Cambridge IAL · Thinka 原創模擬試題

2024 Cambridge IAL History (9489) 模擬試題連答案詳解

Thinka Jun 2024 (V3) Cambridge International A Level-Style Mock — History (9489)

200 360 分鐘2024
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of the Jun 2024 (V3) Cambridge International A Level History (9489) paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from Cambridge.

卷一 Document Question

Answer one question from one section only (Section A: European option, Section B: American option, or Section C: International option). Each question has two parts: part (a) compare and contrast, and part (b) evaluate how far the sources support a specific historical statement.
2 題目 · 55
題目 1 · Source-based Comparison
15
Read the sources below and answer the question that follows.

**Source A**: From an article in a British liberal newspaper, September 1923.

'The dispute between Italy and Greece over the tragic murder of General Tellini has put the machinery of Geneva to its first supreme test. While some argue that the League of Nations has failed because the final settlement was negotiated by the Conference of Ambassadors in Paris, this view is short-sighted. It was the prompt mobilization of public opinion at Geneva that prevented a localized spark from igniting a European conflagration. The League acted as a vital forum for mediation, proving that even the most powerful states must account for their actions before the conscience of the world. Far from showing weakness, the episode demonstrates that the League remains the ultimate guarantor of peace, even when it works in tandem with older diplomatic bodies.'

**Source B**: From a speech by an Italian delegate to the League of Nations Assembly, September 1923.

'There are matters of national dignity and honor which no sovereign state can submit to the arbitration of an international assembly. The unfortunate events in Corfu were a direct consequence of a heinous provocation against the Italian state. The League of Nations, with its cumbersome and theoretical procedures, is entirely unsuited to handle urgent crises involving national security and prestige. Italy’s actions were necessary to ensure justice, and it was only through the sensible and realistic mediation of the Conference of Ambassadors—a body of experienced statesmen—that a settlement was reached. To allow Geneva to dictate terms to a great power would set a dangerous precedent, undermining the very sovereignty upon which international law is built.'

**Question**:
Compare and contrast the views expressed in Source A and Source B regarding the role of the League of Nations in resolving the Corfu Incident of 1923.
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解題

### Analysis of Similarities
- **Role of the Conference of Ambassadors**: Both sources agree that the Conference of Ambassadors played a central role in the ultimate resolution of the dispute. Source A notes that "the final settlement was negotiated by the Conference of Ambassadors," while Source B praises the "sensible and realistic mediation of the Conference of Ambassadors" in reaching a settlement.
- **Acknowledge of Crisis**: Both sources recognize that the Corfu Incident was a significant test or crisis involving sovereign powers that challenged existing international frameworks and diplomatic methods.

### Analysis of Differences
- **Effectiveness and Competence of the League**: Source A is highly positive, arguing that the League "prevented a localized spark from igniting a European conflagration" and proved its value as a "vital forum for mediation." Source B, however, strongly rejects this, calling the League "entirely unsuited to handle urgent crises" and criticizing its "cumbersome and theoretical procedures."
- **National Sovereignty vs. International Accountability**: Source A asserts that the League proved "even the most powerful states must account for their actions before the conscience of the world." Source B fiercely opposes this view, arguing that "matters of national dignity and honor" cannot be submitted to international arbitration and that allowing the League to dictate terms would "undermine the very sovereignty" of great powers.
- **The Characterization of Italy's Actions**: Source A views the incident as a test of peace preservation against unilateral action, whereas Source B justifies Italy's aggression as a necessary measure to "ensure justice" following a provocation.

### Contextualization and Evaluation
- **Context of Source A**: As a British liberal newspaper article, Source A reflects the strong pro-League sentiment prevalent in Britain during the early 1920s. Liberal opinion placed great faith in collective security, international law, and public opinion to deter aggression. The author attempts to salvage the League's reputation by framing its cooperation with the Conference of Ambassadors as a success rather than a failure of its independent authority.
- **Context of Source B**: The Italian delegate's speech represents the aggressive, nationalist foreign policy of Benito Mussolini’s new Fascist regime. Mussolini sought to assert Italian power in the Mediterranean and was deeply hostile to any international interference that threatened Italian sovereignty or expansionist ambitions. The source's purpose is to justify Italy's occupation of Corfu and delegitimize the League's authority in the eyes of the international community, steering diplomacy back to traditional great-power mechanisms (like the Conference of Ambassadors) where Italy held more direct leverage.

評分準則

**Level 4 (12–15 marks)**: Evaluates both sources using historical context and provenance to explain the reasons for the similarities and differences in their viewpoints. Clear, balanced comparison and contrast showing sophisticated understanding of the Corfu Incident and the League's early challenges.

**Level 3 (8–11 marks)**: Identifies clear similarities and differences between the two sources regarding the League's role in the Corfu Incident, supporting these points with direct textual evidence from both documents.

