I missed the Ali fight location. I remember very well the Thrilla in Manila, but I don't think there was as much hype for the Rumble in the Jungle. Or maybe it only seems that way now because Manila was in the title, which made it easier to remember. With all the coverage surrounding his death you'd think I'd know every single fact about him by now.
Cholera was a fairly obvious one for me, but probably only because I was educated in Britain, where we barely even talk about anyone else's History until college, unless we were involved. Yay us...
As much as Britain "got involved" in other people's history over the years, that would be fairly comprehensive, at least from the 18th-19th centuries onward.
In my school system I remember getting very cursory introductions to history at lower grade levels. Probably we were studying US history in 4th grade because I think that year we took a field trip to Gunston Hall. 5th grade I believe was Virginia history. 6th grade world history (with a heavy bias toward Western Civ including Egypt and the Middle East which is a part of Western Civ). My 6th grade teacher made us memorize every country and capital in the world but that was unusual. 7th was either U.S. or Virginia again. 8th was Civics. 9th was World Civilization (again heavily biased toward Western Civ especially Europe). 10th was US history. 11th was Government. In 12th I opted to take AP European History (college level course, not required).
At university I studied Art History, US and Western Civ history again, Japanese history, and Israeli/Palestinian history. Plus a variety of historical literature classes (English major). Foundations of education (Masters in Education). But most of that was at my discretion.
Anyway I don't think Mr. Snow came up in any of those classes.
I am British and we only ever really studied British history in primary school (elementary school). We did Romans, Vikings, Normans and Tudors. I know most of those things are actually from others countries but we did the impact on Britain.
At secondary school (high school) level we didn't do hardly any British history. We did the industrial revolution and 19th century Ireland but other than that we did Russian Tsars, Russian revolution, 1920s America, unification of Italy, cold war Berlin, Spanish civil war, Hitler's rise to power and both world wars (which I know Britain was very involved in but it was taught more from the perspective of Germany and France aside from a stop off in the blitz).
It is very interesting to compare what each of us learned in school. My memory of the times is blurry but the topics should all be there. 6th grade: Egypt, ancient Greece, Rome (focus on daily life for whatever reason). 7th: highlights from Medieval Germany, Luther. 8th grade: no history class. 9th: Islamic expansion, feudalism, absolutism, French Revolution, Napoleon. 10th: Industrial Revolution, rise of German nationalism and failed German revolutions, Third Reich (focus on propaganda). 11th: Bismarck, imperialism, colonialism. 12th: WW1, Weimar Republic, rise of the Nazis. 13th: post-war overview. There was a bit more about US history in English class (Manifest Destiny, Rosa Parks, speeches by modern presidents, perhaps brief bits about the American Revolution, Lincoln and MLK). Interesting: no regional and no oriental history except for the Islamic expansion, and hardly anything about the course of WW2 and the Holocaust (probably not intentional, I blame high teacher turnover...
@camus that is pretty specific for a blurry memory haha. For me it is stone age, iron age, probably? (Unless that was from my own intersts) egypt I dont think we covered at all. maybe a little bit bit about mediaval times. Serfs I remember. I think indeed rather a bit about roman everyday life, bathouses and stuff. And ww2 oh and also some national stuff (of which I remember only 1 thing, some guy getting killed, plus that belgium used to be part of our kingdom, and something with spain. I am great with history, can you tell? :D.
Dont ask me the order (all I remember is local in elementary school and romans in middle school)> I didnt take history as a subject so had it only in primary school and the first year of high/middle school. I think that corresponds to 3th grade up to 7th grade. but maybe only the last two years of primary school, really cant remember anything below those (and really only the last one)
Ow yea napolean.. cause pyramids romans and stoneage were stuff that would ve interested me anyway, but I am sure I wouldnt have looked up napoleon as an 8 yo, so I must been taught about that one.
School was a long time ago but I remember it was Missouri history in 8th grade because all students in the state had to pass a test on the Missouri Constitution. Ninth grade was civics (I remember the teacher was nice but boring and it was the last period of the day - I sat next to the windows and when the sun came in the windows and warmed up our row of desks it was all I could do to stay awake. The only time I liked the class was when he pulled down his Missouri map and we had contests on who could find certain MO counties first. Tenth grade was world history, but since our teacher had been in the Korean War we had a heavy emphasis on recent wars. Eleventh grade was US history and all Missouri students had to pass a test on the US Constitution. That's all that was required. My husband took a basic US history course in college in the early 1970s but the teacher told them he didn't care if they learned anything or not because he was certain the US was going down the tube soon.
I am British, and in history GCSE I studied The History of Medicine, The Rise of Communist China, The Tudors in particular Elizabeth I, The Iran-Iraq War (as it was happening), and the Arab-Israeli Conflict.
Canadian here, in elementary school we studied WW2, especially the Holocaust. In grade 7 we did the settling of Eastern Canada, the seven years war and the war if 1812. In grade 8 there was no history. In grade 9 I studied Confederation, westward expansion and world war 1. Grade 10, again there was no history class. In grade 11 I took American history, which was focused mainly on the civil war and reconstruction, along with a bit about us intervention in the Caribbean. In grade 12, I took world history which was about the industrial revolution, French Revolution and the cold war.
