World History — Semester A
Free Practice · 10 Questions · 20 min
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Question 1 of 10
TEKS 1A-4JMedium
Classical Athens (5th century BCE) is widely cited by historians as the first documented experiment with which form of government?
APrimarily economic in origin, with the cultural, political, or religious framing being a much later interpretive overlay imposed by 19th- and 20th-century historians on a mostly commercial phenomenon.
BOccurred primarily in a different region and affected different populations from those commonly associated with it, with the geographic misattribution originating in medieval-era confusion.
CDirect democracy — eligible male citizens participating personally in legislative and judicial decisions, rather than through elected representatives.
DLeft almost no documentary or archaeological trace in its own period, with surviving accounts consisting largely of later legendary material composed centuries after the supposed events.
Explanation
Classical Athens (5th century BCE) is widely cited as the first documented experiment with direct democracy — eligible male citizens participated personally in the Assembly and juries rather than through elected representatives. Women, enslaved persons, and metics were excluded from citizenship. Options B–D describe unrelated political systems.
Question 2 of 10
TEKS 15A-15CMedium
The FERTILE CRESCENT of Southwest Asia — arching from the eastern Mediterranean coast through southeastern Turkey to the Persian Gulf — is historically significant to world history because:
AMultiple foundational innovations of pre-modern world history — plant and animal domestication, the earliest cities, writing, and legal codes — first appeared in this region.
BA minor regional development that had no lasting influence on broader historical patterns and left no durable institutional or cultural legacy in the surrounding areas.
CBest treated as an artifact of 19th-century nationalist historiography rather than as a distinctive historical development, with most substantive claims about it lacking primary-source support.
DOccurred primarily in a different region and affected different populations from those commonly associated with it, with the geographic misattribution originating in medieval-era confusion.
Explanation
The Fertile Crescent is where multiple foundational innovations of pre-modern world history first appeared: plant and animal domestication (wheat, barley, sheep, goats), the earliest cities (Uruk, Ur), the earliest writing (cuneiform), and the earliest legal codes (Ur-Nammu, Hammurabi). Jared Diamond and others analyze how the specific availability of domesticable species in this region shaped the geography of early agricultural civilizations.
Question 3 of 10
TEKS 1A-4JMedium
The TANG dynasty of China (618–907 CE) is historically significant because it:
AWidely rejected in modern historical scholarship as an inaccurate 19th-century reconstruction of a much more limited underlying event, with little primary-source basis.
BRepresents a category confusion in most standard accounts, mixing distinct developments from different periods.
CReached one of the peaks of Chinese cultural and economic power, produced major advances in poetry, arts, and technology, and made China a cosmopolitan center connected to Central Asia, India, Korea.
DPrimarily military in character, with little cultural or institutional influence beyond its immediate context.
Explanation
The Tang dynasty of China (618–907 CE) reached one of the peaks of Chinese cultural and economic power. It produced major advances in poetry (Li Bai, Du Fu), arts, and technology (block printing, mechanical clocks). Tang China was a cosmopolitan center connected to Central Asia, India, Korea, and Japan through the Silk Road overland trade and maritime networks.
Question 4 of 10
TEKS 25A-25BMedium
The spread of BUDDHISM from its origins in northern India (roughly 5th century BCE onward) to Central Asia, China, Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asia is a canonical example of:
AWidely discussed in older popular accounts but rarely referenced in modern comparative historical scholarship, and generally regarded today as a minor rather than transformative episode in the broader historical trajectory.
BCultural diffusion of a religion via trade routes, monastic networks, and (in some cases) political patronage — reshaping the religious and cultural geography of much of Asia.
CRepresents a category confusion in most standard accounts, mixing distinct developments that occurred in different periods, regions, and cultural contexts under a single misleading label.
DA minor regional development that had no lasting influence on broader historical patterns and left no durable institutional or cultural legacy in the surrounding areas.
Explanation
The spread of Buddhism from northern India to Central Asia (via the Silk Road), China, Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asia is a canonical example of cultural diffusion of a religion via trade routes, monastic networks, and political patronage (Ashoka in India, various Chinese emperors, various Japanese and Korean rulers). It reshaped the religious and cultural geography of much of Asia over the following two millennia.
Question 5 of 10
TEKS 29A-31AMedium
PERIODIZATION in historical analysis refers to:
AThe scholarly practice of dividing continuous historical time into named periods (Bronze Age, Classical Antiquity, Middle Ages, Renaissance) to enable analysis — while recognizing that the boundaries.
BBest treated as an artifact of 19th-century nationalist historiography rather than as a distinctive historical development, with most substantive claims about it lacking primary-source support.
CPrimarily military in character, with little cultural or institutional influence beyond the immediate battlefield context, and no lasting effect on subsequent regional political arrangements.
DOccurred primarily in a different region and affected different populations from those commonly associated with it, with the geographic misattribution originating in medieval-era confusion.
Explanation
PERIODIZATION is the scholarly practice of dividing continuous historical time into named periods to enable analysis. The Bronze Age, Classical Antiquity, Middle Ages, Renaissance — and their equivalents for non-European histories — are periodization constructs. Rigorous historians recognize that the boundaries between periods are analytical constructs (chosen for interpretive convenience) rather than absolute divisions, and that periodization itself carries interpretive bias (Eurocentric periodization, for instance, has been widely criticized).
Question 6 of 10
TEKS 1A-4JMedium
The rise of the first river-valley civilizations (Mesopotamia, Egypt, Indus Valley, and Yellow River basin between roughly 3500 and 1600 BCE) was MOST directly enabled by which combination of factors?
ACold, arid conditions that eliminated the need for water management.
BReliable water from rivers, fertile alluvial soils that supported intensive agriculture, and a resulting agricultural surplus that supported non-farming specialists (rulers, priests, artisans).
CIsolation from all trade routes and neighboring populations.
DUniform political systems imposed by a single external empire.
Explanation
River-valley civilizations rose where reliable water and fertile alluvial soils supported intensive agriculture. The resulting agricultural surplus enabled specialization — rulers, priests, artisans, soldiers — that in turn supported urban development, writing, and monumental architecture. Options B–D contradict documented archaeological evidence.
Question 7 of 10
TEKS 21A-21BMedium Diagram