**Level 2 (4–7 marks)**: Identifies either similarities or differences, or offers a superficial comparison without deep analysis of the underlying arguments of the sources.

**Level 1 (1–3 marks)**: Offers basic comprehension of the sources with minimal or no effective comparison.
題目 2 · Source-based Evaluation
40
Read the following four sources regarding the aftermath of the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and then answer both parts of the question. Source A: Otto von Bismarck, in a speech to the Prussian Landtag (parliament), September 1866. 'Our task was not to conquer as much territory as possible, nor to satisfy a simple lust for power. It was to secure Germany's northern borders and establish a coherent, strong state capable of defending itself against foreign aggression. The annexation of Hanover, Hesse-Kassel, and Nassau was a painful necessity, but essential for geographical unity. Prussia does not seek to subjugate these peoples, but to welcome them into a federal union where their security is guaranteed. Our goal has always been national cohesion, not mere Prussian aggrandizement.' Source B: Rudolf von Bennigsen, a Hanoverian liberal reformer and leader of the National Association, in a private letter to a political ally, October 1866. 'While we have long desired German unity, the method by which Prussia has achieved its supremacy is deeply troubling. The annexation of Hanover was carried out with brutal military disregard for local institutions and historical rights. Bismarck has not unified Germany; he has simply expanded Prussia. The local populations do not feel welcomed; they feel conquered. True national unity cannot be built upon the destruction of legitimate state rights and the imposition of Prussian militarism.' Source C: An editorial in the French newspaper Le Siècle, late August 1866. 'The rapid defeat of Austria has completely overthrown the European equilibrium. Prussia's annexations in the north are not the result of a popular national movement, but of cold, calculated dynastic ambition. By swallowing up Hanover, Nassau, and Frankfurt, King Wilhelm and Count Bismarck have demonstrated that their sole aim is the aggrandizement of the Hohenzollern crown. This is a triumph of military force over treaty rights, posing a grave threat to the security of France and the peace of Europe.' Source D: From the diary of Prince Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, a Bavarian statesman, December 1866. 'The events of this summer have forced us in the south to reconsider our position. Although Prussia's aggressive consolidation of the north has caused widespread alarm, we must recognize that a fragmented Germany is no longer viable. Bismarck's policy, though ruthless, has laid the groundwork for a genuine national federation. We southern states must eventually join hands with the North, not out of subjugation to Prussian power, but because the preservation of German independence against French ambitions demands a unified nation under a single strong leader.' Answer both parts of the question: Part (a) Compare and contrast the views in Source A and Source B regarding the Prussian annexations of 1866. [15 marks] Part (b) How far do these sources support the view that Prussian actions in 1866 were driven solely by a desire to unify the German nation? [25 marks]
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解題

Part (a) Indicative Content: - Similarities: Both sources discuss the 1866 annexations and recognize that German unity is a central political objective. Both acknowledge that these actions have integrated northern territories. - Differences: Source A presents the annexations as a reluctant, defensive necessity aimed at federal union and security, whereas Source B condemns them as a violent military conquest that trampled on local rights. Source A denies any self-serving motive, while Source B directly accuses Prussia of self-aggrandizement and militarism. Part (b) Indicative Content: - Support for the hypothesis: Source A claims the driving force was defensive security and national cohesion. Source D, although critical of the methods, agrees that the actions successfully laid the groundwork for a unified federation capable of defending German independence. - Challenge to the hypothesis: Source B argues that the driving force was the expansion of Prussian power and militarism at the expense of legitimate state rights. Source C supports this challenge, arguing that the annexations were motivated by dynastic Hohenzollern ambition rather than a popular national movement.

評分準則

Part (a) [15 marks]: - L1 (1-3 marks): Identifies superficial similarities/differences. - L2 (4-7 marks): Identifies and explains basic similarities and differences using source content. - L3 (8-11 marks): Provides a detailed comparison and contrast of the sources' viewpoints. - L4 (12-15 marks): Evaluates the sources in context to explain why the differences in perspective exist (e.g., Bismarck's need to justify annexations to the Landtag vs. Bennigsen's perspective as a Hanoverian liberal reacting to the loss of local sovereignty). Part (b) [25 marks]: - L1 (1-5 marks): Writes generally about the topic with little/no source reference. - L2 (6-10 marks): Uses the sources in a one-sided way to support or challenge the statement. - L3 (11-15 marks): Uses the sources to support both sides of the argument, but without evaluation. - L4 (16-20 marks): Evaluates the sources to show how far they support the statement, addressing reliability and contextual factors (e.g., French fears in Source C, Bismarck's political agenda in Source A). - L5 (21-25 marks): Provides a balanced, evaluated argument with a clear, sustained judgement on the statement.

