Deck 8: The Expansion of Europe,950–1100

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Question
One factor that contributed to the increase in agricultural output in the medieval period was:

A) diminished rainfall that allowed for more time to be able to work the fields.
B) a slight cooling of the average temperature that caused a shift to higher yield crops.
C) a rise in average temperature that allowed for a longer growing season.
D) increased rainfall causing a shift in crops grown that had larger yields.
E) the development of the seeder plow paired with the use of manure for fertilizer.
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Question
The rotation of crops:

A) provided insurance against loss from natural disasters.
B) made new types of food available.
C) spread labor evenly over the course of the year.
D) allowed for a great deal of experimentation with plants.
E) all of these
Question
Self-governing elites most frequently developed in areas of western Europe where:

A) royal authority was either weak or nonexistent.
B) kings founded new cities and gave them special charters.
C) bishops were effective feudal lords over the cities in their area.
D) there was a strong tradition of democracy such as Greece.
E) the Church was strong and Latin was the common language.
Question
During the High Middle Ages,fields were rotated over a _________ cycle to increase overall agricultural production 50-67 percent.

A) twelve-month
B) two-year
C) three-year
D) seven-year
E) ten-year
Question
Ruling from their castles,lords claimed the right to:

A) collect taxes.
B) administer justice.
C) wage war.
D) mint money.
E) all of these
Question
Serfs were treated like slaves in parts of medieval Europe with the major exception that:

A) serfdom was not hereditary.
B) serfs could not be fined by their lords.
C) serfs could not be tried in local "manorial" courts.
D) serfs could not be sold apart from their historic lands.
E) the aristocracy was required to see to the serfs' education and well-being.
Question
Between 1000 and 1300 in western Europe,social mobility:

A) increased and social inequality decreased.
B) decreased and social inequality increased.
C) and social inequality both increased.
D) and social inequality both decreased.
E) and social inequality remained roughly constant.
Question
During the eleventh century,the most spectacular developments in long-distance trade took place in:

A) northern Italy.
B) the North Sea.
C) the Rhineland.
D) Sicily.
E) England.
Question
Although moneylending was an important factor in the success of early Italian merchant activity:

A) merchants had to procure loans from Muslim bankers,as such wealth was not available in Europe.
B) Saint Bonaventura thought all merchants were beyond God's favor.
C) high medieval towns prospered instead,because of the traditional landed aristocracy.
D) the papacy refused to borrow money in the Middle Ages.
E) the Western Christian church condemned the practice as usurious.
Question
Although the term feudalism has been defined in many ways by historians,Chapter 8 defines it as:

A) a political system in which public powers were exercised by private lords.
B) a legal system of land tenure formalized by a contract.
C) an aristocratic social order bound together by mutual ties of land holding.
D) a mode of production (or economic system)in which wealth was overwhelmingly agricultural.
E) an economic system by which the peasantry was allowed to accumulate wealth other than agricultural products.
Question
One factor that contributed to the growth of some urban centers such as Paris and London was:

A) the growth of the universities associated with each city.
B) their ability to draw on the wealth of the immediate area around the city.
C) the development of an international trade zone surrounding each city.
D) their holding on to a larger population throughout the period of the dissolution of the Roman Empire.
E) their status as the capital of nation-states formed during the early medieval period.
Question
Many factors contributed to the growth of towns and cities in the early medieval period; among these was:

A) the agricultural revolution.
B) the establishment of monasteries.
C) initiatives taken by local lords.
D) increasing trade along overland routes.
E) all of these
Question
Despite the potential advantages of the manorial system,_________ played the dominant role in creating it.

