WH- Chapter 8, Section 2 Question Preview (ID: 60288)


China. TEACHERS: click here for quick copy question ID numbers.

Tang artisans perfected the making of this—a ceramic made of fine clay baked at very high temperatures:
a) Yellow modeling clay
b) Sliver crystals
c) Porcelain
d) Prismacolor

This new doctrine teaches that the world is real, not an illusion, and that fulfillment comes from participation in the world:
a) Zen
b) Shinto
c) Confucianism
d) neo-Confucianism

These individuals taught that the material world was not real, but an illusion:
a) Buddhists
b) Shinto
c) Zen
d) Kami

These principles became the basis for Chinese government during the Han dynasty:
a) Confucian
b) Shinto
c) Zen
d) Kami

By the time of these two dynasties, Buddhism and Daoism rivaled the influence of Confucianism:
a) Mongol and Mughal
b) Song and Tang
c) Song and Sui
d) Sui and Tang

This dynasty eventually fell victim to the same problems that had plagued other dynasties: too much spending on foreign conquests, corruption at court, and growing internal instability:
a) Shinto
b) Kami
c) Mongols
d) Zen

This group used tactics, such as cavalry charges and siege warfare:
a) Huns
b) Umayyads
c) Abbassids
d) Mongols

This group created the world’s largest land empire by conquering all of China.
a) Huns
b) Visogoths
c) Mongols
d) Ostrogoths

It may be that only the death of this leader kept the Mongols from attacking western Europe:
a) Genghis Kahn
b) Kublai Kahn
c) Marco Polo
d) Charlemagne

Kublai Khan, who ruled China until his death in 1294, established his capital at Khanbalik—the city of the Khan—later known by the Chinese name of:
a) Guangzhou
b) Beijing
c) Tokyo
d) Nanjing

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