Hist 3110, mid-term 2 review (exam:  March 30, 1999)

Part one (40%) identify three out of five terms drawn from the following list. Identification involves an argument: state what the person or thing is, locate it in time and place, and indicate its particular historical significance.

Part two (20%) Write a paragraph on a short passage selected from those on the impact of the French Revolution and the Empire (The Past Speaks, chs. 6 and 12). Briefly explain the writer's argument and intention, how it "fits" a particular historical era or crisis, and, if possible, any particular biases of the writer or holes in his argument. Focus on the passage cited.

Part three (40%) will be two of the following questions from which you will select one as the basis for a well-constructed essay. Where possible, define your terms, make an argument, and give (and explain) specific evidence to back that argument.

  1. Was the Reform Act of 1832 the result of aristocratic factional politics, social changes due to the Industrial Revolution, or a natural political progression from the Glorious Revolution? Compare and weigh the long-term and short-term causes of the Great Reform.
  2. "Victorian Britain was so economically successful because it was the age of free enterprise." Comment on the validity of this statement.
  3. Was Ireland part of the British Empire? Compare and contrast British attitudes towards the Irish Question in the Nineteenth Century with attitudes towards the rest of the Empire. If possible, explain why relations with Ireland occupied so much of the political terrain.

Back to His 3110 syllabus