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| Title | Description |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for May 20, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In Scandinavian mythology, who were the maidens who rode through the sky on horses, sword in hand, to influence the outcome of battles and select the bravest fighters to live in Valhallah? What was the first US Federal statute to limit cartels and monopolies, passed in 1890, that still forms the basis for most antitrust litigation by the United States federal government? What influential and at times highly controversial book was published in November 1859? Which of these people was not assassinated between 1900 and 1910? Which of these fought to unify Italy in the 19th century? The First Sino-Japanese War (1894-5) was fought between which two countries? What post was held by Winston Churchill during the 1926 General Strike in the UK? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for May 13, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The Hanseatic League was a union of ports on which sea? What was the scene of the final defeat of the Jacobites under Charles Edward by forces under the command of the Duke of Cumberland on 16 April 1746? Roughly when was the Hampton Court Maze created? Which of these is not known as Black Thursday? Which of these is one of the activities with which Coretta Scott King was associated? Where was the 2012 annual G8 leaders summit held? "Regina v. Bartle" [1994] is a leading Supreme Court of Canada decision regarding what aspect of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for May 6, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! How did US president William McKinley die in 1901? In 2003, a congestion charge was introduced to reduce traffic volumes in which city centre? The legendary Hercules was said to have what quality? The Peloponnesian War, fought around 430 to 405 BC, was primarily a conflict between the city state of Athens and people from where? Possession of what was made illegal in California, the first part of the USA to do so, on 6 October 1966? What do the US Declaration of Independence, Captain Cook's sailing to discover the North-West Passage, the publication of economist Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, and the first St Leger Stakes horse race at Doncaster, UK, have in common? The Bill of Rights was passed by the Parliament of England in which century? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for April 29, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The Vandals sacked which city in 445 AD? A series of political protests against the government in Thailand in 2010 were organised by a group calling themselves what? In Greek mythology, who was the sister of Apollo? The nomadic Mongol tribes in Mongolia, Manchuria and Siberia united under which leader in the 1100s? What was the name of the US policy to transport suspect terrorists to other countries for interrogation? The New York Stock Exchange, established under that name in 1865, deals in what? In 1713 Charles XII, King of Sweden, created what position to ensure that public officials acted in accordance with the law and discharged their duties satisfactorily, and could initiate legal proceedings against them for dereliction of duty? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for April 22, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The Massacre of Aleppo in 1850 in Syria was carried out during which rule? Which issue in the state of Western Australia has been defeated each time it has been put to a plebiscite in 1975, 1984, 1992 & 2009? The 1830s in Europe saw revolution in several countries, which brought major political change for the countries concerned. Which of these revolutions or rebellions was not one? The initiative for what current unit of the British Army began during World War II in 1941 by David Stirling as a commando force operating behind enemy lines during the war in North Africa and Europe? Bangladesh declared independence from which country on 26 March 1971? What war, begun in 1740 when Austrian Emperor Charles VI died and his daughter Maria Theresa came to the throne, involved attacks by Prussia, Bavaria, France, Spain, Sardinia and Saxony, and ended in 1748? The federal government of Australia moved to what new, purpose-built, planned, capital city in 1927? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for April 15, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In the time of the British Empire, India was referred to as what? When was the eastern part of Australia claimed by Great Britain? Chuck Yeager in a plane first broke the sound barrier in 1957, Joseph Kittinger set a time in 1960 of 4m 37s in free fall from a height of 19.5 miles and reached a speed of 614 mph. On 14 October 2012 Austrian Felix Baumgartner set new records, which of these was not among them? In Roman mythology, when, on the dethronement of Saturn, Jupiter and his brothers divided his dominions, who got the realms of the dead? Ulysses is the Roman name for which Greek king? Shah Jehan directed the construction of which from 1632 to 1648? Who were the Persians defeated by in the sea battle at Salamis in 480BC? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for April 8, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In which country, in June 2010, were there clashes between the two main ethnic groups, the Uzbeks and Kyrgyz, a state of emergency declared and troops deployed, inciting fears that the country could be heading towards a civil war? The Battle of Tewkesbury in 1471 was decisive in which conflict? Who is a central figure in Homer's "Iliad"? Fingerprint classification was refined sufficiently to be used as evidence to solve a crime in which decade? Before becoming US president, George W Bush was governor of which state? During the Great, or Western, Schism from 1378, there were two or more Popes recognised in the Catholic Church. Who was elected in 1417 and eventually recognised by the majority as the single Pope? By what name was the Castle of St Antoine that was built in Paris in 1369 as a fortress better known? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for April 1, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Which country, the oldest existing monarchy in Europe, whose national flag is the oldest state flag in continuous use, became a constitutional monarchy in 1849 and a parliamentary democracy in 1901? Where did Portuguese traders begin to settle in the 16th century, administering the area until 20 December 1999? Which modern country was created when Prithvi Narayan united the 3 kingdoms of Kathmandu, Patan, and Bhaktapur in 1768? In Greek mythology, who was tied to a fiery wheel for eternity as a punishment? Of the 5 Presidents of Egypt since it was declared a republic in 1953 who has served the longest? Roland Berrill, an Australian barrister, and Dr. Lancelot Ware, a British scientist and lawyer, founded which international organsation in the UK in 1946? The Gregorian calendar was named after what public figure at the time? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for March 25, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The sinking, approximately 200 miles off Hampton Roads, Virginia, of which steamship on 12 November 1928, with a loss of over 100 lives, particularly of women and children after it was abandoned, had a major impact on the second International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea in 1929? One of the first actions taken in China's "Great Leap Forward" was a campaign initiated by Mao Zedong, the first President, to eliminate what birds? What did Napoleon Bonaparte I establish in 1804, a measure which has had worldwide effect? What group did the UK join in 1973? What association, currently of 27 members, holds over just 7% (in 2011) of the global population and generates approximately 20% of global GDP when thought of in terms of purchasing power parity? Until the introduction of the Euro on 1 January 2002, which country had the lira as its basic currency unit? What is the early English name for the road that went from London through Lincoln and York to Hadrian's Wall? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for March 18, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Which battle was partly fought on Senlac Hill? The Hapsburg dynasty originated in which country? The Battle of Guadalcanal was between troops from the USA and what other country? What name was given to a trooper in the Parliamentarian cavalry formed by Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War? Emperor Pedro II, Deodoro da Fonseca, Floriano Peixoto, Manuel Vitorino Pereira and Prudente de Morais are names that crop up in the politics of what country in the 19th century? Between 1696 and 1851, the British government imposed a tax on what part of a house? The US Stock Market crash known as Black Thursday happened on 24 October of what year? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for March 11, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! According to global media two major, potentially world-changing events took place in the week 6 -13 November 2012. Which were they? Which European country was twice, in 1892 and again in 1902, declared bankrupt? During which war were occupying Ottoman forces forced to withdraw from the town of Aqaba after a raid led by T. E. Lawrence and the Arab forces of Sharif Hussein? What name was given to a series of violent events on 21 May 1979 in San Francisco, USA, sparked by the lenient sentencing (for voluntary manslaughter, the lightest possible) of Dan White for the assassinations of Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk, which led to changes in the city's official attitude to gays? From 2010 to 2012 a series of major earthquakes devastated areas in the South Island of which country? In 1848, the USA offered Spain $100 million, equivalent to around $2.45 billion in present day terms, for the purchase of which area of land? Concorde, a collaboration between British Aircraft Corporation from the UK and Aérospatiale from France, took its first supersonic flight when? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for March 4, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! What name was commonly used for the struggle that emerged after World War II between capitalism and communism that centred around the USSR & the USA and their partners, that lasted from about 1947 to 1991? In what year did Sweden change its laws to allow a woman to inherit the throne, USSR stage its first rock festival, the border officially re-open between Spain and Gibraltar, Iceland democratically elect its first woman president, and the 10.14 mile (16.32km) long St Gotthard Road Tunnel open in Switzerland? What decade saw the Russian revolution which overthrew the existing government and established the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, the world's first constitutionally socialist state? Which of these historical figures is most associated with the year 1306? The Iron Cross was awarded to soldiers in World Wars I and II by which country? Speculation about the possibility of a southern land mass has been around for at least 2,000 years. When was the first recorded sighting of the Antarctic continent? Poland was partitioned in 1795 and again in 1815. In 1918 what happened? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for February 25, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In the middle ages, what were built in Canterbury, York, Lincoln, Salisbury, Lichfield and Winchester? What battle cry of Richard I at the Battle of Gisors in 1198 was adopted as the the motto of the arms of England where, except for changes during the reigns of Elizabeth I, Anne and William III, it has been since 1340? In 1453, the Ottomans used a cannon called "the Great Turkish Bombard", which required an operating crew of 200 men and 70 oxen, and 10,000 men to transport it, during their seige of which city? Why did the original Globe Theatre in London burn to the ground in 1613 during a performance of William Shakespeare's Henry VIII when the theatre's roof ignited? When the Olympics was resurrected in modern times, with a Summer Olympics in 1896, where were the games held? Since 1951, what is the maximum number of full consecutive terms to be filled by one US president? Torres Strait Islander Eddie Mabo became famous in Australian history for his role in campaigning for what? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for February 18, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The Harelle, a revolt that occurred in the French city of Rouen in 1382 followed by the Maillotins Revolt a few days later in Paris, and subsequently in Amiens, Dieppe, Falaise, Caen, Orleans, and Rheims during the Hundred Years War, was about what? According to legend, what is needed to kill a werewolf? The Battle of Agincourt in 1415 was fought between which two countries? What is the Roman military formation called the Testudo named after? Where was the wedding of Charles, Prince of Wales and Camilla Parker Bowles, held? What links a type of footwear, the home of NATO, the best known military exploit of an early British Prime Minister, and the final days of freedom for a short Corsican commander? In the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact after Germany conquered Poland in 1939 what happened to Poland? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for February 11, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Which western country was the first to extend the right to vote in national elections to women? Which country, after the collapse of its government-owned bank and via a referendum, decided in March 2010 not to pay Great Britain and the Netherlands the €3.9 billion that it owed them? Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) installed as First Consul in France by 1800 and crowned Emperor of France 1804, was born where? Argentina invaded UK's Falkland Islands, Israel invaded Southern Lebanon, Canada became officially independent of the UK, Leonid Brezhnev, leader of the USSR, died, all in what year? On 31 October 1941, the USS Reuben James, a post-World War I four-funnelled Clemson-class destroyer, became the first US Navy ship to do what? What caused the end of the last kingdom of Italy? Which of these was the last to come into effect? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for February 4, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Which of these words is not part of the slogan that arose during the French revolution? Charles Lindbergh's first non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 1927 was between which two cities? Where in the United Kingdom would you find a statue of Anteros? What was the Roman name for Scotland? The era of political liberalisation in Czecholslovakia in 1968 was called what? Which ancient people with a conferacy of 5 cities (Ekron, Ashdod, Gath, Askalon and Gaza) came into conflict with Israel under Samson, Samuel and David? Who was the last monarch in the recent reunified kingdom of Italy? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for January 28, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In Greek mythology, what was the name for the deepest part of hell, for those who had committed really bad crimes? Which of these was an Italian military and political figure who joined the Carbonari Italian patriot revolutionaries In his twenties, and fled Italy after a failed insurrection? What war was waged 1852-1856, one side being an alliance between the Ottoman Empire, UK, France, and Sardinia? In English mythology, who were Galligantus and Bunderbore? In central and northern Italy, the Guelphs, who supported the Pope, and Ghibellines, who supported the Holy Roman Emperor, became a metaphor for rivalry between individual families and cities. When was this? What is the name of the cooperation between the USA and Mexico and countries of Central America, with the aim of combating the threats of drug trafficking, transnational organized crime and money laundering? What is the last part of a famous quotation from Malcolm X that begins "we didn't land on Plymouth Rock, brothers and sisters, ...." Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for January 21, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! In 1794 in Pennsylvania, USA, more than 500 armed men attacked the fortified home of tax inspector General John Neville because of an excise tax on what product? What London establishment was created in 1753 by Sir Harris Sloane? Which cable suspension road bridge, known as "Galloping Gertie", was completely destroyed due to "aeroelastic flutter" on 7 November 1940? When were 18 year olds allowed to vote in a General Election in the United Kingdom? Upon whom did Pope Leo X confer the title "Defender of the Faith" in 1521? Which country declared a state of emergency on 8 November 2005 as a result of prolonged rioting, allegedly provoked by the death of 2 teenagers? Where was there an attack on the parliament building by militants on the morning of 19 October 2010, when 6 people were killed? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for January 14, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! What was the name of the policy making body of the USSR before it broke up?
In 1346, Edward III and his son the Black Prince were repeatedly attacked by French forces in which forest? Which Wonder of the Ancient World begun in 356 BC at Ephesus under the direction of Dinocrates took over a century to build? Which country was divided at the 17th parallel in 1954? The modern British period of history called "The Winter of Discontent" began when? Which bank, which had opened in 1762 (and was the oldest merchant bank in London) collapsed in 1995 after one of the bank's employees lost £827 million ($1.3 billion) speculating primarily on futures contracts? The 50.5 km Channel Tunnel, built under the English Channel or, in France, La Manche, to link the UK and France with road and rail access was finally opened in 1994. When was the first official Anglo-French protocol established to create the railway aspect of the link? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for January 7, 2013 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! When was the period of English history known as "The Anarchy" or "The Nineteen-Year Winter"? In which US Senate election were all senators popularly elected for the first time? Early raids by British Commando units between March 1941 and April 1943, Operations "Claymore", "Anklet", "Archery", "Musketoon" and "Checkmate", destroyed fish-oil factories, petrol dumps, sank ships, damaged factories and warehouses, resulted in permanent closure of a hydroelectric power plant and an aluminium plant, and captured German troops, encryption equipment and codebooks; where were they carried out? On 31 May 2010, the President of which country announced his resignation after local politicians criticised comments he made in relation to overseas military deployments? The Treaty of Kiel, between the UK, Sweden and Denmark-Norway was intended to ease hostilities relating to which war? Which country declared war on Mexico on 13 May 1846? In 1963, US President Kennedy sanctioned a coup d'état in which country to overthrow Ngo Dinh Diem, the Roman Catholic President, by his own army generals? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for December 31, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! On 12 November 1991, where in Dili were pro-independence student demonstrators who were protesting the Indonesian occupation of East Timor, shot at by Indonesian forces, killing at least 250? What land, a British colony for 155 years, and occupied by Japan briefly in WW II, was ceded to the People's Republic of China in 1997? What was the Roman name for Ireland? What ancient civilization was centered in the north of ancient Canaan, with its heartland along the coastal regions of modern day Lebanon, Syria and Israel? What colour connects 29 October 1929, 19 October 1987 and 22 November 1963? An act passed on 5 July 1900 and given Royal Assent by Queen Victoria on 9 July 1900 led to what milestone in the constitutional history of Australia? When was the ICC, official base in The Hague in the Netherlands, established? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for December 24, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Which of these was a landmark of the ancient city of Babylon? The Spanish throne had been vacant since 1936, and on 22 November 1975, Juan Carlos was designated King. What event caused this? In the 20th century what year did Estonia first declare independence? What was the name of the English law court, subsequently abolished in 1641, that had a mandate from Henry VII to deal with nobles who were too powerful to be punished by ordinary courts? What was the name of the line of fortification that ran across Italy during World War II from just north of where the Garigliano River flows into the Tyrrhenian Sea in the west, through the Apennine Mountains to the mouth of the Sangro River on the Adriatic coast in the east via Monte Cassino and Monte Cairo? Which of these is a middle eastern mythical giant bird? CHECK In the UK in 1926 there was a General Strike that attempted to improve working conditions for which occupational group? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for December 17, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Until 1997, the Group of Eight (G8), a forum for powerful governments, was the G7. Which country was the last to join, making it G8? The Oregon Treaty of 1846, which divided "the Oregon Country" along the 49th parallel, gave the USA land which later became parts of Montana and Wyoming, and the states of Washington, Oregon and which other?
The early use of the new technology of the wireless telegram helped British police to capture whom on 31 July 1910? Which of these ships was built last? Before it was changed to "Washington D.C." after his death, what had George Washington named Washington D.C.? In which country were democratic elections held in May 1989, and though Guillermo Endara was elected president, the results were annulled by the existing government? What battle, described as the last great medieval battle in the British Isles, was fought on 9 September 1513 between an invading Scots army under King James IV and an English army commanded by Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey, and is said to be the largest battle (in terms of numbers) fought between the two nations? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for December 10, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! The Ishtar Gate, constructed around 575BC by order of King Nebuchadnezzar II, was a gate to which city? According to Greek mythology, what was the deepest part of hell? Which member of the UK Parliament and member of the IRA died on hunger strike while in prison at The Maze near Belfast in 1981? What was the name of the official news agency of the USSR before it broke up? During World War II, Operation Sealion was the codename for the invasion of which area? In which country did a suicide bombing take place in Taksim Square on 31 October 2010, resulting in at least 32 injuries, 15 of whom were police officers? Which of these was NOT a country that fought against Great Britain during the US War of Independence? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for December 3, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Where was "the Maccabiah bridge collapse", the failure of a pedestrian bridge over the Yarkon River on 14 July 1997 which killed 4 and injured 60? Which of these events in World War II occurred first? What region lies mainly in the Dinaric Alps, ranging to the southern borders of the Pannonian plain, with the rivers Sava and Drina marking its northern and eastern borders? What was the name given in England to the ringing, introduced by William the Conqueror, of a bell at sunset or 8pm in winter as a signal to extinguish fires and lights? The French and what other nation sent colonists to New Zealand in the 1830s? The early kings of Scotland are buried on which island? What caused Richard I of England to be out of the country between 1190 and 1194, when his younger brother John tried to take control? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |
| Ancient and Modern History Trivia for November 26, 2012 | Test yourself with today's history quiz questions. Visit the quiz page once you're ready to take the challenge. Good luck! Gibraltar was ceded to the UK by Spain in 1713 and although now semi-autonomous is still under UK government; it has been a strategic advantage to the UK at a number of times, which is NOT one of these? The legendary character called Beowulf killed who and his mother? Whose followers rose in 1745, taking Edinburgh and defeating the government army in Scotland at the Battle of Prestonpans, marched into England as far as Derby but were defeated by the Duke of Cumberland at the Battle of Culloden on 16 April 1746? Which of these are creatures from Greek mythology that had the head and body of a woman and the wings and feet of a bird? What was Merlin's position at the court of King Arthur? The senate was the governing body of which of these empires? What was the name of the alliance of trading cities and their guilds, each with their own law system and with armies for mututal aid, that established and maintained a trade monopoly along the coast of Northern Europe, from the Baltic to the North Sea and inland, from the 13th to 17th centuries? Ready for the challenge? Visit the quiz page to take the test and find our your score! |