<p>sry for dissapearing
here is new consolidated list
Emperor who built stuff and caused his empire to declnie empire declined
drafted farmers
Last native people to arrive in north America
inuits
Roman and American slaves
racial distinctions
Unified Vietnam
taking over champa
Non violent non cooperation cartoon</p>
<ol>
<li>What do they have in common, Aztecs and incas
put that they both incorporated conquered peoples into their empires</li>
<li>Bread land and stuff like that speech
Speech at finland station</li>
<li>Iron and blood
Bismark</li>
<li>Abassid caliphs
Turkish slave army</li>
<li>Women over 30 voting in 1918
Great Britain
11.Queen of Sheba questions
Yemen
Rulers of equal status (not tribute…definetly he gave her stuff back)</li>
<li>The Japanese empress questions
bushido or confucianism
high ranking women had influence </li>
<li>Marx on religion
Religion-bad </li>
<li>Marx on French revolution
Struggle of economic classes </li>
<li>Boris yeltsin on berlin wall
Soviet empire fell after first hammer </li>
<li>Winning in world war I
Industrial economy </li>
<li>Doubled army size
James II [War</a>, religion and service: Huguenot … - Google Book Search](<a href=“War, Religion and Service: Huguenot Soldiering, 1685-1713 - Google Books”>War, Religion and Service: Huguenot Soldiering, 1685-1713 - Google Books)</li>
<li>Picture of jesuit
Willing to use Chinese customs he was not holding western technology. I believe he was holding an astrolabe. </li>
<li>The face sculpture
Benin </li>
<li>The Picasso painting
Spanish civil war, positively. google it</li>
<li>invented compass gunpowder and stuff
China </li>
<li>Third Rome
Moscow</li>
<li>Chinese philosophy
Daoism</li>
<li>Peter the great
sweden and ottoman empire</li>
<li>khmer question?
buddhism </li>
<li>religion with no missionaries
Buddhism or Hinduism? Someone made a good point that Buddhist do have missionaries, but so do hindus </li>
<li>match person with their country
Corazon Aquino </li>
<li>bantu migrations
to central africa</li>
<li>swahili
influenced by arabic
30.islam spread to sub saharan africa
through merchants</li>
<li>farming developed
independently in different places</li>
<li>sumeria and egypt farming
arid irigition</li>
<li>sanskrit hieroglyphs
record keeping </li>
<li>women wearing veils
ayatollah khomeni</li>
<li>silk road
beijing</li>
<li>roman and persian roads
messengers
37 zhenge he
admiral
38 rosetta stone
hieroglyphs</li>
<li>portuguese in west africa
natives eager to trade
40 chinese voyages
reached east africa
41 greatest immigration
west africa
42 gupta empire
arts and sciences </li>
<li>ghandi’s spinning wheel
nonviolent protest</li>
<li>china and xongnu
mongols and Russia? Rome and huns? </li>
<li>writing in americas </li>
<li>Egypt vs Mesopotamia
geographical obstacles</li>
<li>hellenism
independent city states rise</li>
<li>map of europe
Weak nations, I think it was 16th century </li>
<li>failure of ottoman reforms
From the top down, no grassroots</li>
<li>china and xiongnu
Huns and romans</li>
<li>Mexican & American relations in 1930’s
?</li>
<li>Not an effect of German reunification
what were the options anyone?</li>
<li>Reason why E asia had more population vs. Europe
Less plagues?</li>
<li>latest European nation to industrialize
russia</li>
<li>US direct control over what territories before WWII
pacific basin?</li>
<li>the franco prussian war did not lead to?
Euro customs union?</li>
<li>diff between societies that wrote and those that didn’t was?
literate societies accumulated knowledge over generations</li>
<li>difference between hunter/gatherer + urban societies?
more gender equality in hunter societies</li>
<li>what was the 1st country after US to win independence?
Haiti</li>
</ol>
<p>keep working guys
we’re doing great
i haven’t changed answers to ones where there were multiple opinions yet</p>
<p>lemonio, for the nonviolent protest cooperation one, none of the other choices make sense, because nothing of that sort was even remotely close to happening. the naivity one was very general and was likely to have happened.</p>
<p>I have to agree, the test was extremely specific and oddly random. For example, we never went into depth on the Native Americans, and wth is queen shebo?! (sp?)</p>
<p>the test was pretty easy compared to what i got in prep book(had more analysis questions, less quotes and other exact/specific stuff -> morelike ap world test).</p>
<p>If you have 10 wrong you’ll get an 800… and ^for review I should’ve just looked up historical quotes and cartoons they showed up much more than analysis/knowledge-based questions</p>
<p>and same with _daniel those questions were purely ridiculous I don’t know how they can even put that on the test</p>
<p>here are some more I remembered:
Which had the most Holocaust camps? (I put Poland)
Why did France lose to Britain over control of India (I think British naval supremacy?)
Why did the Yuan and Ottomans employ so many foreigners? (I put b/c they thought foreigners would be more loyal)</p>
<p>And I’m pretty sure the map of europe was political boundaries in first half of 19th century</p>
<p>oh, and
How did the abassid empire counterbalance power of regional/tribal authorities? (I guessed they sponsored Islam expansion into India, but that’s probably wrong)</p>
<p>here are my take on questions:
did not seek converts - hinduism
Hellenistic period - spread of Greek culture (not rise of city-states)
Mexico vs USA 1930’s - immigrants (look it up) [Mexican</a> Repatriation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_Repatriation]Mexican”>Mexican Repatriation - Wikipedia)
Population E. Asia vs. Europe - if the time period was 1250-1350, then its because of grain production [Medieval</a> demography - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_demography]Medieval”>Medieval demography - Wikipedia)
US control before WWII - Pacific Basin
hunter-gatherer vs. urban - not sure but im sure one of the choices said that URBAN society had more equality, which is false</p>
<p>i have changed my mind about the spinning wheel
someone said its non violent protest but i’m sure now that its the value of local manufactures, which is what i put on the test
“Linked to this was his advocacy that khadi (homespun cloth) be worn by all Indians instead of British-made textiles. Gandhi exhorted Indian men and women, rich or poor, to spend time each day spinning khadi in support of the independence movement.”
i know this also from the movie ghandi where he wants to spin his own clothes to promote independence, so the spinning wheel showed the value of making your own clothes and not wearing british clothes, not peaceful resistance</p>
<p>the abbasid question is listed in my list
the answer is the turkish slaves, called mamluks
<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamluk[/url]”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamluk</a>
“The first mamluks served the Abbasid caliphs at the end of the 9th century Baghdad”
and @daniel why is it not city states
my review book on greece specifically talks about the rise of independent city states</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure the hellenism one is the spread of greek culture…
b/c after Alexander of Macedon conquered Greece, hellenism (greek culture and values) spread.</p>
<p>darn it about the malmuks, I got that wrong…I thought they were trying to trick us by implying jannissaries (ottoman)</p>
<p>@daniel. I hope they’re right too But are you sure it said urban? I thought it said hunter-gather were more equal.</p>
<p>Frederick II (Prussia) Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia …
Frederick II or Frederick the Great, 1712-86, king of Prussia (1740-86), … Frederick continued his father’s fundamental domestic policies. … Frederick more than doubled the ranks of the Prussian army–from a…brief sideshow in …
[Frederick</a> II (Prussia) Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Frederick II (Prussia)](<a href=“Frederick Ii (prussia) | Encyclopedia.com”>Frederick Ii (prussia) | Encyclopedia.com)</p>