Creative Association Sonyashnik tests foreign literature. Pogrebnaya Ya.V.: History of Foreign Literature of the Middle Ages
Verification work-test on foreign literature. 5th grade
Goal of the work:
Determination of the level of formation of the following subject and meta-subject skills in grade 5 students:
Determination of the cognitive goal (the ability to determine the main idea and purpose of creating a text);
Extracting the necessary information from the text;
Establishment of causal relationships;
Free orientation and perception of texts artistic style;
Understanding and adequate assessment of language works of art;
Testing time: 10-15 minutes
Terms and conditions:
When testing Additional materials are not used.
The content of the work:
Testing is aimed at testing knowledge and skills that are integral part reading competence, and compiled on the basis of"Exemplary program and work program to the subject line of textbooks edited by V.Ya. Korovina grades 5-9 "- M .: Education, 2011)».
The content of the work is determined by the Federal State Educational Standard of General Education (Order of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation of December 17, 2010 No. 1897) (meta-subject and subject (literature) skills).
The test consists of 15 questions and provides for the choice of one answer out of three proposed, or finding the specified correspondences.
The correctness of the performance of each task (questions 1-15) is assessed by 1 test score. The scale for transferring points for a test to a school mark is given in the table "Evaluation criteria"
Criteria for evaluation:
Quantity Correct answers | Grade |
14-15 | |
11-13 | |
8-10 | |
Test
Name an American writer.
A) D. Defoe.
B) D. London.
C) R. Stevenson.
A) D. Defoe.
B) H.-K. Andersen.
C) R. Stevenson.
3. What are the signs that are not characteristic of a ballad:
A) drama.
B) dynamically developing plot.
C) based on a real historical event.
4. This writer wrote his first novel, which brought him a huge success, at the age of 60. About whom in question?
A) M. Twain
B) D. London
C) D. Defoe.
5. Robinsons are people who:
A) are alone with nature away from people.
B) dream of sea voyages.
C) inhabited Scotland in ancient times.
6. The theme of the novel "Robinson Crusoe":
A) the hero's passion for sea travel.
B) work in a person's life.
C) the struggle of man with nature.
7. Name an English writer:
A) R. Stevenson
B) M. Twain
C) D. London.
8. This writer was known as a storyteller. What are we talking about?
A) M. Twain
B) D. Defoe
C) H.-K. Andersen.
9. The hero of which work is a feisty troll?
A) heather honey
B) "The Snow Queen"
C) "The Tale of Kish".
10. From which work is the passage taken? “They were walking, and spring flowers and green grass were blooming along the way. Then the bells rang out, and they recognized the bell towers of their native city.
A) The Snow Queen
B) "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer"
B) Robinson Crusoe
11. He was not an exemplary boy, brought a lot of trouble to his aunt. What are we talking about?
A) Kai.
B) Kish.
In.
12. “The boy was beautifully dressed - beautifully dressed on a weekday! A very elegant hat, a neatly buttoned blue jacket, new and clean, and the same trousers! Whose description?
A) Tom.
B) Huck
B) Kaya.
13. Who owns the saying: “WORK, WORK all the time. Try to learn the secrets of the earth, the universe, matter and the spirit that shimmers in this matter…”?
A) H.-K. Andersen.
B) M. Twain
C) D. London.
14. What did Kish get from his father?
A) dagger.
B) Spear
B) a gun.
15. What was the "secret" of Kish?
A) Ingenuity.
b) Courage.
C) in witchcraft.
Ministry of Education and Science of the Krasnoyarsk Territory
KSAEI SPO "Kansk Pedagogical College"
Control and measuring materials
Specialty 050301 - "Russian language and literature"
Specialty 050303 - " Foreign language»
Kansk 2011
Printed by decision of the College Board of Education
Reviewer: T.A. Menshchikova, teacher of higher education qualification category MBOU "Gymnasium No. 4", Kansk, Honorary Worker of General Education, Honored Teacher of the Krasnoyarsk Territory, winner All-Russian competition"The best teacher in Russia"
^ History of foreign literature: control and measuring materials / author-comp. V.A. Sazonova, rec. T.A. Menshchikov; KSAEI SPO "Kansk Pedagogical College". Kansk, 2011. - 29p.
The purpose of control and measuring materials is to control students' knowledge of the history of foreign literature
Control and measuring materials for the specialty 050301 "Russian language and literature" in the discipline "History of foreign literature", and can also be used in the study of the discipline "Foreign literature and literature of the countries of the language being studied" by students of specialties 050303 "Foreign language".
© KSAEI SPO "Kansk Pedagogical College"
^ TEST No. 1. HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE 4
MIDDLE AGES AND RENAISSANCE
TEST No. 2. HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE
XVII-XVIII centuries. 7
TEST No. 3. HISTORIES OF FOREIGN LITERATURE
^ 19th century ROMANTISM 14
TEST No. 4. HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE
XIX CENTURY REALISM 17
TEST number 5. HISTORY FOREIGN
LITERATURE OF THE END OF THE XIX - BEGINNING OF THE XX CENTURIES 22
^ TEST No. 6. HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE OF THE XX CENTURY 25
TEST #1
HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE
MIDDLE AGES AND RENAISSANCE
1. What determines the origin and development of medieval literature?
Traditions folk art
Cultural influences of the ancient world
The science
Christianity
Urban
Feudal-knightly
Folk
Clerical
M.M. Bakhtin
A.N. Veselovsky
A.Ya Gurevich
EAT. Meletinsky
9th century
11th century
XII century
singers
Singers-storytellers
Caster Priests
Priests
singers
Singers-storytellers
Caster Priests
Priests
Cuchulainn
Conchobar
Connaught
Kuroi
Conchobar
Cuchulainn
Connaught
Kuroi
Conchobar
Cuchulainn
Ossian
Kuroi
"The Song of Roland"
"Nibelungenlied"
"Beowulf"
"Song of My Sid"
11th century
12th century
13th century
14th century
Mimiru
"Speech of the High"
"Voluspa"
"Loki's Brawl"
"Alvis' speeches"
jugglers
Huglars
Skalds
Druids
"The Song of Roland"
"Nibelungenlied"
"Beowulf"
"Song of My Sid"
Protecting the homeland from enemies
Loyal service to the king
Protection of the Beautiful Lady
Bloody feudal wars
1100
1110
1120
1130
Sirventa
canson
Sonnet
Alba
Arthurian novels proper (Round Table novels)
Holy Grail Novels
Breton le
Novels of Tristan and Iseult
Shvanki
Fablio
Novel
Morality
"Peasant Doctor"
"Testament of the donkey"
"About the dappled gray horse"
"The Song of Roland"
Dante
F. Rabelais
J. Boccaccio
J.-B. Molière
French
Spanish
Latin
German
Miracle
Pastorela
^ HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE 17 - 18 centuries.
