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World History Reviewer

This document contains 89 trivia questions about world history. The questions cover a wide range of topics including countries, historical figures, events, inventions, and more. The questions are multiple choice format with the correct answers provided. The document aims to provide an engaging review of world history facts through a trivia quiz format.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
6K views13 pages

World History Reviewer

This document contains 89 trivia questions about world history. The questions cover a wide range of topics including countries, historical figures, events, inventions, and more. The questions are multiple choice format with the correct answers provided. The document aims to provide an engaging review of world history facts through a trivia quiz format.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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World history reviewer

World History Trivia Quiz Questions

1. Americans founded what African country?


A: Liberia
2. The Opening of the Suez canal was marked by what opera
commissioned in 1869 for the event?
A: Aida
3. Three Scottish kings and eight Popes have what same name?
A: Alexander
4. Oslo, Sweden was called what until 1925?
A: Christiana
5. Whose name translates as Emperor of all?
A: Genghis Khan
6. In ancient Rome, the name Coliseum means Place for a what?
A: Giant
7. The Blur Max medal was named after Max who?
A: Max Immelmann
8. In Holland, who was the first licensed female watchmaker ?
A: Corie Ten Boom
9. Before it was called Britain, what was it called?
A: Albion
10. Which Italian tractor maker started manufacturing cars
in 1960s?
A: Ferruchio Lamborghini
11. Where are the best free world history trivia quiz
questions with answers?
A: Tivia Country!
12. Russian October revolution took place in what month?
A: November
13. What profession did Socrates have?
A: Stonecutter
14. Which English King had the armor with the biggest
codpiece?
A: Henry 8
15. German mapmaker Martin Waldseemuller named
America after who?
A: Amerigo Vespucci
16. What country is the world's oldest functioning
democracy?
A: Iceland
17. What was the name of the last person in England to be
judicially beheaded?
A: Lord Lovat
18. In 1989, Carlos Menim was elected president of what
country?
A: Argentina
19. What was a hoplite in ancient Greece?
A: A Soldier
20. Atahualpa was the last ruler of what people?
A: Incas
21. What 6th century Greek poet is considered the father of
drama?
A: Thespis
22. What famous document begins: "When in the course of
human events..."?
A: The Declaration of Independence.
23. What current branch of the U.S. military was a corps of
only 50 soldiers when World War I broke out?
A: The U.S. Air Force.
24. What game was created by French mathematician Blaise
Pascal, which he discovered when doing experiments into
perpetual motion?
A: The Game of Roulette.
25. Who said: "I'm the president of the United States and I'm
not going to eat any more broccoli"?
A: George Bush.
26. What so-called "war" spawned the dueling slogans
"Better Dead Than RED" and "Better Red Than Dead" in
the 1950's?
A: The Cold War.
27. What president was shot while walking to California
Governor Jerry Brown' office?
A: Gerald Ford.
28. Who earned infamy for noting: "A billion dollars isn't
worth what it used to be"?
A: J. Paul Getty.
29. What ethnic group was largely responsible for building
most of the early railways in the U.S. West?
A: The Chinese.
30. Lots of fun free trivia questions.
31. What former speaker of the U.S. House has a chair in
peace studies named for him at the University of Ulster?
A: Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill.
32. What was a gladiator armed with, in addition to a dagger
and spear?
A: A net.
33. What future Soviet dictator was training to be a priest
when he got turned on to Marxism?
A: Joseph Stalin.
34. What election year saw bumper stickers reading
"Wallace, Wallace, Uber Alles"?
A: 1968.
35. What 20th-century conflict was dubbed the "forgotten
war" despite 54,246 U.S. deaths?
A: The Korean War.
36. What single name is more commonly applied to Holy
Roman Emperor Charles the Great?
A: Charlemagne.
37. Who was the last president of the Soviet Union?
A: Mikail Gorbachev.
38. What had Pliny the Younger seen erupt when he wrote:
"We were terrified to see everything changed, buried in ashes
like snowdrifts"?
A: Mount Vesuvius.
39. Who saw the turtleneck he wore at cease-fire talks in
Bosnia fetch $5,000 at auction?
A: Jimmy Carter.

