SAT World History-International-June 2013

<p>I vaguely remember something like that. Wasn’t the answer to that egalitarian punishment? </p>

<p>And yeah, the Belgians exploited Congo for the rubber but they also exploited it for the ivory.</p>

<p>Yeah that’s what I got - egalitarian society - because punishments were harsher depending on what social class you were in. I put rubber because I remember learning about that in my history class specifically, and the teacher told us that Africans who couldn’t get enough rubber got their limbs cut off. We didn’t talk much about ivory.</p>

<p>For the Hamurabbi code I had put the emphasis on a judical form of law code since both excerpts involved the importance in having proper evidence and witnesses for the crime but the other answer seems correct as well</p>

<p>@knight. Apparently there were 2 separate questions on Hammurabi. </p>

<p>@biribiri. Okay. I didn’t know that. I thought they had their limbs cutoff for wasting bullets…</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: Sassanids and Byzantines</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: Trade route protection/Trading relationships???</li>
<li>Egyptian dude and Pharaoh: Not yet resolved-Tasks given to low ranked ones/Trust???</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: Equality</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: Ongoing-Violent in places with whites/Dictatorship</li>
<li>Transfusion of culture: Europe was in the fringes</li>
<li>Ziggurats: Places of worship</li>
<li>Bandung Conference: Non-aligned countries</li>
<li>Bolivar’s Greatest Disappointment: No Grand Colombia/United South America</li>
<li>Mughal-Safavid Treaty Picture: Mughal superiority</li>
<li>Pseudo-Islamic Mali and Songhay: Traditional Religious Practices</li>
<li>The Traditional South American religion: Persisted under guise of Roman Catholicism</li>
<li>Scandinavian deaths: Wars and Trade in the South and East</li>
<li>Slaves in the Americas: Sugar Plantations</li>
<li>Repository of Hellenistic Culture: Alexandria</li>
<li>Marco Polo looking at the Black Pepper: Asia was full of riches</li>
<li>Christopher Columbus: East to India</li>
<li>Brazil ecological problems: Rain Forests</li>
<li>Mao Zedong and China’s economic collapse: cultural revolution and etc. </li>
<li>Printing Press: Song Dynasty</li>
<li>Christianity, Judaism, and Islam: Zoroastrianism</li>
<li>Vietnam: Confucianism and Buddhism </li>
<li>Huns, Mongols, and some other nomadic race was the horse</li>
<li>Mesoamerican food: maize</li>
<li>Young Turks: political reform</li>
<li>Boxer Rebellion: Europeans and Christians</li>
<li>Tokugawa/Japanese isolationism: Western influences</li>
<li>Opium war: Chinese Ports open for European Trade</li>
<li>New York, NY: Cape Town, South Africa</li>
<li>Atlantic Slave Trade: Port and Trade Cities on the Coast of Africa</li>
<li>Meiji restoration: Centralisation of Government</li>
<li>Massacres in the 1970s and 1990s: Cambodia and Rwanda</li>
<li>Political Ideology Reading: Enlightened Despotism</li>
<li>Mesoamerican opinion on Aztecs: Resentment</li>
<li>Cryllic Alphabet: Eastern Orthodoxy</li>
<li>African Society before 1000 C.E.: Not resolved</li>
<li>Mercantilism: Benefit of the mother country</li>
<li>Byzantine Empire: Eastern part of Roman Emp</li>
<li>Poland Alliance: To prevent soviet/german invasion</li>
<li>Berlin Conference: Division of Africa</li>
<li>Minister quote: Globalization</li>
<li>Confucianism: Ethics</li>
<li>Mayan Collapse: Aztec Fighting</li>
<li>EEC and UK: De Gaulle/France</li>
<li>Multi-ethnic state: Sudan-Sub saharan Africa</li>
<li>Hammurabi’s II: Egalitarian Society/Judicial Form of Law** (Ongoing)</li>
</ol>

<p>3 moreeee</p>

<p>Let’s go guys</p>

<p>@knight
I think the best answer for that one would be the abuse of the law code answer, because in the passages there were specifically parts that talked about the punishment for a lack of evidence/witnesses or whatever. I don’t think there was anything about judges/jury in the passage (actually I have idea what “judicial form of law code” means so I picked the one that made sense to me).</p>

<p>edit: oops, I thought you were talking about the first hammurabi question</p>

<p>I’m fairly sure Judicial form of law was the answer to the first Hammurabi question because the second was an all of this except question.</p>

<p>Well not necessarily Judicial form of law in the answer’s exact wording but the spirit of it was there.</p>

<p>Oh yeah to the guy asking about de gaulle, I think the question was like why the UK wasn’t admitted to the EEC right away. De gaulle was the one against UK in the EEC</p>

<p>Wait, are we sure that the Athenian voting one was male landowners? I put adult sons of citizens because I remember that citizenship was really important for the Greek city-states…</p>

<p>source:<a href=“http://project-history.blogspot.com/2006/01/democracy-in-ancient-athens.html[/url]”>http://project-history.blogspot.com/2006/01/democracy-in-ancient-athens.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>It should be adult sons of citizens right? since male landowners may not necessarily be Athenian and in order to vote you had to be an Athenian citizen</p>

<p>Yeah, I believe biribiri is correct. </p>

<p>“Only adult male Athenian citizens who had completed their military training as ephebes had the right to vote in Athens…”</p>

<p>-No mention of property, but then again, no mention of the training</p>

<p>here, no need for property:</p>

<p>"…in contrast with oligarchical societies, there were no real property qualification for voting…"</p>

<p>Wait there are only 2 questions left since for the enlightened despot question there was a second part with which enlightenment thinker’s policy resembled that form of government:
I think it was Machiavelli</p>

<p>The answer to that was Frederick II.</p>

<p>Thanks, do you what score 18 wrong is? I didn’t skip any so i’m guessing in the low 700’s?</p>

<p>actually youll get a 770</p>

<p>youd get a 73 78-80 is an 800</p>

<p>right now worst case i have a 75 raw score…optimistically 79 raw</p>

<p>@jpull. I think 78-80 is too harsh a curve. Probably 74-78. I think.</p>