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AP World History Chapter 30 Flashcards

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6118019351The industrial revolution began in a. the United States. b. Great Britain. c. France. d. Italy. e. Russia.B0
6118019352Crucial to industrialization was a. the leadership role taken by the Luddites. b. the willing support of the major industrial unions. c. the peasants' planned and willing relocation to the cities. d. the leading role that Russia provided in technology. e. the replacement of human and animal power with inanimate sources of energy such as steam.E1
6118019353The growing demand for cotton cloth in the eighteenth century threatened British a. wool producers. b. monopoly over the Chinese silk trade. c. naval strength because of the dramatically rising cost of sails. d. educational dominance. e. trade with the Americas.A2
6118019354The British Calico Acts of 1720 and 1721 a. restricted British importation of cotton cloth to the Americas. b. showed favoritism to cotton producers over wool producers. c. prohibited the importation of cotton cloth. d. required that a corpse be buried in a cotton shroud. e. encouraged the importation of printed cotton cloth in an effort to boost British trade.C3
6118019355The inventor of the flying shuttle was a. John Kay. b. Samuel Crompton. c. Josiah Wedgwood. d. James Watt. e. Edmund Cartwright.A4
6118019356The invention of the flying shuttle a. powered the first steam-driven locomotive. b. made the steam engine possible. c. led to the passage of the Calico Acts. d. gave the British an unquestioned military advantage. e. sped the weaving process.E5
6118019357Which of the following is NOT a correct pairing of inventor and invention? a. James Watt and steam engine b. Josiah Wedgwood and "mule" c. John Kay and flying shuttle d. John Bessemer and converter e. Edmund Cartwright and power loomB6
6118019358Edmund Cartwright was responsible for the invention of the a. steam-driven locomotive. b. converter. c. steam engine. d. power loom. e. flying shuttle.D7
6118019359James Watt invented a more efficient steam pump when he a. redesigned the flying shuttle. b. restructured the engine's compressor. c. copied and consolidated several important American inventions. d. invented a more efficient method of steel production. e. figured out how to make a piston turn a wheel for rotary motion.E8
6118019360James Watt's steam engine did not adapt well to transportation uses because a. it weighed too much to be supported by rubber tires. b. the heat, combined with the vibrations of movement, caused instability in the structural integrity. c. the engine grew too hot and often exploded. d. it used too much gasoline to be cost efficient. e. it consumed too much coal.E9
6118019361Cheaper iron was produced after 1709 when British smelters began to use what substance as a fuel? a. kerosene b. coke c. charcoal d. wood e. gasolineB10
6118019362Henry Bessemer's innovations made it possible to produce cheaper a. iron. b. cotton. c. steel. d. oil. e. wool.C11
6118019363The first steam-powered locomotive was George Stephenson's a. Rocket. b. Blazer. c. Meteor. d. Lightning. e. Comet.A12
6118019364The dominant form of industrial organization by the end of the nineteenth century was a. the putting-out system. b. cottage industry. c. the factory system. d. the guild system. e. a socialist-directed economy.C13
6118019365The Luddites a. were the first utopian socialist thinkers. b. were the industrial workers that Marx felt would be the eventual victors in the revolution. c. led the movement away from traditional crafts manufacture and toward the factory system. d. were crafts workers who destroyed textile machines. e. promoted industrial advancement through their work in Parliament.D14
6118019366Interchangeable parts were invented by a. Henry Ford. b. Henry Bessemer. c. Eli Whitney. d. Josiah Wedgwood. e. George Stephenson.C15
6118019367In America the petroleum monopoly, Standard Oil Company, was owned by a. John D. Rockefeller. b. Robert Owen. c. Andrew Carnegie. d. George Stephenson. e. Henry Bessemer.A16
6118019368Beginning in the nineteenth century, industrializing lands experienced a social change known as the demographic transition when a. 60 percent of the people were 55 years old and older. b. the rural population increased dramatically. c. the fertility rate increased dramatically. d. the majority of the population was college educated. e. the fertility rate began a marked decline.E17
6118019369Marx and Engels proposed that capitalism divided people into two classes. The classes were a. the capitalists and the bourgeoisie. b. the capitalists and the proletariat. c. the workers and the peasantry. d. the capitalists and the middle class. e. the proletariat and the nobility.B18
6118019370One of the authors of the Manifesto of the Communist Party was a. Marx. b. Fourier. c. Rousseau. d. Owen. e. Lenin.A19
6118019371Marx and Engels suggested that music, art, and literature a. should be used by the communists to facilitate the revolution. b. were the "opiate of the masses." c. were the only aspects of the modern world that had not been contaminated by the capitalists. d. served the purposes of the capitalists because they diverted the workers from their misery. e. represented the peasants and were thus useless.D20