卷二 Outline Study

Answer two questions from one section only. Each question consists of part (a) explaining why a historical event occurred, and part (b) evaluating a historical statement or debate.
4 題目 · 80
題目 1 · Explanatory Essay
10
Why did the Radical Republicans in Congress pass the Reconstruction Acts of 1867?
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解題

The passage of the Reconstruction Acts of 1867 by Radical Republicans was driven by several key factors:

1. **Opposition to Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction Plan**: Following Lincoln's assassination, President Andrew Johnson pursued a highly lenient policy toward the former Confederate states. He allowed them to re-enter the Union with minimal conditions and issued widespread pardons to former Confederate leaders. Congress, dominated by Radical Republicans, believed this soft approach betrayed the Union's victory and failed to punish the secessionists.

2. **The Black Codes and Southern Defiance**: Under Johnson's lenient plan, Southern state legislatures passed 'Black Codes' designed to restrict the freedom of African Americans and compel them to work in a labor economy based on low wages or debt. This blatant attempt to re-establish white supremacy outraged Northern public opinion and convinced Congress that federal intervention was necessary.

3. **Violence against Freedmen and Unionists**: Escalating racial violence in the South, exemplified by the Memphis Riots and the New Orleans Massacre of 1866, demonstrated that Southern state governments had no intention of protecting freedmen or loyal Unionists. Congress realized that military force was required to maintain order and protect vulnerable populations.

4. **The 1866 Midterm Elections**: The 1866 elections gave the Republicans a two-thirds 'veto-proof' majority in both the House and the Senate. This political mandate allowed them to override President Johnson’s vetoes and enforce a much harsher, Congressional-led 'Radical Reconstruction'.

5. **Constitutional and Political Goals**: Radical Republicans wanted to ensure that the 14th Amendment was ratified by Southern states and that African American men were granted the right to vote. By dividing the South into five military districts, the Reconstruction Acts forced Southern states to draft new constitutions guaranteeing black suffrage before they could be readmitted to the Union, thereby also securing a Republican voting base in the South.

評分準則

Standard Cambridge AS Level Paper 2 Part (a) Mark Scheme (10 marks):

- **Level 4 (9–10 marks)**: Identifies and explains multiple reasons, demonstrating a clear understanding of the historical context. The response is analytical, well-focused, and well-structured, showing a high level of historical knowledge.
- **Level 3 (6–8 marks)**: Explains one or two reasons clearly, or lists multiple reasons with limited depth. The response is mostly focused on the question but may contain some narrative or descriptive passages.
- **Level 2 (3–5 marks)**: Identifies some relevant reasons but offers little to no explanation. The response is largely descriptive or lacks historical depth.
- **Level 1 (1–2 marks)**: Provides some general points of limited relevance; lacks focus and clear understanding of the question.
- **Level 0 (0 marks)**: No response or response does not address the question.
題目 2 · Explanatory Essay
10
Why did the League of Nations fail to take effective action over the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931?
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解題

The failure of the League of Nations to take decisive or effective action against Japan during the Manchurian Crisis (1931–1933) can be attributed to several critical factors:

1. **The Great Depression**: In 1931, the global economic crisis was at its peak. The member states of the League, particularly Britain and France, were heavily focused on severe domestic economic problems, such as high unemployment and industrial collapse. They were highly unwilling to impose economic sanctions on Japan, as doing so would harm their own trade interests.

2. **Geographical Distance**: Manchuria was geographically remote from the League's primary theater of influence in Europe. For European powers, sending naval or land forces to East Asia to confront a powerful nation like Japan was logistically difficult, extremely expensive, and strategically risky.

3. **Reluctance of Britain and France**: As the leading members of the League, Britain and France were responsible for enforcing its collective security decisions. However, neither was willing to risk military conflict. Britain was concerned about protecting its lucrative colonial and trade interests in East Asia (such as Hong Kong and Singapore) and feared a retaliatory attack from Japan if they took a hard line.

4. **Absence of Major Non-Member Powers**: The United States (the world's largest economic power) and the Soviet Union (historically a rival of Japan in Asia) were not members of the League of Nations. Without the cooperation of the USA, any economic sanctions imposed by the League would be ineffective, as Japan could simply continue trading with American markets.

5. **The Delays of the Lytton Commission**: Instead of acting report and enforcing immediate peace, the League established an inquiry commission led by Lord Lytton. It took nearly a year for the commission to travel to Manchuria, investigate, and publish its report in 1932. By the time the League officially condemned Japan's actions, the Japanese military had already fully consolidated its control over Manchuria and renamed it Manchukuo, making the League's diplomatic resolutions obsolete.

