Deck 2: Peoples,Gods,and Empires: 1700–500 B.C.E

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Question
When Akhenaten died and was succeeded by Tutankhaten:

A) Tutankhaten continued the religious reforms of his predecessor.
B) the priests of Amon knew their cause was hopeless.
C) the young pharaoh stepped down from the throne, knowing he was too young to rule.
D) the Hebrews took advantage of the opportunity to flee Egypt.
E) the new pharaoh returned to traditional ways of worship.
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Question
The "self-conscious cosmopolitanism" of the Late Bronze Age:

A) refers to women's liberation from traditional family values.
B) included the adoption of hieroglyphics across the known world.
C) developed as ancient cultures actively exchanged goods and ideas.
D) was resisted by the coastal towns of Sidon and Byblos.
E) refers to the insularity of the various cultures of the Near and Middle East.
Question
The division of property and wealth in New Kingdom Egypt:

A) favored the pharaoh, the military aristocracy, and the temples of the gods.
B) guaranteed employment for all, from soldiers to peasants and artisans.
C) led to discontent among the masses and calls for reform.
D) was among the most generous of all ancient civilizations.
E) was equitable for all and represents the earliest communitarian society.
Question
The culture of the Hittites was:

A) hindered by their lack of writing.
B) preserved for posterity by the Kassittes.
C) based on ideas borrowed from the Hebrews.
D) strongly militaristic, prone to attacks on other peoples.
E) the source of all Middle Eastern cultures that followed them.
Question
Akhenaten represents one of the earliest moves,in Western history,toward:

A) a centralized government with all authority resting with the ruler.
B) centralized planning of all aspects of the country's economy.
C) a regulated system of delivering messages throughout the country.
D) monotheistic religious practices.
E) a theocracy.
Question
During the first millennium B.C.E.:

A) bronze slowly replaced iron as the primary component of tools and weapons.
B) iron slowly replaced bronze as the primary component of tools and weapons.
C) tempered copper slowly replaced bronze as the primary component of tools and weapons.
D) scholars from India to Ireland used the Sanskrit language in academic treatises.
E) Anatolia lost influence and was no longer a major player in Near East politics.
Question
"Indo-European," as used in historical or anthropological texts,refers to:

A) someone whose parents belong to different races from India and Europe.
B) linguistic and cultural patterns found in India, the Near East, Europe, and perhaps the Far East.
C) the inhabitants of the strip of land connecting Asia and Europe.
D) the view that Hindus and ancient Goths had much in common.
E) all Western cultures that arose out of western Europe.
Question
By the fourteenth century B.C.E.,international relations were marked by:

A) suspicions and hostility: states wanted as little contact as possible.
B) strictly limited trade in essential goods only: grain, oil, wine, and salt.
C) feelings of brotherhood between the Hittites and the Assyrians.
D) diplomatic standards, polite forms of address, gifts, and alliances.
E) continual warfare between the regional powers.
Question
In 1786,the scholar Sir William Jones suggested that:

A) Mesopotamian civilization died out because of drought.
B) out of respect for the dead, ancient sites should not be excavated.
C) bones found in Anatolia matched those of an Egyptian mummy.
D) ancient Greek and Sanskrit descended from a common, Indo-European linguistic source.
E) the remains of the Trojan civilization could be found in northern Greece.
Question
During the Middle Kingdom,Egypt avoided invasion and attack by:

A) ensuring that their large standing army was well equipped and easily maneuverable.
B) defeating the Mitannians, the most powerful people in the ancient Near East.
C) fostering economic and political ties with its neighbors.
D) hiring mercenaries to defend its borders.
E) practicing a policy of political isolationism.
Question
During the Late Bronze Age (1500-1200 B.C.E.)in the ancient Near East,the two great imperial powers were:

A) New Kingdom Egypt and the Hittite empire.
B) New Kingdom Egypt and classical Greece.
C) the Sumerians and the Egyptians.
D) the Hebrews and the Canaanites.
E) the Canaanites and the Hittite empire.
Question
When the Hyksos conquered Lower Egypt in the Egypt's Second Intermediate Period,they:

A) dismantled all Egyptian forms of government.
B) desecrated Egyptian temples dedicated to Ra.
C) moved the capital of Lower Egypt to Thebes.
D) used a military aristocracy to govern.
E) adopted the machinery of pharaonic government.
Question
The Mitannians introduced lighter chariots to carry archers,but:

A) they were not strong enough to defeat Assyria.
B) their opponents soon copied them and their technological advantage was lost.
C) they could not negotiate effectively with Hittites and Egyptians.
D) the kingdom of Israel defeated them anyway.
E) such chariots could not be used on the rocky terrain of Egypt.
Question
Hattusilis and his successors eventually expanded the Hittite Kingdom by:

A) satisfying the demands of the warrior nobility, who agreed to assist the king's plans for expansion.
B) annexing the neighboring kingdom of Babylon and using it as a base of operation.
C) sacking the fabled city of Babylon and collecting its riches.
D) negotiating with the Egyptians and signing a formal peace treaty with them.
E) defeating the Mitannians by inventing the chariot for use in battle.
Question
The New Kingdom,particularly the Eighteenth Dynasty,was marked by:

A) a return to traditional values of peaceful rule and indifference to the world.
B) the ultimate triumph of the Hyksos and the fall of the Egyptian empire.
C) the failure of Pharaoh Amuse to control his military forces.
D) the peak of Egyptian cultural achievement, and political and military power.
E) the conversion of the entire Egyptian society to monotheism and their rejection of their traditional gods and goddesses.
Question
Thutmose I was remarkable for:

A) his attempt to obliterate the memory of his Horus-Ra predecessors.
B) changing the Egyptian religion from polytheism to monotheism.
C) military campaigns in Palestine, including the capture of Jerusalem.
D) ruling over Egypt, Palestine, and the lands from Nubia in the south to the Euphrates River in the north.
E) his defeat at the hands of the Hyksos at the battle of Kadesh.
Question
The people who settled in Anatolia around 2000 B.C.E.and built a powerful,militaristic kingdom there over the next four hundred years are known as the:

A) Philistines.
B) Assyrians.
C) Babylonians.
D) Hittites.
E) Chaldeans.
Question
The priests at the greatest Egyptian temple complexes at Thebes:

A) were discredited by their association with the hated Hyksos.
B) required believers to approach on their knees and beg forgiveness.
C) received special favor from the Eighteenth Dynasty, which worshiped Amon-Ra.
D) supported Amenhotep IV's religious reform program.
E) led the change in Egyptian religion from polytheism to monotheism.
Question
Hatshepsut was regularly portrayed as masculine in Egyptian statuary because:

A) she had become a priest of Amon-Ra.
B) she needed to demonstrate that, like male pharaohs, she ruled in her own right.
C) she regularly led her troops in battle in men's clothing.
D) her court-appointed artists wanted to defame her.
E) she wanted to challenge traditional masculine authority.
Question
As part of his religious reform,Amenhotep IV changed his name to Akhenaten and:

A) emphasized his father's manner of devotion.
B) founded a new capital called Akhetaten, located between Thebes and Memphis.
C) sponsored artwork that depicted the new pharaoh as a masculine god in the shape of a falcon-headed man.
D) constructed the Great Pyramid at Gaza as a memorial to his family.
E) returned the capital of Egypt to Memphis from Thebes.
Question
Relations after 1500 B.C.E.are more appropriately referred to as "transnational" because:

A) of the transcendence of Egypt during the Eighteenth Dynasty.
B) the superpowers of the Near East created the first multinational governing body.
C) the political and economic networks transcended national boundaries and identities.
D) of the emergence of the Persian Empire as the sole political entity in the region.
E) boundaries between kingdoms in this period were flexible and changed often.
Question
Influenced by their long struggle to survive,the Assyrians:

A) tried to appease their neighbors' demands for food and land.
B) refused to share their advanced culture and political system.
C) created a multicultural union of civilized states.
D) acted very aggressively toward other peoples.
E) developed a diverse cultural empire that outlasted its political influence.
Question
The Hebrew Bible is an unparalleled historical source that describes the cultural practices and theological development of the Hebrew people.However,most historians believe that:

A) the biblical stories are essentially unique to the Hebrews, with no parallels in other Near Eastern societies.
B) few historical events actually happened as they are described in the text.
C) it represents a factual account of the events it relates-the most accurate record of the period we have today.
D) the Hebrew people never really struggled with the Canaanites.
E) the Bible's composite nature means that each biblical book should be analyzed within its particular context.
Question
The Minoans:

A) remained isolated politically and economically from the rest of the ancient world.
B) were civil servants in a redistributive economy, not warriors.
C) wrote tablets in Linear A to record their economic transactions.
D) can be identified as non-Greek allies of the Hittites and Egyptians.
E) were a warrior people who conquered most of the eastern Mediterranean.
Question
The Heroic Age of Greece described by Hesiod and other ancient poets was long thought to:

A) have a firm basis in historical reality.
B) be legends or fables with little basis in historical reality.
C) have been invented by Virgil, Lucretius, and other ancient Roman poets.
D) be metaphors for the political events of the poets' own time.
E) have been lost with the sinking of Atlantis.
Question
Assurnasirpal II,king of Assyria,has the distinction of:

A) possessing a deserved reputation for cruelty and savagery.
B) being a heretic who turned away from traditional Assyrian religion.
C) losing the decisive battle that ended Assyrian dominance.
D) establishing a great library to collect Mesopotamian culture.
E) being a benevolent ruler who handed the throne over to his son and became a priest.
Question
King David's rule was significant in establishing:

A) the principle of monarchy: in God's eyes, whatever a king does is right.
B) a unified Israelite people with a new national capital at Jerusalem.
C) Israeli claims to rule over the East Bank of the Jordan.
D) an empire that dominated its neighbors for centuries.
E) a ruling family that has lasted to the present day.
Question
The Phoenicians created a trade network that stretched from:

A) Anatolia to Iberia and beyond.
B) Greece to Sicily.
C) Anatolia to the Black Sea.
D) Carthage to Sardinia.
E) Egypt to Carthage.
Question
Members of the group known in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)as the Philistines shared cultural affinities with the:

A) Egyptians.
B) Minoans.
C) Mycenaeans.
D) Hyksos.
E) Hittites.
Question
The twelve Hebrew tribes united under a single king to:

A) more easily resist Philistine incursions.
B) build a holy temple to house the Ark of the Covenant.
C) invade Egypt.
D) found the city of Jericho.
E) travel across the Sinai Desert.
Question
Heinrich Schliemann and Sir Arthur Evans:

A) were archaeologists who dug up Troy, Mycenae, and Knossos.
B) refused to accept the historical character of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey.
C) argued that the Greeks had taken all their ideas from African cultures.
D) discovered the source of the annual flooding of the Nile.
E) were archaeologists who discovered Pharos, the lighthouse of Alexandria.
Question
Many small kingdoms arose in the Levant during the early Iron Age as a result of the:

A) collapse of the Hittite civilization.
B) importation of grapes to the area.
C) collapse of the Egyptian Eighteenth Dynasty.
D) defeat of the Philistines by the Hebrews.
E) bronze mines of the Hittites being depleted.
Question
The division of the ancient kingdom of Israel was:

A) the result of its being conquered by the Chaldeans.
B) a result of Solomon's decision to cut the "baby" in half.
C) in response to popular demands to revive Ba'al-worship.
D) God's way of protecting the faithful from foreign aggression.
E) provoked by Solomon's oppressive regime.
Question
The system of writing developed by the citizens of Ugarit:

A) combined Egyptian hieroglyphics and Mesopotamian cuneiform.
B) used an alphabet of about thirty symbols for the consonants.
C) was hopelessly inefficient for the needs of trade.
D) constituted a secret language used by diplomats and spies.
E) was adopted throughout the region as an easier alternative to Phoenician.
Question
Around 1200 B.C.E.,an inscription by Pharaoh Ramses III records:

A) the end of the Late Bronze Age and the first use of iron.
B) an Egyptian victory over the "Sea Peoples," invaders from the north.
C) drastic measures because of overpopulation, food shortages, and war.
D) the terror felt by the kings of Ugarit and Alashiya.
E) his release of the Hebrew people from Egypt.
Question
The Phoenicians are also known as the:

A) Assyrians.
B) Babylonians.
C) Canaanites.
D) Hebrews.
E) Levants.
Question
In the Book of Judges,the Hebrew people:

A) begin to settle and organize themselves into twelve tribes.
B) build a magnificent temple to their God in Jerusalem.
C) receive detailed laws on marriage, divorce, property, and the like.
D) are ruled by kings who pay tribute to the Assyrians.
E) establish a court in Jerusalem to hear cases concerning property rights.
Question
The earlier Assyrian empire had been devastated by the _________ ,but in the ninth century B.C.E.,the foundations for a neo-Assyrian empire were laid by Assurnasirpal II.

A) Phoenicians
B) Mycenaeans
C) Minoans
D) Sea Peoples
E) Egyptians
Question
The Hebrew people,according to archaeological and linguistic evidence,were essentially:

A) Egyptian.
B) Philistine.
C) Chaldean.
D) Canaanite.
E) Hyksos.
Question
Mycenaean Greece played a central role in Bronze Age networks as evidenced by:

A) the artifacts of Chinese origin found in the ruins of Mycenaean Troy.
B) the written language of the Mycenaean Greeks, Linear B, that was used in all transnational trade.
C) correspondence between Mycenaean leaders and Egyptian pharaohs and Hittite kings.
D) Mycenaean cylinder seals discovered in Babylon.
E) Mycenaean pottery discovered in the Indus River Valley of India.
Question
The effect of the arrival of the Sea Peoples on the Near East was to force fledgling kingdoms to unite,through conquest or consent,in order to stand up to this new threat.
Question
The accomplishments of King Darius of Persia included:

A) recruiting foreign mercenaries for his armies.
B) building roads for transport and postal service.
C) extending Persian rule over Greece and the Aegean.
D) capturing the bandits that had terrorized Persepolis.
E) conquering the civilization of the Indus River Valley.
Question
The defeat of the Assyrians and the destruction of Nineveh were:

A) the work of Medes from Iran and the Chaldeans.
B) fortunate for subject peoples, who were finally freed from oppression.
C) attributed to a loss of popular confidence in Assur.
D) commemorated by sculptures and plaques in the palace wall.
E) the work of an alliance between the Canaanites, Philistines, and Phoenicians.
Question
Unlike other rulers,Cyrus of Persia (559-529 B.C.E.):

