European Christians who emigrated to Japan:
a. Avoided port cities, which they considered sources of vice and iniquity.
b. Presented a united front of Christian solidarity, regardless of specific creed.
c. Converted only about 2000 Japanese, who clung to Neo-Confucian traditions.
d. Brought their bitter quarrels with them, pitting their Japanese allies against each other.
d. Brought their bitter quarrels with them, pitting their Japanese allies against each other.
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In the Chinese civil service examination system,
a. stress was placed on geometric and foreign language skills. b. under the Song, Confucian doctrine had been replaced by Buddhist teachings as the sole contents of the exam. c. in comparison to other civilizations, the process provided a means for upward social mobility. d. the elimination of all bureaucratic shortcomings was achieved. e. the establishment of the Censorate eliminated all possibilities of official wrongdoing.
World War II had the effect of __________ Europe’s overseas empires.
What arguments were put forward by critics of global free trade in the early twenty-first century?
What will be an ideal response?
What effect did World War I have on the Russian army?
a. Because of prewar modernization, the Russian army was able to hold back the best of the German armies. b. Led by aristocratic officers, the morale of the army was high. c. Russian prisoners were treated well, because the kaiser and tsar were related through royal blood. d. Mutinies were common among the bulk of the army, composed mostly of peasants. e. The tsar, as the religious and civil leader of Russia, was held in high regard by the common Russian soldier.