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Test Bank — Societies, Networks, and Transitions: A Global History 4th Edition — Craig A. Lockard — ISBN 9780357365304

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The Test Bank for Societies, Networks, and Transitions: A Global History 4th Edition by Craig A. Lockard provides a full set of instructor‑verified assessment materials tied directly to the textbook’s comprehensive chapter structure. This resource includes multiple‑choice, true/false, short‑answer, and applied scenario questions, all mapped to each chapter’s learning objectives and themes of societies, networks, and transitions across global history. According to the publisher’s official table of contents, the test bank covers Chapter 1: The Origins of Human Societies, to ca. 2000 B.C.E., Chapter 2: Ancient Societies in Mesopotamia, India, and Central Asia, 5000‑600 B.C.E., Chapter 3: Ancient Societies in Africa and the Mediterranean, 5000‑600 B.C.E., Chapter 4: Around the Pacific Rim: Eastern Eurasia and the Americas, 5000‑600 B.C.E., Chapter 5: Classical Societies in Southern and Central Asia, 600 B.C.E.–600 C.E., Chapter 6: Eurasian Connections and New Traditions in East Asia, 600 B.C.E.–600 C.E., Chapter 7: Western Asia, the Eastern Mediterranean, and Regional Systems, 600‑200 B.C.E., Chapter 8: Empires, Networks, and the Remaking of Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia, 500 B.C.E.–600 C.E., Chapter 9: Classical Societies and Regional Networks in Africa, the Americas, and Oceania, 600 B.C.E.–600 C.E., Chapter 10: The Rise, Power, and Connections of the Islamic World, 600‑1500, Chapter 11: East Asian Traditions, Transformations, and Eurasian Encounters, 600‑1500, Chapter 12: Expanding Horizons in Africa and the Americas, 600‑1500, Chapter 13: South Asia, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and Afro‑Eurasian Connections, 600‑1500, Chapter 14: Christian Societies in Medieval Europe, Byzantium, and Russia, 600‑1500, Chapter 15: Global Connections and the Remaking of Europe, 1450‑1750, Chapter 16: New Challenges for Africa and the Islamic World, 1450‑1750, Chapter 17: Americans, Europeans, Africans, and New Societies in the Americas, 1450‑1750, Chapter 18: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia: Triumphs and Challenges, 1450‑1750, Chapter 19: Modern Transitions: Revolutions, Industries, Ideologies, Empires, 1750‑1914, Chapter 20: Changing Societies in Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, 1750‑1914, Chapter 21: Africa, the Middle East, and Imperialism, 1750‑1914, Chapter 22: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Colonization, 1750‑1914, Chapter 23: East Asia and the Russian Empire Face New Challenges, 1750‑1914, Chapter 24: World Wars, European Revolutions, and Global Depression, 1914‑1945, Chapter 25: Imperialism and Nationalism in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, 1914‑1945, Chapter 26: The Remaking of the Global System, Since 1945, Chapter 27: East Asian Resurgence, Since 1945, Chapter 28: Rebuilding Europe and Russia, Since 1945, Chapter 29: The Americas and the Pacific Basin: New Roles in the Contemporary World, Since 1945, Chapter 30: The Middle East, Sub‑Saharan Africa, and New Conflicts in the Contemporary World, Since 1945, and Chapter 31: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Global Connections, Since 1945.

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November 18, 2025
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Written in
2025/2026
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Societies, Networks, and Transitions:

A Global History – 4th Edition
ST
UV

TEST BANK
IA
_A
PP

Craig A. Lockard
RO
VE

Comprehensive Test Bank for Instructors

and Students
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© Craig A. Lockard
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All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution without permission is prohibited.




