After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
Three developments would be especially important for the future of Europe. First and most critical, the voyages of discovery slowly made it clear, for the first time in human history, that the oceans of Earth were linked into a single vast body of water that could carry seaworthy ships to any coast anywhere. These voyages began not with Columbus in 1492 but almost two centuries earlier. In the early fourteenth century, ships from the Italian cities Venice and Genoa began to venture onto the high seas of the Atlantic,making yearly expeditions to England and other destinations. By the mid-fourteenth century, commercial links had been established with the Madeiras and the Azores, and in the next century these two island groups and the Cape Verde Islands passed into Spanish or Portuguese hands. By 1500 Portuguese ships had traveled down the long coast of West Africa and traversed the Indian Ocean bringing Portugal a direct sea route to India and a vast commercial empire in the Far East. Similarly, Spanish ships traversed the Atlantic to the New World. In the sixteenth century, the commercial economy of Europe would be transformed by such voyages. As new ocean routes short-circuited old trade routes, both the Ottoman Empire (which controlled major routes in the Middle East) and the cities of the Italian peninsula fell into commercial decline. The economic future lay not in the Mediterranean Sea but in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.
Second, some entrepreneurs began to take industrial work,especially work in cloth making, into the rural villages that surrounded their towns. These so-called rural industries offered entrepreneurs cheaper and less regulated production than could be had within town walls. And they offered peasants extra income especially during the winter when agricultural demands were few Rural industries would become a mainstay of industrial production and rural economy in early modern Europe, and, indeed, they remain important in some regions of Europe even today
Third, technological innovation drove much of the economic expansion of the fifteenth century. In addition to improvements already mentioned in mining and shipping, water power was harnessed in better ways, mechanical clocks measured time more precisely than ever before, spinning wheels (first introduced to Europe in the late thirteenth century) continued to replace older tools for producing thread, eyeglasses became ever more common,and advances in the metallurgical arts gave birth to two entirely new urban industries: the production of firearms and cannons and printing with movable type. Gunpowder, invented in eleventh century China, was in military use-very limited use-in Europe by he 1320s,but it became an increasingly important factor in the warfare of the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Printing from movable type began with the production of the Gutenberg Bible in Mainz. Germany. in 1445, and within a generation about three dozen cities in Europe-stretching from Oxford to Valencia to Krakow-boasted printing presses. Both printing and gun manufacture gave rise to a different sort of working environment than before, slowly replacing family workshops with larger workplaces, rather like small factories, to which many employees would gather for each day’s work
1
After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
The word “extraction” in the passage is closest in meaning to
Aavailability for sale
Bspread
Cdevelopment
Dremoval from the earth
2
After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
According to paragraph 1, all of the following occurred in Europe during the fifteenth century EXCEPT:
AInvestments were made in copper and iron mines.
BThe production of luxury cloths increased.
CConsumers had more money to spend on goods
DAdvances in ship design led to the development of trade
3
After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
What can be inferred about Portugal from paragraph 1?
AIt was the first country to create a new design for European ships in the fifteenth century.
BIt probably had not established direct trade links with West Africa before the fifteenth century
CIt had fewer improvements in living standards in the fifteenth century than did other European countries
Dresponded to economic changes in the fifteenth century by trying to protect the privileges already gained.
4
After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
What is the author’s primary purpose in paragraph 1?
ATo explain why different European towns and cities responded to the economic challenge of the late medieval economy indifferent ways
BTo demonstrate that not everyone responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by attempting to guard the privileges they already had
CTo emphasize the speed with which most countries responded to the economic changes occurring in fifteenth century Europe
DTo provide examples of new types of economic enterprises in fifteenth century Europe
5
Three developments would be especially important for the future of Europe. First and most critical, the voyages of discovery slowly made it clear, for the first time in human history, that the oceans of Earth were linked into a single vast body of water that could carry seaworthy ships to any coast anywhere. These voyages began not with Columbus in 1492 but almost two centuries earlier. In the early fourteenth century, ships from the Italian cities Venice and Genoa began to venture onto the high seas of the Atlantic,making yearly expeditions to England and other destinations. By the mid-fourteenth century, commercial links had been established with the Madeiras and the Azores, and in the next century these two island groups and the Cape Verde Islands passed into Spanish or Portuguese hands. By 1500 Portuguese ships had traveled down the long coast of West Africa and traversed the Indian Ocean bringing Portugal a direct sea route to India and a vast commercial empire in the Far East. Similarly, Spanish ships traversed the Atlantic to the New World. In the sixteenth century, the commercial economy of Europe would be transformed by such voyages. As new ocean routes short-circuited old trade routes, both the Ottoman Empire (which controlled major routes in the Middle East) and the cities of the Italian peninsula fell into commercial decline. The economic future lay not in the Mediterranean Sea but in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.
