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TEST BORRADO, QUIZÁS LE INTERESEComplementos Lengua Inglesa UD3

COMENTARIOS ESTADÍSTICAS RÉCORDS
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Título del test:
Complementos Lengua Inglesa UD3

Descripción:
Máster de Profesorado Especialidad Ingles Ui1

Autor:
Ida

Fecha de Creación:
11/06/2022

Categoría:
Historia

Número preguntas: 80
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Temario:
Why did the Roman Empire withdraw all its troops from Britannia and retired South? Because they were losing against the British Because Rome was being attacked by Germanic invaders.
What are the sources for the events that happened in Britain during the 5th and 6th centuries based on? Literature Archaeological findings.
What are the only narrative accounts that were written in later centuries about the events in Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries? The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and Bede' accounts There are no narrative accounts from those centuries.
What happened without the protection of the Roman army in the 5th and 6th centuries? Cities were abandoned and overlords established themselves in kingdoms Many civil wars started.
How many Germanic tribes invited the British overlords as mercenary troops to fight against the invaders? 208 450.
Who were these mercenaries? Celtic tribes Saxons, Jutes, and Angles.
What battle did the Britons win led by Arthur? the Battle of Mons Badonicus the Battle of Sussex.
What territories did the Britons lose against the Anglo-Saxons? The North The South and central territories.
Were did the Britons and Celtic tribes sought refuge? in the South in Wales and the North.
By 600, the seven Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were established. Can you name them? Kent, Sussex, Wessex, East Anglia, Essex, Mercia, and Northumbria. Kent, Sussex, Plymouth, East Anglia, Poppleton, Sunderland and Middlesborough.
Which were the strongest social bonds? Kingdom and lords Kinship and lordship.
In Anglo-Saxon custom and law, honor could be satisfied by a payment to the victim's kin called... kingift wergild.
What was the key element in the relationship between the overlord and his warriors? A sword Loyalty.
The Anglo-Saxon society was pagan and worshiped Germanic gods like... Frey, Balder, Frigg Tiw, Woden, and Thor.
How did Christianization reach the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms first? Through socializing with America Through their contact with the Roman Empire and the remnants of the Celtic Christian mission from Ireland to Scotland.
When did the Roman Christian practice arrived in the kingdoms? With who? With Queen Elizabeth II in 700 With St Augustine in 597.
What was the name of the script used for the Irish-Latin alphabet? Irish-Latin script Insular script.
What was the standard language used for the study of Old English? English King Alfred's language.
What is the name of the first fragment of English literature? the Bible Caedmon's Hymn.
What is Caedmon's Hymn? A war song The first song of praise in English culture and the first Christian religious poem in English.
Who were the only people that could read and write before the 14th century? the Kings Monks and nuns.
What Old English text did the Church preserve? Those that narrated the wars Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People; The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Book of Genesis.
What was the name of Caedmon's translation of the Christian Bible? the Bible 2.0 The Book of Genesis.
What is the name of the most clearly Christian Old English text? Ecclesiastical History of the English People The Dream of the Rood.
What is the name of the only long epic poem that features mythical creatures and a hero? Caedmon's Hymn Beowulf.
What is the name of the first short epic poem that narrates an actual battle? the Battle of Mons The Battle of Maldon.
Some characteristics of Old English poetry are... the use of metaphors, the British pronunciation and the free verse. the verse form, the use of alliteration and conventional diction.
Who is the only author that signed his works in Old English? What did he use? Caedmon - he used ink Cynewulf - he signed with runes.
Who was Alfred the Great? King of the North in the 7th century King of the West Saxons at the end of the 9th century.
What influence did Alfred the Great have? He started writing The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and launched a program of translations from Latin into the vernacular He started a book about the religion in his territories.
Which was the dominant language variant in the 10th and 11th centuries? Essex West Saxon.
Where did Vikings raiders come from towards the end of the 8th century? from the North from the East.
When was London raided? In 865 In 842.
In 878,.... King Alfred was killed and the Vikings took London King Alfred won a decisive battle and recaptured London.