評分準則

Standard Cambridge AS Level Paper 2 Part (a) Mark Scheme (10 marks):

- **Level 4 (9–10 marks)**: Identifies and explains multiple reasons, demonstrating a clear understanding of the historical context. The response is analytical, well-focused, and well-structured, showing a high level of historical knowledge.
- **Level 3 (6–8 marks)**: Explains one or two reasons clearly, or lists multiple reasons with limited depth. The response is mostly focused on the question but may contain some narrative or descriptive passages.
- **Level 2 (3–5 marks)**: Identifies some relevant reasons but offers little to no explanation. The response is largely descriptive or lacks historical depth.
- **Level 1 (1–2 marks)**: Provides some general points of limited relevance; lacks focus and clear understanding of the question.
- **Level 0 (0 marks)**: No response or response does not address the question.
題目 3 · Evaluative Essay
30
Answer both parts of the question.

(a) Why did the Directory fail to achieve political stability in France between 1795 and 1799?

(b) 'Napoleon Bonaparte preserved, rather than destroyed, the main principles of the French Revolution.' How far do you agree with this view?
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解題

### Part (a) Outline

**Introduction**
* Introduce the Directory (established in 1795 after the fall of Robespierre) as an attempt to find a middle ground between Jacobin radicalism and Royalist reaction.
* Outline the main thesis: the Directory failed to achieve stability due to structural constitutional weaknesses, deep-seated economic crises, ongoing external wars, and a reliance on the military to suppress political challenges from both the left and right.

**Key Reasons for Failure**
* **Constitutional Flaws:** The constitution of Year III designed a highly complex system with a five-man executive (the Directory) and a bicameral legislature. To prevent dictatorship, the system required annual elections for one-third of the legislature. This led to constant political instability and prevented long-term policymaking.
* **Political Polarization and Interference:** The Directory faced threats from both Jacobins (who wanted a return to radical policies) and Royalists (who wanted a restoration of the monarchy). When elections did not produce the desired results, the Directory used military force to overturn outcomes (e.g., the Coup of Fructidor in 1797 and the Coup of Floréal in 1798), undermining its own democratic legitimacy.
* **Economic and Social Crisis:** High inflation, the collapse of the assignat currency, food shortages, and heavy taxation alienated the French public. Many viewed the Directors (especially figures like Barras) as corrupt and self-serving.
* **Reliance on the Army:** Due to domestic instability and the ongoing War of the Second Coalition, the Directory became increasingly dependent on the military to maintain order and finance the state through foreign plunder. This paved the way for a military figure (Napoleon Bonaparte) to seize power in the Coup of Brumaire in 1799.

### Part (b) Outline

**Introduction**
* Clarify the debate: Did Napoleon institutionalize the key gains of the 1789 Revolution (equality, meritocracy, legal reform) or did he return France to an autocracy that betrayed revolutionary ideals (liberty, representative government)?
* Thesis: Napoleon preserved key social and legal aspects of the Revolution but utterly destroyed its political principles of liberty and democracy.

**Arguments for 'Preserved'**
* **Legal and Social Equality (The Napoleonic Code, 1804):** Napoleon consolidated the abolition of feudalism, guaranteed equality before the law, and protected property rights, which were fundamental demands of the Third Estate in 1789.
* **Meritocracy:** He promoted careers open to talent rather than noble birth, establishing a state bureaucracy and military based on skill, which aligned with revolutionary ideals of ending aristocratic privilege.
* **Religious Settlement (The Concordat of 1801):** By reconciling with the Catholic Church while retaining state control over it, he secured the toleration of Protestants and Jews, preserving the revolutionary concept of religious freedom.
* **Education Reform:** He established lycées (secondary schools) to create a trained, merit-based civil service, expanding access to education for the middle class.

**Arguments for 'Destroyed'**
* **Eradication of Political Liberty:** Napoleon established a police state, heavily censored the press, banned political opposition, and centralist control through appointed Prefects, ending the revolutionary ideal of democratic participation.
* **Return to Monarchy:** By crowning himself Emperor in 1804 and creating a new imperial nobility, Napoleon restored a court culture and dynastic rule that contradicted the republican ideals of the Revolution.
* **Subjugation of Women:** The Napoleonic Code reduced the legal status of women, reversing some of the progressive gains made during the early years of the Revolution regarding divorce and property rights.
* **Re-establishment of Slavery:** In 1802, Napoleon restored slavery in French colonies, betraying the 1794 revolutionary decree of abolition.

**Conclusion**
* Summarize that while Napoleon acted as the 'executor' of the Revolution's social reforms (equality, modernization of the state), he was the 'executioner' of its political ideals (liberty, democracy). Thus, he synthesized revolutionary efficiency with authoritarian order.

