SuperTeacherTools SuperTeacherTools Help
Create a New Game Back to Non-Live Version

Join Code:
K4WQ8A

How to Play:

Instant Jeopardy Review is designed for live play with as many individuals or teams as you like! Each team will need to enter the Join Code above. Teams choose a question, then try to give the best answer.

Scoring is built in for each team.

You can also choose to use a timer below.

Have fun!

Play This Game Live Now


Seconds To Answer Each Question
Set to X to hide the timer

Prefer the old Flash template? Switch now: World History Final Review Round I Jeopardy Review Flash Version

World History Final Review Round I

Renaissance Reformation Scientific Revolution Enlightenment French Revolution
10 10 10 10 10
20 20 20 20 20
30 30 30 30 30
40 40 40 40 40
50 50 50 50 50
Final Question
Create a New Game Create a New Game



Which period saw a great rebirth in the classics, art, and literature?

View Answer
Who were the three most well-known artists of High Renaissance?

View Answer
What was the name of Machiavelli's book that was published during the Renaissance and gave advice to the leaders of Europe?

View Answer
How must leaders act according to Machiavelli?

View Answer
Which Renaissance era philosophy used science, art, and respect for each human being in the study of worldly subjects and classical culture?

View Answer
What happened to the power of the Catholic Church in Europe as a result of the Protestant Reformation?

View Answer
Which reformer nailed his 95 theses to the door of the Castle Church at Wittenberg in 1517?

View Answer
An important result of the Reformation was the creation of new denominations. What were new denominations?

View Answer
Which Protestant reformer in Switzerland believed in predestination?

View Answer
The strengthening of the Catholic Church in Spain, Portugal, and Italy, the Council of Trent, and the creation of the Jesuits were all part of what Catholic response to the Protestant Reformation?

View Answer
Which sixteenth century movement led to many advances in science?

View Answer
With whom did Galileo Galilei have a dispute over their refusal to accept his conclusions about the relationship between the Earth and the sun in the solar system?

View Answer
Francis Bacon, Galileo Galilei, and Isaac Newton all believed that knowledge should be based on what two things?

View Answer
What was the biggest difference between the Ptolemaic view of the universe and the Copernican view of the universe?

View Answer
What was the name for the systematic procedure for collecting and analyzing evidence that changed the way scientists and philosophers studied the world around them?

View Answer
What period of history led to many philosophies on the best form of government?

View Answer
How did John Locke believe the mind acquires knowledge?

View Answer
Which of the following was not a book written during the Enlightenment: Locke’s Two Treatises of Government, Rousseau’s The Social Contract, Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People, and Montesquieu’s The Spirit of the Laws?

View Answer
Which two periods of history between 1550 and 1800 examined the natural laws governing the universe?

View Answer
Enlightenment ideas were spread through the use of the printing press and through meetings of the wealthy elites in which elegant drawing rooms in the urban houses of the wealthy?

View Answer
High taxes on the Third Estate, the success of the American Revolution, and the poor leadership and frivolous spending of Louis XVI all contributed to which war?

View Answer
Which 1814 meeting of European leaders occurred to develop a plan for lasting peace in Europe after the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars?

View Answer
In 1789, members of the Third Estate in the Estates General in France took the Tennis Court Oath, promising to do what?

View Answer
The storming of which prison building in Paris demonstrated that violence would be an integral part of the French Revolution?

View Answer
What philosophical principles of the Enlightenment contributed to the goals of the French Revolution?

View Answer
Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael
The Prince
Good when possible and evil when necessary (they must be manipulative)
Humanism
Weakened
Martin Luther
New branches of the Christian Church
John Calvin
Counter-Reformation
Scientific Revolution
Catholic Church officials
Experimentation & Observation
Body at the Center of the Universe (Earth vs. Sun)
Scientific Method
Enlightenment
Experience
Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People
Scientific Revolution & Enlightenment
Salons
French Revolution
Congress of Vienna
Draft a new National Constitution
Bastille
Individual Rights and Liberties of the People





Remove Teams / Players