HIEU390_QuizMod4
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Liberty University *
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390
Subject
History
Date
Dec 6, 2023
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docx
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Quiz: The Great War
Instructions
The quiz:
Covers the Learn
material from Module 4: Week 4
.
Contains 32 multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank
questions.
Is limited
to 1 hour
.
Allows
1 attempt
.
Is worth 40 points
.
Attempt History
Attempt
Time
LATEST
Attempt 1
53 minutes
Correct answers are hidden.
Score for this quiz: 37.29
out of 40
This attempt took 53 minutes.
Question 1
1.25 / 1.25 pts
How did the German government react after the assassination of Francis Ferdinand?
Germany attempted to smooth relations over with Russia.
Germany told Austria-Hungary's leaders to make peace.
Germany ordered the German army to invade Serbia.
Germany issued the Fourteen Points for peace.
Germany promised Austria-Hungary full German support once Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia.
Question 2
1.25 / 1.25 pts
To which nation did Germany offer military aid in the infamous "Zimmermann telegram"?
Austria-Hungary
Canada
Italy
Mexico
the Ottoman Empire
Question 3
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Which national leader proposed the Fourteen Points for peace
at the end of the war?
David Lloyd George
Georges Clemenceau
Woodrow Wilson
Vittorio Orlando
Vladimir Lenin
Question 4
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What battle marked the failure of the Schlieffen Plan and the start of trench warfare on the western front?
Battle of Verdun
Battle of Liège
Battle of the Somme
Battle of the Tannenberg Forest
Battle of the Marne
Question 5
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What was an important consequence of the Second Moroccan
Crisis of 1911?
Germany gained control of Morocco.
It marked a shift in German foreign policy away from the aggressive policies of the previous decade.
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Austria-Hungary and Russia reached an agreement over access to the Mediterranean Sea.
Serbia began an invasion of the Ottoman Empire in response.
Britain and France moved closer together in their alliance against Germany.
Question 6
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What was the political cause that motivated the assassination
of Francis Ferdinand in 1914?
Hungarian demands for increased power in the Austro-
Hungarian Empire
Russian demands for access to the Mediterranean
German nationalist demands for a "Greater Germany"
Serbian nationalist demands for a "Greater Serbia"
demands for reform in Austria-Hungary's bureaucracy
Question 7
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What condition, caused by the horrors of trench warfare, was first diagnosed among soldiers during the Great War?
tuberculosis
whooping cough
venereal disease
bubonic plague
shell shock
Question 8
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What was one reason Austria-Hungary helped to diffuse the crisis in the Balkans?
Austria-Hungary wanted to strengthen the Balkan states.
Austria-Hungary wanted to encourage nationalist agitation in the Balkans.
Austria-Hungary wanted to prevent Serbia from gaining a port on the Adriatic.
Austria-Hungary had recently adopted a policy advocating for
nonviolent warfare.
Austria-Hungary wanted to establish an alliance with Russia.
Question 9
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What did the new German commander in chief, Erich von Falkenhayn, hope to accomplish at the Battle of Verdun?
Verdun offered control over a road to Paris. Taking the French capital would end the war.
He wanted to try out the effectiveness of a new weapon, the tank.
Taking Verdun would convince Russia that it should make peace.
German control of Verdun would divide British from French forces on the western front.
He hoped to "out-attrition" France, using Germany's higher population as a weapon.
Question 10
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What event was especially influential in increasing pacifist sentiment in the United Kingdom after 1916?
the stalemate at Verdun and Germany's strategy of attrition
the decision to introduce military conscription
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defeat in the Gallipoli campaign
the sinking of the Lusitania
reports of German atrocities in Belgium
Question 11
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What nation joined Germany and Austria-Hungary to form the
Triple Alliance in 1882?
the United Kingdom
the Ottoman Empire
Italy
France
Russia
Question 12
1.25 / 1.25 pts
In which nation was women's legal position the strongest in the 1920s?
France
the United Kingdom
Germany
Poland
Italy
Question 13
1.25 / 1.25 pts
How did corporatists propose organizing economies?
cartel-like corporations that would join companies and
workers in the same organization
international organizations of corporations to make decisions that governments would not
laissez-faire economies that would leave greater power to corporations
corporate control over national economic planning bodies
worker control over corporations
Question 14
1.25 / 1.25 pts
According to the Treaty of Versailles, where did responsibility lie for the outbreak of the Great War?
