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1
The practice of deciphering, as explained in "Deciphering History," is rooted in the Renaissance fascination with:
A)ancient Greece.
B)ancient Egypt.
C)devising codes and other puzzles.
D)South American civilizations.
2
The most important undeciphered script, as maintained in "Deciphering History," is that of:
A)Easter Island.
B)Phaistos in Crete.
C)the Mayan civilization.
D)the Indus Valley.
3
Although the Etruscan alphabet resembles that of ancient Greece, as described in "Deciphering History," there are several notable differences.
A)True
B)False
4
As mentioned in "The Pharaoh Returns! King Tut," Tutankhamun raised a stela in Karnak to boast of all he had done for the Egyptian people, including:
A)instituting monotheism with the worship of Aten.
B)conquering Hittite armies led by Suppiluliuma.
C)building the first of the pyramids.
D)reinstating polytheism and enriching the temples.
5
In a scene from a wooden shrine from Tutankhamun's tomb, as described in "The Pharaoh Returns! King Tut," the king's wife, Ankhesenamun, hands her husband:
A)a goblet of wine.
B)a scepter.
C)an arrow to shoot at ducks.
D)an infant, presumed to be their first child.
6
As noted in "The Pharaoh Returns! King Tut," Howard Carter discovered Tut's tomb during his first year in the Valley of Kings.
A)True
B)False
7
As detailed in "Journey to the Seven Wonders," the most fragile wonder of them all, standing for only 56 years before it collapsed, was the:
A)temple of Artemis in Ephesus.
B)lighthouse of Alexandria.
C)statue of Zeus at Olympia.
D)Colossus of Rhodes.
8
According to legend, as related in "Journey to the Seven Wonders," the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus was built around 350 B.C. for:
A)Alexander the Great.
B)King Mausolos of Caria.
C)King Xerxes of Persia.
D)Helen of Troy.
9
As pointed out in "Journey to the Seven Wonders," the only one of the ancient seven wonders of the world still standing is the lighthouse at Alexandria.
A)True
B)False
10
As discussed in "The Coming of the Sea Peoples," the Sea Peoples were instrumental in the transformation of Mediterranean society because they:
A)introduced a new form of government.
B)opened trade with cities to the north and east.
C)changed the nature of warfare.
D)brought improved health practices to the area.
11
As noted in "The Coming of the Sea Peoples," the militaries of all the empires of the Late Bronze Age were dependent on:
A)naval power.
B)light battle chariots.
C)foot archers.
D)long swords and shields.
12
As cited in "The Coming of the Sea Peoples," by adopting the Sea Peoples' tactics, Egypt was able to repulse their invasion and regain its former strength.
A)True
B)False
13
As discussed in "Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death," to conquer and control their subjects, the Assyrians relied on:
A)their reputation for both strength and justice.
B)intimidation through religious doctrine.
C)destruction and devastation.
D)their comparatively advanced technology.
14
According to "Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death," the main tasks of an Assyrian king were military exploits and:
A)religious service.
B)erecting public buildings.
C)commissioning the writing of histories in the form of inscriptions.
D)the administration of justice.
15
According to "Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death," Assyrian military records contradict certain historical assertions made in the Old Testament.
A)True
B)False
16
The traditional view of David and Solomon, as cited in "Fact or Fiction?" is that they:
A)may be largely mythical figures.
B)were influential, but might not have been father and son.
C)are central to Jewish history.
D)held power for only a short period of time.
17
In today's Middle Eastern politics, as put forth in "Fact or Fiction?" if the claims of the new archaeologists that David's Israel was relatively insignificant are valid, then:
A)Jewish claims to the region are not as solid as they might be.
B)new questions are raised about the dispersal of the tribes of Israel.
C)the Palestinians should be offered reparations for their time in refugee camps.
D)neither side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can claim that history supports its position.
18
The field of biblical archaeology, as pointed out in "Fact or Fiction?" is now so consumed with controversy that it can be difficult to find scholars who agree on anything.
A)True
B)False
19
According to "Was There a Trojan War?" in the Late Bronze Age the city now called Troy was the kingdom of Wilusa, powerful enough to conclude treaties with the:
A)pharaohs of Egypt.
B)kings of Minos.
C)Hittite Empire.
