<p>Cathedrals were often centers for pilgrimages.</p>
<p>thank you mr. gloogles, but the link doesn’t work ):</p>
<p>… le me during the test: <a href=“http://cdn.memegenerator.net/instances/400x/38314968.jpg[/url]”>http://cdn.memegenerator.net/instances/400x/38314968.jpg</a></p>
<p>@damaan, i said tax collection because it looked like a medieval church, which had a lot of power over society and i assumed that included economic power. that question i was very unsure about</p>
<p>@DMAzai ok that makes sense.</p>
<p>It was Afghanistan that had a reactionary movement against western influences and globalization, through the Taliban.</p>
<p>It was linked to the previous question, which also talked about western influences otherwise seen as dangerous, if not wholly conflicting with some tenets of Islam.</p>
<p>Nomadic herders and settled communities?</p>
<p>@DMAzai Check this out for L’Ouverture</p>
<p>[Toussaint</a> L?Ouverture, the Genius Who Embodied the Enlightenment | Haiti Chery](<a href=“http://www.dadychery.org/2011/11/01/toussaint-louverture-the-genius-who-embodied-the-enlightenment-2/]Toussaint”>Toussaint L’Ouverture, the Genius Who Embodied the Enlightenment – Haiti Chery)</p>
<p>“The notions of equality and liberty in the works of French Enlightenment thinkers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau also resonated well with Toussaint.”</p>
<p>The other two are surely influenced by the enlightenment, so I guess that’s the answer, though the question wasn’t very clear, since technically Toussaint was learned.</p>
<p>@damaan i said that they interacted through raids and something else…</p>
<p>they blended.</p>
<p>oh god…with the approximate curve listed by gloogle, 13 omits and like 5 wrong brings me down to a 730 ish…jeez…</p>
<p>I am sure that the curve will be very, very lenient because arguably it was an extremely hard test:)</p>
<p>I think I’m looking alright. I took two practice tests, and scored in the 90s range on both ones, but here I’m thinking that I might be at the borderline, having omitted two and probably gotten at least 5 wrong.</p>
<p>But then again, the curves on those practice tests changed, so there might be a better curve because I feel like this was much more difficult than the practice tests.</p>
<p>@DMAzai and @damaan</p>
<p>I surely hope the curve is higher than the practice tests. Also, on my practice tests, I was getting high 700’s-800 on my first try…On this test, I did not feel confident at all…It was surprising.</p>
<p>@drewshlee You must be looking at the wrong curve!</p>
<p>Its here: <a href=“http://highschool.gardencity.k12.ny.us/UserFiles/Servers/Server_881339/File/Counseling/SAT%20Subject%20Test%20Resource%20Guide.pdf[/url]”>http://highschool.gardencity.k12.ny.us/UserFiles/Servers/Server_881339/File/Counseling/SAT%20Subject%20Test%20Resource%20Guide.pdf</a></p>
<p>13 omitted and 5 wrong is a 76=790 which obviously isn’t very bad…</p>
<p>barrons and pr don’t have accurate tests usually. according to the blue book, you can omit 13 and get an 800. raw score of 69 is 750+ and 61 is 700+ (according to the blue book again)</p>
<p>i wonder how the curves each year compare to each other.</p>
<p>@Stanford2019: 13?! “My” blue book tells “96-78”, which is 18!</p>
<p>Ah, thank you very much guys, my spirits have been lifted a little, I was almost about to go into a depression. I studied very hard for this test.</p>
<p>sorry cebolleta; i meant to type 17 (78+) and there are only 95 questions</p>
<p>CB recycled almost every WH test the last 4 years - this one was crunchy-crispy-fresh, so the curve will be pretty lenient</p>