4.5 Practice MCQs
Group 1
Questions 1-3 refer to the image below
Source 1.1
Sugar Plantation in the Americas, 17th Century
Question 1a
Based on the image above, which of the following is an accurate description of the impact of the sugar industry?
Question 1b
Sugar plantations were instrumental to the introduction of African slavery to the Americas because
Question 1c
The production of sugar was necessary because of which of the following developments?
Group 2
Questions 4-5 refer to the image below
Source 2.1
Transatlantic Slave Trade from Africa, 1551-1850
Question 2a
The graph supports which of the following assertions?
Question 2b
Which of the following is an explanation for the trend in the graph?
Group 3
Questions 6-7 refer to the passage below
Source 3.1
“[In the 16th through the 18th centuries] Europeans derived more profit from their participation in trade within Asia than they did from their Asian imports into Europe. They were able to do so ultimately only thanks to their American silver. . . . Only their American money, and not any ‘exceptional’ European ‘qualities’ permitted the Europeans [to access Asian markets]. . . . However, even with that resource and advantage, the Europeans were no more than a minor player at the Asian, indeed world, economic table [until the 19th century].”
Andre Gunder Frank, ReOrient: Global Economy in the Asian Age, 1996
Source 3.2
“The societies of Europe had been at the margins of the great trading systems, but they were at the center of the global networks of exchange created during the 16th century because they controlled the oceangoing fleets that knit the world into a single system. Western Europe was better placed than any other region to profit from the vast flows of goods and ideas within the emerging global system of exchange. . . . [European states] were keen to exploit the commercial opportunities created within the global economic system. They did so partly by seizing the resources of the Americas and using American commodities such as silver to buy their way into the markets of southern and eastern Asia, the largest in the world.”
David Christian, This Fleeting World: A Short History of Humanity, 2008
Question 3a
The two interpretations of economic history of the early modern period differ most strongly concerning
Question 3b
The main arguments of the two sources are most similar in their emphasis on the
Group 4
Questions 8-9 refer to the image below
Source 4.1
Question 4a
Which of the following best explains why the painting was seen as a challenge to social conventions when it was painted?
Question 4b
Which of the following most directly led to the arrival of substantial numbers of Africans in the Americas at the time of the painting?
Group 5
Questions 10-12 refer to the passage below
Source 5.1
"To Your Highnesses of the States General:*
We have been informed by our agent Joris Pietersen, who recently returned from the coast of Angola, that a war arose between the king of Kongo and the Portuguese. The war started because the Portuguese, according to their nature, attacked the region of Mpemba, which the king of Kongo also claims, without any reason but to enslave the inhabitants and conquer the entire country. In this war, the king of Kongo's armies performed so well that all of the Portuguese were driven out of the conquered region with many losses. After this victory, the king took the hats and shoes of all captured Portuguese soldiers as a sign of contempt and took the sails and rudders off their two ships that were anchored off Mpemba.
Then the king of Kongo, being of the opinion that all the Portuguese should be driven off his lands forever, sent letters to Joris Pietersen, our agent in Angola, requesting to enter into an alliance with the Dutch state and asking your Highnesses to provide them with four or five warships as well as five or six hundred soldiers for assistance on the water as well as the land, in order that he might secure the coasts from the Portuguese and their supporters. The king is offering to pay for the ships and the monthly wages of the soldiers with gold, silver, or ivory. If successful, he promises to put into your hands the fort and city of Luanda—a place so useful to the king of Spain that more than twenty-four thousand Africans are shipped annually from there to the West-Indies and other places in the Americas.
Your Highnesses, it is the Company's judgment that the king of Kongo's proposal will likely bring harm to our enemies and increase our commerce. Therefore, if the king's proposal is accepted, the Company will contribute according to its capacity."
*a legislative body of the Dutch Republic, comprising representatives of the various provinces of the Netherlands
Letter from the directors of the Dutch West India Company to the States General of the Netherlands, 1623.
Question 5a
The contents of the letter are best understood in the context of which of the following aspects of the historical situation in sub-Saharan Africa in the early 1600s?
Question 5b
The point of view expressed by the Dutch West India Company's directors in the letter can best be described as
Question 5c
The report's position on the proposed transfer of Luanda to the Dutch is best understood in light of the authors' goal to
Group 6
Questions 13-15 refer to the passage below
Source 6.1
"I admit that the punishments of the slaves on Barbados for all sorts of offenses are indeed very cruel, but one must consider before condemning the [White] inhabitants that they often have no choice but to set moderation aside and use punishment as a way to intimidate their slaves. The Whites need to impress fear and respect upon their slaves in order not to one day find themselves the victims of their fury. Unless the slaves are kept in a constant state of fear of punishment, they would always be ready to revolt, to take over everything, and to commit the most horrible crimes in order to liberate themselves.
The plantations on Barbados are smaller than those in the French [Caribbean] islands. This is not surprising because although the island is small, its population is very large, and land is scarce and therefore very valuable. Nonetheless, the plantation owners are very wealthy and the houses on the plantations are even better built than those in the towns. The plantation houses are large in size, have numerous glass windows, and have fine rooms that are conveniently arranged. Nearly all plantation houses have rows of shade trees around them to keep them cool. One observes the wealth and good taste of the inhabitants in their furniture, which is very fine, and their silver, of which they have so large a quantity that if this island were to be sacked the silver utensils from the plantations alone would be worth more than the value of several Spanish galleons."
Jean-Baptiste Labat, French clergyman and travel writer, account of his visit to the British Caribbean island of Barbados, 1690s.
Question 6a
Which of the following best describes the author's argument in the first paragraph?
Question 6b
Which of the following best describes the author's claim in the second paragraph?
Question 6c
Which of the following is an implicit argument made by the author in the passage?
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