D)Shang Dynasty.
20
As explained in "Was There a Trojan War?" archaeologists are able to make a compelling argument about the importance of Troy in the Late Bronze Age because of recent discoveries of:
A)quantities of gold objects and jewelry.
B)the size of Troy, which covered about 75 acres.
C)pottery from trading partners thousands of miles away.
D)burial mounds for the kings of ancient Troy.
21
As portrayed in "Was There a Trojan War?" the site of ancient Troy was forgotten for centuries until the excavations made by Heinrich Schliemann in the late nineteenth century.
A)True
B)False
22
As described in "Xerxes' Greek Campaign," the Persian forces crossed the Hellespont by means of:
A)light rafts that held about a dozen soldiers each.
B)two bridges constructed by lashing galleys and triremes together.
C)going north of it so they could remain on land and avoid the dangerous currents.
D)swimming it while their weapons and armor were ferried over by ships.
23
As identified in "Xerxes' Greek Campaign," the main tactician or the Greeks in the battle against the Persian fleet off Salamis was:
A)Leonidas of Sparta.
B)Themistocles of Athens.
C)Pericles of Athens.
D)Promethus of Ionia.
24
According to "Xerxes' Greek Campaign," King Xerxes watched the battle of Salamis from a golden throne on the slopes of Mount Aegaleus.
A)True
B)False
25
As explained in "Of the People, By the People," modern democracies talk about the rights of citizens, but ancient democracy considered citizenship more of an issue of:
A)land ownership.
B)duties.
C)geography.
D)birth.
26
As quoted in "Of the People, By the People," the aphorism "man is a political animal" was first uttered by:
A)Plato.
B)Themistocles.
C)Aristotle.
D)Socrates.
27
As related in "Of the People, By the People," the statesman Aristides was asked by an illiterate farmer to write his own name on a potsherd for ostracism because the farmer was sick of hearing Aristides referred to as "the Just."
A)True
B)False
28
According to "Mighty Macedonian: Alexander the Great," at the time of Alexander's death in 323 B.C., his empire stretched from the:
A)Tigris to the Euphrates.
B)Balkans to the Himalayas.
C)Mediterranean to the Aegean.
D)Danube to the Volga.
29
As recounted in "Mighty Macedonian: Alexander the Great," historians have disagreed about Alexander's character, but there is substantial agreement on the issue of his:
A)sexuality.
B)military prowess.
C)ability to pick administrators.
D)motives.
30
As noted in "Mighty Macedonian: Alexander the Great," historians now generally accept that Alexander was poisoned by his generals.
A)True
B)False
31
As maintained in "Etruscan Women: Dignified, Charming, Literate, and Free," the Etruscan women were the talk of their Greek and Roman neighbors for their freedom of action, their appetite for wine, and their:
A)use of makeup.
B)loose morals.
C)influence on politics.
D)learning.
32
As the author of "Etruscan Women: Dignified, Charming, Literate, and Free" notes, there is only one reference to the Etruscans in the story of antiquity's most famous traveler:
A)Hercules.
B)Theseus.
C)Odysseus.
D)Pericles.
33
According to "Etruscan Women: Dignified, Charming, Literate, and Free," the Etruscans developed a sophisticated dentistry, including bridges with prosthetic teeth.
A)True
B)False
34
As asserted in "Childhood in the Roman Empire," an explanation, generally discounted, for how Romans dealt with the high rate of infant mortality was by:
A)adopting the children of conquered enemies.
B)increasing reliance on charms and talismans for protection.
C)not caring about the loss of their children.
D)sending Roman physicians to Greece for training.
35
As defined in "Childhood in the Roman Empire," Roman childhood consisted of two stages, from birth to 7 years old and from 7 to 14 years old, based on the development of the child's teeth and on:
A)needing a nurse during the first stage and a tutor for the second.
B)survival of dangerous childhood diseases that generally struck before age 7.
C)the transition from wearing one style of toga to another.
D)astronomy and the 7 visible planets.
36
As noted in "Childhood in the Roman Empire," many Roman women avoided breastfeeding because it kept them at home and unable to attend long public celebrations or private banquets.
A)True
B)False
37
As detailed in "Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome," Boudica led a revolt against Roman rule because the Romans:
A)killed her husband.