1. Literary directions XVII century:
sentimentalism
baroque
romanticism
classicism
France
England
Spain
Germany
imitative
exemplary
classical
excellent
rationalism
idealism
positivism
gnosticism
Spinoza
Aristotle
Descartes
tendentiousness
versatility
inconsistency
static
image
time
place
action
Luis de Gongora
F. de Quevedo
Gracian
P. Calderon
Luis de Gongora
F. de Quevedo
Gracian
P. Calderon
"Steady Prince"
"Life is a dream"
"Salamey alcalde"
"Doctor of Honor"
You are the most valiant of all, but you are not a king's son":
Diego
Rodrigo
Sancho
Gormas
"Phaedra"
"Celestina"
"Dorotea"
"Iphigenia"
“She is the wife of Hector, I am the son of Achilles,
And the ocean of enmity separates the two of us ":
"Bayazet"
"Andromache"
"Atalia"
"Britannic"
J. St. Beuf
M. Montaigne
J. La Fontaine
B. Johnson
comedy-ballet
comedy cape
high comedy
petty-bourgeois drama
I.A. Goncharov
A.S. Pushkin
L.N. Tolstoy
I.S. Turgenev
"The tradesman in the nobility" Gargapon
"Funny Pretenders" Sganarelle
"Tartuffe" Madelon
"Don Juan" Elmira
18. The hero of Molière's comedy "The tradesman in the nobility", defending the ideas of the extra-class value of a person:
Jourdain
Dorant
Cleont
Dorimena
Alceste
Don Juan
Danden
Arnolf
"Stingy"
"Tartuffe"
"Misanthrope"
"Don Juan"
"When you listen to his moralizing,
Whatever you do, everything will be a crime ":
Sganerelle
Cleante
Tartuffe
orgone
P. Calderon "Sid"
Corneille "Life is a dream"
Racine "Phaedra"
Molière "The Misanthrope"
Logau
M. Opitz
P. Fleming
A.Gryphius
Like a Phoenix, I was born from a flame.
I soared up, but did not destroy myself,
I wandered through the countries, I have been to the seas,
Joy in wanderings knew little,
About the same thing that was done in my life,
Told the reader in this book.
May he now follow me in life:
Runs foolishness, tastes peace.
"Simplicissimus"
"The amazing and true visions of Philander von Sittewald"
"Lost heaven"
"Prometheus Chained"
first of the first
the stupidest of the stupidest
the smartest of the smartest
the simplest of the simplest
B. Johnson
J. Donn
J. Milton
J. Bunyan
"Prometheus Chained"
"Anatomy of the World"
"Lost heaven"
"Samson the Fighter"
16th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
"Robinson Crusoe"
"The Adventures of Gulliver"
"Moll Flanders"
"Roxanne"
"Confessions of a Son of the Century"
"Robinson Crusoe"
"The Suffering of Young Werther"
"Gulliver's travels"
midgets
guingmas
giants
Laputians
G. Fielding
L. Stern
D. Swift
S. Richardson
"Pamela"
"Clarissa"
"Grandison"
"Amelia"
fielding
Smollett
stern
Richardson
hyperbolism
typing
keynote
detailing
adventurous and picaresque
family and household
comic epic
adventure
F. Voltaire
J. Rousseau
D. Milton
C. Montesquieu
D. Defoe
N. Boileau
D. Diderot
J. Racine
"Doctor in captivity"
"Tricks of Scapin"
"The Marriage of Figaro"
"The Barber of Seville"
D. Milton
S. Richardson
J.-J. Rousseau
D. Diderot
10th – 20th
30th – 40th
50th - 60th
70s - 80s
I. Goethe
I. Grimm
V. Gauf
F. Schiller
"I call death, I can't bear to see"
"Stop, a moment, you're beautiful"
"Earthly life having passed to half"
"O new wonderful, wonderful world"
Montesquieu "Robbers"
J. Rousseau "The Suffering of Young Werther"
F. Schiller "Persian Letters"
I. Goethe "Nun"
"New Eloise" Wagner
"The Barber of Seville" Julia
"Robbers" Karl Moor
Faust by Figaro
46. The tragedy that lay on the table of Werther before suicide:
"Emilia Galotti"
"Sarah Sampson"
"Young Scientist"
"Cunning and Love"
"Ilmenau"
"Forest King"
"Glove"
"Lenora"
"Song of the Bell"
"Corinthian Bride"
"Ivikov Cranes"
"Polycrates ring"
Klopstock
Herder
Wieland
Lessing
Lessing
Schiller
Wieland
TEST #3
^ HISTORIES OF FOREIGN LITERATURE OF THE XIX CENTURY. ROMANTICISM
1. What writers do not belong to the Jena school?
F. Schlegel
Novalis
E.T.A. Hoffman
L.Thick
E.T.A. Hoffmann
L. Tiku
Novalis
F. Schlegel
C. Brentano
L.Thick
A. von Arnim
painting
poetry
music
sculpture
insomnia
the night Watch"
dream
morning watch
"Golden Pot"
"Ligeia"
"Rip Van Winkle"
« Nutcracker and mouse king»
W. Wordsworth
J.G.Byron
P.B. Shelley
J. Keats
seagull
albatross
penguin
"Foreword to Cromwell"
"Protection of Poetry"
"Preface to" "Lyrical Ballads""
"On Literature in Its Connection with Social Institutions"
Dulcinea of Tobobo
Maid of Sarogos
corsair
Abydos bride
"Hamlet" by W. Shakespeare
"Don Quixote" by M. de Cervantes
"Robbers" F. Schiller
"Faust" I.-V. Goethe
in France in the 18th century.
in Germany in the 10th century.
Spain in the 14th century
in England in the 12th century.
Rob Roy
Rebekah
Robin Hood
Quentin Dorward
V. Hugo
E.T.A. Hoffman
W. Scott
J.G.Byron
P.B. Shelley
J.G.Byron
W. Wordsworth
W. Irving
"Cathedral Notre Dame of Paris»
"Manfred"
"Indiana"
"Les Misérables"
Louis XII
Louis XI
Esmeralda
Claude Frollo
rock, destiny
sadness
the sound of a bell
whistle sound
ax sound
no
Indiana
Cosette
Consuelo
G. Longfellow
F. Cooper
R. Chateaubriand
"Murder in the Rue Morgue"
"William Wilson"
"The Secret of Marie Roger"
"The Fall of the House of Usher"
England and France
England and Italy
England and Spain
England and America
Natty Bumpo
Chingachgook
Magua
Uncas
gluttony
aversion to work
drunkenness
Nakomis
Minnehaha
Ovini
disease
hunger
murder
accident
"Flint"
"The wolf and the seven Young goats"
"Swineherd"
"Ole Lukoye"
TEST #4
^ HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE OF THE XIX CENTURY. REALISM
1. German poet who called himself "the last romantic."
G. Heine
G. Buchner
K. Gutskov
F. Gobbel
"Again at home"
"Book of Songs"
« winter fairy tale»
"North Sea"
B.L. Parsnip
V. A. Zhukovsky
M.Yu. Lermontov
E. A. Baratynsky
W. Shakespeare
P. Ronsard
F. Petrarch
F. Rabelais
materialism
positivism
idealism
sensationalism
story
epic
novel
short story
C. Lecomte de Lisle
G. Heine
T. Gauthier
C. Baudelaire
Ch. Dickens
F. Stendhal
G. Flaubert
W. Thackeray
road
tower
mirror
flower
"Chronicle of the 19th century."