A) peasants
B) serfs
C) lords
D) kings
E) clerics
Question
The medieval economy was based primarily on:

A) manufacturing.
B) cottage industry.
C) mining.
D) agriculture.
E) fishing.
Question
William the Conqueror was politically innovative in that he:

A) claimed England in the name of the Roman papacy.
B) rewarded his Norman followers with cash payments rather than English land.
C) used the highly centralized English administrative authority combined with the feudal structures of France.
D) negotiated an advantageous peace agreement with King Harold of England without resorting to physical violence.
E) managed to retain the English crown while becoming the heir to the French throne.
Question
In northern Europe,increasing use of the heavy-wheeled plow between 800 and 1050 coincided with:

A) the increasing use of horses as traction animals.
B) rising alcohol consumption among the peasantry.
C) fundamental changes in patterns of peasant settlement.
D) rapidly improving road systems.
E) the first use of oxen as traction animals.
Question
Major towns and cities in the High Middle Ages:

A) grew exponentially after the agricultural and trade improvements of the age.
B) sustained their population only through continuous immigration from the countryside.
C) were built of stone and were largely impervious to fire.
D) were grimly aware of crowd diseases and emphasized proper sanitation where possible.
E) were controlled by either a local noble or monastery.
Question
One response to the Viking invasions of the tenth century was the development of:

A) feudalism.
B) keeps.
C) castles.
D) standing armies.
E) city-state alliances.
Question
The two fundamental factors driving the high medieval European economy were:

A) population growth and an increasingly efficient market for goods.
B) long-distance trade and investments in church building.
C) technological innovations in agriculture and new styles of ships that could carry more.
D) newly discovered precious metal deposits and the resulting inflation.
E) long-distance trade and the newly designed ships to carry the trade goods.
Question
A major source of mechanical power in medieval Europe after 1050 was the:

A) four-wheeled cart,which was pulled by horse or oxen.
B) water mill,which was used to grind grain,crush paper pulp,and press oil.
C) windmill,which was used primarily to process cloth.
D) steam engine,which was used to produce cloth goods.
E) open-hearth furnace,which was used to forge iron.
Question
The Crusades marked a fundamental turning point in the relationship between:

A) Byzantium and western Europe.
B) the Islamic world and the Byzantine empire.
C) the Islamic world and western Europe.
D) western Europe and the Far East.
E) all of these
Question
One of the many reforms undertaken by the Cluniac monasteries was to enforce the monastic vow of celibacy on all priests.Some segments of the Church rejected this reform claiming that:

A) there was no biblical source for such a vow.
B) there had never been any rule against priests being married.
C) secular priests needed to experience life as their parishioners did.
D) the biblical injunction to "be fruitful and multiply" should apply to everyone.
E) the church fathers,such as Ambrose,had been married.
Question
Central to the establishment of feudal monarchies was the:

A) personal relationship among individuals at each level of feudal society.
B) relationship of each lord to the religious authority in his territory.
C) personal relationship that developed among the monarchs of the various countries.
D) blessing given by the pope to his chosen lord in each country.
E) ability of the monarch to protect and provide for the common people in his realm.
Question
The First Crusade:

A) strengthened Byzantine control over trade in the eastern Mediterranean.
B) weakened Byzantine control over trade in the eastern Mediterranean.
C) disrupted Byzantine trade along the Silk Road to China.
D) had little impact on Byzantine trade because the Crusaders were primarily motivated by religion,not commercial gain.
E) disrupted the trade routes between Byzantium and western Europe.
Question
Compared to the Benedictine monasteries of the sixth and seventh centuries,the Cluniac monasteries of the eleventh century were more:

A) focused on missionary activity.
B) independent from their local benefactors.
C) interested in leading lives of poverty,chastity,and service.
D) obedient to the pope in Rome.
E) strict in the appointment of new abbots.
Question
In the eleventh century,the struggle for power in central Europe was,for the most part,between:

A) king and pope.
B) king and nobility.
C) nobility and bishops.
D) bishops and pope.
E) king and bishops.
Question
Many Christians believed in the special protective and curative powers of objects associated with saints such as a fragment of bone or cloth from their garment.Such relics:

A) were displayed in elaborate reliquaries to demonstrate the prestige and wealth of a church or monastery.
B) demonstrated a growing spirituality of medieval people.
C) showed the great devotion people had toward the Church.
D) prompted incidents of "holy theft."
E) all of these
Question
Relations between Muslims and Christians in the area Christians referred to as the Holy Lands were upset when Jerusalem was captured in 1071 by the:

A) Saracen Turks.
B) Seljuq Turks.
C) Akko Turks.
D) Abbasid Turks.
E) Fatimid Turks.
Question
At Canossa in the winter of 1077:

A) King Henry IV humiliated himself before Pope Gregory VII.
B) King Henry IV humiliated Pope Gregory VII.
C) Pope Gregory humiliated himself before King Henry IV.
D) King Henry IV arrived,but Pope Gregory VII refused to see him.
E) Pope Gregory VII received Henry IV and they resolved their differences peacefully.
Question
The first successful attempt to restore the spiritual authority of the Latin Church can be traced to the establishment of a new kind of monastery at:

A) Toulouse in Burgundy.
B) Lorraine in Alsace.
C) Cluny in Burgundy.
D) Tours in the Île de France.
E) Orléans in Burgundy.
Question
The term feudal comes from the Latin feudum,which refers to:

A) the relationship that exists between serfs from different manors.
B) the work owed to a lord by the serfs bound to the land he owns.
C) a village not under the direct control of a lord.
D) "fief" or a gift that created a contractual relationship.
E) the contractual relationship existing between a patron and an artist.
Question
The importance of the Investiture Conflict was that it:

A) formally,though not in practice,separated the "church" and the "state" in European politics.
B) signaled the decline of the papacy in western Europe.
C) created a lasting conceptual distinction between religion and politics in western Europe.
D) established the cult of the Virgin Mary in medieval Christianity.
E) represented the triumph of the Church over secular authority.
Question
The compromise that ended the Investiture Conflict was known as the:

A) Second Ecumenical Council.
B) Schism with the Byzantine church.
C) 1059 Electoral Decree of Pope Nicholas II.
D) Fourth Lateran Council.
E) Concordat of Worms.
Question
The tenth century was known for ineffective kingship throughout Europe and:

A) the momentous Investiture Conflict.
B) the beginning of the Christian Crusades against Muslims.
C) a very effective and powerful papacy.
D) local bishops who were surpassing nobles in power and authority.
E) an incompetent and largely corrupt papacy.
Question
Compared to their Carolingian predecessors,the kings of tenth- and eleventh-century Germany:

A) did not exercise much control over the Church within their kingdom.
B) did not have any soft frontiers where they could pursue easy conquests.
C) all had set lines of succession,which allowed for the peaceful transfer of power.
D) did not have a sophisticated administrative system and frequently maintained power only in alliance with the Church.
E) all of these
Question
When Alexius Comnenus asked for Western help against the Seljuq Turks,he was hoping for a:

A) crusading army that would recapture Jerusalem.
B) large army of foot soldiers to drive the Turks from Anatolia,the Byzantine heartland.
C) force of heavily armored knights to deploy against the lightly armored Turkish cavalry.
D) group of Norman mercenaries to serve as his palace guard.
E) conquering army he could lead against the Muslims and thus unite all of Christendom.
Question
Which of the following was NOT a goal expressed by Pope Urban II for the First Crusade?

A) to establish peace at home by sending violent knights abroad
B) to capture Jerusalem
C) to reunite the Byzantine and Latin Christian churches under the command of the pope
D) to slay Christ's enemies wherever they could be found,especially Jews and Muslims
E) to demonstrate the superiority of Western military and spiritual might over that of the East.
Question
The monastic reform movement that began at Cluny in Burgundy was unique in that it:

A) rejected the ideals of poverty,chastity,and obedience popular in other monasteries.
B) undertook the establishment of a large number of subordinate "daughter houses" also free of control by local lords.
C) stressed political and economic independence from the pope in Rome.
D) led to the Norman Conquest of England.
E) became the leading religious force in eastern Europe,establishing some monasteries in Russia.
Question
The expansion of the Byzantine empire during the tenth and early eleventh centuries was assisted by:

A) Christian missionary activity in Russia and the Balkans.
B) Christian missionary activity among the Abbasids.
C) Muslim opposition to commerce.
D) the First Crusade,which captured Jerusalem.
E) the Fourth Crusade,which destroyed Venice.
Question
In 1059,Pope Nicholas II issued a new decree on papal elections,which gave the power to elect future popes to the:

A) Holy Roman Emperor.
B) German imperial court.
C) leading abbots of Cluniac monasteries.
D) College of Cardinals.
E) monarchs of England,France,and Germany.
Question
The Ottonian emperors were the first to be able to exercise actual control in the areas they claimed to rule.
Question
Although it represented a monumental struggle for power at the upper levels of society,the Investiture Controversy was a largely private affair that had little impact or interest in the average person's life.
Question
The European political structure in the tenth and eleventh centuries was typified by social mobility and egalitarianism.
Question
The Muslim philosopher known in Europe as Averroès attempted to resolve a perceived problem in philosophy of:

A) reconciling the apparent contradiction between the apparent rational principles that govern the world and the unpredictability of the world.
B) understanding how Aristotle's logic applied to real-world problems.
C) understanding Aristotle's philosophy as it was changed and modified by Neoplatonism.
D) reconciling the Greek idea of the freedom individuals had in the world and the view that God determined everything that happens in the world.
E) reconciling the Greek idea of the eternity of the world with the Islamic idea of the limited nature of the world.
Question
For Muslims,the loss of Jerusalem was an economic affront much more than a religious one.
Question
The Crusades take their name from the symbol of the Christian religion.
Question
From the Islamic world come some of the best-known poetry in the world,among which is the poetry of:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?na.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
Question
Beginning in the tenth century,the Church was beginning to assert its independence from secular rulers as had been the case under Charlemagne.
Question
One of the greatest Islamic philosophers of the medieval period was:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?na.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
Question
A commune was an informal association of citizens who undertook governmental functions.
Question
Due to the expansion of commerce and the availability of cheap and nutritious food,the largest European cities boasted populations in excess of over one million people by 1300.
Question
The greatest strength of the Capetian rulers was their uninterrupted succession for over three hundred years.
Question
The Muslim world was far advanced over Europe in the area of medicine as evidenced by the writings of:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?nq.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
Question
The literary world created by Islam was not limited to Muslims alone.One of the greatest scholars and writers of the period was:

A) Edward Fitzgerald.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Averroès.
D) Moses Maimonides.
E) Mishneh Almohads.
Question
The most devastating consequence of the Crusades was the:

A) new religious and political ethos that informed the reconquest of Iberia.
B) development of Islamic and Christian doctrines of holy war.
C) underlying justification of the English wars against the Welsh and Scots.
D) justification for the massacre and dispossession of the "heretics" of southern France.
E) all of these
Question
When preaching the First Crusade,some churchmen in western Europe offered crusaders:

A) sainthood as a reward for military service.
B) a well-equipped flotilla of ships for their transport across the Mediterranean.
C) true accounts of the atrocities committed by Muslims in the East.
D) a plenary indulgence,promising that those who died would immediately go to heaven.
E) all of these
Question
One of the technological innovations that helped spur the agricultural revolution was the heavy-wheeled plow.
Question
None of the new political entities arose in Europe as a direct result of the Viking raids of the previous century.
Question
The medieval epic,The Song of Roland,is similar to Homer's Iliad as both were the product of a long oral tradition rather than having been composed in a written form.
Question
The Byzantine emperor Alexius Comnenus banned the teaching of Aristotelian logic.
Question
What issues lay at the heart of the Investiture Conflict,and how were they resolved?
Question
What technological advances were made in the High Middle Ages,and how did they change Europe?
Question
What events led to the loss of Byzantium's power and ultimately to Alexius's request for help?
Question
Why did people go on crusade?
Question
What was the impact of the Crusades on the West?
Question
What was manorialism,and what advantages did it hold for each class?
Question
Of the three heirs to the Roman Empire,Europe was the most prosperous by 1000.
Question
What reforms did the papacy undertake in the eleventh century?
Question
How were the Norman kings responsible for the rise of administrative kingship?
Question
What issues were central in the Cluniac reform?
Question
What effect did Islam have on the culture and society of Christian Europe?
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Deck 8: The Expansion of Europe,950–1100
1
One factor that contributed to the increase in agricultural output in the medieval period was:

A) diminished rainfall that allowed for more time to be able to work the fields.
B) a slight cooling of the average temperature that caused a shift to higher yield crops.
C) a rise in average temperature that allowed for a longer growing season.
D) increased rainfall causing a shift in crops grown that had larger yields.
E) the development of the seeder plow paired with the use of manure for fertilizer.
a rise in average temperature that allowed for a longer growing season.
2
The rotation of crops:

A) provided insurance against loss from natural disasters.
B) made new types of food available.
C) spread labor evenly over the course of the year.
D) allowed for a great deal of experimentation with plants.
E) all of these
spread labor evenly over the course of the year.
3
Self-governing elites most frequently developed in areas of western Europe where:

A) royal authority was either weak or nonexistent.
B) kings founded new cities and gave them special charters.
C) bishops were effective feudal lords over the cities in their area.
D) there was a strong tradition of democracy such as Greece.
E) the Church was strong and Latin was the common language.
royal authority was either weak or nonexistent.
4
During the High Middle Ages,fields were rotated over a _________ cycle to increase overall agricultural production 50-67 percent.

A) twelve-month
B) two-year
C) three-year
D) seven-year
E) ten-year
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5
Ruling from their castles,lords claimed the right to:

A) collect taxes.
B) administer justice.
C) wage war.
D) mint money.
E) all of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Serfs were treated like slaves in parts of medieval Europe with the major exception that:

A) serfdom was not hereditary.
B) serfs could not be fined by their lords.
C) serfs could not be tried in local "manorial" courts.
D) serfs could not be sold apart from their historic lands.
E) the aristocracy was required to see to the serfs' education and well-being.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Between 1000 and 1300 in western Europe,social mobility:

A) increased and social inequality decreased.
B) decreased and social inequality increased.
C) and social inequality both increased.
D) and social inequality both decreased.
E) and social inequality remained roughly constant.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
8
During the eleventh century,the most spectacular developments in long-distance trade took place in:

A) northern Italy.
B) the North Sea.
C) the Rhineland.
D) Sicily.
E) England.
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k this deck
9
Although moneylending was an important factor in the success of early Italian merchant activity:

A) merchants had to procure loans from Muslim bankers,as such wealth was not available in Europe.
B) Saint Bonaventura thought all merchants were beyond God's favor.
C) high medieval towns prospered instead,because of the traditional landed aristocracy.
D) the papacy refused to borrow money in the Middle Ages.
E) the Western Christian church condemned the practice as usurious.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Although the term feudalism has been defined in many ways by historians,Chapter 8 defines it as:

A) a political system in which public powers were exercised by private lords.
B) a legal system of land tenure formalized by a contract.
C) an aristocratic social order bound together by mutual ties of land holding.
D) a mode of production (or economic system)in which wealth was overwhelmingly agricultural.
E) an economic system by which the peasantry was allowed to accumulate wealth other than agricultural products.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
One factor that contributed to the growth of some urban centers such as Paris and London was:

A) the growth of the universities associated with each city.
B) their ability to draw on the wealth of the immediate area around the city.
C) the development of an international trade zone surrounding each city.
D) their holding on to a larger population throughout the period of the dissolution of the Roman Empire.
E) their status as the capital of nation-states formed during the early medieval period.
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k this deck
12
Many factors contributed to the growth of towns and cities in the early medieval period; among these was:

A) the agricultural revolution.
B) the establishment of monasteries.
C) initiatives taken by local lords.
D) increasing trade along overland routes.
E) all of these
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Despite the potential advantages of the manorial system,_________ played the dominant role in creating it.

