What position did the Prussian king Frederick William IV take toward the unification of the German states into a single kingdom?
A) He gave the movement his complete support.
B) He supported unification but refused to take ?the crown from the gutter? when it was
offered by an assembly.
C) He adamantly opposed the unification movement.
D) He would accept unification only if it were approved by a popular plebiscite.
E) He refused and maintained a strict loyalty to the Habsburg emperor.
B
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What does the scene from the Book of the Dead shown in your text suggest about Egyptian views of the afterlife?
a. The afterworld was a gloomy and dark place. b. The path to the afterlife was filled with trials and tests. c. Everyone passed into the afterlife forever. d. The gods of the dead resembled humans.
What was the New Economic Policy?
A. Lenin's early Soviet economic system B. France's democratic economic system C. Hitler's original economic system D. China's communist economic system
Why didn't Great Britain support the rest of the European continent in their Latin American policies?
a. Great Britain realized that independent Latin American countries offered better economic opportunities for British products. b. Great Britain didn't want to lose its colonies in Africa, so it opposed any independent colonies in Latin America. c. Great Britain hoped to re-colonize most of the Latin American nations once the Spanish and Portuguese were kicked out. d. Great Britain had learned from the Revolutionary War with the United States that colonial wars were expensive and impossible to win. e. Great Britain had observed the economic and political successes of the United States and respected Latin American nations' rights to the same.
In 1856, the breaking point over slavery in Kansas came with
a. the arrival of John Brown. b. a deadly armed attack and partial burning of the the free-soil town of Lawrence by a gang of proslavery raiders. c. the influx of a large number of slaves. d. the establishment of evangelical abolitionist churches. e. the passage of the Lecompton Constitution.