"Diary of a Hero"
"Confessions of a Son of the Century"
"History of a Generation"
Robespierre
Murat
Wellington
Napoleon
Julien Sorel "Red and White"
Fabrizio del Dongo "Parma Convent"
Missirilli "Vanina Vanini"
Lucien Leven "Red and Black"
Scraper
Raphael
Rastignac
Vautrin
"Colonel Chabert"
« Shagreen leather»
"Father Goriot"
"Eugenia Grande"
P. Merimee
P. Beranger
B. Constant
O. Balzac
physiological
manners
philosophical
analytical
Rastignac
Derville
Grande
Vautrin
Bianchon
gobsek
Lucien
Raphael
"Tamango"
"Shuans"
"Colomba"
"Carmen"
O. Balzac
P. Merimee
G. Flaubert
F. Stendhal
"Provincial manners"
"History of a Provincial Woman"
"Young Lady's Album"
"Diary of the 19th century"
overgrown alley in the garden of the monastery
agricultural exhibition
deserted shore of the raging sea
charity evening at the mayor's
Sancho Panza
Don Quixote
Mephistopheles
Don Juan
Ch. Dickens
F. Stendhal
A. Radcliffe
W. Thackeray
Monks
Fagin
Sykes
Oliver
"A novel without a hero"
"Morals of the Province"
"Chronicle of the Century"
"Theatre of Life"
Lord Stein
Rawdon Crowley
Puppeteer
John Dobbin
T. Smollett
D. Bunyan
O. Goldsmith
L. Stern
Emilia Sedley
Miss Pinkerton
Bute Crowley
Rebecca Sharp
Charlotte Bronte "Emma"
Emilia Bronte "Wuthering Heights"
Ann Bronte "Agnes Grey"
D. Austin "Jane Eyre"
O. Balzac "Shagreen leather"
Ch. Dickens “Germany. Winter fairy tale»
G. Flaubert "Salambo"
G. Heine "Dombey and Son"
V. Hugo
J. Laforgue
A. de Renier
S. Baudelaire
"Taipi"
"Shagreen leather"
"Moby Dick"
"Dombey and Son"
TEST #5
^ HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE
LATE XIX - BEGINNING XX CENTURIES.
Founder of naturalism:
Flaubert
T.Mann
T. Hardy
Thanks to his acquaintance with which Russian writer E. Zola published his works on naturalism in the Russian journal Vestnik Evropy
A. Chekhov
I. Turgenev
L. Tolstoy
F. Dostoevsky
Which novel became the prologue of the Rougon-Macquart epic, "a powerful work in which the seeds of all other Zola novels are laid."
"Belly of Paris"
"The Career of the Rougons"
"Nana"
"Trap"
The novel that brought Maupassant fame
"Yvette"
"Pyshka"
"Uncle Milon"
"Mademoiselle Fifi"
The heroine of Maupassant's short story "Mother of Freaks" gains prosperity
trading
prostituting
married well
deliberately giving birth to crippled children and selling them to fair booths
Anna de Vaux
Rosalie
Countess Fourville
Jeanne de Vaux
Who was one of the first French critics who wrote about Russian literature?
R. Rolland
A. France
G. de Maupassant
E. Zola
A. France's first novel
"Tais"
"The Crime of Sylvester Bonar"
"Queen Crow's Feet Tavern"
"Penguin Island"
Which French writer was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1915 for "sublime idealism" and "sympathy and love for truth"?
A. France
R. Rollan
G. de Maupassant
E. Zola
What work is defined as a “roman-river”, “four-part symphony”?
"Rougon Macquart"
"Buddenbrooks"
"Jean Christophe"
"Penguin Island"
What hero does R. Rolland endow with "pantagruelism", an invariable sense of the beauty of the world, the ability to rejoice and enjoy life?
Jean Christophe
Olivier Janin
Cola Breugnon
Pierre Aubier
With whom does the existence of Belgian literature begin?
Emil Verhaern
Camille Lemonnier
Charles de Coster
Maurice Maeterlinck
Which of the following collections of poems belong to E. Verharn?
"Flemish"
"The Kingdom of Silence"
"Black Torches"
"Octopus Cities"
What concept was created by M. Maeterlinck?
"theater of ideas" (Ibsen, Shaw)
"theatre of silence"
"intimate theater" (Strindberg)
« folk theater» (Rolland)
What plays belong to G. Ibsen?
"Wild duck"
"Blue bird"
"Freken Julia"
« Dollhouse»
The writer who introduced the term "intellectual novel" into literature
Rollan
G.Mann
T.Mann
Kafka
Genre of T. Mann's work "Tonio Kroeger"
novel
story
short story
story
family life story
ballad about a family
family death story
hymn to one family
19. Who is depicted in the portrait?
E.Verharn
M. Maeterlinck
G.Ibsen
J. Galsworthy
B.Show
G.Ibsen
R. Rollan
G. Hauptman
TEST #6
^ HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE OF THE XX CENTURY
1. The literary movement, whose representatives responded to the death of A. Frans with the pamphlet "Corpse", where they announced"feast of the funeral of realism".
expressionism
Dadaism
surrealism
futurism
"Under the shadow of girls in bloom"
"Time Recovered"
"Captive"
"Toward the Guermantes"
R. Rollan
G.Mann
T.Mann
F. Kafka
existentialism
surrealism
expressionism
realism
M. Proust
W. Faulkner
Du Gard
Exupery
"A Farewell to Arms!"
"Seventh Cross"
"Fire"
"Lotta in Weimar"
"Magic Mountain"
"Success"
futurism
surrealism
Dadaism
expressionism
R. Rollan
F. Kafka
E. Hemingway
M. Proust
B. Brecht
G. Ibsen
G. Lorca
B. Show
England
Germany
France
Austria
Rollan
France
Brecht
barbus
"Enchanted Soul"
"The Thibaut Family"
"The Forsyte Saga"
"Success"
Becher
Saint-Exupery
"The Ugly Duchess"
"Tonio Kroeger"
"On Western front no change"
"The Young Years of King Henry IV"
"Transformation"
"Lock"
"Process"
"Ulysses"
"Fiesta"
"Three Comrades"
"Process"
" A Farewell to Arms!"
Jake Barnes
Robert Lokamp
Otto Kestner
Paul Bäumer
"Process"
"Outsider"
"For whom the Bell Tolls"
"American tragedy"
"The Old Man and the Sea"
"For whom the Bell Tolls"
"Fiesta"
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
Brecht
Feuchtwanger
Lorca
surrealism
realism
existentialism
futurism
France
China
Japan
paris
Dublin
London
Lyon
Galsworthy
Faulkner
Lorca
Original layout and computer layout:
A.P. Afanasiev, T.N. Igoshina, E.N. Fedorov,
Dialectics
Art world literary work
Character
Protagonist
Antagonist
literary type
Object world
Scenery
Interior
a) A character in which features that are universal or inherent in a whole group of people clearly suppress the individual qualities of this particular person
b) Part of the objective world of a literary work
c) main current works, whose fate is primarily of interest to the author
d) Any character that appears in the artistic world
e) Development, change of man and nature in all their internal contradictions
f) The totality of descriptions of the material parts of the artistic world
g) Actor works that are opposed to the protagonist, often entering into a struggle with him
g) Description interior decoration home or other premises
h) A generalized idea of the “device” of that real world that surrounds every person.