B)were enslaving Britons.
C)abused her daughters and her and planned to take her property.
D)had broken treaties made with her tribe.
38
According to the author of "Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome," the Britons who opposed the Romans wanted all of the following from the Romans except:
A)food subsidies and precious metals.
B)respect.
C)peace.
D)a government that treated them with justice and honor.
39
As explained in "Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome," the druid stronghold was on the Isle of Mona.
A)True
B)False
40
The human accomplishments of the Roman Empire, as pointed out in "The Great Jewish Revolt Against Rome, 66-73 CE," were only achieved because Rome was able to:
A)enslave conquered peoples.
B)skim off agricultural surpluses from villages across the Empire.
C)loot the wealth of the upper classes in its territory.
D)learn from the technologies of others.
41
The Essene vision of liberation contained in the Dead Sea Scrolls, as explained in "The Great Jewish Revolt Against Rome, 66-73 CE," revolved around:
A)a violent uprising.
B)peaceful submission to hardship.
C)learning and prayer.
D)the idea of the Apocalypse.
42
In his writings, as described in "The Great Jewish Revolt Against Rome, 66-73 CE," the Jewish priest and historian Josephus praised the popular leaders of the resistance as heroes and saviors.
A)True
B)False
43
In the major religions in which he plays a large part, as described in "The Legacy of Abraham," Abraham is first significant as the first person to:
A)avow that there is only one God.
B)turn his back on his parents to pursue his own faith.
C)witness a miracle.
D)receive direct instruction from God.
44
The history of Abraham, as maintained in "The Legacy of Abraham," points out monotheism's darker side, which is the desire of people to:
A)mythologize figures even if they would learn more from them as ordinary human beings.
B)cling to scripture in spite of evidence in opposition.
C)define themselves by excluding or demonizing others.
D)present as simple a story of faith as possible from important figures.
45
Jews, as pointed out in "The Legacy of Abraham," are often unaware of Abraham's significance for Christians and both Jews and Christians know little about Abraham's importance to Muslims.
A)True
B)False
46
The Asherah of ancient Israel, as put forth in "The Lost Goddess of Israel," is now believed to have been the:
A)daughter of Yahweh.
B)mother of one of the fallen angels.
C)wife or consort of Yahweh.
D)first prophet to speak of Yahweh.
47
The goddess Asherah, as explained in "The Lost Goddess of Israel," is well known to archaeologists from the site of Ugarit in:
A)Turkey.
B)Egypt.
C)Palestine.
D)Syria.
48
Changes that occurred in the heartland of Israelite settlement around 1100 B.C., such as the development of small rural settlements and a rejection of the raising of pigs, as maintained in "The Lost Goddess of Israel," do not appear to be rooted in a religious movement.
A)True
B)False
49
As described in "Behind the First Noel," visitors to Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity are led to Jesus' supposed birthplace there, a:
A)stable.
B)room in what once served as an inn.
C)basement grotto.
D)garden area.
50
As noted in "Behind the First Noel," the Biblical versions of the Annunciation differ in that Luke describes the visit of the angel Gabriel to Mary, while Matthew's version relates that an unnamed angel made the announcement in a dream to:
A)Mary's cousin Elizabeth.
B)John the Baptist.
C)Joseph.
D)the three wise men.
51
As reported in "Behind the First Noel," a majority of scholars now believe that Jesus was born in Nazareth, not Bethlehem.
A)True
B)False
52
Among the following dates in history, as claimed in "Who the Devil Is the Devil?" on which date would the Devil have been most prominent in the Western world?
A)500 a.d.
B)1000 a.d.
C)1700 a.d.
D)1900 a.d.
53
As revealed in "Who the Devil Is the Devil?" the first Devil, i.e., the first concentration of all evil in a single personal form, was an invention of the:
A)Persians.
B)Egyptians.
C)Greeks.
D)Hebrews.
54
As noted in "Who the Devil Is the Devil?" a brutal, terrifying, physically threatening version of the Devil made frequent appearances in the fine arts of the Renaissance.
A)True
B)False
55
As explained in "Adrianople: Last Great Battle of Antiquity," the Goths claimed that they originated in an area called Gothiscandza in southern Scandinavia, but they eventually made their homeland between the Oder and Vistula Rivers in what is now:
A)Spain.
