SAT World History-International-June 2013

<p>Ziggurats were places of worship unlike pyramids I remember.</p>

<p>Maybe the powers changed, but the system in general was still retained, though it was temporary, just like the peace, as ww2 would show later on.</p>

<p>Yeah ziggurats. Noted</p>

<p>Places of worships = temples?</p>

<p>@kiwieagle yeah</p>

<p>To any other internationals reading this: Please contribute!</p>

<p>Share any questions you remember! </p>

<p>ty</p>

<p>So far:</p>

<ol>
<li>Opposition to globalization/west: Afghanistan</li>
<li>Congo products: Rubber</li>
<li>Spread of Agri and Herding: SW asia something [Inconclusive]</li>
<li>Imperialism after ww1: Retained</li>
<li>Cathedral: Pilgrimage</li>
<li>Bhagavad Gita: Dharma</li>
<li>Wool Production: Flanders</li>
<li>Sikhism: Islam+Hindu</li>
<li>Spread of Hellenistic culture: East med</li>
<li>Slave soldiers: Janissaries</li>
<li>Mussolini v Stalin: Private Sector</li>
<li>L’ouverture, Franklin, Bolivar: Enlightenment</li>
<li>Caesaropapism: Secular and Church power in the czar</li>
<li>Enlightened despot: Frederick II/ the Great</li>
<li>Taj mahal:mausoleum</li>
<li>Shang bones: Oracle</li>
<li>Munich conference: appeasement</li>
<li>UN sec members: WW2 victors</li>
<li>Munich conference: resulted in continuation of hitler’s expansion </li>
<li>British Industrialization in the 1700’s and 1800’s: Working class growth</li>
<li>Boddhishatva: Englihtened dude</li>
<li>Muslim invasion in 7th century: ?? Franks?</li>
<li>Polynesian v American contact with Europe: Disease</li>
<li>Africans in India: Slave trade???</li>
<li>Afro-Eurasian Trade: New World Crops</li>
<li>Oldest manuscript: Rig Veda</li>
<li>Cattle Ranching: Argentina, Mex, US SW</li>
<li>Japanese Emperors: Amaterasu/Sun God</li>
<li>Homer’s Map: Accurate source</li>
<li>Pastoral Nomads: ??</li>
<li>Egyptian dude and Pharaoh: Tasks given to low ranked ones***</li>
<li>Context of Egyptian dude: Afterlife</li>
<li>Daoism: To do nothing is to do everything</li>
<li>Ancient Math: Measurements and Calendars</li>
<li>Harappan Culture: Not deciphered</li>
<li>Rebel Hideouts: Runaway slaves</li>
<li>Coastal African Cities: Muslim Trade
38: Noble Savages: Taihitians</li>
<li>Athenian Voting: Male landowners</li>
<li>Mexican Nun: Political Patronage</li>
<li>Map of Indian Ocean: Trade existed before Europeans</li>
<li>Neolithic development: Diversification of Labor</li>
<li>Hamurrabi & Hebrews: Abuse of Law</li>
<li>Marco Polo: Mongol Protection</li>
<li>Redistribution of Lands: Decreasing Aristocrat power??***</li>
<li>Nobles in Court of Louis XIV: To keep them busy & decrease power</li>
<li>Division of India: Muhammad Ali Jinnah</li>
<li>Austria-Hungary Problem: Nationalism</li>
<li>Barbarians: Ethnocentralism</li>
<li>Rome vs Han: Giving away of citizenship in Rome</li>
<li>Decolonization in Africa: Dictatorships</li>
<li>Transfusion of culture: Europe was in the fringes</li>
<li>Ziggurats: Places of worship</li>
</ol>

<p>What did people think of the Aztecs?
Resentment</p>

<p>What was not one of the reasons maya did not fall?
Aztecs</p>

<p>@kiwieagle didnt people marvel at their wealth. I think the aztecs also treated their people comparatively nicely.</p>

<p>i omitted 20…is there hope for a 700 even for me</p>

<p>Do you guys think collegeboard will take off certain questions?
I heard that if less than 20% of students get it right, they take it off…
It seems to me that people this year didn’t do as well as last year…</p>

<p>@damaan It definitely was resentment. The Aztecs made people pay a lot of tribute, and a tributary actually rose up against Monctezuma when Cortez was taking over Mexico.,</p>

<p>94-95) -> Sub-Sahara (Sudan) - [South</a> Sudan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Sudan]South”>South Sudan - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>I thought the egyptian dude and the pharoh was people were selected based on how well they could keep secrets…</p>

<p>For the one about decolonization in Africa - Couldn’t it be the more Europeans there were the more violent the rebellion? I remember in South Africa there were massacres like at Sharpesville and in Algeria the presence of a lot of European troops led to years of war. Not to mention Mau Mau in Kenya.</p>

<p>But it said that it was more violent in countries with large white populations which didn’t make much sense to me.</p>

<p>Yeah that’s true, but I felt like the other answer choice where it said that the new countries “immediately” became dictatorships was kind of iffy. I remember reading that new African countries started out as democracies, and quickly went downhill to becoming dictatorships (at least that’s what happened in Ghana).</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>Yeah I got that too</p>

<p>@biri I think that de jure maybe, but de facto they were all military dictatorships.</p>

<p>And did anyone figure out the nomads and settled people question? I originally thought it was to protect trade routes but then I changed it to trading relationship that was interrupted by invasions and movement. </p>

<p>And for the diffusion along the ancinet Afro-Eurasian trade routes I said musical instruments. Is that right?</p>

<p>i thought it was most violent decolonizing in africa with places that had white settlers
harrovian-it was a trading relationship, youre right…but it was not musical instruments it was new world crops</p>