6118019372Marx and the communists believed that private property a. would be the only aspect of industrial society that would survive the revolution. b. should be divided up on a more equitable basis. c. would be the foundation of the post-revolutionary world. d. should be abolished. e. should pass into the ownership of the workers.D21
6118019373Marx and Engels believed that the final result of the socialist revolution would be the a. "usurpation by the proletariat of the bourgeois hegemony." b. "dictatorship of the proletariat." c. "complete inversion of the class hierarchy." d. "realization of freedom." e. "opiate of the masses."B22
6118019374According to the Manifesto of the Communist Party, all of human history had been a history of a. class struggle. b. the quest for religious self-awareness interfering with the development of the peasantry. c. the search for equality. d. the search for freedom. e. industrial integration.A23
6118019375In the late nineteenth century, Germany led European countries in the movement to a. dramatically reduce the rights and benefits of workers. b. provide medical insurance and unemployment compensation for workers. c. crush the trade union movement so thoroughly that it didn't return for over fifty years. d. recognize trade unions only if they would publicly renounce their ties to the communists. e. convert to communism.B24
6118019376Throughout most of the nineteenth century, employers and governments a. readily established their own trade unions. b. worked closely with the trade unions to improve the conditions of the working class. c. tried to convince trade unions to switch their allegiance from communists to socialists. d. viewed trade unions as illegal associations designed to restrain trade. e. saw the trade unions as the single best alternative to Marxian-type class revolution.D25
6118019377Over the long haul, trade unions a. reduced the likelihood of a revolution by improving the lives of working people. b. dramatically increased the chances for a revolution through their ties to Marxian socialists. c. were completely unsuccessful in improving the conditions of the working class. d. stood out as the most radical critics of industrial society. e. fell under communist control.A26
6118019378Charles Fourier was a. the Belgian foreign minister whose disastrous trade policies blocked Belgian advancement. b. the German nobleman who stood as the chief obstacle to German industrialization. c. the French nobleman who seized the throne after an economic collapse. d. the English radical who founded the Bolsheviks. e. a social critic who is often referred to as a utopian socialist.E27
6118019379By 1900, which was the largest city in the world? a. New York b. Berlin c. Paris d. London e. TokyoD28
6118019380The use of which of the following increased dramatically in the nineteenth century? a. steel b. iron c. copper d. gold e. aluminumA29
6118019381Which of the following was a key feature in the rapid industrialization of Great Britain? a. high agricultural productivity b. population density c. navigable rivers and canals d. sophisticated banking and financial institutions e. All these answers are correct.E30
6118019382Horizontal organization is a. the framework for powerful European trade unions in the industrial age. b. the consolidation or cooperation of independent companies in the same business. c. the control of all facets of an industry. d. a method of mass production. e. the assembly line process developed by Henry Ford in 1913.B31
6118019383Industrialization refers to the process that transformed agrarian and handicraft-centered economies into economies distinguished by industry and machine manufacture. (T/F)T32
6118019384The fortunate conjunction of coal deposits and the skills necessary to extract this fuel encouraged the substitution of coal for wood, thus creating the promising framework for industrialization. (T/F)T33
6118019385The most crucial technological breakthrough of the early industrial era was the development of a general-purpose steam engine in 1765 by James Watt. (T/F)T34
6118019386The factory system began to emerge in the seventeenth century, when technological advances transformed the British textile industry.(T/F)F35
6118019387German industrialization proceeded at a faster pace than did French and Belgian because of German coal and iron production and extensive railroad building.(T/F)F36
6118019388During the 1850s and 1860s, the governments of Britain and France laid the legal foundations for the modern corporation, which became the most common form of business organization in industrial societies.(T/F)T37
6118019389Industrialization and population growth strongly discouraged migration and urbanization.(T/F)F38
6118019390The rapid population growth in Europe encouraged massive migration to the Americas, especially the United States.(T/F)T39
6118019391In the industrial society, the family was the basic productive unit. Family members worked together and contributed to the welfare of the larger group; there was little distinction between work and family life.(T/F)F40
6118019392The most prominent of the nineteenth century socialists were the German theorists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. They argued that human history has been a struggle between social classes, and that the future lay with the working class because capitalism would grind to a halt.T41

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