Mr. Winschel

European History Western Civilization

Final Exam Study Guide

The final exam for this class consists entirely of multiple choice and matching questions. You should have a fair grasp on the following items to ensure that you are amply prepared for the test. If anything is uncertain to you – ASK A FRIEND AND THEN ASK ME. We will spend at least one day in review, but most of the preparation is up to you. Good luck!

Middle Ages

Approximate dates 400 or 500 – 1400 or 1500

4 foundations – Roman, Greek, Barbarian, Catholic

Clovis unites Franks, converts to Catholic Faith

Charlemagne and Carolingian Empire

Saints Patrick, Benedict and Boniface

*missionaries and spread of Catholicism

Prayers, fighters and workers

Power of Church in Middle Ages

Manorialism

Feudalism

Crusades – causes, effects

Black Death

Excommunication

Holy Inquisition

Lords, vassals, peasants, serfs

Oath of Fealty

Reconquista of Spain

Pope Urban II, Saladin

Rise of Italian city-states

Medieval Towns and Guilds

Hundred Years’ War

Renaissance

Approximate dates 1300-1600

Starts in Italy – why?

Humanism, naturalism, secularism

Michelangelo, da Vinci, Shakespeare, Raphael

Redirection of focus from Middle Ages from God to man

Reformation

Approximate dates 1517-

Long term causes

Christendom

North converts to Protestant, South stays Catholic

Babylonian Captivity

Great Schism

Martin Luther – actions and doctrines

John Calvin – actions and doctrines

King Henry VIII – Act of Supremacy

95 Theses

Indulgences

Heresy

30 Years’ War, 1618-1648 – HRE shattered

Edict of Nantes

Annulment

Council of Trent

Society of Jesus (Jesuits)

Ignatius of Loyola

Catholic Counterreformation

Huguenots, Anglicans, Lutherans, Calvinists

England – 17th Century

William the Conqueror, Battle of Hastings, 1066

War of the Roses

Tudor Monarchs

Stuart Monarchs

Parliament – House of Lords, House of Commons

Magna Carta

Henry VIII – divorce and Anglican Church

Elizabeth I – unmarried, long, powerful reign

James I – unifies thrones of Scotland and England

Divine Right of Kings (James I)

Charles I – troubles with Parliament

Nineteen Propositions

Puritans, Anglicans and Catholics

English Civil War 1642-1647

Oliver Cromwell - Interregnum

Restoration

Glorious Revolution – cause and effect

English Bill of Rights

Act of Settlement bars Catholic from becoming monarchs

Causes of the English Civil War

French Revolution

The Enlightenment – thinkers and thoughts

Dates of revolution 1789-1815

Bourbons, approximate dates,

Royal Absolutism

Estates General

Sun King – Louis XIV

Cardinal Richelieu

1614-1789 – no Estates General

3 estates – size and makeup, unfair taxation

Tennis Court Oath

Storming of the Bastille – July 14, 1789

Causes of the revolution

Declaration of the Rights of Man

Louis XVI

Limited constitutional monarchy

Pendulum of the revolution

Opposed to revolution – King, Church, conservatives

Sans-culottes – the extreme lower class

Robespierre

Reign of Terror

Napoleon Bonaparte – dates of his reign 1799-1815

Battle of Waterloo, 1815

Invasion of Russia, Scorched Earth Policy

Spread of the spirit of revolution

Nationalism

Nineteenth Century Europe

Congress of Vienna – reaction to Napoleon

Two-headed beast – nationalism, liberalism

Balance of Power

Quadruple and Holy Alliances = UN of the day

German and Italian unification

Wars of German unification

Austria vs. Prussia

Zollverein

Realpolitik

Treaty of Frankfurt – punish France - revenge

1848 Liberal revolutions

Klemens von Metternich

Camillo di Cavour

Otto von Bismarck

Industrial Revolution – origins in England

Agricultural Revolution

Enclosure Movement

Factors of Production = land, labor, capital

Urbanization

Imperialism

Industrial Revolution – effects

Adam Smith – Laissez Faire

Karl Marx – Socialism (state owns factors of production)

World War I

Long-range causes – nationalism, militarism, alliances

Dates of war – 1914 - 1918

Balkans = powder keg

*European rivalries

*for empire, economic lead, etc.

*Nationalism

*in Balkans (Serbs in A-H)

*everyone is better than everyone else

*France vs. Germany

*Militarism

*huge military buildup and attitude

*Alliances

*gang attitude

Five Great Powers at turn of century

Splendid Isolation of Great Britain

By 1907:

*Triple Alliance – A-H, Germany, Italy

*Triple Entente – GB, France, Russia

Allied Powers – GB, Russia, Fr., USA

Central Powers – A-H, Germ., Ottoman Turks

Archduke Franz Ferdinand of A-H

Von Schlieffen Plan

Western, Eastern Fronts

Trench Warfare and the tank

Romanovs (Nicholas II) deposed and slaughtered

Alexander Kerensky

Treaty of Brest Litovsk, 1918

Zimmerman Note (from Germ. to Mexico) brings USA in

American intervention 1917 swings tide

Peace of Paris, Treaty of Versailles, 1919

Immediate effects of war – casualties, cost

Long-term effects – econ. depression, totalitarianism

Hitler, Mussolini, Lenin, Stalin - totalitarianism

Mein Kampf

Communism

Fascism