A) peasants
B) serfs
C) lords
D) kings
E) clerics
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k this deck
14
The medieval economy was based primarily on:

A) manufacturing.
B) cottage industry.
C) mining.
D) agriculture.
E) fishing.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
William the Conqueror was politically innovative in that he:

A) claimed England in the name of the Roman papacy.
B) rewarded his Norman followers with cash payments rather than English land.
C) used the highly centralized English administrative authority combined with the feudal structures of France.
D) negotiated an advantageous peace agreement with King Harold of England without resorting to physical violence.
E) managed to retain the English crown while becoming the heir to the French throne.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In northern Europe,increasing use of the heavy-wheeled plow between 800 and 1050 coincided with:

A) the increasing use of horses as traction animals.
B) rising alcohol consumption among the peasantry.
C) fundamental changes in patterns of peasant settlement.
D) rapidly improving road systems.
E) the first use of oxen as traction animals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Major towns and cities in the High Middle Ages:

A) grew exponentially after the agricultural and trade improvements of the age.
B) sustained their population only through continuous immigration from the countryside.
C) were built of stone and were largely impervious to fire.
D) were grimly aware of crowd diseases and emphasized proper sanitation where possible.
E) were controlled by either a local noble or monastery.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
One response to the Viking invasions of the tenth century was the development of:

A) feudalism.
B) keeps.
C) castles.
D) standing armies.
E) city-state alliances.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The two fundamental factors driving the high medieval European economy were:

A) population growth and an increasingly efficient market for goods.
B) long-distance trade and investments in church building.
C) technological innovations in agriculture and new styles of ships that could carry more.
D) newly discovered precious metal deposits and the resulting inflation.
E) long-distance trade and the newly designed ships to carry the trade goods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A major source of mechanical power in medieval Europe after 1050 was the:

A) four-wheeled cart,which was pulled by horse or oxen.
B) water mill,which was used to grind grain,crush paper pulp,and press oil.
C) windmill,which was used primarily to process cloth.
D) steam engine,which was used to produce cloth goods.
E) open-hearth furnace,which was used to forge iron.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The Crusades marked a fundamental turning point in the relationship between:

A) Byzantium and western Europe.
B) the Islamic world and the Byzantine empire.
C) the Islamic world and western Europe.
D) western Europe and the Far East.
E) all of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
One of the many reforms undertaken by the Cluniac monasteries was to enforce the monastic vow of celibacy on all priests.Some segments of the Church rejected this reform claiming that:

A) there was no biblical source for such a vow.
B) there had never been any rule against priests being married.
C) secular priests needed to experience life as their parishioners did.
D) the biblical injunction to "be fruitful and multiply" should apply to everyone.
E) the church fathers,such as Ambrose,had been married.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Central to the establishment of feudal monarchies was the:

A) personal relationship among individuals at each level of feudal society.
B) relationship of each lord to the religious authority in his territory.
C) personal relationship that developed among the monarchs of the various countries.
D) blessing given by the pope to his chosen lord in each country.
E) ability of the monarch to protect and provide for the common people in his realm.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The First Crusade:

A) strengthened Byzantine control over trade in the eastern Mediterranean.
B) weakened Byzantine control over trade in the eastern Mediterranean.
C) disrupted Byzantine trade along the Silk Road to China.
D) had little impact on Byzantine trade because the Crusaders were primarily motivated by religion,not commercial gain.
E) disrupted the trade routes between Byzantium and western Europe.
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25
Compared to the Benedictine monasteries of the sixth and seventh centuries,the Cluniac monasteries of the eleventh century were more:

A) focused on missionary activity.
B) independent from their local benefactors.
C) interested in leading lives of poverty,chastity,and service.
D) obedient to the pope in Rome.
E) strict in the appointment of new abbots.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In the eleventh century,the struggle for power in central Europe was,for the most part,between:

A) king and pope.
B) king and nobility.
C) nobility and bishops.
D) bishops and pope.
E) king and bishops.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Many Christians believed in the special protective and curative powers of objects associated with saints such as a fragment of bone or cloth from their garment.Such relics:

A) were displayed in elaborate reliquaries to demonstrate the prestige and wealth of a church or monastery.
B) demonstrated a growing spirituality of medieval people.
C) showed the great devotion people had toward the Church.
D) prompted incidents of "holy theft."
E) all of these
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Relations between Muslims and Christians in the area Christians referred to as the Holy Lands were upset when Jerusalem was captured in 1071 by the:

A) Saracen Turks.
B) Seljuq Turks.
C) Akko Turks.
D) Abbasid Turks.
E) Fatimid Turks.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
At Canossa in the winter of 1077:

A) King Henry IV humiliated himself before Pope Gregory VII.
B) King Henry IV humiliated Pope Gregory VII.
C) Pope Gregory humiliated himself before King Henry IV.
D) King Henry IV arrived,but Pope Gregory VII refused to see him.
E) Pope Gregory VII received Henry IV and they resolved their differences peacefully.
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30
The first successful attempt to restore the spiritual authority of the Latin Church can be traced to the establishment of a new kind of monastery at:

A) Toulouse in Burgundy.
B) Lorraine in Alsace.
C) Cluny in Burgundy.
D) Tours in the Île de France.
E) Orléans in Burgundy.
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31
The term feudal comes from the Latin feudum,which refers to:

A) the relationship that exists between serfs from different manors.
B) the work owed to a lord by the serfs bound to the land he owns.
C) a village not under the direct control of a lord.
D) "fief" or a gift that created a contractual relationship.
E) the contractual relationship existing between a patron and an artist.
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32
The importance of the Investiture Conflict was that it:

A) formally,though not in practice,separated the "church" and the "state" in European politics.
B) signaled the decline of the papacy in western Europe.
C) created a lasting conceptual distinction between religion and politics in western Europe.
D) established the cult of the Virgin Mary in medieval Christianity.
E) represented the triumph of the Church over secular authority.
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33
The compromise that ended the Investiture Conflict was known as the:

A) Second Ecumenical Council.
B) Schism with the Byzantine church.
C) 1059 Electoral Decree of Pope Nicholas II.
D) Fourth Lateran Council.
E) Concordat of Worms.
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34
The tenth century was known for ineffective kingship throughout Europe and:

A) the momentous Investiture Conflict.
B) the beginning of the Christian Crusades against Muslims.
C) a very effective and powerful papacy.
D) local bishops who were surpassing nobles in power and authority.
E) an incompetent and largely corrupt papacy.
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35
Compared to their Carolingian predecessors,the kings of tenth- and eleventh-century Germany:

A) did not exercise much control over the Church within their kingdom.
B) did not have any soft frontiers where they could pursue easy conquests.
C) all had set lines of succession,which allowed for the peaceful transfer of power.
D) did not have a sophisticated administrative system and frequently maintained power only in alliance with the Church.
E) all of these
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36
When Alexius Comnenus asked for Western help against the Seljuq Turks,he was hoping for a:

A) crusading army that would recapture Jerusalem.
B) large army of foot soldiers to drive the Turks from Anatolia,the Byzantine heartland.
C) force of heavily armored knights to deploy against the lightly armored Turkish cavalry.
D) group of Norman mercenaries to serve as his palace guard.
E) conquering army he could lead against the Muslims and thus unite all of Christendom.
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37
Which of the following was NOT a goal expressed by Pope Urban II for the First Crusade?

A) to establish peace at home by sending violent knights abroad
B) to capture Jerusalem
C) to reunite the Byzantine and Latin Christian churches under the command of the pope
D) to slay Christ's enemies wherever they could be found,especially Jews and Muslims
E) to demonstrate the superiority of Western military and spiritual might over that of the East.
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38
The monastic reform movement that began at Cluny in Burgundy was unique in that it:

A) rejected the ideals of poverty,chastity,and obedience popular in other monasteries.
B) undertook the establishment of a large number of subordinate "daughter houses" also free of control by local lords.
C) stressed political and economic independence from the pope in Rome.
D) led to the Norman Conquest of England.
E) became the leading religious force in eastern Europe,establishing some monasteries in Russia.
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39
The expansion of the Byzantine empire during the tenth and early eleventh centuries was assisted by:

A) Christian missionary activity in Russia and the Balkans.
B) Christian missionary activity among the Abbasids.
C) Muslim opposition to commerce.
D) the First Crusade,which captured Jerusalem.
E) the Fourth Crusade,which destroyed Venice.
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40
In 1059,Pope Nicholas II issued a new decree on papal elections,which gave the power to elect future popes to the:

A) Holy Roman Emperor.
B) German imperial court.
C) leading abbots of Cluniac monasteries.
D) College of Cardinals.
E) monarchs of England,France,and Germany.
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41
The Ottonian emperors were the first to be able to exercise actual control in the areas they claimed to rule.
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42
Although it represented a monumental struggle for power at the upper levels of society,the Investiture Controversy was a largely private affair that had little impact or interest in the average person's life.
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43
The European political structure in the tenth and eleventh centuries was typified by social mobility and egalitarianism.
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44
The Muslim philosopher known in Europe as Averroès attempted to resolve a perceived problem in philosophy of:

A) reconciling the apparent contradiction between the apparent rational principles that govern the world and the unpredictability of the world.
B) understanding how Aristotle's logic applied to real-world problems.
C) understanding Aristotle's philosophy as it was changed and modified by Neoplatonism.
D) reconciling the Greek idea of the freedom individuals had in the world and the view that God determined everything that happens in the world.
E) reconciling the Greek idea of the eternity of the world with the Islamic idea of the limited nature of the world.
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45
For Muslims,the loss of Jerusalem was an economic affront much more than a religious one.
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46
The Crusades take their name from the symbol of the Christian religion.
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47
From the Islamic world come some of the best-known poetry in the world,among which is the poetry of:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?na.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
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48
Beginning in the tenth century,the Church was beginning to assert its independence from secular rulers as had been the case under Charlemagne.
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49
One of the greatest Islamic philosophers of the medieval period was:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?na.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
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50
A commune was an informal association of citizens who undertook governmental functions.
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51
Due to the expansion of commerce and the availability of cheap and nutritious food,the largest European cities boasted populations in excess of over one million people by 1300.
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52
The greatest strength of the Capetian rulers was their uninterrupted succession for over three hundred years.
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53
The Muslim world was far advanced over Europe in the area of medicine as evidenced by the writings of:

A) Ibn Rushd.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Ibn S?nq.
D) Ibn Abacus.
E) Umar Imam.
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54
The literary world created by Islam was not limited to Muslims alone.One of the greatest scholars and writers of the period was:

A) Edward Fitzgerald.
B) Umar Khayyam.
C) Averroès.
D) Moses Maimonides.
E) Mishneh Almohads.
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55
The most devastating consequence of the Crusades was the:

A) new religious and political ethos that informed the reconquest of Iberia.
B) development of Islamic and Christian doctrines of holy war.
C) underlying justification of the English wars against the Welsh and Scots.
D) justification for the massacre and dispossession of the "heretics" of southern France.
E) all of these
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56
When preaching the First Crusade,some churchmen in western Europe offered crusaders:

A) sainthood as a reward for military service.
B) a well-equipped flotilla of ships for their transport across the Mediterranean.
C) true accounts of the atrocities committed by Muslims in the East.
D) a plenary indulgence,promising that those who died would immediately go to heaven.
E) all of these
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57
One of the technological innovations that helped spur the agricultural revolution was the heavy-wheeled plow.
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58
None of the new political entities arose in Europe as a direct result of the Viking raids of the previous century.
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59
The medieval epic,The Song of Roland,is similar to Homer's Iliad as both were the product of a long oral tradition rather than having been composed in a written form.
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60
The Byzantine emperor Alexius Comnenus banned the teaching of Aristotelian logic.
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61
What issues lay at the heart of the Investiture Conflict,and how were they resolved?
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62
What technological advances were made in the High Middle Ages,and how did they change Europe?
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63
What events led to the loss of Byzantium's power and ultimately to Alexius's request for help?
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64
Why did people go on crusade?
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65
What was the impact of the Crusades on the West?
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66
What was manorialism,and what advantages did it hold for each class?
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67
Of the three heirs to the Roman Empire,Europe was the most prosperous by 1000.
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68
What reforms did the papacy undertake in the eleventh century?
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69
How were the Norman kings responsible for the rise of administrative kingship?
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70
What issues were central in the Cluniac reform?
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71
What effect did Islam have on the culture and society of Christian Europe?
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