II.Specify the authors of the works
"Licentiate Widriera"
"Forced Marriage"
"Robinson Crusoe"
"The Legend of the Arab Astrologer"
"Mexican"
"Father and son"
a) W. Irving
b) D. Defoe
c) Jack London
d) J.B. Molière
e) M. Cervantes de Saavedra
e) James Aldridge
III. Enter Vidriera's real name ("Vidriera's Licentiate")
Thomas Rueda
Thomas Rodaha
Thomas Riara.
IV. Determine the titles of the works
mocking human stupidity
a kind of experiment is being carried out on the hero
shows a conflict between two unsympathetic personalities
depicting a bourgeois-democratic revolution
the moral stamina of a person is affirmed
a) The Mexican, Jack London
b) "The Legend of the Arab Astrologer", W. Irving
c) “Forced marriage”, J. B. Molière
d) "Robinson Crusoe", D. Defoe
e) "Father and Son", J. Aldridge
V. Indicate from which works these characters are
1. Devi
2. Sganarelle
3. Aben - Abus
4. Rivera
a) The Mexican, Jack London
b) “Forced marriage”, J. B. Molière
c) "The Legend of the Arab Astrologer", W. Irving
d) "Father and Son", J. Aldridge
VI. Indicate which of the works carries the thought: how honorable it is to be a man, a man - the creator of his own destiny
The Mexican, Jack London
Forced Marriage, J.B. Molière
"Robinson Crusoe", D. Defoe
"The Legend of the Arab Astrologer", W. Irving
VII. Specify which literary hero these words
"His days are numbered - at most if he lasts six months"
"He was a retired conqueror, that is, one who once, in the days of his youth, spent his life in incessant raids and robberies"
There was no smile on his lips, no greeting in his eyes. Something poisonous, snake-like lurked in his black eyes.
“He dealt mainly with laws, but showed himself with special brilliance in the humanities”
“His gray beard fell to the waist, and in general everything in him testified to extreme old age, although he traveled all the way from Egypt on foot”
“All the clothes ... were soaked through, and there was nothing to change into ... There was no food, no fresh water ...”
“The boy did not even try to continue the conversation and silently did what he was ordered”
a) Vidriera (M. Cervantes. "Licentiate Vidriera")
b) Robinson ("Robinson Crusoe", D. Defoe)
c) Sganarelle (“Forced Marriage”, J.B. Molière)
d) Filipe Rivera (The Mexican, Jack London)
e) Aben - Abus ("The Legend of the Arab Astrologer", W. Irving)
g) Ibrahim ibn Abu - Ayubh (“The Legend of the Arab Astrologer”,
W. Irving)
h) Devi (“Father and Son”, J. Aldridge)
VIII. Determine what genres
Dramatic genre based on comic conflict
small artistic narrative work in prose
A small fictional narrative work with a sharp, gripping plot
a) novel
b) comedy
c) story.
IX. Find out the writer by the facts of his biography
In life, "he was a worker, and a sailor, and a gold digger"
"Professional Actor"
"An experienced businessman who was constantly in the center of events"
"He traveled to many countries in Europe, America, Asia, Africa, supporting the struggle of progressive forces against reaction and fascism"
“Necessity forces him to accept the position of tax collector. Being in this service, he innocently ends up in prison.
"The Pioneer of American Romanticism and the Novel Genre"
a) Daniel Defoe
b) James Aldridge
c) Jack London
d) Jean-Baptiste Molière
e) Washington Irving
f) Miguel de Cervantes
X. Specify features
1. Renaissance literature
2. Literature European Enlightenment
a) the discovery of the world of ancient culture, in which man occupied the main place
b) the conviction that a person is by nature, from birth, kind
c) the belief that a person is the result of upbringing
d) it is necessary to develop the mind, teach to control the actions of a person, educate feelings
e) the discovery of human nature, the relationship between man and the world
g) man is the creator of his own destiny, he is the crown of all that exists on Earth
h) belief in harmony as a universal cure for all ills. Mind and feelings must be in harmony
i) knowledge of the world and its diversity through personal, life experience is necessary.
Keys
2h
3g
4v
5th
6a
7e
8b
9g
1 d
2 g
3 b
4 a
5 in
6 e
1 in
2g
3b
4a
5d
1 g
2 b
3c
4a
2d
3g
4a
5g
6b
7h
1 b
2c
3a
2g
3a
4b
5e
6d
1 a f g h
2 b c d i
German literature (based on the novel by G. Hesse "Steppenwolf")
What is the name of the hero of the novel by G. Hesse "The Steppe Wolf"?
a) the name is not given, only a nickname is given;
b) Harry Galler;
d) Hermione.
2. What is the hero in question in this fragment?
“….. belonged to those who found themselves between two eras, who were not protected by anything and lost their integrity forever, to those whose destiny is to feel all the doubtfulness of human life with special force…”
b) a young professor;
c) Haller;
d) red-yellow imp.
3. Continue the phrase.
3.1. "The devil is a spirit, and we are his ..."
a) victims
b) actual implementation;
c) unhappy children;
d) poor servants.
3.2. " magic theater- This ….."
a) hell inside Harry;
b) the most powerful hallucination of Hermine;
c) a prank on Pablo and Hermina;
d) a real-life theater, which is located next to the Black Eagle restaurant.
3.3. "The entrance fee to the Magic Theater is….."
a) soul b) 50 marks;
c) 5 years of life; d) mind.
4. To which hero do the following words belong?
“The peace you seek is the peace of your own soul. Only in your own heart lives that other reality for which you yearn.
a) a young saxophonist;
b) a waiter at the Black Eagle restaurant;
c) Haller;
5. What was the purpose of the Magic Theater?
a) put Haller in a good mood and teach him to laugh;
b) lead Haller to suicide;
c) liberate Haller's personality, give him freedom;
d) get rid of the Steppenwolf?
6. In what game is the hero's personality disintegration realized?
a) in chess
b) in billiards;
c) in poker;
d) in the game on the stock exchange.
7. Whose soul became the container of two substances: an intellectual and a wild beast?
a) the soul of Gustav;
b) the soul of a professor of theology;
c) the soul of Pablo;
d) the soul of Harry Haller.
8. Who in the novel realizes the prospect of immortality?
a) steppe wolf;
b) Mozart and Goethe;
c) Maria and Haller;
d) Pablo and Hermine.
Test No. 14 English Literature (based on the novel by W. Wolfe "To the Lighthouse")
How many children did Mr and Mrs Ramsay have?
a) eight; b) two;
c) four; d) six.
