South East Asia
Dot, not Feather
Middle East
Africa
100

He went by many names: Laozi, Lao Dan, Lao Dun, Lau Jun

Lao Tzu

100

What is the capital of India?

New Delhi

100

What is the capital of Iraq?

Baghdad

100

What is the capital of Egypt?

Cairo

200

He is a Tibetan Buddhist monk that was believed to be reincarnated.

Dalai Lama

200
Name 2 countries that border India.

Pakistan, Nepal, China, Bagladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, (Techinacally Sri Lanka does not boarder India but the fact that you remember this country at all, I will award credit for it.)

200

Name 2 countries that boarder Iraq.

Iran, Syria, Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait

200

Name a body of water that boarders Egypt.

Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea

300

Born in the Hunan province of China, he started the CCP. Chinese Communist Party

Mao Zedong

300

He was known for peace and was born in Porbandar, Inida.

Mahatma Gandhi

300
Became president of Iraq in 1979.

Saddam Hussein

300

She was a powerful leader and loved Julius Caesar and Mark Antony.

Cleopatra

400

Born 1162, near Lake Baikal, Mongolia and died August 18, 1227.

Genghis Khan

400

What religion did Gandhi practice?

Hinduism

400

What 2 countries did Saddam start war with?

Iran and Kuwait

400

The means of Cleopatra's death is uncertain. Name one of the popular beliefs.

She and her servants killed themselves via snake poison. 


Did not die by suicide but was poisoned by Octavian or his associates.

500

Genghis Khan was not born with this name. What is his orginal name?

Temujin

500
Gandhi was the catalyst, if not the initiator of three major revolutions of the 20th century, what are they?

Movements against colonialism, racism, and violence.

500

Saddam was captured and put on trial October 2005. What was the verdict and sentence?

Convicted of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death by hanging.

500

Who is being discussed here? 

The City of God was widely read in ______ time and throughout the Middle Ages and still demands attention today, but it is impossible to read without a determined effort to place it in its historical context. Confessions was not much read in the first centuries of the Middle Ages, but from the 12th century onward it has been continuously read as a vivid portrayal of an individual’s struggle for self-definition in the presence of a powerful God.

St. Augustine