The ATHENIAN DEMOCRACY at its 5th-century BCE peak had which specific institutional features?

AThe Ecclesia (citizen assembly) that voted on major policy issues; the Council of 500 (Boule) that prepared assembly business; and citizen courts (Heliaia) with large juries selected by lot — with.
BConfined to a single generation and substantially reversed by later regimes, with no lasting institutional legacy and no direct influence on the developments that followed in subsequent centuries.
CChronologically misplaced in most popular accounts, occurring substantially earlier or later than commonly claimed, and involving different actors from those usually named.
DSubstantially reversed within a single generation by successor regimes, producing no durable political or cultural transformation and leaving few traces in subsequent centuries.
Explanation
The Athenian democracy at its 5th-century BCE peak (particularly the period after Cleisthenes' 508 BCE reforms through Pericles' leadership) had specific institutional features. The Ecclesia (citizen assembly) that met roughly 40 times per year on the Pnyx hill, voted on major policy issues (war and peace, treaties, taxation, ostracism). The Council of 500 (Boule), chosen by lot with rotating membership, prepared assembly business and administered day-to-day government. Citizen courts (Heliaia) with juries of hundreds selected by lot handled judicial matters. Citizenship was restricted to native-born free adult males (excluding women, enslaved persons, and metics — about 15–20% of the total population).
Question 8 of 10
TEKS 19A-19CMedium
The FEUDAL SYSTEM of medieval Europe (roughly 9th–15th centuries CE) is BEST characterized by:
AA hierarchical arrangement in which land was granted in exchange for military and other services — lords granted use of land to vassals in exchange for service; peasants worked the land in exchange.
BA single democratically-elected central government covering all of medieval Europe.
CAn absence of any political or economic structure of any kind.
DBest treated as an artifact of 19th-century nationalist historiography rather than as a distinctive historical development, with most substantive claims about it lacking primary-source support.
Explanation
Medieval European feudalism was a hierarchical arrangement in which land was granted in exchange for military and other services. Lords granted use of land (fiefs) to vassals in exchange for service and loyalty; peasants (serfs) worked the land in exchange for protection and use rights. It is a foundational concept in medieval European historical geography. Options B–D contradict documented history.
Question 9 of 10
TEKS 28AMedium
The CHINESE INVENTION of the MAGNETIC COMPASS (by 11th century CE for navigation) is historically significant because it:
AConfined to a narrow elite context, with limited broader social, economic, or cultural impact during the period.
BEnabled reliable navigation across large ocean distances — first in Chinese and Indian Ocean maritime commerce, later underpinning the European Age of Exploration (from the 15th century onward).
CChronologically misplaced in most popular accounts, occurring substantially earlier or later than commonly claimed.
DWidely rejected in modern scholarship as an inaccurate later reconstruction of a much more limited underlying event.
Explanation
The magnetic compass, developed in China by the 11th century CE for navigation (an earlier form for divination existed since the Han dynasty), enabled reliable directional navigation across large ocean distances — first in Chinese and Indian Ocean maritime commerce, later underpinning the European Age of Exploration (from the 15th century onward). Combined with improved ship design (caravels), improved cartography, and the astrolabe, the compass made trans-oceanic voyages practical.
Question 10 of 10
TEKS 16A-16CMedium
The INDIAN OCEAN TRADE NETWORK, active from ancient times through the early modern period, connected which regions?
AEast Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, South Asia (India and Sri Lanka), Southeast Asia, and China — with cosmopolitan trading communities linking African, Arab, Persian, Indian, Malay, and Chinese.
BWidely rejected in modern historical scholarship as an inaccurate 19th-century reconstruction of a much more limited underlying event, with little primary-source basis.
CPrimarily economic in origin, with the cultural, political, or religious framing being a much later interpretive overlay imposed by 19th- and 20th-century historians on a mostly commercial phenomenon.
DConfined to a narrow elite context, with limited broader social, economic, or cultural impact during the period, and substantially forgotten within a generation or two.
Explanation
The Indian Ocean trade network connected East Africa (Kilwa, Mombasa, Zanzibar), the Arabian Peninsula (Aden), South Asia (Malabar Coast, Sri Lanka), Southeast Asia (Malacca), and China (Guangzhou) — with cosmopolitan trading communities linking African, Arab, Persian, Indian, Malay, and Chinese participants. Seasonal monsoon winds enabled reliable long-distance sailing. This was one of the world's deepest and longest-lasting pre-modern maritime trade zones.

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