What Alabama city saw state troopers attack Civil Rights


marchers on Edmund Pettis Bridge?
A: Selma.
40. What Texan ended up with one delegate after spending
$12 million of his own money running for president in 1980?
A: John Connally.
41. What congressional award was Dr. Mary Edwards
Walker the first woman to receive?
A: Medal of Honor.
42. What modern vehicle was invented to circumvent trench
warfare?
A: The Tank
43. What California city did the last Pony Express ride end
in?
A: Sacramento.
44. Who was the first U.S. president to adopt the informal
version of his first name?
A: Jimmy Carter.
45. What civil rights leader did Dorothy Parker leave the
bulk of her estate to?
A: Martin Luther King Jr.
46. What did Republicans call the platform they hyped in the
1994 Congressional elections?
A: The Contract With America.
47. What brave-hearted Scottish patriot led soldiers to a
defeat of the English at the Battle of Cambuskenneth in 1297?
A: William Wallace.
48. What nation issued the five-dollar bill found in Abraham
Lincoln's pocket when he was shot?
A: The Confederate States of America.
49. What political system was gradually dismantled in South
Africa, starting in 1989?
A: Apartheid.
50. What was 11th-century Spanish military leader Rodrigo
Diaz de Vivar better know as?
A: El Cid.
51. Who was Timothy Leary?
A: Timothy Leary was a psychologist and writer known for
advocating the exploration of the therapeutic potential of
psychedelic drugs.
52. Where was Alexander Hamilton born?
A: In Charlestown, the capital of the island of Nevis in the
Leeward Islands.
53. When and where did Amelia Earhart have her first flying
lesson?
A: On January 3, 1921, at Kinner Field near Long Beach.
54. Where did Earhart become the first woman to fly solo ?
A: Across the North American continent and back.
55. What kind of meat is Bacon typically prepared from?
A: Pork belly or back cuts, which have less fat than the belly.
56. How is bacon cured?
A: Through either a process of injecting with or soaking
brine.
57. For safety, bacon can be treated to prevent what disease?
A: Trichinosis, caused by Trichinella, a parasitic roundworm.
58. With the retirement of Justice John Paul Stevens, Ruth
Bader Ginsburg became the senior member of what is
sometimes referred to as what?
A: The court's "liberal wing".
59. Ginsburg is believed to be the first Supreme Court justice
to officiate at what?
A: A same-sex wedding.
60. Ginsburg's profile began to rise after O'Connor's
retirement in 2006 left Ginsburg as what?
A: The only serving female justice.
61. What was “The Outer Limits"?
A: The Outer Limits was a television series broadcast on
ABC from 1963 to 1965 at 7:30 PM Eastern Time on
Mondays.
62. The Outer Limits is an anthology of what?
A: Self-contained episodes, sometimes with a plot twist at the
end.
63. What was the first television game show ever?
A: Spelling Bee.
64. Daytime game shows would be played for lower stakes to
target whom?
A: Stay-at-home housewives.
65. During the late 1950s games such as Twenty-One and The
$64,000 Question began a what?
A: A rapid rise in popularity.
66. What happened in 1959 regarding game shows?
A: Many of the higher stakes game shows were discovered to
be rigged.
67. When did Let's Make a Deal first air?
A: In 1963.
68. Who was J. Edgar Hoover?
A: J. Edgar Hoover was the first Director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of the United States.
69. Later in life and after his death, Hoover became a
controversial figure as evidence of what, began to appear?
A: Secret abuse of power.
70. Who was Dr Seuss?
A: Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) was a children's author,
political cartoonist, poet, animator, screenwriter, filmmaker,
and artist.
71. When did Geisel take the pen name "Dr. Seuss"?
A: As an undergraduate at Dartmouth College and as a
graduate student at the University of Oxford.
72. What is the Eiffel Tower?
A: The Eiffel Tower is a wrought iron lattice tower on the
Champ de Mars in Paris, France.
73. How tall is the Eiffel Tower?
A: It is 324 meters (1,063 ft) tall.
74. During its construction, the Eiffel Tower surpassed the
Washington Monument to become what?
A: The tallest man-made structure in the world.
75. Where is Mount Rushmore?
A: In the Black Hills in Keystone, South Dakota.
76. The Mount Rushmore sculptures feature what past US
presidents?
A: Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson ,
Theodore Roosevelt , and Abraham Lincoln.
77. What was the first country to recognize Mexico's
independence, in 1836?
A: The U.S.
78. What encyclopedia's first edition, in 1771, described
California as "a large country of the West Indies"?
A: Encyclopedia Britannica's.
79. Who was the only American to become vice president and
president after resignations?
A: Gerald Ford.
80. There is one in Las Vegas for every how many
inhabitants?
A: Eight.
81. What year did the Dow Jones Industrial Average break
both the 4000 and 5000 marks?
A: 1995.
82. Who saw his crew dine on wormy biscuits and rats on his
fourth voyage to the New World?
A: Christopher Columbus.
83. What disgraced vice president's high school yearbook
quote read; "An ounce of wit is worth a pound of sorrow"?
A: Spiro Agnew.
84. Who was the youngest man to chair the Joint Chiefs of
Staff?
A: Colin Powell.
85. Which of Henry VIII's wives gave birth to Elizabeth I?
A: Anne Boleyn.
86. What 19th-century president erroneously noted: "The
ballot is stronger than the bullet"?
A: Abraham Lincoln.
87. What country led all Arab nations in the number of
troops participating in Operation Desert Storm?
A: Saudi Arabia.
88. Who did George Bush accuse of being "a card-carrying
member" of the American Civil Liberties Union, in 1988?
A: Michael Dukakis.
89. What presidential election year saw Republicans dub
Democrats the party of "Communism, Corruption and
Korea"?
A:1952.
90. What position was Eileen Collins the first female to hold
on a space shuttle mission?
A: Captain.
91. What were the Viet Minh called when they crossed into
South Vietnam?
A: The Viet Cong.
92. What Russian cleric was poisoned, shot and finally
drowned on December 30, 1916?
A: Rasputin.
93. Who led the Million Man March on Washington?
A: Louis Farrakhan.
94. What country suffered the worst two earthquakes in
history, killing 830,000 in 1556 and 750,000 in 1976?
A: China.
95. What Eastern European city was the last city to be
liberated in World War II?
A: Prague.
96. What country used the deadly nerve gas Sarin against its
Kurdish minority in the 1990s?
A: Iraq.
97. What general did GI's nickname "Top Gun" in the
Persian Gulf War?
A: Colin Powell.
98. What trade union was finally legalized in Poland in 1989?
A: Solidarity.
99. What symbol was first linked to the Democratic party in
an 1870 cartoon by Thomas Nast?
A: A donkey.
100. What Harry Callahan line did Ronald Reagan invoke to
"tax increasers"?
A: "Go ahead, make my day".
101. What explorer of North Carolina never got to finish his
"History of the World" while banished to the Tower of
London?
A: Sir Walter Raleigh.
102. Who was president of the U.S. when Uncle Sam first got a
beard?
A: Abraham Lincoln.
103. Who did Adolf Hitler dictate Mein Kampf to while in
prison?
A: Rudolf Hess.
104. What structure was 26.5 miles long until 1989?
A: The Berlin Wall.
105. What sport sparked a war between El Salvador and
Honduras, after an unpopular referee's call in 1969?
A: Soccer.
Fun History trivia questions and answers.

