Seating in Congregational churches was a reflection of
A. whether one was of the elect or of the damned.
B. one's marital status.
C. one's occupation.
D. one's standing in the community.
Answer: D
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Social and economic conditions that produced problems and tensions in sixteenth-century England included all of the following EXCEPT
A) a population explosion. B) the enclosure movement. C) the collapse of the woolens industry. D) price inflation.
Which of the following is not evidence that public education in the late-nineteenth-century United States had become entangled in ethnic and class differences?
A) The proliferation of private and parochial schools B) The controversy over compulsory education C) The debates over classroom decorum D) The efforts to wrest control of schools from neighborhood leaders E) New educational theories that stressed decentralized administration, repealed compulsory attendance, and de-emphasized white European conventions such as punctuality.
The Reform Bill of 1832 in Britain primarily benefited the
A) landed aristocracy. B) peasants. C) working class. D) clergy. E) upper middle-class.
Between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries, what became a new requirement for priests?
a. virginity b. marriage c. aristocratic connections d. literacy e. celibacy