A) introduced metallic coinage in Asia Minor.
B) took the Hebrew people into captivity in his capital city.
C) lost a great empire to the barbarian tribes of Central Asia.
D) granted self-rule and religious freedom to conquered peoples.
E) granted self-rule to conquered peoples who accepted the Persian religion.
Question
The center of Mycenaean society was the village,which gave a sense of family and responsibility to the people and encouraged loyalty to the king,who was depicted as a father to his people.
Question
Thutmose I was the pharaoh who expelled the Hyksos and restored Egyptian confidence and reunification.
Question
The Minoans worshiped an early form of the Greek pantheon of gods and goddesses.
Question
Anatolia grew in wealth and became urbanized in part due to the Assyrians who changed from a nomadic lifestyle to become caravan merchants.
Question
The term thalassocracy means "sea empire."
Question
The Hyksos invasion of Lower Egypt allowed the Nubians to establish an independent kingdom.
Question
The Greek term Phoenician means "purple people."
Question
One distinct belief that later Western religions took from Zoroastrianism is the idea:

A) of an ultimate battle between the forces of good and evil.
B) of a Day of Judgment.
C) that one ought to live a life of helping others.
D) of a rewarding afterlife for believers.
E) of the necessity of ritual sacrifice.
Question
The Hebrew people became unified in their worship of Yahweh due to:

A) Moses forbidding the worship of false gods.
B) Saul outlawing all other activities of worship.
C) the kings of Judah imposing the worship of Yahweh on the kingdom of Israel.
D) prophetic insistence on the need for a united Hebrew identity under neo-Assyrian rule.
E) the destruction of the city of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar.
Question
Trade in the Late Bronze Age fostered war between nations.
Question
The Assyrian king:

A) also served as chief priest of the Assyrian religion.
B) was in constant conflict with the chief priests of the Assyrian religion who used their power over the people to challenge the powers of the ruling class.
C) did not act as a military leader but as a god embodied on earth.
D) was chosen from a band of select warriors rather than being a hereditary position.
E) was purely a military leader who ruled with a co-king who was the political leader.
Question
The followers of Zoroastrianism believed in:

A) polytheism, animal sacrifice, and magical rituals.
B) a god of light who constantly battled a god of darkness.
C) individual guardian angels who protect believers and punish wrongdoers.
D) public cult worship sponsored by the Persian government.
E) reincarnation through multiple lives to achieve perfection.
Question
Before the Persian empire could be formed,the Persian people had first to defeat their rulers,the:

A) Babylonians.
B) Egyptians.
C) Lydians.
D) Assyrians.
E) Chaldeans.
Question
Zarathustra attempted to redefine religion:

A) as a set of ritual practices centered on animal sacrifice.
B) so that it would be concerned more with dietary rules and ritual.
C) as the mystical insights achieved through fasting.
D) as ethical practices common to all people.
E) as practices centered on temple worship conducted by priests.
Question
Savage violence and terror were characteristic of Assyrian warfare and foreign policy from Assyria's rise as a power in 1900 B.C.E.
Question
Due to a period of captivity in Babylon,ancient Hebrews:

A) rebelled against their Chaldean conquerors.
B) developed a religion that transcended local politics and geography.
C) adopted the worship of Assur.
D) established stringent purity laws.
E) turned to prophets to explain their fate.
Question
What was the Phoenician sphere of influence in the Early Iron Age?
Question
What are the advantages of monotheism as illustrated through the experiment of Akhenaten and that of the Hebrew nation?
Question
Analyze the role of warfare and terror in the formation,rulership,and fall of the Assyrian empire.
Question
Describe the effect of the Sea Peoples on the kingdoms and economies of the Late Bronze Age.
Question
By the end of Solomon's rule,the cult of Yahweh had expelled all worship of foreign deities and acted as a glue to hold the Hebrew Kingdom together after the Davidic dynasty ended.
Question
In what ways can it be said that the Late Bronze Age was an "international system"?
Question
The Phoenicians were descendants of the Peleset,one of the Sea Peoples.They introduced the olive and the grapevine to the Near East and exerted much of their power in the area from large citadels and control over local trade routes and a monopoly over metalsmithing that made it virtually impossible for their enemies to forge their own weapons.
Question
What factors contributed to the success of the Persian empire?
Question
What was the effect of the Hyksos invasion on Egypt?
Question
The "Babylonian captivity" of the Hebrew people began in the rule of Cyrus the Great.
Question
How did the cultures of the Minoans and Mycenaeans contribute to the development of Greece?
Question
We know very little about the Philistines because they left no written records.
Question
In what ways was Zoroastrianism a radical departure from other Near Eastern religions?
Question
Although the Phoenicians were great colonizers of the Mediterranean,they remained strict separatists,having little cultural interaction with the non-Semitic peoples they encountered.
Question
Compare and contrast the strengths and weaknesses of the Davidic dynasty in the Hebrew Kingdom.
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Deck 2: Peoples,Gods,and Empires: 1700–500 B.C.E
1
When Akhenaten died and was succeeded by Tutankhaten:

A) Tutankhaten continued the religious reforms of his predecessor.
B) the priests of Amon knew their cause was hopeless.
C) the young pharaoh stepped down from the throne, knowing he was too young to rule.
D) the Hebrews took advantage of the opportunity to flee Egypt.
E) the new pharaoh returned to traditional ways of worship.
the new pharaoh returned to traditional ways of worship.
2
The "self-conscious cosmopolitanism" of the Late Bronze Age:

A) refers to women's liberation from traditional family values.
B) included the adoption of hieroglyphics across the known world.
C) developed as ancient cultures actively exchanged goods and ideas.
D) was resisted by the coastal towns of Sidon and Byblos.
E) refers to the insularity of the various cultures of the Near and Middle East.
developed as ancient cultures actively exchanged goods and ideas.
3
The division of property and wealth in New Kingdom Egypt:

A) favored the pharaoh, the military aristocracy, and the temples of the gods.
B) guaranteed employment for all, from soldiers to peasants and artisans.
C) led to discontent among the masses and calls for reform.
D) was among the most generous of all ancient civilizations.
E) was equitable for all and represents the earliest communitarian society.
favored the pharaoh, the military aristocracy, and the temples of the gods.
4
The culture of the Hittites was:

A) hindered by their lack of writing.
B) preserved for posterity by the Kassittes.
C) based on ideas borrowed from the Hebrews.
D) strongly militaristic, prone to attacks on other peoples.
E) the source of all Middle Eastern cultures that followed them.
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5
Akhenaten represents one of the earliest moves,in Western history,toward:

A) a centralized government with all authority resting with the ruler.
B) centralized planning of all aspects of the country's economy.
C) a regulated system of delivering messages throughout the country.
D) monotheistic religious practices.
E) a theocracy.
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6
During the first millennium B.C.E.:

A) bronze slowly replaced iron as the primary component of tools and weapons.
B) iron slowly replaced bronze as the primary component of tools and weapons.
C) tempered copper slowly replaced bronze as the primary component of tools and weapons.
D) scholars from India to Ireland used the Sanskrit language in academic treatises.
E) Anatolia lost influence and was no longer a major player in Near East politics.
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7
"Indo-European," as used in historical or anthropological texts,refers to:

A) someone whose parents belong to different races from India and Europe.
B) linguistic and cultural patterns found in India, the Near East, Europe, and perhaps the Far East.
C) the inhabitants of the strip of land connecting Asia and Europe.
D) the view that Hindus and ancient Goths had much in common.
E) all Western cultures that arose out of western Europe.
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k this deck
8
By the fourteenth century B.C.E.,international relations were marked by:

A) suspicions and hostility: states wanted as little contact as possible.
B) strictly limited trade in essential goods only: grain, oil, wine, and salt.
C) feelings of brotherhood between the Hittites and the Assyrians.
D) diplomatic standards, polite forms of address, gifts, and alliances.
E) continual warfare between the regional powers.
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Unlock for access to all 75 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
9
In 1786,the scholar Sir William Jones suggested that:

A) Mesopotamian civilization died out because of drought.
B) out of respect for the dead, ancient sites should not be excavated.
C) bones found in Anatolia matched those of an Egyptian mummy.
D) ancient Greek and Sanskrit descended from a common, Indo-European linguistic source.
E) the remains of the Trojan civilization could be found in northern Greece.
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10
During the Middle Kingdom,Egypt avoided invasion and attack by:

A) ensuring that their large standing army was well equipped and easily maneuverable.
B) defeating the Mitannians, the most powerful people in the ancient Near East.
C) fostering economic and political ties with its neighbors.
D) hiring mercenaries to defend its borders.
E) practicing a policy of political isolationism.
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11
During the Late Bronze Age (1500-1200 B.C.E.)in the ancient Near East,the two great imperial powers were:

A) New Kingdom Egypt and the Hittite empire.
B) New Kingdom Egypt and classical Greece.
C) the Sumerians and the Egyptians.
D) the Hebrews and the Canaanites.
E) the Canaanites and the Hittite empire.
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12
When the Hyksos conquered Lower Egypt in the Egypt's Second Intermediate Period,they:

A) dismantled all Egyptian forms of government.
B) desecrated Egyptian temples dedicated to Ra.
C) moved the capital of Lower Egypt to Thebes.
D) used a military aristocracy to govern.
E) adopted the machinery of pharaonic government.
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13
The Mitannians introduced lighter chariots to carry archers,but:

A) they were not strong enough to defeat Assyria.
B) their opponents soon copied them and their technological advantage was lost.
C) they could not negotiate effectively with Hittites and Egyptians.
D) the kingdom of Israel defeated them anyway.
E) such chariots could not be used on the rocky terrain of Egypt.
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14
Hattusilis and his successors eventually expanded the Hittite Kingdom by:

A) satisfying the demands of the warrior nobility, who agreed to assist the king's plans for expansion.
B) annexing the neighboring kingdom of Babylon and using it as a base of operation.
C) sacking the fabled city of Babylon and collecting its riches.
D) negotiating with the Egyptians and signing a formal peace treaty with them.
E) defeating the Mitannians by inventing the chariot for use in battle.
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15
The New Kingdom,particularly the Eighteenth Dynasty,was marked by:

A) a return to traditional values of peaceful rule and indifference to the world.
B) the ultimate triumph of the Hyksos and the fall of the Egyptian empire.
C) the failure of Pharaoh Amuse to control his military forces.
D) the peak of Egyptian cultural achievement, and political and military power.
E) the conversion of the entire Egyptian society to monotheism and their rejection of their traditional gods and goddesses.
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16
Thutmose I was remarkable for:

A) his attempt to obliterate the memory of his Horus-Ra predecessors.
B) changing the Egyptian religion from polytheism to monotheism.
C) military campaigns in Palestine, including the capture of Jerusalem.
D) ruling over Egypt, Palestine, and the lands from Nubia in the south to the Euphrates River in the north.
E) his defeat at the hands of the Hyksos at the battle of Kadesh.
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17
The people who settled in Anatolia around 2000 B.C.E.and built a powerful,militaristic kingdom there over the next four hundred years are known as the:

A) Philistines.
B) Assyrians.
C) Babylonians.
D) Hittites.
E) Chaldeans.
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k this deck
18
The priests at the greatest Egyptian temple complexes at Thebes:

A) were discredited by their association with the hated Hyksos.
B) required believers to approach on their knees and beg forgiveness.
C) received special favor from the Eighteenth Dynasty, which worshiped Amon-Ra.
D) supported Amenhotep IV's religious reform program.
E) led the change in Egyptian religion from polytheism to monotheism.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Hatshepsut was regularly portrayed as masculine in Egyptian statuary because:

A) she had become a priest of Amon-Ra.
B) she needed to demonstrate that, like male pharaohs, she ruled in her own right.
C) she regularly led her troops in battle in men's clothing.
D) her court-appointed artists wanted to defame her.
E) she wanted to challenge traditional masculine authority.
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20
As part of his religious reform,Amenhotep IV changed his name to Akhenaten and:

A) emphasized his father's manner of devotion.
B) founded a new capital called Akhetaten, located between Thebes and Memphis.
C) sponsored artwork that depicted the new pharaoh as a masculine god in the shape of a falcon-headed man.
D) constructed the Great Pyramid at Gaza as a memorial to his family.
E) returned the capital of Egypt to Memphis from Thebes.
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21
Relations after 1500 B.C.E.are more appropriately referred to as "transnational" because:

A) of the transcendence of Egypt during the Eighteenth Dynasty.
B) the superpowers of the Near East created the first multinational governing body.
C) the political and economic networks transcended national boundaries and identities.
D) of the emergence of the Persian Empire as the sole political entity in the region.
E) boundaries between kingdoms in this period were flexible and changed often.
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22
Influenced by their long struggle to survive,the Assyrians:

A) tried to appease their neighbors' demands for food and land.
B) refused to share their advanced culture and political system.
C) created a multicultural union of civilized states.
D) acted very aggressively toward other peoples.
E) developed a diverse cultural empire that outlasted its political influence.
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23
The Hebrew Bible is an unparalleled historical source that describes the cultural practices and theological development of the Hebrew people.However,most historians believe that:

A) the biblical stories are essentially unique to the Hebrews, with no parallels in other Near Eastern societies.
B) few historical events actually happened as they are described in the text.
C) it represents a factual account of the events it relates-the most accurate record of the period we have today.
D) the Hebrew people never really struggled with the Canaanites.
E) the Bible's composite nature means that each biblical book should be analyzed within its particular context.
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24
The Minoans:

A) remained isolated politically and economically from the rest of the ancient world.
B) were civil servants in a redistributive economy, not warriors.
C) wrote tablets in Linear A to record their economic transactions.
D) can be identified as non-Greek allies of the Hittites and Egyptians.
E) were a warrior people who conquered most of the eastern Mediterranean.
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25
The Heroic Age of Greece described by Hesiod and other ancient poets was long thought to:

A) have a firm basis in historical reality.
B) be legends or fables with little basis in historical reality.
C) have been invented by Virgil, Lucretius, and other ancient Roman poets.
D) be metaphors for the political events of the poets' own time.
E) have been lost with the sinking of Atlantis.
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26
Assurnasirpal II,king of Assyria,has the distinction of:

A) possessing a deserved reputation for cruelty and savagery.
B) being a heretic who turned away from traditional Assyrian religion.
C) losing the decisive battle that ended Assyrian dominance.
D) establishing a great library to collect Mesopotamian culture.
E) being a benevolent ruler who handed the throne over to his son and became a priest.
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27
King David's rule was significant in establishing:

A) the principle of monarchy: in God's eyes, whatever a king does is right.
B) a unified Israelite people with a new national capital at Jerusalem.
C) Israeli claims to rule over the East Bank of the Jordan.
D) an empire that dominated its neighbors for centuries.
E) a ruling family that has lasted to the present day.
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28
The Phoenicians created a trade network that stretched from:

A) Anatolia to Iberia and beyond.
B) Greece to Sicily.
C) Anatolia to the Black Sea.
D) Carthage to Sardinia.
E) Egypt to Carthage.
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29
Members of the group known in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)as the Philistines shared cultural affinities with the:

A) Egyptians.
B) Minoans.
C) Mycenaeans.
D) Hyksos.
E) Hittites.
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30
The twelve Hebrew tribes united under a single king to:

A) more easily resist Philistine incursions.
B) build a holy temple to house the Ark of the Covenant.
C) invade Egypt.
D) found the city of Jericho.
E) travel across the Sinai Desert.
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31
Heinrich Schliemann and Sir Arthur Evans:

A) were archaeologists who dug up Troy, Mycenae, and Knossos.
B) refused to accept the historical character of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey.
C) argued that the Greeks had taken all their ideas from African cultures.
D) discovered the source of the annual flooding of the Nile.
E) were archaeologists who discovered Pharos, the lighthouse of Alexandria.
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32
Many small kingdoms arose in the Levant during the early Iron Age as a result of the:

A) collapse of the Hittite civilization.
B) importation of grapes to the area.
C) collapse of the Egyptian Eighteenth Dynasty.
D) defeat of the Philistines by the Hebrews.
E) bronze mines of the Hittites being depleted.
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33
The division of the ancient kingdom of Israel was:

A) the result of its being conquered by the Chaldeans.
B) a result of Solomon's decision to cut the "baby" in half.
C) in response to popular demands to revive Ba'al-worship.
D) God's way of protecting the faithful from foreign aggression.
E) provoked by Solomon's oppressive regime.
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34
The system of writing developed by the citizens of Ugarit:

A) combined Egyptian hieroglyphics and Mesopotamian cuneiform.
B) used an alphabet of about thirty symbols for the consonants.
C) was hopelessly inefficient for the needs of trade.
D) constituted a secret language used by diplomats and spies.
E) was adopted throughout the region as an easier alternative to Phoenician.
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35
Around 1200 B.C.E.,an inscription by Pharaoh Ramses III records:

A) the end of the Late Bronze Age and the first use of iron.
B) an Egyptian victory over the "Sea Peoples," invaders from the north.
C) drastic measures because of overpopulation, food shortages, and war.
D) the terror felt by the kings of Ugarit and Alashiya.
E) his release of the Hebrew people from Egypt.
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36
The Phoenicians are also known as the:

A) Assyrians.
B) Babylonians.
C) Canaanites.
D) Hebrews.
E) Levants.
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37
In the Book of Judges,the Hebrew people:

A) begin to settle and organize themselves into twelve tribes.
B) build a magnificent temple to their God in Jerusalem.
C) receive detailed laws on marriage, divorce, property, and the like.
D) are ruled by kings who pay tribute to the Assyrians.
E) establish a court in Jerusalem to hear cases concerning property rights.
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38
The earlier Assyrian empire had been devastated by the _________ ,but in the ninth century B.C.E.,the foundations for a neo-Assyrian empire were laid by Assurnasirpal II.

A) Phoenicians
B) Mycenaeans
C) Minoans
D) Sea Peoples
E) Egyptians
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39
The Hebrew people,according to archaeological and linguistic evidence,were essentially:

A) Egyptian.
B) Philistine.
C) Chaldean.
D) Canaanite.
E) Hyksos.
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40
Mycenaean Greece played a central role in Bronze Age networks as evidenced by:

A) the artifacts of Chinese origin found in the ruins of Mycenaean Troy.
B) the written language of the Mycenaean Greeks, Linear B, that was used in all transnational trade.
C) correspondence between Mycenaean leaders and Egyptian pharaohs and Hittite kings.
D) Mycenaean cylinder seals discovered in Babylon.
E) Mycenaean pottery discovered in the Indus River Valley of India.
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41
The effect of the arrival of the Sea Peoples on the Near East was to force fledgling kingdoms to unite,through conquest or consent,in order to stand up to this new threat.
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42
The accomplishments of King Darius of Persia included:

A) recruiting foreign mercenaries for his armies.
B) building roads for transport and postal service.
C) extending Persian rule over Greece and the Aegean.
D) capturing the bandits that had terrorized Persepolis.
E) conquering the civilization of the Indus River Valley.
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43
The defeat of the Assyrians and the destruction of Nineveh were:

A) the work of Medes from Iran and the Chaldeans.
B) fortunate for subject peoples, who were finally freed from oppression.
C) attributed to a loss of popular confidence in Assur.
D) commemorated by sculptures and plaques in the palace wall.
E) the work of an alliance between the Canaanites, Philistines, and Phoenicians.
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44
Unlike other rulers,Cyrus of Persia (559-529 B.C.E.):