2. What is Andrew Ramsey talking about in the following passage?
"Imagine a kitchen table when you're not in the kitchen."
b) about your dream;
c) about the work of Lily Briscoe;
d) about the evening TV show.
3. Who is Lily Briscoe?
a) an artist; b) a writer;
c) an actress; d) a student of Mr. Ramsay.
4. Who is the next passage talking about?
“An amazing disregard for the feelings of another in the name of truth, a sharp, rude attack against the simplest conventions seemed to her such a monstrous violation of all human rules ...”
a) Mr Banks b) Mr Carmichael;
c) Mr. Ramsay; d) Mr Tansley.
5. What was the composition of the expedition to the lighthouse after the war?
a) Mr Ramsay, Cam and James;
b) Mr. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe;
c) the whole Ramsey family;
d) Ramsey's children only.
6. In the minds of which of the heroes do these words sound?
“The brush is the only reliable thing in the world of strife, destruction, chaos - and you can’t play with it, all the more so consciously
a) Mrs Ramsay b) Lily Briscoe;
c) Mr. Tansley; d) James Ramsey.
7. Continue the phrase.
“James has had this metaphor for a long time ……”
a) go to the lighthouse and live there;
b) come to the lighthouse and destroy it;
c) capsize the boat going to the lighthouse;
d) take a knife and plunge into the father's chest.
8. How does Mr. Tansley's storyline end in the novel?
a) drowned;
b) went to India;
c) became a teacher in a school for the poor;
d) defended his dissertation and got married.
9. What is the character in the following passage about?
“I knew everything without learning anything. Her simplicity has always penetrated into what the smart people were confused about, what the wise men were deceived in, straightforwardness taught with a stone, like a bird, to rush to the target, soar and soar and dive straight into the truth ... "
a) a servant of the Ramsey family; b) Mrs Ramsay;
c) Lily Briscoe; d) Minta Doyle.
10. How does Mrs. Ramsay's storyline end in the novel?
a) her flight from Mr. Ramsay;
b) suicide;
c) death during the First World War;
d) her departure to the lighthouse.
TESTS ON THE HISTORY OF FOREIGN LITERATURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE
For intermediate or final certification
NOTE: Some tests may have more than one correct answer, while others may not have a correct answer.
SECTION 1. LITERATURE OF THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
1 . S: Establish a correspondence between periods and their chronological framework:
Early Middle Ages
Mature Middle Ages
Late Middle Ages
X-XIII centuries
XIY-XY centuries
2. S: Match the steps Early Middle Ages and their chronological framework:
Fall of the Roman Empire
The era of the Great Migration of Nations
- "Dark Ages"
Carolingian and Ottonian Renaissance
455 CE e.
YII-YIII centuries
3 . S: The beginning of the Middle Ages is
455 CE e.
476 CE e.
410 CE e.
4 . S: A significant contribution to the study of medieval literature was made by:
M. P. Alekseev
V. M. Zhirmunsky
V. I. Kuleshov
B. I. Purishev
A. A. Smirnov
S. S. Mokulsky
A. Ya. Gurevich
A. I. Revyakin
Yu. M. Lotman
5 . S: The literature of the Early Middle Ages was formed on the basis of:
Partially preserved ancient literature
Archaic epics
Christian Literature
Literature of the Middle East
Byzantine literary tradition
Heroic epics
6 . S: Three streams medieval literature presented:
urban literature
chivalric literature
clerical literature
mythology
translated literature
7 . S: Literature of the Early Middle Ages is represented by:
Archaic epics
Heroic epics
hagiographies
Historical chronicles
chivalric novels
Knight's lyrics
8 . S: The three streams of literature of the Mature Middle Ages are:
Clerical literature
Knight literature
Folklore
9 . S: Choose the correct definition: hagiography is
Biography of the monarch
The biography of the hero
Life of an Apostle
Life of a Saint
10 . S: Choose a science that was not one of the seven liberal arts:
Rhetoric
Grammar
Dialectics
Arithmetic
Astronomy
Geometry
Theology
11 . S: The Crisis of the Roman Empire Begins
In the II century. n. e.;
In the III century. n. e.;
In the 4th century n. e.
12 . S: Centon is
This is a poem of 14 lines;
This poem is a list of names and titles;
This is the glorification of victories and accomplishments in verse;
This is a poem consisting of the lines of classical authors.
13 . S: Peacock Polanski is
Late Latin poet;
Advisor to Emperor Constantine I;
Christian writer.
14 . S: The first attempt to synthesize Christianity and antiquity is made by:
Tertullian;
Jerome;
lactation;
Jerome.
15 . S: The work of Tertullian was called:
- "About the city of God";
- "Apologetic"
16 . S: Tertullian
Cynic moods;
Imperial ambitions;
Democratic sentiment.
17 . S: Lactantius was a tutor:
Constantine I;
Empress Helena;
Crispus, son of Konstantin I.
18 . S: The emperor who legalized Christianity was:
Constantine I;
Calligula;
Empress Elena;
Emperor Tiberius.
- "Guide to divine and worldly literature";
- Apologetics.
20 . S: The first translation of the Bible into Latin is done
Tertullian;
lactation;
Jerome.
21. S: The translation of the Bible into Latin was called:
- "Vulgate";
- "Scripture".
22 . S: Jerome translated the Bible from
Greek;
Egyptian.
23 . S: Augustine the Blessed was a bishop in
In Verona;
Hippo (North Africa).
24 . S: Alaric occupied Rome in
410 CE e.;
455 CE e.;
476 CE e.
25 . S: The most important works of Augustine
- "About the city of God";
- "About famous people";
- "Confession";
- Apologetics.
26 . S: Augustine is developing a concept
dialectics of history;
Dialectics of the formation and development of personality;
Synthesis of Catholicism and Orthodoxy;
Association of secular and secular authorities.
27 . S: Theodoric commissioned the revival of the ancient heritage
Cassiodorus;
Odoacer;
Romulus Augustulus.
28 . S: He founded a school on his estate
Cassiodorus;
Theodoric.
29 . S: Cassiodorus translated
Plato;
Aristotle;
Hesiod.
30 . S: Major work of Cassiodorus
- "Divine institutions";
- "Guide to divine and worldly literature";
- "Consolation of Philosophy".
31
In verse;
In the form of a monologue;
in the form of a dialogue.
32 . S: "Consolation of Philosophy" by the pen
Cassiodora;
Augustine.
33 . S: Consolation by Philosophy is based on the technique
antitheses;
Allegories;
Metaphorizations.
34 . S: The last poet of antiquity is called:
Cassiodora;
lactation.
35 . S: "Consolation by Philosophy" written
In the dungeon, awaiting execution;
At the school of Cassiodorus;
In the monastery.
36 . S: The aphorism that “a monk best serves God by copying books” belongs to
Charlemagne;
Augustine;
Cassiodorus.
37 . S: The Carolingian Renaissance falls on the period:
768-814;
900-914.
38. S: Palace Academy is being created
Charlemagne;
Theodoric;
Augustine.
