Comparison in Land-Based Empires
Help Questions
AP World History: Modern › Comparison in Land-Based Empires
In the 1500s and 1600s, the Safavid Empire in Persia and the Spanish Empire in the Americas both built authority over diverse populations and frontier zones. Safavid shahs promoted Twelver Shi’ism to unify the state and distinguish it from Sunni rivals, while Spanish rulers used Catholic institutions and colonial bureaucracies to govern Indigenous and settler societies. Which comparison best explains a similar way both empires used religion to strengthen imperial rule?
Both relied on Buddhism as an imperial ideology, using monasteries to recruit administrators and to enforce pacifist policies in frontier regions.
Both used state-sponsored religion to legitimize rulers and standardize loyalty, even as local practices persisted under clerical oversight and imperial institutions.
Both expanded primarily by converting neighboring European kingdoms, using dynastic marriages to spread a single faith across the continent without warfare.
Both prohibited any clerical involvement in politics, removing courts from religious influence and banning mission activity across all provinces and colonies.
Both embraced religious pluralism by abolishing official faiths and funding all temples equally, reducing conflict through strict separation of religion and state.
Explanation
This question compares how the Safavid and Spanish empires used religion to strengthen imperial rule. The correct answer (A) identifies the similarity: both empires used state-sponsored religion to legitimize rulers and create unified identity, while still tolerating some local religious practices under imperial oversight. The Safavids promoted Twelver Shi'ism to distinguish themselves from Sunni rivals, while Spain used Catholic institutions in colonial administration. This comparison demonstrates how different empires in different regions used similar strategies of religious legitimation. The skill here involves recognizing parallel functions of religion in empire-building despite different faiths and contexts. Other options incorrectly describe secular policies or religious practices these empires didn't follow.
From 1200 to 1600, the Mongol Empire and the Inca Empire each created large land-based states, but in very different environments. Mongol khans ruled across Eurasian steppe and settled societies, promoted trade security along caravan routes, and used relay stations for communication. Inca rulers governed the Andes, built extensive road systems and storehouses, and managed labor through the mita. Which option best compares how each empire integrated conquered peoples into imperial administration?
Mongols replaced local elites with hereditary priests, while Incas governed chiefly through elected councils that rotated leadership annually among households.
Both expanded primarily through maritime conquest and established coastal trading forts, integrating subjects by converting them to a shared oceanic religion.
Both imposed a single alphabet and universal written civil-service exams, ensuring officials were chosen solely by merit rather than lineage or conquest.
Both relied mainly on independent city-states to govern provinces, allowing conquered elites complete autonomy in taxation, law, and military recruitment.
Mongols often co-opted local administrators and merchants, while Incas relocated populations and used labor obligations to bind communities to the state.
Explanation
This comparison question examines how the Mongol and Inca empires integrated conquered peoples into their administrations. The correct answer (B) highlights a key difference: Mongols often maintained existing local administrators and merchants to govern their vast territories, while Incas used more direct control through population relocations (mitma) and labor obligations (mita). This demonstrates the comparison skill of identifying contrasting administrative strategies - the Mongols' indirect rule versus the Incas' more centralized approach. The question requires understanding how different geographical contexts (Eurasian steppes vs. Andean mountains) shaped different imperial strategies. Options A, C, D, and E present false or anachronistic claims about these empires.
In the 1400s–1700s, Ming/Qing China and Tokugawa Japan each strengthened centralized authority after periods of conflict. Ming and Qing emperors expanded or maintained a large bureaucracy, relied on Confucian ideology, and enforced social hierarchies. Tokugawa shoguns controlled daimyo through alternate attendance and regulated foreign contact. Which comparison best explains how both states limited the power of regional elites?
Both relied on decentralized feudal contracts that guaranteed daimyo and scholar-gentry full tax authority, limiting any interference from central governments.
Both ended hereditary status by mandating universal suffrage and rotating provincial governors through competitive elections supervised by independent courts.
Both used Atlantic slave labor to weaken nobles economically, replacing estate incomes with profits from plantation exports and coastal trading forts.
Both dissolved all aristocratic lineages by redistributing land equally to peasants, eliminating intermediaries between rulers and local communities.