B)Austria.
C)Poland.
D)France.
56
As noted in "Adrianople: Last Great Battle of Antiquity," the Goths who fought at Adrianople were led by a Visigothic warrior-king named:
A)Sitalces.
B)Alaric.
C)Strabo.
D)Fritigern.
57
As asserted in "Adrianople: Last Great Battle of Antiquity," one of the officers serving under Valens, the Comes Sebastianus, had been extremely successful using guerilla tactics against the Goths.
A)True
B)False
58
The Eastern Roman Empire managed to outlast the Western Empire, as explained in "The Survival of the Eastern Roman Empire," for all of the following reasons except that it had:
A)more skillful individual leaders.
B)a more strategic location.
C)a wealthier agricultural base.
D)leaders who practiced a higher order of statecraft.
59
The enemies of Rome who could boast the most centralized, sophisticated state, as identified in "The Survival of the Eastern Roman Empire," were the:
A)Huns.
B)Visigoths.
C)Persians.
D)Franks.
60
As noted in "The Survival of the Eastern Roman Empire," Alaric was a strong leader of the Germanic tribe known as the Vandals.
A)True
B)False
61
As characterized in "The True Caliph of the Arabian Nights," Harun's chief advisor Yahya belonged to a family from the far east of the Islamic world, former guardians of a Buddhist shrine who had converted to Islam, named:
A)Mahdi.
B)Umayyad.
C)Mansur.
D)Barmakid.
62
The Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid, the leader portrayed in "The True Caliph of the Arabian Nights," was a contemporary of the western leader:
A)Richard the Lion-heart.
B)Hakon the Good of Norway.
C)Charlemagne.
D)Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar, known as El Cid.
63
As specified in "The True Caliph of the Arabian Nights," at the time Harun succeeded as caliph, the Abbasid capital of Baghdad was the largest city in the world outside China.
A)True
B)False
64
The medieval European world, as maintained in "Doctor, Philosopher, Renaissance Man," valued most of all Ibn Rushd's achievements as a:
A)philosopher.
B)explorer.
C)physician.
D)jurist.
65
An important component of peaceful Christian-Muslim rivalry during Ibn Rushd's time, as put forth in "Doctor, Philosopher, Renaissance Man," was:
A)technological inventions.
B)literary compositions.
C)architecture.
D)athletic pursuits.
66
Although the taifa kingdoms were generally weak, as noted in "Doctor, Philosopher, Renaissance Man," many of them tried to outdo one another in the advancement of learning and the arts.
A)True
B)False
67
Regarding the Holy Roman Empire, as maintained in "The Ideal of Unity," the people of Europe over the last thousand years have wanted to believe in its existence because the idea of unity was important to strengthening their:
A)image as peaceful people.
B)sense of greatness.
C)racial identities.
D)commitment to exploration and achievement.
68
During the days of the classical Roman Empire, as cited in "The Ideal of Unity," the emperor was, at least in theory, always chosen by the:
A)previous emperor as an heir.
B)army and people.
C)high priests.
D)governing Senate.
69
The actual coronation of Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, as described in "The Ideal of Unity," suggested, along with Charlemagne's protestations, that the ceremony had not been planned prior to the Pope's actions on Christmas Day, 800.
A)True
B)False
70
According to "The Most Perfect Man in History?" the accomplishments of Alfred the Great included all of the following except:
A)paved the way for the future unity of England.
B)translation of the Bible into the vernacular.
C)reorganization of military service.
D)liberation of neighboring areas from Viking control.
71
As reported in "The Most Perfect Man in History?" King Alfred shared a common heritage with the:
A)Tudors.
B)Windsors.
C)Battenburgs.
D)Hanovers.
72
As stated in "The Most Perfect Man in History?" Alfred was canonized shortly after his death.
A)True
B)False
73
As cited in "An Iberian Chemistry," the factor that most contributed to the downfall of Cordova was the:
A)conflict between Muslims and Christians.
B)enmity between Arabs and Berbers.
C)persecution of the Jews.
D)rise of powerful Christian states to the west.
74
As recounted in "An Iberian Chemistry," after the Christian of Cordova conquest in 1236, the city's Great Mosque was:
A)transformed into a marketplace.
