A Look Back: The Renaissance through the Congress of Vienna Semester 1 Review AP European History

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A Look Back: The Renaissance through the Congress of Vienna Semester 1 Review AP European History This review is intended to remind you of the most critical issues, people, places, events, and other key terms in the history of Europe from the Renaissance through the Industrial Revolution. It should NOT be taken to suggest that each of these items will specifically be on the semester exam. Rather, consider this as a general review, understanding that there are significant details surrounding each of these items. Part A--Chronology. Place the following events at the appropriate point on the timeline below: Council of Trent, Revolutions everywhere, Peter the Great in power, Reconquista of Spain completed, Glorious Revolution, Reform Act, Edict of antes, Magellan circumnavigated the world, Congress of Vienna, Treaty of Westphalia, French Revolution, the defeat of the Spanish Armada, start of English Civil War, Seven Years War. 1453 1492 1521 1545 1588 1598 1642 1648 1688 1700 1756 1789 1815 1830 1832 1848 Part B--Places in History. Briefly explain the importance of each of the following places in the period from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution. 1 Constantinople 2. Worms 3. Versailles 4. Florence 5. Amsterdam 6. Silesia 7. Lepanto 8. Utrecht 9. Aix-la-Chapelle 10. Manchester 11. Quebec 12. Austerlitz 13. Vienna 14. Paris Part C--Individuals in History. Identify each of these individuals and explain their importance in history. 1. Gustavus Adolphus 2. Leonardo da Vinci 3. Magellan 4. Martin Luther

5. Cardinal Richelieu 6. James I 7. Rousseau 8. Copernicus 9. Frederick II (the Great) 10. Robespierre 11. Robert Owen 12. Klemens von Metternich 13. Simόn Bolívar Part D--Terms. Explain briefly the meaning of the following terms. Identify an appropriate time frame for each. 1. mercantilism 2. heliocentric theory 3. secularism 4. laissez faire 5. politique 6. divine right 7. mercantilism 8. social contract 9. natural law 10. justification by faith 11. chartism 12. liberalism 13. socialism Part E--Relationships. Place each of the following groups in the correct chronological order. 1. absolute monarchy, national monarchy, constitutional monarchy 2. guilds, laissez faire, mercantilism 3. Copernicus, Galileo, Newton 4. Universal Church, religious toleration, established churches 5. Rousseau, Locke, Montesquieu 6. Magellan, Columbus, Drake 7. Portuguese, English, and Dutch commercial empires 8. Baroque, Renaissance, and Neo-Classic

9. Peace of Paris, Peace of Utrecht, Peace of Westphalia 10. Tennis Court Oath, storming of Bastille, Thermidorean Reaction 11. Great Exhibition, enclosure movement, first factory acts 12. Congress of Vienna, Concert of Europe, Napoleon s invasion of Russia 13. French Revolution, French Revolution, French Revolution (distinguish the three revolutions in France in the late 18 th century and the first half of the 19 th century) Part F--Works. Match the authors in column B with their works in Column A. Be prepared to summarize the main points of each work. Column A Column B 1. The Courtier a. Erasmus 2. The Social Contract b. Thomas Hobbes 3. The Prince c. Edwin Chadwick 4. The Wealth of ations d. Edmund Burke 5. Against the Murderous and Thieving Peasants e. John Stuart Mill 6. On the Revolution of the Heavenly Bodies f. Machiavelli 7. In Praise of Folly g. Martin Luther 8. Don Quixote h. Castiglione 9. Two Treatises on Civil Government I. Adam Smith 10.Leviathan j. John Locke 11. Report on the Condition of the Labouring Population k. Copernicus 12. Reflections on the Revolution in France L. jean-jacques Rousseau 13. On Liberty m. Miguel de Cervantes Part G--Quotes. Identify the author of each of these quotes and explain what the quote signifies within the context of the times in which it was spoken. 1. Here I stand. 2. L etat c est moi. 3. But it does move. 4. God s might and Mohammed s miracles are my companions. 5. The Holy Roman Empire is neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire. 6. A prince needs only to conquer to maintain his position. The means he has used...will be praised by everybody. 7....the state of nature had a law of nature to govern it, which obliges everyone, and reason, which is that law...not to harm another in life, liberty, and property. 8....to increase its wealth, a nation must increase its productivity. 9....trade causes perpetual conflict, both in war and in peace, among the nations of Europe, as to who should carry off the greatest part. 10....he, the said Charles Stuart, as a tyrant, traitor, murderer, and the public enemy to the good people of this nation, shall be put to death by the severing of his head from his body. 11. In promoting [the progress of the human race], we are accomplishing the will of the great and blessed God. 12. Unwholesome occupations, severe labor and exposure to the seasons, extreme poverty, bad nursing of children, great towns, excesses of all kinds, the whole train of common disease, and epidemics, wars, plagues and famine serve to check severe overpopulation. 13. O my Brother! Love your country. Our country is our home.

Part H--Relationships (continued). Circle the name of the person or event that is OT contemporary with the other two. 1. Charles V, Luther, Richelieu 2. Rousseau, Voltaire, Locke 3. Frederick the Great, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great 4. Newton, James II, Henry IV 5. Thirty Years War, Council of Trent, Gustavus Adolphus 6. Henry the Navigator, Balboa, Cortez 7. Gustavus Adolphus, Suleiman the Magnificent, Charles V 8. Newton, Louis XIV, Copernicus 9. Erasmus, Mazarin, Machiavelli 10. Thomas More, Cromwell, Hobbes 11. Samuel Slater, James Watt, Robert Walpole 12. Adam Smith, Louis Blanc, Robert Owen 13. Giuseppe Mazzini, Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon Bonaparte Part I--Identification. Identify and explain the significance of each of the following. 1. English Bill of Rights 2. 95 Theses 3. Edict of Nantes 4. Long Parliament 5. Fronde 6. Diplomatic Revolution 7. Peace of Augsburg 8. Index of Forbidden Books 9. Republic of Virtue 10. Partition of Poland 11. Factory Act of 1833 12. kleindeutsch 13. risorgimento Part J--Cause/Effect. Circle the term in each group that is the cause of the other. 1. Reformation, 95 Theses 2. Habsburg power, Thirty Years War 3. Louis XIV, revocation of Edict of Nantes 4. Glorious Revolution, James II 5. Copernicus, Ptolemaic system 6. The Prince, Italian disunity 7. Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment 8. War of the Spanish Succession, Charles II (Spain) 9. Restoration, English Civil War 10. Declaration of Pillnitz, Reign of Terror 11. the factory system, Ten Hours Act 12. the French Revolution (1789), Concert of Europe 13. the Second Republic, Revolution of 1848

Part K More Identification. Identify and explain the significance of each of the following. 1. humanism 2. Act of Supremacy 3. Society of Jesus 4. encomienda 5. westernization 6. price revolution 7. Whigs and Tories 8. domestic system 9. enlightened despotism 10. empiricism 11. Old Regime 12. Concert of Europe 13. nationalism