The word “critical” in the passage is closest in meaning to
Atroubling
Bpredictable
Cimportant
Dunderstandable
6
Three developments would be especially important for the future of Europe. First and most critical, the voyages of discovery slowly made it clear, for the first time in human history, that the oceans of Earth were linked into a single vast body of water that could carry seaworthy ships to any coast anywhere. These voyages began not with Columbus in 1492 but almost two centuries earlier. In the early fourteenth century, ships from the Italian cities Venice and Genoa began to venture onto the high seas of the Atlantic,making yearly expeditions to England and other destinations. By the mid-fourteenth century, commercial links had been established with the Madeiras and the Azores, and in the next century these two island groups and the Cape Verde Islands passed into Spanish or Portuguese hands. By 1500 Portuguese ships had traveled down the long coast of West Africa and traversed the Indian Ocean bringing Portugal a direct sea route to India and a vast commercial empire in the Far East. Similarly, Spanish ships traversed the Atlantic to the New World. In the sixteenth century, the commercial economy of Europe would be transformed by such voyages. As new ocean routes short-circuited old trade routes, both the Ottoman Empire (which controlled major routes in the Middle East) and the cities of the Italian peninsula fell into commercial decline. The economic future lay not in the Mediterranean Sea but in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.
According to paragraph 2, each of the following was part of the sixteenth-century transformation of the commercial economy of Europe EXCEPT:
ANew ocean routes replaced old trade routes
BThe Ottoman Empire fell into commercial decline.
CThe Atlantic and Indian Oceans became economically more important than the Mediterranean Sea.
DItaly gained control of the major trade routes in the Middle East.
7
Second, some entrepreneurs began to take industrial work,especially work in cloth making, into the rural villages that surrounded their towns. These so-called rural industries offered entrepreneurs cheaper and less regulated production than could be had within town walls. And they offered peasants extra income especially during the winter when agricultural demands were few Rural industries would become a mainstay of industrial production and rural economy in early modern Europe, and, indeed, they remain important in some regions of Europe even today
According to paragraph 3, what is one reason that cloth-making industries began to move out of towns and into rural villages?
ATo take advantage of the fewer controls on production in rural villages
BTo improve rural economies
CTo extend the influence of the towns
DTo provide peasants with extra income during the winter
8
Third, technological innovation drove much of the economic expansion of the fifteenth century. In addition to improvements already mentioned in mining and shipping, water power was harnessed in better ways, mechanical clocks measured time more precisely than ever before, spinning wheels (first introduced to Europe in the late thirteenth century) continued to replace older tools for producing thread, eyeglasses became ever more common,and advances in the metallurgical arts gave birth to two entirely new urban industries: the production of firearms and cannons and printing with movable type. Gunpowder, invented in eleventh century China, was in military use-very limited use-in Europe by he 1320s,but it became an increasingly important factor in the warfare of the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Printing from movable type began with the production of the Gutenberg Bible in Mainz. Germany. in 1445, and within a generation about three dozen cities in Europe-stretching from Oxford to Valencia to Krakow-boasted printing presses. Both printing and gun manufacture gave rise to a different sort of working environment than before, slowly replacing family workshops with larger workplaces, rather like small factories, to which many employees would gather for each day’s work
According to paragraph 4, the production of firearms and printing with movable type had each of the following in common EXCEPT:
AThey created new urban industries.
BThey led to changes in the work environment
CThey both originated in China and underwent continued development in Europe
DThey were the result of advances in metals technology.
9
After widespread economic difficulties in the fourteenth century,Europe began to recover and develop new initiatives. For example,some English towns developed thriving cloth weaving industries, so that England, a great exporter of wool in 1300, became a great exporter of cloth by 1500. ■ Some German towns began investing in mines, using new advances in mining technology to profit from the extraction of copper and iron. Others began to specialize in linen or silk production. ■ Some Flemish towns (towns in the northern part of modern Belgium), reacting to the improving living standards and purchasing power of late medieval consumers, switched from the production of luxury cloths to cheaper cloths that attracted a broader market. ■ And some cities in Portugal began to make good use of improvements in ship design and navigation to establish trade links down the coast of West Africa. ■ If some merchants responded to the challenges of the late medieval economy by seeking merely to guard the privileges they already possessed,others looked farther afield to find profit in new markets, new commodities, and new trade routes
Look at the four squaresthat indicate where the following sentence could be added to the passage
Developments such as these made for a period of great economic change and opportunity.
Where would the sentence best fit?Click on a square sentence to the passage.
10
New initiatives enabled fifteenth-century Europe to recover from the widespread economic difficulties of the fourteenth century.
ASome merchants responded to the changing conditions of the late medieval economy by attempting to defend the privileges they had gained during the previous centuries
BNew ocean routes replaced old trade routes, a process that transformed the commercial economy of Europe and led to the Ottoman Empire’s commercial decline
CMuch of the economic expansion of the fifteenth century resulted from advances in technology, and the new industries that emerged changed the workplace environment
DThe voyages of discovery that made the economic transformations of sixteenth-century Europe possible began with Italian cities making yearly expeditions to England.
EBecause rural villages offered cheaper and less regulated production than could be found in towns, entrepreneurs began to move industrial production to rural villages.
FGunpowder became a crucial element in European warfare in the early fourteenth century when large-scale gun manufacture first.