Both reduced regional autonomy by requiring elites to demonstrate loyalty through state-controlled institutions—bureaucratic appointment in China and sankin-kōtai in Japan.
Explanation
This comparison focuses on how Ming/Qing China and Tokugawa Japan limited regional elite power. The correct answer (B) identifies the similarity: both states reduced regional autonomy by requiring elites to demonstrate loyalty through state-controlled institutions. In China, this meant bureaucratic appointments through the examination system; in Japan, the sankin-kōtai system required daimyo to alternate residence between their domains and the capital. This comparison skill involves recognizing how different mechanisms (examinations vs. alternate attendance) served the same function of centralizing power and controlling regional elites. Options A, C, D, and E describe policies these states didn't implement, including anachronistic references to elections and Atlantic slavery.
In the 1500s–1700s, the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire expanded overland into frontier regions with diverse peoples. Russian rulers pushed into Siberia using forts and tribute (yasak), and relied on Orthodox legitimacy and service nobility. Ottoman rulers expanded into the Balkans and the Middle East, using provincial administration and military institutions like the janissaries. Which comparison best explains a shared challenge both empires faced as they expanded?
Both expanded mainly through overseas colonization in the Caribbean, confronting plantation revolts and competition from Atlantic maritime powers.
Both faced immediate collapse because they lacked cavalry and firearms, making it impossible to defeat nomadic confederations or defend borders effectively.
Both eliminated all local languages through compulsory schooling, quickly creating uniform national identities that ended frontier resistance by 1600.
Both struggled to govern religiously and ethnically diverse populations, requiring negotiated arrangements with local elites and flexible administrative practices in frontier zones.
Both were unable to raise revenue from land taxes, depending exclusively on industrial tariffs and income taxes collected from urban factory workers.
Explanation
This comparison examines shared challenges faced by the Russian and Ottoman empires during expansion. The correct answer (A) identifies that both empires struggled to govern religiously and ethnically diverse populations, requiring flexible administrative arrangements and negotiations with local elites in frontier zones. This demonstrates the comparison skill of recognizing common imperial challenges despite different contexts - Russians expanding into Siberia and Ottomans into the Balkans and Middle East. Both empires had to balance central authority with local autonomy to maintain control over vast, diverse territories. Options B through E incorrectly describe these empires' capabilities or policies, including false claims about lacking military technology or eliminating local languages.
Between 1450 and 1750, the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire were land-based “gunpowder empires” that expanded across diverse religious and linguistic regions. Both relied on cavalry and firearms, collected agrarian taxes, and governed through layered elites. Yet Ottoman sultans ruled from a long-standing Islamic caliphate tradition and controlled key Mediterranean trade routes, while Mughal emperors governed a majority Hindu population in South Asia and often relied on alliances with regional warrior aristocracies. Which comparison best explains a key similarity in how both empires maintained control?
Both rejected religious legitimacy, emphasizing secular nationalism and mass literacy campaigns to unify subjects under standardized vernacular languages.
Both depended primarily on overseas colonies for wealth, using plantation slavery and Atlantic trade to fund standing armies and court culture.
Both abolished tax farming entirely and replaced it with elected provincial assemblies that limited rulers through written constitutions and regular parliamentary sessions.
Both eliminated landholding aristocracies by distributing land equally to peasant households, preventing any intermediaries between ruler and cultivator.
Both relied on bureaucratic systems that incorporated local elites—Ottoman timar and devshirme networks, Mughal mansabdari—to mobilize revenue and soldiers.
Explanation
This question asks you to compare how the Ottoman and Mughal empires maintained control over their diverse territories. The correct answer (B) identifies a key similarity: both empires incorporated local elites into bureaucratic systems to collect revenue and mobilize military forces. The Ottomans used the timar system (land grants to cavalry officers) and devshirme (recruitment of Christian boys for elite positions), while Mughals used the mansabdari system (ranked military-administrative positions). This comparison skill requires recognizing that despite different cultural contexts, both empires used similar strategies of co-opting local power structures rather than replacing them entirely. Options A, C, D, and E describe anachronistic or inaccurate features that don't apply to these traditional land-based empires.