A) introduced metallic coinage in Asia Minor.
B) took the Hebrew people into captivity in his capital city.
C) lost a great empire to the barbarian tribes of Central Asia.
D) granted self-rule and religious freedom to conquered peoples.
E) granted self-rule to conquered peoples who accepted the Persian religion.
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45
The center of Mycenaean society was the village,which gave a sense of family and responsibility to the people and encouraged loyalty to the king,who was depicted as a father to his people.
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46
Thutmose I was the pharaoh who expelled the Hyksos and restored Egyptian confidence and reunification.
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47
The Minoans worshiped an early form of the Greek pantheon of gods and goddesses.
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48
Anatolia grew in wealth and became urbanized in part due to the Assyrians who changed from a nomadic lifestyle to become caravan merchants.
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49
The term thalassocracy means "sea empire."
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50
The Hyksos invasion of Lower Egypt allowed the Nubians to establish an independent kingdom.
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51
The Greek term Phoenician means "purple people."
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52
One distinct belief that later Western religions took from Zoroastrianism is the idea:

A) of an ultimate battle between the forces of good and evil.
B) of a Day of Judgment.
C) that one ought to live a life of helping others.
D) of a rewarding afterlife for believers.
E) of the necessity of ritual sacrifice.
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53
The Hebrew people became unified in their worship of Yahweh due to:

A) Moses forbidding the worship of false gods.
B) Saul outlawing all other activities of worship.
C) the kings of Judah imposing the worship of Yahweh on the kingdom of Israel.
D) prophetic insistence on the need for a united Hebrew identity under neo-Assyrian rule.
E) the destruction of the city of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar.
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54
Trade in the Late Bronze Age fostered war between nations.
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55
The Assyrian king:

A) also served as chief priest of the Assyrian religion.
B) was in constant conflict with the chief priests of the Assyrian religion who used their power over the people to challenge the powers of the ruling class.
C) did not act as a military leader but as a god embodied on earth.
D) was chosen from a band of select warriors rather than being a hereditary position.
E) was purely a military leader who ruled with a co-king who was the political leader.
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56
The followers of Zoroastrianism believed in:

A) polytheism, animal sacrifice, and magical rituals.
B) a god of light who constantly battled a god of darkness.
C) individual guardian angels who protect believers and punish wrongdoers.
D) public cult worship sponsored by the Persian government.
E) reincarnation through multiple lives to achieve perfection.
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57
Before the Persian empire could be formed,the Persian people had first to defeat their rulers,the:

A) Babylonians.
B) Egyptians.
C) Lydians.
D) Assyrians.
E) Chaldeans.
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58
Zarathustra attempted to redefine religion:

A) as a set of ritual practices centered on animal sacrifice.
B) so that it would be concerned more with dietary rules and ritual.
C) as the mystical insights achieved through fasting.
D) as ethical practices common to all people.
E) as practices centered on temple worship conducted by priests.
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59
Savage violence and terror were characteristic of Assyrian warfare and foreign policy from Assyria's rise as a power in 1900 B.C.E.
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60
Due to a period of captivity in Babylon,ancient Hebrews:

A) rebelled against their Chaldean conquerors.
B) developed a religion that transcended local politics and geography.
C) adopted the worship of Assur.
D) established stringent purity laws.
E) turned to prophets to explain their fate.
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61
What was the Phoenician sphere of influence in the Early Iron Age?
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62
What are the advantages of monotheism as illustrated through the experiment of Akhenaten and that of the Hebrew nation?
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63
Analyze the role of warfare and terror in the formation,rulership,and fall of the Assyrian empire.
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64
Describe the effect of the Sea Peoples on the kingdoms and economies of the Late Bronze Age.
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65
By the end of Solomon's rule,the cult of Yahweh had expelled all worship of foreign deities and acted as a glue to hold the Hebrew Kingdom together after the Davidic dynasty ended.
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66
In what ways can it be said that the Late Bronze Age was an "international system"?
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67
The Phoenicians were descendants of the Peleset,one of the Sea Peoples.They introduced the olive and the grapevine to the Near East and exerted much of their power in the area from large citadels and control over local trade routes and a monopoly over metalsmithing that made it virtually impossible for their enemies to forge their own weapons.
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68
What factors contributed to the success of the Persian empire?
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69
What was the effect of the Hyksos invasion on Egypt?
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70
The "Babylonian captivity" of the Hebrew people began in the rule of Cyrus the Great.
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71
How did the cultures of the Minoans and Mycenaeans contribute to the development of Greece?
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72
We know very little about the Philistines because they left no written records.
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73
In what ways was Zoroastrianism a radical departure from other Near Eastern religions?
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74
Although the Phoenicians were great colonizers of the Mediterranean,they remained strict separatists,having little cultural interaction with the non-Semitic peoples they encountered.
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75
Compare and contrast the strengths and weaknesses of the Davidic dynasty in the Hebrew Kingdom.
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