評分準則

### Part (a) Marking Scheme (Total: 10 marks)
* **Level 4 (8–10 marks):** Analytical explanation of multiple factors. Explains *why* these factors combined to make stability impossible. Highly focused on the analytical narrative of the Directory's lifespan (1795–99).
* **Level 3 (5–7 marks):** Explains some reasons but may focus heavily on one factor (e.g., just the rise of Napoleon or just economic issues) without providing a balanced, multi-causal analysis.
* **Level 2 (3–4 marks):** Descriptive response listing events of the Directory period. Lacks analytical depth on the causes of instability.
* **Level 1 (1–2 marks):** Generalized comments with little specific historical knowledge.

### Part (b) Marking Scheme (Total: 20 marks)
* **Level 5 (18–20 marks):** Balanced, highly analytical essay that directly addresses both sides of the prompt. Offers a clear, nuanced judgment on the extent of preservation vs. destruction of revolutionary ideals, backed by precise historical evidence.
* **Level 4 (14–17 marks):** Analytical response covering both arguments (preservation and destruction). May have minor imbalances but maintains a clear focus on the core prompt.
* **Level 3 (10–13 marks):** Identifies relevant points on both sides but tends to rely on narrative or description of Napoleon's reforms rather than analyzing their connection to revolutionary principles.
* **Level 2 (6–9 marks):** Mostly descriptive or highly one-sided. May struggle to define what the 'principles of the French Revolution' actually were.
* **Level 1 (1–5 marks):** Assertive, vague, or inaccurate comments about Napoleon with little relevance to the essay question.
題目 4 · Evaluative Essay
30
Answer both parts of the question.

(a) Why did the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 increase sectional tensions in the United States?

(b) To what extent was the Compromise of 1850 successful in resolving disputes between the North and the South?
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解題

### Part (a) Outline

**Introduction**
* Briefly introduce the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, drafted by Stephen A. Douglas.
* State the main thesis: the Act reignited the slavery debate by repealing the Missouri Compromise and introducing 'popular sovereignty', which led to localized violence and political realignment.

**Key Reasons for Increased Sectional Tensions**
* **Repeal of the Missouri Compromise:** The Act allowed territories north of the latitude 36°30' line to potentially permit slavery through popular sovereignty. This outraged Northerners who viewed the 1820 compromise as a sacred pledge keeping slavery out of the northern Louisiana Purchase.
* **The Concept of 'Popular Sovereignty':** By leaving the decision of slavery to the settlers, the Act turned Kansas into a competitive battleground. Both pro-slavery 'Border Ruffians' from Missouri and anti-slavery 'Free-Soilers' flooded the territory, leading to the localized civil war known as 'Bleeding Kansas' (e.g., the Sack of Lawrence and the Pottawatomie Creek massacre).
* **Political Realignment:** The act destroyed the second party system. It fractured the Whig Party along sectional lines, severely divided the Democratic Party, and led to the creation of the anti-slavery, purely Northern Republican Party.
* **Polarization in Congress:** The physical violence in Kansas spilled over into the political arena, most famously illustrated by the beating of Senator Charles Sumner by Representative Preston Brooks on the Senate floor in 1856.

### Part (b) Outline

**Introduction**
* Contextualize the Compromise of 1850 as a legislative package designed by Henry Clay and Stephen Douglas to address territorial acquisitions from the Mexican-American War.
* Thesis: While the Compromise achieved short-term success by averting secession and a potential civil war in 1850, it was a long-term failure because it introduced highly divisive elements—most notably the Fugitive Slave Act—that alienated northern public opinion and deepened moral and political divisions.

**Arguments for 'Successful' (Short-term De-escalation)**
* **Avoided Immediate War:** In 1850, southern radicals (fire-eaters) were openly discussing secession at the Nashville Convention. The compromise successfully pacified moderate opinion in both sections and preserved the Union.
* **Balanced Territorial Demands:** Admitted California as a free state (pleasing the North) while organizing Utah and New Mexico territories under popular sovereignty (leaving the option open to the South).
* **Specific Regional Adjustments:** Settled Texas's boundary disputes in exchange for debt relief and abolished the slave trade (though not slavery itself) in Washington, D.C., satisfying key humanitarian demands from the North.

**Arguments for 'Unsuccessful' (Long-term Polarisation)**
* **The Fugitive Slave Act:** This element of the compromise forced northern citizens to assist in capturing runaway slaves and denied accused runaways a jury trial. This deeply offended northern public opinion, prompted state-level Personal Liberty Laws, and inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel *Uncle Tom's Cabin*.
* **Temporary Nature of the Peace:** It did not resolve the underlying ideological debate over the expansion of slavery. By using 'popular sovereignty' for Utah and New Mexico, it set a precedent that ultimately destroyed the Missouri Compromise in 1854.
* **Appeasement Rather Than Solution:** It was passed not as a single unified bill, but as separate measures pushed through by shifting coalitions. This meant there was no genuine consensus or national reconciliation, only temporary appeasement.