From 600 to 900, the Abbasid Caliphate and the Tang Dynasty were major land-based empires that governed large, diverse populations. Abbasid rulers centered power in Baghdad, supported scholarship and trade across Afro-Eurasia, and delegated authority to provincial governors. Tang emperors ruled from Chang’an, used a Confucian-influenced bureaucracy, and managed frontier relations through tributary and military systems. Which comparison best explains a similar factor contributing to both empires’ prosperity?
Both rejected urbanization, relocating capitals to rural estates and prohibiting long-distance travel to prevent cultural diffusion and political dissent.
Both benefited from controlling or facilitating major overland trade routes, encouraging urban growth and cultural exchange that supported state revenue and legitimacy.
Both practiced isolationism by banning merchants and closing land routes, ensuring prosperity through self-sufficient village economies and minimal foreign contact.
Both depended on Viking tribute and Mediterranean piracy, using raiding fleets to fund central governments rather than taxation or commerce.
Both relied primarily on Atlantic triangular trade, importing enslaved labor to plantations and exporting sugar to European markets for imperial profit.
Explanation
This question compares factors contributing to prosperity in the Abbasid Caliphate and Tang Dynasty. The correct answer (A) identifies that both empires benefited from controlling or facilitating major overland trade routes, which encouraged urban growth, cultural exchange, and provided state revenue. The Abbasids controlled Middle Eastern trade routes connecting Africa, Asia, and Europe, while the Tang managed Silk Road commerce. This comparison demonstrates how geographical advantages in trade location contributed to imperial prosperity in both cases. The skill involves recognizing similar economic foundations despite different cultural contexts. Options B through E describe practices these land-based empires didn't follow, including anachronistic references to Atlantic trade.
In the 1300s–1600s, the Delhi Sultanate (and later Mughal rule) and the Songhai Empire each governed territories with significant Muslim elites and non-Muslim populations. Rulers in North India and West Africa collected taxes on agriculture and trade, patronized Islamic learning in key cities, and faced pressure from regional leaders. Which comparison best explains a common strategy used to manage religious diversity within these land-based empires?
Both enforced immediate, universal conversion by abolishing all non-Muslim practices, closing temples, and expelling communities that resisted Islamization.
Both primarily used maritime missionary networks in the Indian Ocean to govern inland farmers, avoiding taxation and relying on voluntary donations.
Both replaced religious law with Roman legal codes and created secular republics in which clerics were barred from courts and education.
Both combined Islamic legitimacy with pragmatic governance, often tolerating local religions while relying on Muslim administrators, judges, and scholarly institutions.
Both ended religious diversity by adopting Protestant Christianity, aligning with European monarchs and using printing presses to spread vernacular Bibles.
Explanation
This comparison examines how the Delhi Sultanate/Mughals and Songhai Empire managed religious diversity. The correct answer (B) identifies that both combined Islamic legitimacy with pragmatic governance, often tolerating local religions while relying on Muslim administrators and institutions. This demonstrates the comparison skill of recognizing similar strategies for managing religious pluralism - using Islam for elite legitimacy while accommodating non-Muslim populations for practical governance. Both empires needed to balance religious ideology with the realities of ruling diverse populations. Options A, C, D, and E incorrectly describe these empires' religious policies, including false claims about forced conversion or adoption of Christianity.
Between 1000 and 1400, the Byzantine Empire and the Khmer Empire each developed strong state structures but faced different geopolitical pressures. Byzantine emperors drew on Roman law, Orthodox Christianity, and a complex bureaucracy to govern territories contested by neighbors. Khmer rulers at Angkor used divine kingship, massive irrigation works, and temple complexes to organize agrarian production and labor. Which comparison best explains a key difference in how each empire expressed political legitimacy?
Khmer legitimacy depended on Orthodox patriarchs appointing kings, while Byzantine rulers claimed authority through Hindu caste status and Sanskrit court ritual.
Byzantine rulers derived legitimacy from Confucian civil-service exams, while Khmer rulers used nomadic military councils to choose khans by consensus.
Byzantine legitimacy emphasized a Christian imperial tradition and Roman legal continuity, while Khmer rulers emphasized divine kingship expressed through monumental temple construction.
Both relied mainly on elected parliaments and written constitutions, limiting monarchs through representative assemblies and codified individual rights across provinces.
