The Three Kingdoms of early Korea were

A. Xinjang, Silla, and Jurchen.
B. Paekche, Silla, and Koguryo.
C. Sakhalin, Koryo, and Tientsin.
D. Pyongyang, Yalu, and Annam.
E. Seoul, Koguryo, and Champa.


Answer: B

History

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The increasing association of cities with ______________________ only further distanced them from the countryside

Fill in the blank(s) with correct word

History

When peace was restored in the 1780s, Americans were forced to face some unanswered questions raised by their revolution. Which of the following was NOT among their questions?

A. Could the individual states establish treaties and agreements with foreign countries, excluding the other states? B. Would the lands in the West eventually become part of the United States, and how would this take place? C. Would factions and self-interest groups pull the states apart and make union impossible? What forces and issues could unite the very different types of people who populated the new states? D. None is a correct answer, because all these questions were among those raised by the revolution.

History

How were the earliest Sumerian temples constructed?

A) The earliest temples were constructed of mud brick called adobe and placed in the center of the city-state for all to see and attend to worship. B) The earliest temples were constructed of the only available substance (mud brick-adobe) and constructed atop man-made stepped mountains called ziggurats. C) Ziggurats were the earliest temples and they were constructed of stone and wood at the center of the city-state. D) The earliest temples were mountain temples that were built of brick at the highest point adjacent to the city-state. E) The ziggurats were the earliest temples constructed of mud brick and were constructed far from the city-state for worshippers to take a pilgrimage to interact with their deities.

History

The Maccabean revolt occurred in protest against ______________.

A. Antigonus of Macedonia B. the Seleucid king Antiochus IV C. Athanasius of Nicea D. Salome Alexandria E. Albanensus the Cynic

History