**Conclusion**
* Conclude that the Compromise of 1850 was an armistice rather than a true compromise. It bought the Union a decade of time, but its provisions (especially the Fugitive Slave Act) made future sectional reconciliation virtually impossible.

評分準則

### Part (a) Marking Scheme (Total: 10 marks)
* **Level 4 (8–10 marks):** Clearly explains multiple causal links between the Kansas-Nebraska Act and sectional tensions (e.g., destruction of the Whig party, Bleeding Kansas, repeal of 36°30'). Highly analytical.
* **Level 3 (5–7 marks):** Explains some consequences of the Act but may focus too much on a single aspect (such as just 'Bleeding Kansas') without fully explaining the wider political and ideological consequences.
* **Level 2 (3–4 marks):** Mostly descriptive accounts of the Kansas-Nebraska Act or Stephen Douglas. Limited focus on *why* it caused tension.
* **Level 1 (1–2 marks):** Broad, inaccurate, or superficial comments on slavery and the Civil War.

### Part (b) Marking Scheme (Total: 20 marks)
* **Level 5 (18–20 marks):** Evaluates the success of the 1850 Compromise using a clear chronological framework (distinguishing short-term success in preserving peace from long-term failure due to the Fugitive Slave Act). Backed by rich historical detail.
* **Level 4 (14–17 marks):** Balanced essay discussing both successes and failures of the Compromise. Strong analysis but perhaps slightly less developed in linking the 1850 Compromise to the events of the late 1850s.
* **Level 3 (10–13 marks):** Demonstrates sound knowledge of the terms of the Compromise but tends to list them rather than evaluating their *success* in resolving disputes.
* **Level 2 (6–9 marks):** One-sided argument or a narrative account of the decade leading up to the Civil War with limited focus on the specific terms of the 1850 Compromise.
* **Level 1 (1–5 marks):** Descriptive assertions with little or no historical evidence regarding the 1850 crisis.

Paper 3 Interpretations Question

Answer one question from one section only. Evaluate the provided secondary source extract to explain the historian's interpretation, approach, and how they construct their argument.
1 題目 · 40
題目 1 · Historiographical Analysis
40
Read the following extract and then answer the question:

"The assumption that United States policy in the immediate post-war period was merely a defensive reaction to Soviet expansionism does not withstand critical scrutiny. From the closing months of the Second World War, American policymakers were driven by a profound determination to reconstruct the global economy on the basis of liberal-capitalist principles. This 'Open Door' policy was seen as essential to prevent a return to the domestic economic depression of the 1930s. Consequently, Washington sought to leverage its overwhelming financial superiority and its temporary monopoly on nuclear weapons to force the Soviet Union into accepting a subordinate position within a US-dominated international order. Stalin’s actions in Eastern Europe, while brutal, were essentially defensive and aimed at establishing a secure buffer zone. By misinterpreting these limited, security-driven Soviet actions as a prelude to global conquest, and by deploying aggressive programs like the Marshall Plan to secure markets for American goods, the United States turned a manageable geopolitical rivalry into an ideological crusade. It was this American insistence on global economic hegemony, rather than Soviet intransigence, that primarily triggered the division of Europe and the onset of the Cold War."

What can you learn from this extract about the interpretation and approach of the historian who wrote it? Use your own knowledge of the Cold War to evaluate this interpretation.
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解題

To achieve a high mark in Paper 3, candidates must systematically analyze the extract to reveal the historian's core interpretation, sub-arguments, and underlying historiographical approach.

1. **Identify the Core Interpretation**: The candidate must identify that the historian holds a **Revisionist** perspective (typical of the New Left school). The central thesis is that the United States, driven by its own capitalist economic imperatives, was the primary instigator of the Cold War, rather than a passive defender of democracy reacting to Soviet expansionism.

2. **Analyze the Sub-Arguments**:
- *Economic Imperialism / Open Door Policy*: The historian argues that the US needed to export capital and secure global markets to prevent a relapse into the 1930s Great Depression.
- *Atomic Diplomacy & Financial Leverage*: The extract claims the US used its nuclear monopoly and economic might to coerce the Soviet Union into a subordinate role.
- *Symmetry of Responsibility (Reversed)*: Stalin's actions in Eastern Europe are defended as 'essentially defensive' security measures, which the US misinterpreted as a blueprint for world domination.
- *Marshall Plan as an Aggressive Tool*: The Marshall Plan is depicted not as altruistic aid, but as an aggressive instrument to secure markets and assert American hegemony.