Both rejected religion as a basis for rule, grounding legitimacy in industrial growth, wage labor, and mass political parties in rapidly expanding cities.
Explanation
This question asks for a comparison highlighting differences in how the Byzantine and Khmer empires expressed political legitimacy. The correct answer (A) correctly identifies that Byzantine legitimacy emphasized Christian imperial tradition and Roman legal continuity, while Khmer rulers emphasized divine kingship expressed through monumental temple construction like Angkor Wat. This comparison skill requires understanding how different cultural traditions shaped different forms of political legitimacy - Byzantine continuity with Rome and Christianity versus Khmer Hindu-Buddhist divine kingship. The contrast shows how legitimacy claims reflected different cultural and religious contexts. Options B through E contain anachronistic or factually incorrect descriptions of these empires.
During the 1300s–1500s, the Mali Empire in West Africa and the Aztec Empire in Mesoamerica both built wealth through tribute and control of trade networks. Mali’s rulers benefited from trans-Saharan commerce in gold and salt and used Islamic scholars in cities like Timbuktu. Aztec rulers extracted tribute from conquered city-states and supported markets such as Tlatelolco. Which comparison best explains a key difference in their economic integration with wider interregional trade?
Mali rejected long-distance trade as un-Islamic, while the Aztecs built fortified coastal factories to dominate Mediterranean commerce and European bullion flows.
Mali was linked to Afro-Eurasian trade via trans-Saharan routes, while the Aztecs’ exchange remained largely regional within Mesoamerica rather than intercontinental.
Both were primarily maritime commercial empires, using large navies to monopolize Indian Ocean trade and establish overseas colonies across Southeast Asia.
Aztec wealth depended on trans-Saharan caravans and Islamic credit networks, while Mali relied on tribute from Andean highland communities and mita labor.
Both used paper money and state banks to finance industrial manufacturing, integrating directly into Atlantic capitalist markets by the early 1400s.
Explanation
This question asks for a comparison highlighting a key difference between Mali and Aztec economic systems. The correct answer (A) correctly identifies that Mali was integrated into intercontinental Afro-Eurasian trade through trans-Saharan routes (gold and salt trade), while Aztec exchange remained largely regional within Mesoamerica. This comparison skill requires understanding different scales of economic integration - Mali's connection to Islamic trade networks versus the Aztecs' more localized tribute system. The contrast shows how geographical location and available trade routes shaped different economic structures. Options B through E contain factual errors about both empires' economic systems and anachronistic references to later historical developments.
In the 1400s–1600s, the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg (Spanish/Austrian) realms both governed multiethnic populations and fought prolonged wars on multiple fronts. Ottoman rulers used a centralized court, provincial administration, and military slavery institutions, while Habsburg rulers relied on dynastic claims, composite monarchies, and Catholic institutions across scattered territories. Which comparison best explains a key difference in how these land-based empires held territories together?
Both rejected dynastic politics, selecting rulers through competitive civil-service exams and rotating monarchs every four years to prevent corruption and favoritism.
Both maintained unity primarily through a single standardized language enforced by compulsory schooling, quickly replacing local identities with uniform national citizenship.
Habsburg cohesion rested on janissary recruitment and devshirme, while Ottoman cohesion relied on hereditary feudal knights owing service to territorial parliaments.
Ottomans depended on overseas plantation colonies for revenue, while Habsburgs relied exclusively on steppe nomad tribute collected through mobile cavalry camps.
Ottomans tended toward more centralized imperial administration, while Habsburg rule was often composite and negotiated, with regional privileges and varied institutions.
Explanation
This comparison examines differences in how Ottoman and Habsburg realms maintained territorial cohesion. The correct answer (B) identifies that Ottomans tended toward more centralized imperial administration, while Habsburg rule was often composite and negotiated, with regional privileges and varied institutions. This demonstrates the comparison skill of contrasting administrative structures - Ottoman centralization through uniform provincial administration versus Habsburg composite monarchy with different arrangements for different territories. The difference reflects how Ottomans built a more unified empire while Habsburgs inherited diverse territories through dynastic claims. Options A, C, D, and E incorrectly describe these empires' practices, including false claims about their revenue sources and selection of rulers.