Unit

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description

Unit. Jeopardy!. Unit Jeopardy. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. 500. FINAL. What event sparked the 30 years’ war?. 30 Years War 100. a rebellion of Protestant nobles against - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Unit

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Unit Jeopardy

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30 Years War

Absolutism Western Europe

Absolutism

Limited Monarchy & Republics

European Culture

FINAL

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30 Years War 100

30 Years War 100

What event sparked the 30 years’ war?

a rebellion of Protestant nobles against

the Catholic ruler Ferdinand in Bohemia.

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30 Years War 200

30 Years War 200

What allowed the German states to determine their religion?

Peace of Westphalia of 1648

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30 Years War 300

30 Years War 300

What country became dominant in Europe after the 30 years wars?

France

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30 Years War 400

30 Years War 400

The 30 years’ war led to the destruction of what country?

Germany

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30 Years War 500

30 Years War 500

What was the result of Cardinal Richelieu’s foreign policy?

An increase in debt

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Absolutism Western Europe

100Absolutism Western Europe

100

The “military revolution,” or changes in the science and practice of warfare between 1550

and 1650, saw armies

change from mercenaries to conscripts for manpower.

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Absolutism Western Europe

200Absolutism Western Europe

200

Jacques Boussuet’s Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture

was the fundamental statement of

seventeenth-century divine right monarchy.

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Absolutism Western Europe

300Absolutism Western Europe

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Ultimate authority rests solely in the hands of a king who rules by divine right

Absolutism

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Absolutism Western Europe

400Absolutism Western Europe

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Cardinal Richelieu was most successful in

strengthening the central role of the monarchy in domestic and foreign policy.

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Absolutism Western Europe

500Absolutism Western Europe

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The costly palace built by Louis XIV, that became the envy of all European monarchs, was

Versailles.

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Absolutism

100Absolutism

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Russian society in the seventeenth century

was characterized by a highly oppressive

system of serfdom

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Absolutism 200

Absolutism 200

The Austrian Empire in the seventeenth century

lost a German empire, but gained one in eastern and southeastern Europe.

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Absolutism

300Absolutism

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After 1648, the Holy Roman Empire

was not really and empire at all but rather a loose

association of 300 German states.

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Absolutism 400

Absolutism 400

Who had a program of Europeanization that was predominantly technical and aimed at

modernizing the military.

Peter the Great of Russia

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Absolutism

500Absolutism

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What was the primary goal of Peter the Great’s foreign policy?

opening of a port easily accessible to Europe

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Limited Monarchy & Republics 100

Limited Monarchy & Republics 100

What country was the “sleeping giant” of Eastern Europe?

The Ottoman Empire

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Limited Monarchy & Republics 200

Limited Monarchy & Republics 200

How did James I of England alienate most of the members of Parliament?

insisting on his right to govern through Divine Right

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Limited Monarchy & Republics300

Limited Monarchy & Republics300

What maintained that the King could pass no new tax without the consent of Parliament.

The Petition of Right (1628)

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Limited Monarchy & Republics 400

Limited Monarchy & Republics 400

What was the significance of the“Glorious Revolution” (1688) in England?

bloodlessly deposing James II in favor of William of Orange

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Limited Monarchy & Republics 500

Limited Monarchy & Republics 500

What was the significance of the English Bill of Rights?

It laid the foundation for a constitutional monarchy

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European Culture100

European Culture100

What period of art attempted to blend the feelings of the religious reformations with

Renaissance art

Baroque art

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European Culture200

European Culture200

Which artist represented the Mannerism movement?

El Greco

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European Culture300

European Culture300

Baroque art was superseded by which of the following artistic style?

French Classicism

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European Culture400

European Culture400

Who was known as the one great Protestant painter of the seventeenth century?

Rembrandt van Rijn

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European Culture500

European Culture500

Who is the first female painter admitted to the Guild of St. Luke in Haarlem and who painted

scenes of everyday life?

Judith Leyster

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Question

Answer

FINAL JEOPARDY!FINAL JEOPARDY!