B)used as a military barracks.
C)torn down.
D)consecrated as a Christian cathedral.
75
As stated in "An Iberian Chemistry," Cordova had no urban rival in Europe in the tenth century.
A)True
B)False
76
As reported in "The Emergence of the Christian Witch," practices that attracted the wrath of the church in early Christianity included:
A)men entering cemeteries after dark.
B)saying the name of any angel aloud.
C)performance of exorcisms.
D)invoking the ghosts of the dead.
77
As noted in "The Emergence of the Christian Witch," the theology of the early church led to the belief that:
A)the spiritual world did not exist.
B)magic was associated with evil spirits.
C)magic was one of the fruits of the Spirit.
D)all power was of God.
78
According to "The Emergence of the Christian Witch," magicians and dabblers in the occult were relegated to the fringes of society in late antiquity.
A)True
B)False
79
As concluded in "Lackland: The Loss of Normandy in 1204," King John's defeat at Bouvines led to the:
A)establishment of the English navy.
B)annexation of Scotland.
C)French invasion of England.
D)creation of Magna Carta.
80
Before his defeat at Bouvines in 1214, King John of England's French territories:
A)were mostly in the south of France.
B)covered roughly two-thirds of modern France.
C)included only Normandy and Brittany.
D)were never considered part of the French king's realm.
81
As claimed in "Lackland: The Loss of Normandy in 1204," Richard the Lionheart's castle-building program in Normandy caused great financial strain.
A)True
B)False
82
As explained in "The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople," knights in northern Europe gained realistic preparation for warfare through:
A)practice at one-on-one combat.
B)skirmishes with Viking raiders.
C)tournaments.
D)acting as squires to knights from the age of seven until adulthood.
83
As described in "The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople," the participants for the Fourth Crusade included many European nobles and the naval fleet of:
A)Venice.
B)Greece.
C)Spain.
D)Florence.
84
As mentioned in "The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople," one of the first acts of the Fourth Crusade was the capture of the Christian city of Zara, which led to the excommunication of many of the crusaders.
A)True
B)False
85
As described in "Saints or Sinners? The Knights Templar in Medieval Europe," the knights were a:
A)religious order charged with the upkeep of cathedrals.
B)military order that protected pilgrims to the Holy Land.
C)society dedicated to reforming the Roman Catholic Church.
D)secret society that stole from the rich to help the poor.
86
The Order of the Temple, according to "Saints or Sinners? The Knights Templar in Medieval Europe," was considered a military order instead of a religious order, because:
A)the members' lifestyle was very different from that of ordinary monks.
B)only men could join the order.
C)its purpose was to protect pilgrims against bandits.
D)members did not make charitable gifts.
87
The members of a military order, as claimed in "Saints or Sinners? The Knights Templar in Medieval Europe," took up weapons to defend Christ's people for life.
A)True
B)False
88
According to "How a Mysterious Disease Laid Low Europe's Masses," in the fourteenth century, a third of the population of Europe was destroyed by:
A)smallpox.
B)malaria.
C)bubonic plague.
D)typhoid fever.
89
In 1347, according to "How a Mysterious Disease Laid Low Europe's Masses," the first European site to be struck down by the plague was:
A)Florence.
B)Catania.
C)Messina.
D)Genoa.
90
The entire structure of feudal society, as claimed in "How a Mysterious Disease Laid Low Europe's Masses," was strengthened by the plague.
A)True
B)False
91
According to "The Fall of Constantinople," the Ottomans wanted to capture the city for all of the following reasons except its:
A)strategic military importance.
B)material wealth.
C)population, which could be enslaved.
D)reputation as a great city and imperial capital.
92
As stated in "The Fall of Constantinople," the factor that sealed the fate of the city was:
A)an outbreak of plague within the city.
B)the defenders' inability to invest in the current technology of warfare.
C)desertions by Italian allies.
D)the presence in the city of Muslim spies.
93
As noted in "The Fall of Constantinople," the siege of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks was a surprise to the Byzantine Christians.
A)True
B)False
94
Until recently, as presented in "Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses," there was some confidence in the claims that the difficulties Martin Luther had with his father were transposed in later life into:
A)the desire for fame.