39 . S: Scientists and poets adjoin Charlemagne:
Theodulf;
Paul Deacon;
Einhard;
Augustine the Blessed;
Jerome.
40 . S: Determine who owns the following works:
- "Verbalization of Spring with Winter";
- "Biography of Karl";
- "History of the Lombards";
- "Against the Plague"
Paul Deacon;
Einhard;
Angilbert;
Seduli Scott.
41 . S: The poem "Farewell to the cell" belongs to
Alcuin;
Angilbert;
Sedulus Scott.
42 . S: Small Academy was located
in Aachen;
in Reims;
In Paris.
43 . S: The Ottonian Renaissance falls on the period:
962-973;
862-873;
1062-1073
44 . S: Eschatological myths show:
The birth of the supreme god
End of the world
world creation
45 . S: Cosmogonic myths show:
The birth of the supreme god
End of the world
world creation
46 . S: Choose a work that is not an archaic epic
- "Beowulf"
- Elder Edda
- The Nibelungenlied
Celtic sagas
47. S: The Celtic saga is a unique genre formation due to:
The inclusion of poetic fragments in a prose narrative
The inclusion of foreign language fragments in the narrative
Incorporating graphic illustrations into the narrative
48 . S: The heroic cycle of the Celtic epic is represented by:
Ulad cycle
Finn's cycle
Conchobor cycle
Cycle Dekhtire
Connaught cycle
49 . S: The Celtic epic was formed on the territory of:
Byzantium
Ireland
50. Q: Match the sagas to the cycles they belong to:
- "Illness of Ulads"
- "The Persecution of Diarmuid and Graye"
- "Disappearance of Kondla the Beautiful, Son of Kond of a Hundred Battles"
Ulad cycle
Finn cycle
Cycle of fantastic sagas
51 . Q: Distribute among the narrators of the Celtic epic those areas of epic creativity for the preservation and execution of which they were responsible:
The history of the origin and settlement of the clan
love lyrics
incantatory poetry
52 . S: The genre form of the Celtic epic is:
53 . S: The hero of the Ulad cycle of the Celtic epic is
54 . S: Cuchulainn's name means
55 . S: Where did the following passage come from
Why do I need all the hardness of the spirit now?
Anguish and madness took possession of me
Before this death that I caused
Over this body that I slew.
- "Beowulf"
- "Short song about Sigurd"
- "Fight of Cuchulain with Ferdiad"
56 . S: The reason for the death of the hero in the saga "Death of Cuchulainn" is:
The willfulness of a hero
Hero's recklessness
Numerical superiority of enemies
Self-sacrifice of the hero in favor of the family
57 . S: In lines: “Oh, Emain-Maha! Oh Emain Maha! Great, greatest treasure!” saga ends
- "Cuchulain's disease"
- "Wooing to Emer"
- "Death of Cuchulainn"
58 . S: The first records of the Celtic sagas come from
YI-YII centuries
YII-YIII centuries
59 . S: The Celtic epic was the source for the collection of J. McPherson
60 . S: The main cycles of the Celtic epic:
Mythological
Heroic
Poetic
Prosaic
Fantastic
61 . S: The Irish Iliad is called the saga:
Bull-stealing from Kualnge
Book of Five Conquests of Ireland
Book of the Brown Cow
Persecution of Diarmuid and Greine
62 . S: Cuchulainn acts as a son
God Oghme
Fairy Morrigan
God of Light Meadows
63 . S: The center of Celtic culture before the 1st c. n. e. spoke:
Iceland
Iberian peninsula
64 . S: In the Celtic sagas, the activity of a woman is explained
The absence of male heroes;
The fight for independence
Equality of men and women
Remnants of matriarchy
65 . S: The main plots of the fantastic Celtic sagas:
Obtaining miraculous items;
Swimming in a magical land;
Love of a mortal and sid;
War of seeds and people
66. S: The heroic cycle of the Celtic epic includes two sections:
Ulad cycle;
Osiine cycle;
Osgar cycle;
Finn cycle;
67 . S: Tragic blame falls on Cuchulain after:
Heroic matchmaking
After learning martial arts from Scathach
After killing the blacksmith's dog
After killing brother
68 . S: The genre identity of the Celtic saga is determined by:
The poetic form of the saga
Combination of verse and prose
Fantastic characters and plots
prosaic narrative
69 . Q: Match the Celtic sagas with their heroes:
- "The expulsion of the sons of Usneh"
- "The Voyage of Bran, son of Phoebalus"
- "The Persecution of Diarmuid and Greine"
70 . S:Irish explorers prefer to name their sagas
stories
ballads
fairy tales
skelami
71 . S: The Celtic epic had a significant impact on the formation
Romanticism
realism
Heroic epic
chivalric romance
72 . S: The poem "Beowulf" belongs to
Germano-Scandinavian literature
Celtic Literature
Anglo-Saxon literature
73 . S: Beowulf's name is a kenning of a bear and translates as ##
74 . S: Beowulf describes the events that take place
In England;
In Denmark;
In Sweden.
75 . S: In Beowulf
Two parts;
Three parts;
Four parts.
76 . S: The central event of the first part of "Beowulf"
Dragon fight;
Fight with Grendel and his mother;
Fight with the Danes.
77 . S: Beowulf mining at the bottom of the lake
Sword of battles;
Miraculous armor;
Spear of battles
Miraculous helmet;
Hat of invisibility.
78 . S: Grendel was
monster;
Mighty hero;
Werewolf;
The king of the underwater world.
79 . S: "Beowulf" preserved in manuscript
10th century n. e.;
11th century n. e.;
12th century n. e.;
13th century n. e.
80 . S:The below excerpt is taken from
The sun turned black
land sinks into the sea,
bright stars
are falling from the sky.
- "The exile of the sons of Usneh"
- "Beowulf"
- "Speech of the High"
- "Divinations of the Velva"
81 . S: The name of the German-Scandinavian epic songs "Elder Edda" means:
great-grandmother
Farm Oddi
Poetic name of Snorri Sturluson
The name of the heroine of the songs
82 . S: "Elder Edda" was discovered in a manuscript
Brown cow book
Book of Five Conquests of Ireland
Royal code
83 . S: The Elder Edda includes:
10 mythological songs
14 mythological songs
6 mythological songs
84 . S: "Elder Edda" includes two cycles of songs:
Mythological
Fantastic
Heroic
Archaic
85 . S: Heiti in skaldic poetry is
Name of the patron of poetry
The name of the legendary skald
The name of the legendary king
Form of metaphor
Form of a one-member epithet
86 . S:Kenning in skaldic poetry
It's another name for a king
This is the designation of the king's brother
Form of binomial metaphor
form of comic
87 . S: Choose from the given examples the one that is not a haty of the sun:
fiery red
Light of the elves
88 . S:Choose from the given examples of ship kenning
Battle stick
house of eels
horse of the sea
89 . S: The dialogue songs of the Elder Edda are called
squabbles;
ballads;
90 . S: The plot of Thor's return of his hammer is described in the song
- "The Song of Humir";
- "Velva Divination";
- "Song of the Hold";
- "Speech of the High"
91 . S: High is one of the names:
92 . S: Where does the following passage come from:
Gunnar is sad
He hung his head.