1. What war saw James Madison become the first U.S. president
to command a military unit during his term in office?
A: The War of 1812.

2. What document did President Andrew Johnson want a copy of


placed under his head upon his burial?
A: The U.S. Constitution.

3. What inscription on U.S. coins did Theodore Roosevelt try in


vain to have removed?
A: In God We Trust.

4. What former U.S. president showed up on dollar coins in


1971?
A: Dwight D. Eisenhower.

5. What did Ronald Reagan disclose he was suffering from, in


1994?
A: Alzheimer's disease.

6. What future U.S. president received the last rites of the


Catholic Church after an infection following spinal surgery in 1954.
A: John F. Kennedy.

7. Who did Abraham Lincoln promote to major general or


volunteers after he captured Fort Henry and Fort Donelson?
A: Ulysses S. Grant.
8. How many U.S. presidents played a role in Vietnam's civil
war?
A: Five.

9. Who said: "I'm the president of the United States, and I'm not
going to eat any more broccoli"?
A: George Bush.

10. Who was the first president to appear on a U.S. coin?


A: Abraham Lincoln.

11. What date saw FDR sign the U.S. declaration of war against
Japan?
A: December 8, 1941.

12. What pooch was the only gift Richard Nixon admitted
accepting, in a famous 1952 speech?
A: Checkers.

13. Who was assassinated the day after Andy Warhol was shot?
A: Robert F. Kennedy.

14. What Wild West figure is described on his New Mexico


tombstone as "The Boy Bandit King"?
A: Billy the Kid.

15. Who was billed as the "Killer of Custer" in Buffalo Bill's


Wild West Show?
A: Sitting Bull.
16. What conspirator in the Lincoln assassination was pardoned
for saving the lives of prison guards during a yellow fever epidemic?
A: Dr. Samuel Mudd.

17. What condition was alleviated by medicine dubbed "liquid


cork" by U.S. troops in Vietnam?
A: Diarrhea.

18. What medical condition kept William Blount from traveling


to Philadelphia on horseback for the 1787 Constitutional
Convention?
A: Hemorrhoids.

19. What physicist called nationalism "the measles of mankind"?


A: Albert Einstein.

20. What was the world's principal Christian city before it fell to
the Ottoman Turks in 1453?
A: Constantinople.

21. Who is credited with creating the model of European fascism


in the 20th century?
A: Benito Mussolini.

22. What "revolution" saw almost every Chinese citizen to a


copy of Mao Zedong's Little Red Book?
A: The Cultural Revolution.

23. What was closed to traffic after the Six Day War in 1967, and
not reopened until 1975?
A: The Suez Canal.
24. Who convinced Jamaicans he'd made the moon disappear
during a lunar eclipse in 1504?
A: Christopher Columbus.

25. What group meets in a Pentagon room dubbed "The Tank"?


A: The Joint Chiefs of Staff.

26. What Texan ended up with one delegate after spending $12
million of his own money running for president in 1980?
A: John Connally.

27. What Caribbean nation sent thousands of troops to Angola


and Ethiopia in the 1970s?
A: Cuba.

28. What military man had a much less famous cousin


nicknamed "Mudwall"?
A: "Stonewall" Jackson.

29. What Israeli is known affectionately as "Bibi"?


A: Benjamin Netanyahu.

30. What Roman emperor forbade citizens from laughing or


bathing after one of his sister-wives died?
A: Caligula.

31. What weekend retreat saw Menachim Begin and Anwar


Sadat hammer out an Israeli-Egyptian peace accord in 1978?
A: Camp David.

32. Who proved his mettle as a pollster in the 1936 presidential


elections?
A: George Gallup.

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