use of native labor
C) relatively few immigrants left Spain for the New World
D) the successful search for gold and silver ultimately retarded Spain’s economic development
E) missionaries were among the least successful Spanish colonial adventurers
15. The European nation that, unlike other colonizers, did not “people” its colonies but instead imposed over them a
European ruling class was
A) England
B) Spain
C) France
D) Holland
E) Italy
16. When the Europeans arrived in the Americas, they brought with them all of the following things except
A) diseases to which that the Native Americans had little immunity
B) the practice of human sacrifice for religious practices that the natives had not known before
C) a strong yearning for silver and gold
D) new crops that the natives had not seen before
E) new domestic livestock that the natives had never seen
17. In an effort to subjugate the Native Americans, the Spanish engaged in all of the following practices except
A) prohibiting marriage between Spanish men and Indian women
B) installing Spaniards in positions of political power
C) destroying records and documents of the native political systems
D) killing Indian leaders, including warriors and priests
E) forcing natives to work for Spaniards for little or no pay
18. Before the arrival of the Europeans, the political system of southern and western Africa was composed of
A) a single African-led empire
B) a number of small- and medium-sized regional kingdoms
C) a state of barbaric anarchy
D) a series of national republics
E) a collection of nomadic tribes
19. Before Europeans settled in the New World, western and southern Africans
A) did not tolerate the institution of slavery in their society
B) were unable to use natural resources wisely
C) had no widespread religions, just local ones based on nature worship or ancestor worship
D) did not have the extreme degree of sexual inequality found in most European countries
E) had no trade with the outside world and relied on hunting and fishing for their livelihood
20. Interest in colonization grew in England because of
A) all of the answers below
B) a desire to compete with Spain
C) almost constant religious strife
D) the growth of merchant capitalism
E) an increasing population and decreasing food supply
21. According to the principles of mercantilism,
A) the individual is the key to economic progress
B) the world’s supply of wealth is almost unlimited
C) free trade is good for a country because it maximizes both imports and exports
D) a successful nation should export its own goods in exchange for gold and silver
E) wealth should be shared by all social classes
37. The settlers at Jamestown faced powerful local Indians led by their imperial chief _____.
38. In the fall of 1608, _____ took control of Jamestown and imposed work and order on the community.
39. _____ developed Jamestown’s first marketable crop and married the daughter of the local Indian chief.
40. To encourage settlement, some English colonies established the _____ system, which gave fifty-acre grants of
land to each new settler.
41. In 1632, the charter for Maryland was given to Caecilius Calvert the second _____.
42. Bacon’s Rebellion was in some ways a personal contest between Nathaniel Bacon and Governor _____.
43. The agreement drawn up by the Pilgrims prior to stepping ashore at Plymouth was known as the _____.
44. _____ served as the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay colony.
45. The founders of Massachusetts believed they were founding a holy commonwealth, or a _____ a, model for the
corrupt to see and emulate.
46. Colonial Massachusetts was, in effect, a _____, a society in which the Church was almost indistinguishable from
the government.
47. For a time in the mid 1600s, the only colony in which people of all faiths (including Judaism) could worship
without interference was _____.
48. Some of Anne Hutchinson’s followers went north from Massachusetts to found _____, which became a formal
colony in 1679.
49. Expanding colonial land needs were due to their _____ economy.
50. When the forces of Parliament won the English Civil War, _____ replaced the king and assumed the position of
“protector” of the English government.
51. Between 1660 and 1688, all new English colonies in North America were of the _____ type, which means that
one man or a few men, none of whom were the king, had a tremendous amount of control over the affairs of the
colony.
52. James used military force to capture the colony of _____ and rename it New York.
53. William Penn established his colony as a religious refuge for _____.
54. In 1703, three counties withdrew from Pennsylvania to become the separate colony of _____.
55. In the Caribbean, Spain and England began to rely on an enslaved African work force on _____ plantations.
56. When Spain realized that English merchants and French and Russian trappers were present in the West, it began
to colonize the territory of _____.
57. General _____ led the group of trustees that founded the colony of Georgia.
58. The Parliamentary Acts drawn up in 1660, 1663, and 1673, which formed the basis of England’s mercantile
system in America, were known collectively as the _____.
59. In an attempt to consolidate all of the colonies from New Hampshire to New Jersey into one “supercolony,”
James II created the _____.
60. The Glorious Revolution deposed James II and brought _____ to the throne of Great Britain.
TRUE/ FALSE
63. The expected life span was longer in New England than in the South
64. Until the eighteenth century, more immigrants came from Europe than from Africa.
65. The “middle passage” describes the middle colonies as people moved between New England and the South
66. “Coffles” were long lines of Blacks tied together to be sold into slavery
67. North America was the most important market for slaves in the Western Hemisphere.
68. Color was the sole factor in determining whether a person was subject to ‘slave codes’
70. The most numerous of the immigrants to America were the Huguenots
72. Conditions for farming were less favorable in the North than the South
74. The well-defined English class system was reproduced in North America
75. The most frequent form of slave resistance was running away.
76. The English practice of primogeniture was not copied in New England.
77. During the Salem Witchcraft crisis, only marginal women were accused of being witches.
79. Enlightenment figures who attacked religion thought reason would undermine Christianity.