He sat all day
In sorrowful confusion;
Didn't know at all
What to do
He befitted
He did not know at all
How to do it
In this case...
- "The First Song of Gudrun"
- "Speech of Sigriva"
- "Brynhild's Journey to Hel"
- The Nibelungenlied
- "A short song about Sigurd"
93 . Q: Match the genres and songs of the Elder Edda:
- "Speech of the High"
- "Divination of Velva"
- "Speech of Vaftrudnir"
- "Song of Hymir"
didactic song
Divination
Dialogic song
mythological ballad
94 . S:"Edda Minor" belongs to
Segmund the Wise
Brinolv Sveinsson
Snorri Sturluson
95 . S: "The Younger Edda" is written
Poetry
Combines poetry and prose
SECTION 2. LITERATURE OF THE MATURE AND LATE MIDDLE AGES
96 . S: A distinctive feature of the heroic epic is
Historical basis
Mythological origin
Fairy tale orientation
Orientation to the clerical tradition
97 . S: The debate about the origin of the German heroic epic is between:
Carl Lachmann
Andreas Häusler
Joseph Bedier
Menendez Pidal
Menendez Pidal
Gaston Paris
Joseph Bedier
99. S: The formula for the origin of the epic in the edition of J. Bedier is as follows:
"In the beginning there was a poet"
"In the beginning was history"
100 . S: The formula for the origin of the heroic epic as edited by M. Pidal is as follows:
"In the beginning there was a poet"
- "in the beginning there was a historical chronicle"
"In the beginning was history"
- "in the beginning was the road of pilgrims"
101. S: The historical basis of the "Song of Roland" is presented in
- "The Acts of Carl" by Einhard
In the chronicles of Theodulf
In The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius
102 . S:Roland is a vassal
Charlemagne
Genolona
103 . S: The historical Roland had a name (there may be several correct answers):
hruotland
Hruotland, Macgrave of the Brittany March
Hruotland, Chief of the Breton March
104 . S: The cause of Roland's death is
Conflict with Olivier
Conflict with King Charles
Betrayal of Ganelon
Betrayal of the peers of France
105 . S: Roland is
fictional character
mythological hero
historical face
106 . S: The historical basis of the French heroic epic is
Campaign of Charlemagne in 778
Reconquest of Valencia by Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar
The death of the Burgundian kingdom
107 . S: The ideal vassal in "The Song of Roland" is:
Ganelon
108 . S: The main conflict in "The Song of Roland":
Confrontation between the Christian world and the world of infidels
Confrontation between king and hero
Confrontation between a traitor and a hero
109 . S: In the "Song of Roland" in terms of the exhaustion of the conflict, the final
110 . S: Main themes of the Spanish heroic epic:
Reconquista
Feudal strife
Conflict between king and hero
Love of a Castilian and a Mauritanian
The struggle for freedom and political primacy of Castile
111 . S: The protagonist of the Spanish heroic epic:
Cid de Bivar
Ganelon
Giselher
112 . Q: Set the sequence of story episodes of "Song of Sid":
Sid's exile
Help from Martin Antolines
First victory over the Moors and gifts to King Alphonse
Victory over King Yusuf
Conquest of Valencia
Connecting with the family
Reconciliation with the king
Marriage of the daughters of Cid and the Infantes of Corrion
Insult in the forest Korpes
Cortes
Judicial duel and restoration of justice, new marriage daughters of Sid
113 . Q: Match the heroic epics with their heroes:
Marsilius
Giselher
Pedro Bermudez (Silent)
- "The Song of Roland"
- The Nibelungenlied
- "Song of Side"
114 . S: Sid wins back
Granada
Castile
Valencia
115 . S: Sid name means
Conqueror
noble lord
King's relative
Mister
116. S: Sid's Nicknames
Invincible
Exile
compeador
glorious beard
Born in a good hour
117 . S: Full name Sida
118 . S: Sid had
two sons
Two daughters
There were no children
119. S: The Spanish heroic epic is characterized by:
anti-aristocratic tendencies;
Monarchist tendencies;
Religious pathos;
Fantastic episodes
realism
120 . S: From which epic are these lines taken:
“Here would be a good vassal,
be good to him."
- "The Song of Roland"
- The Nibelungenlied
- "Beowulf"
- "Song of Side"
121 . S: The anti-aristocratic tendencies in the "Song of Sid" are associated with
Images of Judah and Rachel
In the image of Martin Antolines
The image of Pedro Bermudez
Images of Diego and Fernando
122 . S: The beginning of the epic is lost in
- "Songs about Roland"
- "Songs about Side"
- "Songs of the Nibelungs"
123 . S: One of them said:
"Destined by fate
You lose your life and all your friends with you.
We know that only the palace chaplain
Will return to the land of Gunther from foreign countries.
This prediction was given
Giselher
Shpilman Volker
Gernot
Dietrich of Bern
Hildebrant
124 . S: Siegfried's invulnerability in the Nibelungenlied is related to
Victory over the dragon
Possession of miraculous items
Possession of miraculous weapons
125 . Q: Match the heroes of the Nibelungenlied with their archaic prototypes:
Brynhild
Siegfried
Kriemhild
Brynhild
126 . Q: Correspond between time and space locus in the Nibelungenlied
Isenstein
State of Attila
mythological antiquity
knight civilization
The era of the Great Migration of Nations
127 . S: The cause of the queens' quarrel in the Nibelungenlied is
Hoard of the Nibelungs
Dispute about the nobility of the spouses
Dispute about the valor of the spouses
128 . S: Siegfried Hoard
Moved to Kriemhild
Moved to Etzel
Stayed with the Burgundians
Buried at the bottom of the Rhine
129 . S: Christian Fiction dominates
- "Songs of the Nibelungs"
- "Songs about Side"
- "Songs about Roland"
130 . S: common features for the heroic epics of the Mature Middle Ages are:
The conflict of the king and the hero (obvious or potentially possible)
Controversy between vassal and lord
Historical basis
The willfulness of a hero
The activity of the hero and the passivity of the king
Presence of Christian fiction
The presence of mythological fiction
131. Q: Match the heroic epics with their historical basis:
- "The Song of Roland"
- "Song of Side"
- The Nibelungenlied
437, 453
132 . Q: Establish a correspondence between the epics and the features of their content:
Epos with elements of knightly aesthetics
Strict military epic
Realistic epic
- The Nibelungenlied
- "The Song of Roland"
- "Song of Side"
133 . S: A chivalric romance is formed on
South of France
In the central states of France
North of France
South of England
Northern Spain
134. S: Where does the following passage come from:
But still the servant in response
She is in the usual madness,
Almost all women are accustomed,
What makes them always
"No" to say, but to think "yes" -
Screaming: "Leave me alone!"
