Scandinavia by the twelfth century

A) remained largely pagan and resistant to European culture.
B) contained the continent's most powerful nation, Sweden.
C) entered into a period of relative peace within and between local kingdoms.
D) had accepted Christianity through the agency of local kings who wished to better organize and govern their states.
E) abandoned their marriage alliances with the Holy Roman Empire.


D

History

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Lenin changed Marxism to fit the realities of Russia using all of the following EXCEPT

A) A full-time professional leadership supervising a conspiratorial, clandestine party. B) A movement of peasants', not workers', discontent with the government could lead to revolutionary action. C) A dictatorship of the Bolsheviks was necessary. D) The small industrial class of Russia would rise in discontent, followed by the peasants. E) The small group of the Central Committee and Lenin would rule Russia.

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Hagia Sophia was

A. the magnificent church at Constantinople. B. the legal foundation for Justinian's code. C. Justinian's most dangerous political enemy. D. the central trading city on the silk roads. E. the wife of Justinian, who proved to be a wise adviser.

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Progressive reformer__________ ran for governor of California in 1910 with a platform advocating “direct democracy.”

a. Louis Brandeis b. Hiram Johnson c. William Shepherd d. W. E. B. Du Bois

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Once the system of jatis in India was established,

a. individual jati were locked into an unchanging hierarchy in relation to other jatis. b. individuals within a jati regularly raised their social status by growing wealthy enough to join other jatis. c. an individual jati could raise its standing in relation to other jatis in the local hierarchy by acquiring land or wealth. d. no individual could be expelled from his or her jati.

History