B)an obsession with material wealth.
C)fear of God's judgment.
D)worries that he could not be a successful family man.
95
In later life, as described in "Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses," Martin Luther came to believe that sinners could obtain the acceptance and forgiveness of God through:
A)a monastic lifestyle.
B)devotion to good works.
C)mortification of the flesh.
D)simple faith alone.
96
From an early age, as asserted in "Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses," Martin Luther was pushed into the priesthood by his father.
A)True
B)False
97
According to "Explaining John Calvin," Calvin was a:
A)joyless tyrant.
B)cold, inflexible moralist.
C)rigid thinker.
D)humanist.
98
The three languages of ancient Christian discourse, according to "Explaining John Calvin," included all of the following except:
A)Hebrew.
B)Greek.
C)French.
D)Latin.
99
John Calvin, as claimed in "Explaining John Calvin," strongly supported the traditional belief in hierarchy as the general principle of all order.
A)True
B)False
100
As noted in "The Spanish Inquisition," from the very beginning, the Spanish Inquisition was almost entirely controlled by the:
A)papacy in Rome.
B)Spanish crown.
C)Franciscan order of monks.
D)papacy in Avignon.
101
As enumerated in "The Spanish Inquisition," the most severe punishment, being burned at the stake, was referred to as being:
A)penanced.
B)reconciled.
C)released.
D)relaxed.
102
As explained in "The Spanish Inquisition," the "auto de fe" always involved the public burning of prisoners.
A)True
B)False
103
According to "The Third Way," while not themselves Anabaptists, the two men who can be considered the founders of the Anabaptist movement are:
A)Erasmus and Zwingli.
B)Luther and Calvin.
C)Knox and Penn.
D)Wesley and Cromwell.
104
As noted in "The Third Way," over time Zwingli came to believe that the foundation and source of Christian belief was the:
A)Roman Catholic Church.
B)Scriptures.
C)teachings of the priests.
D)writings of the early church fathers.
105
As stated in "The Third Way," most priests of the sixteenth century had never read the Bible.
A)True
B)False
106
As stated in "Vlad Dracula's War on the Turks," Dracula instilled in the common people a:
A)feeling of loyalty to a unified country.
B)distrust of the Russians to the East.
C)determination to make peace with the Turks.
D)commitment to Roman Catholicism.
107
As presented in "Vlad Dracula's War on the Turks," the Turks still equate the name of Dracula with:
A)prosperity.
B)war.
C)evil.
D)Christians.
108
As given in "Vlad Dracula's War on the Turks," to the Turks the name "Dracula" meant "Conqueror."
A)True
B)False
109
The most immediate legal precedent for the expulsion of the Muslims from Spain in the early part of the seventeenth century, as put forth in "The Muslim Expulsion from Spain," was the:
A)ongoing civil war.
B)fate of Native Peoples in the New World.
C)expulsion of the Jews in the last decade of the fifteenth century.
D)recent overthrow of the ruling family.
110
The Rebellion of the Alpujarras in 1499-1500, as described in "The Muslim Expulsion from Spain," provided the Catholic monarchs with their excuse to revoke promises of religious tolerance when:
A)one of the Cardinal's agents was assassinated.
B)it seemed that the Muslim population was increasing substantially.
C)the entire rural peasant population had to be suppressed.
D)the Pope required new assurances of allegiance from Spain.
111
In the early 1500s, as described in "The Muslim Expulsion from Spain," most Spanish Moors rejected any movement towards becoming New Christians, preferring to continue publicly proclaiming their faith.
A)True
B)False
112
According to "Reign On!" Elizabeth's life was most likely spared after her arrest and imprisonment in the Tower of London because Queen Mary, Elizabeth's half sister, feared:
A)interference from France.
B)popular unrest.
C)a Protestant rebellion.
D)she would be cursed with bad luck.
113
Robert Dudley's chances of ever marrying Elizabeth, as set forth in "Reign On!" were most likely finished forever in the scandal surrounding:
A)his other affairs.
B)the death of his wife.
C)his agreements with other nobles.
D)accusations of embezzlement.
114
To her subjects, as maintained in "Reign On!" Elizabeth I seemed unnatural and more divine than mortal.
A)True
B)False







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