L13
Terms
-
rhetoric
trivium or quadrivium
-
trivium
-
astronomy
trivium or quadrivium
- quadrivium
-
music
trivium or quadrivium
- quadrivium
-
geometry
trivium or quadrivium
- quadrivium
-
dialectic
trivium or quadrivium
- trivium
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
being crowned emperor of the Roman Empire in Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome on
Christmas Day, 800 A.D., by the Pope - true
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
the adaptation of Roman administrative techniques to fit the needs of his own
kingdom - true
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
the establishment of a bureaucratic system requiring civil servants who could read
and write - true
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
the expulsion of the Moslems from what is now Spain
- false
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
regular diplomatic relations with the Byzantine Empire
- true
-
Charlemagne’s political accomplishments included:
the stabilization of the currency system
- true
-
Charlemagne’s “palace school”:
was located in Paris so scholar-teachers like Alcuin could be recruited from the
famous Parisian universities - false
-
Charlemagne’s “palace school”:
emphasized studies which developed logic and science
- true
-
Charlemagne’s “palace school”:
provided an opportunity to revise and correct the books used in religious worship
services - true
-
Charlemagne’s “palace school”:
inspired the establishment of a system of schools for children in the Empire
- true
-
The Song of Roland:
portrays Charlemagne as a man over 200 years old
- true
-
The Song of Roland:
shows Roland to be both good and wise
- false
-
The Song of Roland:
shows Turpin as the model bishop-warrior
- true
-
The Song of Roland:
shows Ganelon as the symbolic Judas
- true
-
The Song of Roland:
can be read as an apocalyptic tale, with evil triumphing over good in the end
- false
-
The Song of Roland differs from pagan epic poems because:
it does not portray the heroic code
- false
-
The Song of Roland differs from pagan epic poems because:
it portrays larger-than-life heroes
- false
-
The Song of Roland differs from pagan epic poems because:
it shows that the Christian heroes have promise of a glorious afterlife in reward for
their deeds on earth - true
-
The Song of Roland differs from pagan epic poems because:
it shows that the Christian heroes’ enemies are not their moral equals
- true
-
The Song of Roland differs from pagan epic poems because:
it does not have the characteristics of a “founding myth”
- false