I am pretty sure sire can be used for both male and female (that is how it is used here anyway, it is the same as your highness). Unless to mean "to sire" then it is about the male that fathers offspring. (Or make vampires...)
Might be silly, but only NOW I realise you might have misread it as sir. I allready thought miss was a strange counterpart of sire...
They referred to me as a 'gentleman' so I feel like all of this is moot. And while I think theoretically 'sire' can be gender-neutral, I don't think I've ever heard it used for a woman.
I didn't even consider that "Rumble in the Jungle" could have actually been in anything remotely like jungle, I just automatically assumed it was some strange stage name thingo and guessed all the US cities I could think of
Since this comment, I've found out that the definition of city to an American is quite different to the UK definition and small settlements of just a few people are sometimes called cities
I think the percentage of correct answers will increase with the recent news coverage of Ali's life and death. That's the only reason I got it correct.
What if I said "too Western-centric"? I mean, there are two other worlds beside the First World, and having one or two cities from them doesn't do them justice.
18/20 of these took place after the US was founded. I would argue both have been equally important since then. The US has obviously been far more influential in the long run, but there are only two old questions. Also, this quiz is heavily western biased. There is history outside of Europe and English speaking countries
I only knew one, and a half... and guessed 6 more just by mentioning known capiitals.
History (after the 15th century) Isnt my thing. History/polictics and sports ( unless it is a general description, like which sport has penalties) ore my worst quiz subjects.
Best is science and words. (And I think in english science includes biology and nature right? And maths, for me science means formulas and experiments, so basicly physics and chemistry.)
There's some interesting theories out there, with fairly compelling evidence to back them up, that Muhammad was actually originally from Petra, not Mecca. The earliest Islamic sources do not mention Mecca by name, and the clues they give to the identity of the city where he grew up don't match.
The "I have a dream" speech by MLK jr was originally given in Rocky Mount, NC, on November 1962 (source: https://edition.cnn.com/2015/08/12/us/north-carolina-mlk-jr-i-have-a-dream-recording/index.html)
Kitty Hawk & Kill Devil Hills are both Towns in Dare County, NC. The first flight took place in Kill Devil Hills but the telegraph sent announcing the successful first flight was sent from Kitty Hawk.
In my school system I remember getting very cursory introductions to history at lower grade levels. Probably we were studying US history in 4th grade because I think that year we took a field trip to Gunston Hall. 5th grade I believe was Virginia history. 6th grade world history (with a heavy bias toward Western Civ including Egypt and the Middle East which is a part of Western Civ). My 6th grade teacher made us memorize every country and capital in the world but that was unusual. 7th was either U.S. or Virginia again. 8th was Civics. 9th was World Civilization (again heavily biased toward Western Civ especially Europe). 10th was US history. 11th was Government. In 12th I opted to take AP European History (college level course, not required).
Anyway I don't think Mr. Snow came up in any of those classes.
At secondary school (high school) level we didn't do hardly any British history. We did the industrial revolution and 19th century Ireland but other than that we did Russian Tsars, Russian revolution, 1920s America, unification of Italy, cold war Berlin, Spanish civil war, Hitler's rise to power and both world wars (which I know Britain was very involved in but it was taught more from the perspective of Germany and France aside from a stop off in the blitz).
Dont ask me the order (all I remember is local in elementary school and romans in middle school)> I didnt take history as a subject so had it only in primary school and the first year of high/middle school. I think that corresponds to 3th grade up to 7th grade. but maybe only the last two years of primary school, really cant remember anything below those (and really only the last one)
Ow yea napolean.. cause pyramids romans and stoneage were stuff that would ve interested me anyway, but I am sure I wouldnt have looked up napoleon as an 8 yo, so I must been taught about that one.
Elementary school
mainly local history, but also Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and about the Mayans, Aztecs, Incas and did a bit on Romans.
Middle school:
World War one and two, the Great Depression, Slavery in the US and history of China.
High school:
More about World war one and two, the opium wars, russian revolution and the cold war.
Then I dropped history for my last two years to do geography instead; guess that's why i like this site :)
Might be silly, but only NOW I realise you might have misread it as sir. I allready thought miss was a strange counterpart of sire...
Kill Devil Hills: not a city
Btw, you misspelled "speech" in the MLK question. :)
This was harder to make than I thought it would be so I got bored and stopped at 15 answers. Sorry.
Hence, more European questions. What's the problem?
History (after the 15th century) Isnt my thing. History/polictics and sports ( unless it is a general description, like which sport has penalties) ore my worst quiz subjects.
Best is science and words. (And I think in english science includes biology and nature right? And maths, for me science means formulas and experiments, so basicly physics and chemistry.)
2. 1962 was not 1963. The clue says 1963.
So... interesting point of trivia. But the quiz isn't wrong.