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When the grand prince of Moscow, Ivan III, stopped paying tribute to the Mongol Khan in 1848, it was seen as significant because it
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- consolidated the Muscovy princes over all other princes.
- symbolically declared Russian independence from Mongol rule.
- led to a revolution in the Caucuses.
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During the fifteenth century, the princes of Moscow expanded their land holdings by war, marriages, and outright purchases. Ivan III sought to consolidate his holdings through
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- generating violent wars and revolution among indigenous populations.
- recruiting peasants and offering them freedom to settle in newly acquired lands.
- a series of marriages to several different royal houses which owned land.
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Ivan III reigned like the Byzantine emperors, which meant that he
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- was the head of the state and head of the church.
- organized a liberal constitutional monarchy and made himself the head.
- ruled through terror and fear with bands of peasants who carried out his orders.
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The reign of Ivan the Terrible, the grandson of Ivan III, is important because during his rule,
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- church lands were confiscated for use of the state.
- oprichniki, whose primary function was service to the state, were introduced.
- his eccentric behavior led to the burning of dissenters in large frying pans in Moscow.
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When Ivan IV died without an heir, the next fifteen years of wars and famine, known as the Time of Troubles, were punctuated by
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- fighting between factions who wanted to succeed Ivan IV.
- the invasion of Russia by Poland and Sweden.
- both of the above.
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In the aftermath of the Polish and Swedish invasion, representatives from around the country selected which man as the Tsar?
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- Mikhail Romanov
- Peter I
- Avvakum
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When Peter I came to the throne in 1682, his primary agenda was to
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- initiate a plan of forced and rapid modernization based on western models.
- consolidate his power by relocating dissenters in the farthest part of his country.
- purge all foreign influence out of Russian culture and language.
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The commitment of Peter I to modernization turned the Russia army into one of the largest in the world. Which tactics did he incorporate to achieve this?
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- buying surplus military men from other countries
- extensive training, modern weapons, and better salaries
- avoiding military conflict for many years in an effort to build up the military
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When Peter I overhauled the Russian government bureaucracy, he
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- established the Table of Ranks which eliminated the privileges of nobility and reinforced the subservience of the people to the tsar.
- created a pre-modern system of social security that included peasants.
- decided to give tax breaks to foreign industrial powers that would re-locate in Russia.
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In Russia, the policy of Peter I’s social reform included
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- cutting off beards of men and the abolishment of terms.
- quicker and easier divorce laws for everyone, not just the privileged nobles.
- redistribution of land to freed peasants and serfs.
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With St. Petersburg, Peter I worked zealously to establish a modern capitol and used architects and designs exclusively from within the Russian population in an effort to promote Russian nationalism and pride.
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- True
- False
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In the Charter of Nobility and its parallel, the Charter of the Towns, Catherine II reinforced the image of the enlightened despot by
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- providing complete autonomy to all classes and provinces.
- encouraging industrial production by providing tax breaks to reward individual initiative.
- stopping short of granting complete independence to nobles in the towns.
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After crushing the challenges to her rule, Catherine II launched a campaign aimed at expanding foreign and especially Western European influence in an ongoing effort to modernize.
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- True
- False
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Ukraine peasants, led by Bogdan Khmelnitsky, gravitated toward a union with Russia based on their
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- hatred of Polish landlords.
- religious affinities.
- all of the above.
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The Polish-Lithuanian Republic remained unstable due to its poorly organized administrative and legal systems, and it posed little resistance when invaded by
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- Russia, Austria, and Prussia.
- Russia, France, and Prussia.
- Russia, Austria, and the German Federation.
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During the various wars with Russia, parts of Poland were annexed. In regard to these territories, Catherine II initiated legislation called the Pale of Settlement which
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- prohibited peasants from living outside their traditional feudal boundaries.
- prohibited Jews from living outside specified boundaries.
- prohibited foreigners from living outside of specific cities.
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In pre-modern Muscovite society, agricultural society revolved around
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- the peasant church.
- the peasant family.
- the peasant village.
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Peasant women in pre-modern Muscovite society held considerable influence because they took the responsibility for
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- organizing labor on the family farm.
- arranging marriages in the village.
- promoting religious values, such as honesty and purity.
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Contrary to their Western counterparts, Russian women often maintained control over their dowries after marriage.
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- True
- False
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During whose reign did the nobles gain the most power regarding their feudal privileges at the expense of their serfs?
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- Ivan I
- Peter I
- Catherine II
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When Patriarch Nikon of Moscow and his followers initiated a series of reforms, they faced enormous resista