©STUDYSTREAM

, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Societies, Networks, and Transitions: A Global
ST

History – 4th Edition
Craig A. Lockard
UV

Part I

Chapter 1: The Origins of Human Societies, to ca. 2000 BCE
IA

Chapter 2: Ancient Societies in Mesopotamia, India, and Central Asia, 5000–
600 BCE
Chapter 3: Ancient Societies in Africa and the Mediterranean, 5000–600 BCE
Chapter 4: Around the Pacific Rim: Eastern Eurasia and the Americas, 5000–
_A

600 BCE
PP

Part II

Chapter 5: Classical Societies in Southern and Central Asia, 600 BCE–600 CE
Chapter 6: Eurasian Connections and New Traditions in East Asia, 600 BCE–
600 CE
RO

Chapter 7: Western Asia, the Eastern Mediterranean, and Regional Systems,
600–200 BCE
Chapter 8: Empires, Networks, and the Remaking of Europe, North Africa, and
Western Asia, 500 BCE–600 CE
Chapter 9: Classical Societies and Regional Networks in Africa, the Americas,
VE

and Oceania, 600 BCE–600 CE
D?

Part III

Chapter 10: The Rise, Power, and Connections of the Islamic World, 600–
1500
??
Chapter 11: East Asian Traditions, Transformations, and Eurasian Encounters,
600–1500
Chapter 12: Expanding Horizons in Africa and the Americas, 600–1500
Chapter 13: South Asia, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and Afro-Eurasian

, Connections, 600–1500
Chapter 14: Christian Societies in Medieval Europe, Byzantium, and Russia,
600–1500
ST

Part IV

Chapter 15: Global Connections and the Remaking of Europe, 1450–1750
UV

Chapter 16: New Challenges for Africa and the Islamic World, 1450–1750
Chapter 17: Americans, Europeans, Africans, and New Societies in the
Americas, 1450–1750
Chapter 18: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia: Triumphs and
Challenges, 1450–1750
IA
_A
Part V

Chapter 19: Modern Transitions: Revolutions, Industries, Ideologies, Empires,
1750–1914
Chapter 20: Changing Societies in Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, 1750–
PP

1914
Chapter 21: Africa, the Middle East, and Imperialism, 1750–1914
Chapter 22: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Colonization, 1750–1914
Chapter 23: East Asia and the Russian Empire Face New Challenges, 1750–
RO

1914
Chapter 24: World Wars, European Revolutions, and Global Depression, 1914–
1945
Chapter 25: Imperialism and Nationalism in Asia, Africa, and Latin America,
1914–1945
VE

Part VI
D?

Chapter 26: The Remaking of the Global System, Since 1945
Chapter 27: East Asian Resurgence, Since 1945
Chapter 28: Rebuilding Europe and Russia, Since 1945
Chapter 29: The Americas and the Pacific Basin: New Roles in the
??

Contemporary World, Since 1945
Chapter 30: The Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, and New Conflicts in the
Contemporary World, Since 1945
Chapter 31: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Global Connections, Since 1945

, Chapter 01. The Origins of Human Societies, to ca. 2000 BCE

1. Which of the following was the most immediate consequence of Homo habilis’s ability to use tools?
a. A more varied diet
ST
b. The development of mathematics
c. Walking on two instead of four feet

ANSWER: a
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2. Which is a plausible assumption, given the presence of Homo erectus fossils found on Pacific islands?
a. They could gather material and assemble watercraft.
b. They evolved at a time when the Pacific islands were connected by land.
c. They were transported there by later humans.
IA
ANSWER: a

3. Why is Africa considered the ―cradle of the human species‖?
a. All evidence of Homo sapiens sapiens is found there.
_A

b. The most recent evidence of Neanderthals has been found there.
c. Most of the oldest evidence of Homo sapiens sapiens has been found there.

ANSWER: c
PP
4. About when did modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) appear?
a. About 200,000 years ago
b. About 40,000–100,000 years ago
c. About 10,000 years ago
RO

ANSWER: b

5. Why was the development of langu so important to modern humans?
a. It allowed modern humans to write histories of their origin for later humans such as ourselves.
b. It allowed modern humans to transmit culture, information, and other things more easily and more widely.
VE

c. It allowed modern humans to communicate with archaic human species such as Neanderthals.

ANSWER: b

6. When had modern humans reached every continent?
D?

a. About 20,000 years ago
b. About 70,000 years ago
c. About 10,000 years ago

ANSWER: a
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7. How did a reliance on hunting and gathering affect modern human societies?
a. It tended to encour cooperation and prevented great disparities of wealth within communities.
b. It usually brought human communities into regular conflict with one another.
c. It led to very harsh living conditions with no time for creative expression.

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