Time
People
True or False
Museums
100

Christians based the passage of time after this event

Birth of christ

100

This person classified museum artifacts by material, giving rise to the idea of the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age 

Christian Jürgensen Thomsen

100

Isaac Newton used the mythical voyage of Jason and the Argonauts for the base event in his chronology 

True

100

Thomsen organized museum artifacts by the principals that he learned from his father, who was a: 

Shipowner  

200

6:00 PM, October 24, 3963 B.C. was considered by Johannes Hevelius to be:

The date of creation

200

Thomsen’s successor, who was known as the first professional archaeologist

Jens Jacob Worsaae

200

Creation was dated to 6004 B.C.

False, it was 4004 B.C.

200

Originally, museums favored _____ objects over _____ objects

Beautiful, famous; crude, anonymous

300

Many ancient civilizations used this to reckon time 

Years of the reign of their king

300

This person depicted the round earth on a flat surface and created a universal chronology

Gerardus Mercator

300

King Frederick is widely assumed to have planted polished axes among Old Stone Age artifacts as a practical joke 

True

300

Before Thomsen’s theories, materials made of stone, bronze and iron were thought to come from different ____ rather than different time periods

Social classes

400

Christmas, Lady Day, and Easter were all used to: 

Begin the year

400

This person refined Pope Hilarius’ calendar and changed the base date to the birth of Christ

Dionysus Exiguus

400

B.C. was accepted before A.D. 

False, it was accepted several centuries later

400

Museums for the public arose in this century 

18th century

500

Before the 17th “century,” the word century was used to denote:

One hundred of anything

500

This person concluded that the Three-Age classification was supported by Swiss artifacts as well as Danish artifacts 

Ferdinand Keller

500

The word “tourist” was introduced in the 1600s 

False, it was the 1800s

500

The Old Stone Age was given the more informal name of: 

The Culture of Kitchen Middens

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