3. **Deploy Contextual Knowledge for Evaluation**:
- *Support for the Interpretation*: Candidates can support this Revisionist view by citing economic drivers like the Bretton Woods conference (1944), the termination of Lend-Lease aid to the USSR in May 1945, the rejection of Soviet loan requests, and the economic conditions attached to Marshall Plan aid (which made it impossible for the USSR or its satellites to accept).
- *Criticisms / Counter-arguments*: Candidates should balance this by evaluating the limitations of the Revisionist view. They can bring in Orthodox arguments highlighting Stalin’s ideological commitment to Marxist-Leninist expansionism, the brutal Sovietization of Eastern Europe (e.g., the Polish elections of 1947, the Czechoslovak Coup of 1948), and the Berlin Blockade. They can also introduce Post-Revisionist perspectives (e.g., Gaddis) that emphasize mutual security dilemmas, misperceptions, and the role of European allies in inviting American involvement ('empire by invitation').

4. **Conclusion**: The response should synthesize these points, concluding that the historian's approach relies heavily on an economic determinist framework typical of New Left revisionism (e.g., William Appleman Williams, Gabriel Kolko), which minimizes Soviet responsibility and ideological factors to focus almost exclusively on American domestic economic pressures.

評分準則

This question is marked out of 40 using the A Level History Paper 3 Mark Scheme levels:

- **Level 5 (33–40 marks)**: Evaluates the interpretation thoroughly. Shows a clear, sophisticated understanding of the historian's argument, identifying its Revisionist nature. Deploys precise, relevant, and detailed historical knowledge of the Cold War to analyze and evaluate the extract's strengths and limitations. Demonstrates a clear grasp of the historiographical context.
- **Level 4 (25–32 marks)**: Identifies the historian's overall interpretation and supports this with detailed reference to the extract. Uses sound contextual knowledge to evaluate the interpretation, though there may be minor gaps in the historiographical framing or the depth of historical detail.
- **Level 3 (17–24 marks)**: Comprehends the extract and identifies some key aspects of the argument. Contextual knowledge is deployed, but it is used more to write about the Cold War in general rather than directly evaluating the specific claims made in the extract.
- **Level 2 (9–16 marks)**: Shows basic understanding of the extract but struggles to identify the overall interpretation. Tends to paraphrase the extract or write a narrative of Cold War events with limited analytical connection to the text.
- **Level 1 (1–8 marks)**: Limited comprehension of the extract. Writes irrelevant or highly generalized assertions about the Cold War with no real engagement with the historian's perspective.

Paper 4 Depth Study

Answer two questions from one section only. Write two balanced, analytical, and highly structured essays evaluating thematic developments during A-Level depth studies.
2 題目 · 60
題目 1 · Depth Study Essay
30
Assess the view that Mussolini's economic policies in the period from 1922 to 1940 failed to achieve their objectives.
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解題

Introduction
- Define Mussolini's key economic objectives: achieving autarky (self-sufficiency), modernising Italy's infrastructure, establishing the Corporate State, and preparing the nation militarily for expansionist war.
- Thesis statement: While policies achieved notable domestic propaganda successes and specific sectoral achievements (like the Battle for Grain), they ultimately failed to create a modern, resilient economy or adequately prepare Italy for the demands of World War II.

Arguments supporting the view of failure:
1. The Corporate State: This was largely a bureaucratic facade rather than a revolutionary third way between capitalism and communism. It suppressed free trade unions and lowered workers' wages while serving the interests of large industrial monopolies (like FIAT and Pirelli) instead of promoting national economic efficiency.
2. Autarky and Industrial Readiness: Italy lacked vital raw materials (coal, iron ore, oil) necessary for heavy industry. Attempting to force autarky distorted the market, drove up prices, and left Italy's military-industrial complex critically under-resourced by 1939-1940.
3. The Battle for the Lira: Artificially overvaluing the lira at 90 to the pound (Quota 90) harmed Italian exports, led to wage cuts, and caused deflationary pressures that hampered economic expansion.

Arguments challenging the view of failure (achievements):
1. The Battle for Grain: This policy was largely successful in its narrow aim of making Italy self-sufficient in wheat production, reducing the trade deficit and reliance on grain imports.
2. The Battle for Land (Pontine Marshes): Drainage and reclamation of marshlands successfully reduced malaria, created new agricultural land, and provided employment, functioning as a massive propaganda success.
3. Infrastructure Development: Modernisation of the railway network, construction of the first autostrade (motorways), and substantial investment in hydroelectric power significantly boosted Italy's modern industrial infrastructure.

Conclusion:
- Summarize the balanced view. Mussolini prioritised political control and fascist prestige over structural economic health. Although specific targeted initiatives (e.g., land reclamation) succeeded, the broader structural strategy failed to transform Italy into a major industrial power capable of sustaining its imperialist ambitions.