King Alfred was... the first king to win the battles against the Vikings and defend his territory. the first ruler to unite the Angles and the Saxon kingdoms against the invaders, regarded as the predecessor of English ruling dynasties.
Who is regarded as the predecessor of English ruling dynasties? King Alfred King Ethelred.
What did king Ethelred establish to make the Vikings leave? the Danegeld the Christianity .
What was the Witan? the royal family the royal council.
Which two Danish kings ruled until 1040? Ethelred and Harold Cnut and his son.
Which king did the Witan chose after Cnut and his son died in 1040? Harold Edward the Confessor.
What double threat did Harold face? the Danish Vikings and the Normans in Hastings The Germans in Yorkshire and the army was against him.
Year of the Norman Conquest 1040 1066.
What battle did William of Normandy fight? The battle of Moors The Battle of Hastings.
What relationship did the Normans establish when they ascended the throne? the German and the Danish Vikings The English and French territories .
When was the greater expansion of English possession over France reached? In WWII In the Hundred Years' War (1339-1453).
What is the name of the survey William led to know exactly who owned each piece of land in 1086? The Book of the Lands the Domesday Book.
What did John I Lackalnd (son of Henry II and brother of Richard I Lionheart) lose? London Normandy.
Who signed the Magna Carta in 1215? William the Conqueror John I Lackland (son of Henry II, brother of Richard I Lionheart).
Every king after John I Lackland recognized the Magna Carta until... the 15th century the 17th century the 16th century the 20th century.
What led the nobles to form a Parliament? The continued wars over the territories Henry III’s heavy spending on expensive wars in Italy and France .
Who brought together the first real Parliament? Henry III Edward I.
What did Edward I created in 1275? a representative institution, the House of Commons feudalism.
Where did Henry V win during the Hundred Years' War? Whitby Agincourt.
The next conflict after the Hundred Years' War would be... the Waterloo battle the War of the Roses.
In which century did London establish itself as the capital city? 15th 13th.
Which one became the dominant variant in the 13th century? the Norman the Chancery English.
When were the first books in English printed? In 1470 In 1800.
In the early 13th century, the idea of an author comes into English literature with... King Arthur Layamon.
What did Layamon write? The Aeneid Brut.
Until the Norman Conquest, there was no presence of love poetry in English literature. True False.
William Langland’s “Piers Plowman” brings together English traditions and French romance influences. True False.
Female voices from the Middle English literature can be: Marie de France, Christine de Pisan, and Hrotsvitha. Marie de France, Cristina de France, and Marie Claire. .
When was the word "authoress" first used? It was never used In 1478 when Christine de Pisan wrote "Moral Proverbs of Christine".
“Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” takes the fantasy of the Court of Camelot and the mythical figure of King Arthur as the greatest of the English kings. True False.
What did Sir Tomas Malory write? He wrote a trilogy “La Morte d’Artur”, a prose version comprising eight romances from the story of King Arthur and the Knight of the Roung Table. .
Which was the first imaginative work to be widely circulated? La Morte d'Artur Beowulf.
How can we also call the Bubonic Plague? The hundred deaths the Black Death.
Which is the only late medieval drama whose author is known? John Skelton's "Magnificence" John Skelton's "The Battle of York".
What is the main work of Chaucer? Beowulf The Canterbury Tales.
Who is the at the centre of the English context during the Renaissance? King Alfred Queen Elizabeth I.
What key dates mark the beginning of modern times? the end of the War of the Rose and the arrival of Columbus to America. The end of the Hundred Years' War and the arrival of the Vikings to England. .
With which dynasty does the Renaissance start? the Edwards The Tudors.
After the Battle of Bosworth, Henry VII Tudor was crowned king. True Falso.
Due to protestantism, the head of the church in England was... the Pope the King.
Who are the most important figures of the Tudor dynasty? Henry IV and Elizabeth I Henry VIII and Elizabeth I.
Who produced a Greek edition of the Scriptures (1516) that replaced the Latin one the Church of Rome uses? Erasmus of Rotterdam Sir Thomas More.
Who wrote "Utopia" (1516)? Erasmus of Rotterdam Sir Thomas More.
Luther pinned his 95 Theses to a chapel door in 1517 as the start of the Reformation and the birth of Protestantism. True False.
Elizabeth I became queen in 1558 and sought a peaceful resolution to the problems derived from the English Reformation True False.
Who inherited the throne after Elizabeth I? Mary Queen of the Scots Mary's son, James VI of Scotland, I of England.
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