Compare the aristocratic styles in Europe and China, as illustrated in Versailles and the Forbidden City

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In 1368, as native Chinese rebels drove out the last of the Mongol rulers, they established the Ming dynasty, which ruled China until 1644. The Ming dynasty governed the largest and most sophisticated empire on earth, an empire of some 120 million people. Eventually, invading Manchus overthrew the Mings and established the Qing dynasty. The early Manchu rulers imitated their predecesors as royal sponsors of art and architecture. Like Louis XIV and Shah Jahan, the Chinese emperor and his huge retinue resided in an impressive ceremonial complex. This metropolis, the symbol of entrenched absolutism and the majesty of the ruler, was known as the Forbidden City—so called because of its inaccessibility to ordinary Chinese citizens until 1925.
The Forbidden City was a huge complex, featuring royal meeting halls, grand avenues, broad courtyards, government offices, mansions for princes and dignitaries, artificial lakes, lush gardens, spacious temples, theaters, a library, and a printing house. It was the nucleus of imperial power and the symbol of Chinese absolutism. Laid out with a gridiron regularity that rivaled Mogul and French palatial complexes, the arrangement of buildings, courtyards, gates, and terraces was uniquely Chinese. Adhering to the practice of feng shui, the arrangement of the physical environment is in accordance with specific cosmological principles. Although most of the buildings of the Forbidden City are no more than a single story high, what they lack in monumentality they achieved in ornamental splendor and a harmony with nature. Bronze lions and gilded dragons (symbols of royal power) guard the great halls and entrances. In the Forbidden City, Chinese court culture promoted a lavish aristocratic style that enhanced the majesty of the ruler.

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In his Ethics, ________ argued that the good life was identical to the life of reason, and would be guided by the Golden Mean

A. Plato B. Socrates C. Hippocrates D. Aristotle

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Carvings on late Roman burial vaults or sarcophagi reveal that

A. rich non-Christian Romans preferred plain, unadorned monuments. B. late Romans wanted only biblical themes and figures on these tombs. C. the Christian belief in life after death made the sarcophagus a likely object for art. D. Christians cremated the dead and thus did not use burial vaults.

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New developments in music occurred because of

A. a shift in patronage. B. political upheavals. C. economic factors. D. all of these.

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What were the primary consonances of organum during the early Middle Ages?

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