Germany and Germany's allies' aggression
the entangling alliance system of the pre-war period
the growth of nationalist movements, culminating in the Black Hand's assassination of Francis Ferdinand
the lack of an international institution for resolving disputes
Austria-Hungary's response to the assassination of Francis Ferdinand
Question 15
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Which British economist's The Economic Consequences of the
Peace warned that charging Germany high reparations would have negative consequences?
Friedrich Hayek
Adam Smith
Irving Fisher
John Maynard Keynes
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Thomas Malthus
Question 16
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Why did David Lloyd George change his position to support the creation of a German Republic at the Paris Peace Conference?
He was morally opposed to punishing a nation that had already suffered so much.
He wanted to have another vote that would block American plans for the League of Nations.
He received bribes from German representatives.
He feared that France would upset the balance of power on the continent if there was no Germany
.
He hoped to increase British trade with Central Europe.
Question 17
1.25 / 1.25 pts
James Joyce's Ulysses, with its "stream of consciousness" narration, is perhaps the most famous novel of what artistic movement?
Fauvism
Expressionism
Dadaism
Futurism
Surrealism
Question 18
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Which German author penned the classic pacifist novel All Quiet on the Western Front?
Heinrich Mann
Hermann Hesse
Erich Maria Remarque
Bertolt Brecht
Thomas Mann
Question 19
1.25 / 1.25 pts
The Treaty of Sèvres dismembered what defeated Central Power?
Bulgaria
the Turkish Ottoman Empire
Austria-Hungary
Germany
Italy
Question 20
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What was new about Mahatma Gandhi's nationalist movement in India, as opposed to earlier movements?
It excluded Muslims from the future independent India.
Its primary tactic was violent resistance against British police and soldiers.
It aimed for complete independence from the British Empire rather than greater autonomy.
It aimed for Indian independence while retaining membership
in the British Commonwealth.
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It tried to work with foreign powers to undermine the United Kingdom.
Question 21
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What artistic movement, led by André Breton, developed from distrust of the rationality and reason that its adherents believed had led to the Great War?
Fauvism
Expressionism
Dadaism
Futurism
Surrealism
Question 22
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What political solution to Irish independence demands resulted in part from Sinn Féin members refusing to sit in Parliament?
British recognition of an independent, unified Ireland
British police attacks on Irish civilians
the start of increased fighting, known as "The Troubles"
a ban on Irish political participation
the division of Ireland between the Catholic South and
Protestant North
Partial
Question 23
0.83 / 1.25 pts
How did the war expand in and beyond Europe during World War I?
Japan joined the side of the Allies and occupied various islands in the Pacific. THIS IS CORRECT
Romania and Bulgaria joined different sides. THIS WAS WRONG
Italy fought against the Austrians in the Alps
The Philippines were a hotly contested battleground. Question 24
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What fueled nationalism in Europe?
State-controlled education
Mass media
Church attendance
Multinational corporations
Question 25
1.25 / 1.25 pts
How did nationalism contribute to the tensions leading to World War I?
Nations created a belief that other nations were a threat
Strong sense of loyalty
Strong feelings of cooperation
Ambivalence to other nations
Question 26
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Name one of the four long-term preconditions for the outbreak of World War I
. NATIONALISM
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Partial
Question 27
0.42 / 1.25 pts
What happened on the Eastern Front during World War I?
Won the battle of Tannenberg
Faced early defeats from a quickly deploying Russia
Issued defeat after defeat after 1914
Devolved into trench warfare
Question 28
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What were the major battles on the Western Front?
Battle of Verdun
Battle of the Somme
Battle of Tannenberg
Siege of Gallipoli
Partial
Question 29
0.42 / 1.25 pts
What was the goal of the Schlieffen Plan?
Knock out and flank the French border defenses
Defeating France within six weeks
Redirecting the German army to fight against Russia
Knock out the Belgian defenses
Partial
Question 30
0.63 / 1.25 pts
What role did entangling alliances play in the start of World War I?
Escalating a localized conflict into a large-scale war
Alliances created a complex web of commitments and obligations among European nations
Held high economic standards for trade between alliances
Kept war at bay because all powerful nations had equal counterbalances
Question 31
1.25 / 1.25 pts
Who were the leading Generals on the Eastern Front?
Paul Von Hindenburg
Erich Ludendorff
Ferdinand Foche
Franz von Papen
Question 32
1.25 / 1.25 pts
What event triggered the start of World War I?
The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
The invasion of Belgium
The invasion of Poland
The assassination of Ferdinand Foche
Quiz Score: 37.29
out of 40
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