評分準則

Generic Level Descriptors for 30-mark Depth Study Essays:

Level 5 (25–30 marks): Candidates demonstrate exceptional knowledge. Arguments are consistently analytical, highly focused on the prompt, and demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of historical context. There is a well-structured, balanced evaluation of Mussolini's economic successes (e.g., Battle for Grain, infrastructure) versus his failures (e.g., Quota 90, Corporate State, autarky). Conclusions are logical, nuanced, and fully supported by evidence.

Level 4 (19–24 marks): Candidates show good, detailed knowledge of interwar Italian economic policies. The response is analytical and addresses the 'assess' command. It balances achievements against failures, though some arguments may be more developed than others.

Level 3 (13–18 marks): Candidates provide a largely descriptive account of Mussolini's economic campaigns (the various 'Battles'). There is some attempt to evaluate success or failure, but the argument may be superficial or lack analytical depth.

Level 2 (7–12 marks): Candidates show limited or generalized knowledge of Italian fascism. The essay is highly descriptive, may contain factual inaccuracies, or lacks a coherent structure relating to the prompt.

Level 1 (1–6 marks): Minimal historical knowledge, characterized by unsubstantiated assertions or irrelevance.
題目 2 · Depth Study Essay
30
How far was the growth of the feminist movement in the USA during the 1960s and 1970s driven by the influence of 'second-wave' literature?
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解題

Introduction
- Define 'second-wave' feminism in the context of the 1960s and 1970s USA.
- Introduce the key debate: whether intellectual catalysts like Betty Friedan's *The Feminine Mystique* (1963) were the primary drivers, or whether broader structural socio-economic, political, and cultural factors played a more decisive role.
- Thesis statement: Literature was vital in framing the debate and mobilizing middle-class women, but it required the existing socio-economic shifts and political climate of the 1960s to transform individual frustration into a powerful national movement.

Arguments for the influence of 'second-wave' literature:
1. Betty Friedan's *The Feminine Mystique* (1963): Articulated 'the problem that has no name,' targeting the isolation and unfulfilled expectations of suburban housewives. It sold millions of copies, serving as a mass consciousness-raising tool and directly leading to the founding of the National Organization for Women (NOW) in 1966.
2. Radical feminist texts: Works like Kate Millett's *Sexual Politics* (1970) and Germaine Greer's *The Female Eunuch* (1970) expanded the movement's scope to address patriarchy, sexual liberation, and domestic violence, appealing to younger, more radical activists.
3. Feminist media: Gloria Steinem's *Ms. Magazine* (founded 1972) regularized feminist discourse, bringing feminist perspectives on work, family, and politics into the American mainstream.

Arguments for other factors driving the movement's growth:
1. Socio-economic changes: Post-war economic expansion saw a massive increase in female employment. However, women faced systematic discrimination, a significant gender wage gap, and limited career advancement, which fueled widespread resentment and economic demands.
2. Political and legislative catalysts: JFK's President's Commission on the Status of Women (1961) published a 1963 report documenting widespread systemic inequality, validating women's grievances at the governmental level. The inclusion of 'sex' in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provided a vital legal tool to challenge workplace discrimination.
3. Influence of other social movements: Many young women participated in the Civil Rights, New Left, and anti-Vietnam War movements. Experiencing sexism within these progressive spaces forced them to organize independently, utilizing grassroots mobilization tactics they had learned from civil rights campaigning.

Conclusion:
- Synthesize the arguments: Literature acted as the intellectual catalyst that gave voice to a growing, underlying social reality. Without the structural socio-economic changes (more women working) and the political environment (the rights revolution of the 1960s), the literature would not have found such a receptive audience or translated so readily into a mass socio-political movement.

評分準則

Generic Level Descriptors for 30-mark Depth Study Essays:

Level 5 (25–30 marks): Candidates demonstrate exceptional knowledge. Arguments are consistently analytical, highly focused on the 'how far' aspect of the prompt, and demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of historical context. There is a well-structured, balanced evaluation of 'second-wave' literature (e.g., Friedan, Millett, Steinem) alongside other structural, political, and socio-economic causes. Conclusions are logical, nuanced, and fully supported by evidence.

Level 4 (19–24 marks): Candidates show good, detailed knowledge of the 1960s/1970s feminist movement in the USA. The response is analytical and addresses alternative factors alongside literature, though some arguments may be more developed than others.

Level 3 (13–18 marks): Candidates provide a largely descriptive account of the feminist movement (mentioning NOW, the ERA debate, Roe v. Wade). There is some attempt to evaluate the role of literature, but the analysis remains basic or lacks clear comparison with other factors.

Level 2 (7–12 marks): Candidates show limited or generalized knowledge of the women's rights movement. The essay is highly descriptive, may contain factual inaccuracies, or lacks a coherent structure relating to the prompt.

Level 1 (1–6 marks): Minimal historical knowledge, characterized by unsubstantiated assertions or irrelevance.

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