From "The Romance of Aeneas"
From "The Romance of Troy"
From the novel "Lancelot, or the Knight of the Cart"
From the novel "Yvain, or the Knight of the Lion"
135. S: The basis of the chivalric romance is
Christian sources
Antiquity
Celtic myths and legends
Oriental tales
136 . Q: Match the chivalric romances with their cycles
- "Alexandria"
- "Yvain, or the Knight of the Lion"
- Aucassin and Nicolette
antique cycle
Arthurian cycle
Byzantine cycle
137. S: In the romance of chivalry, adventure means
risky adventure,
The feat of a knight
risky love affairs
Relationship between love and achievement
138 . S: Celtic legends and romance connected
Wolfram von Eschenbach
Chretien de Troy
Hartmann von Aue
Thomas Malory
139 . S: Arthurian legends have been processed
In the chronicle of Geoffrey of Monmouth
In the chronicle of Robert Vasa
In the novel by Lambert de Thor and Alexandre de Berne
In the novel by Benoît de Sainte-Maur
140. S: Alexandrian verse, classic tragedy verse, goes back to the novel:
Lambert de Thor and Alexandre de Berne
Benoit de Saint Maur
Chrétien de Troyes
141 . Q: Match chivalric romances with their authors:
- "Alexandria"
- "Erec and Enida"
- "Parzival"
- "Poor Heinrich"
Lambert de Thor, Alexandre de Bernay
Chretien de Troy
Wolfram von Eschenbach
Hartmann von Aue
142 . S: German chivalric romance grouped around
Christian didactic legends
Legends of the Holy Grail
Arthurian legends
Legends of Tristan and Iseult
143 . Q: Set the episode sequence of the legend of Tristan and Isolde
Tristan's battle with Morolt
Departure of Tristan and his healing
Finding a Bride for King Mark
Drinking a love potion
Betrayal of the courtiers
Escape to the Forest of Morua
Tristan's exploits in the court of King Arthur
Tristan's marriage
My work, in which everything is so new,
Let it be taken lightly
The one for which I write.
I lift all my desires to her.
So good, good! Must
She is called to be a rose.
This passage is taken from:
- The Romance of the Rose
Canzones by D. Rüdel
Sonnet by F. Petrarch
- "The novel about Tristan and Iseult"
145 . S:Sochi is a genre
Liturgical drama
folk drama
folk epic
Folk lyrics
146 . S: Mystery is a genre
Liturgical poetry
Liturgical drama
urban epic
147. S: From which work is the following passage taken:
holy madonna,
good maiden,
I pray for your protection.
calling you.
- "About the villan, who by litigation won paradise for himself"
- "Game about Robin and Marion"
- Aucassin and Nicolette
- "The Miracle of Theophilus"
After all, cunning distorted the truth.
Fake nature struck,
Krivda captured all the ways,
Dexterity has become more necessary than strength.
These lines end
- "A novel about the Fox";
- "The Romance of the Rose";
Fablio "About the Cow, Priest's Cow";
Fablio "On the villan, who by litigation acquired paradise for himself";
Fablio "The Will of the Donkey"
149 . S: The heyday of urban literature falls on
150 . S: The peculiarities of urban literature are that it
Created in national languages;
Represented by all kinds of literature;
Expressed the interests of the people;
Created in Latin;
Was under the control of the church
151 . S: Individual episodes of "The Romance of the Fox" are called:
heads
branches
ballads
152 . The leading form of the comic in the "Novel of the Fox" is:
Oxymoron;
Paradox.
153 . Q: Establish a correspondence between the heroes of the “novel about the Fox” and those estates, the personifications of which they are:
Isengrim
Petty feudal knight
Large feudal lord
Bourgeois city dweller
154 . S: "The Romance of the Rose" belongs to
Didactic-allegorical epic
Courtly epic
Satirically-allegorical epic
155 . Q: Match fablios to their genre types
- "Are you there"
- "About a dappled gray horse"
- "Testament of a donkey"
Humorous, anecdotal fablio
Narrative fablio
satirical fablio
156 . S: A medieval Provençal ballad is
Song with chorus
historical poem
Short folk narrative song
157 . S: Alba is
song of the dawn;
Genre of lyrics of troubadours;
Genre of Vagant lyrics
Lyric genre Trecento
158 . S: Centon is a poem:
On a borrowed plot
This is a poem that continues the poems of a famous poet
This is a poem built from borrowed lines
159 . S: Tenson is
Poetic dispute between two poets
Poetic novella
Poetic ballad
160 . S: Serena in the lyrics of the troubadours is
song of the dawn
parting song
Sunset Waiting Song
magic spell
161 . S: Senyal is
Conventional name of the lady or patron saint
encrypted given name poet
Name of poetic or ideological opponent
162 . S: Komjata in the lyrics of the troubadours is
parting song
song of the dawn
Poetic dispute
Complaint about unhappy love
Message to the beloved
163 . S: Sirventa in the lyrics of the troubadours is
satirical poem
Poetic controversy
Poetic ballad
Song with a dance chorus
164 . S: In the lyrics of the troubadours, the ballad is
Song with a dance chorus
Girl Complaint
Poem of mystical content
Poem of historical content
165. S: The concept of courtesy in chivalric culture meant
Consistent with the ideal of a vassal
Compliance with the ideal of a senior
Elegance, sophistication
Exemplary behavior in the castle
166 . S: Pastorella in the lyrics of the troubadours is
song of the dawn
Song of the Beginning of Spring
Song about the meeting of the knight and the shepherdess
167 . S: Provence becomes the center of chivalric culture thanks to:
Good geographical location
Urban growth and intensive trade
own Provencal language
Development of secular education
The influence of the philosophy of the East
The flowering of freethinking and heresies
Lack of central royalty
168 . S: Choose one quality that is not necessary for a perfect knight
Generosity and Valor
Completion of feats in the name of love for the Lady
Completion of feats in the name of glory
Accomplishment of feats in the name of the king and the Fatherland
The ability to gallantly speak about love
Ability to compose and sing poetry
169 . S: Troubadour lyrics
Depicted real feelings
Glorified the king
Glorified the mistress counting on the reward
Depicted only love
170. S: The word troubadour comes from the verb
Invent
Find
create
Suffer
write poetry
171 . Q: Establish a correspondence between the genres of chivalrous lyrics and their content:
Tenson
canson
Pastorella
Komjata
Sirventa
love song
Love of a knight and a shepherdess
song of the dawn
parting song
satirical poem on a political theme
172 . Q: Match the content of concepts
high platonic love
Low sensual love
unrequited love
173 . S: The lyrics of the troubadours have
book origin
Folk sources
Italian poetry source of origin
The poetry of the Irish bards as a source of origin
Arabic poetry as a source of origin
174 . Q: Match the troubadours with their creative and life credo:
Singer of love from afar
Supporter of shared and equal love
Champion of knightly and noble honor, war singer
Juafre Rudel
Bernart de Ventadorn
Bertrand de Born
175
In a tavern, take me death, and not on a bed!
To be close to wine is dearest to me;
It will sing and the angels will have more fun too:
“Have mercy on the great drunkard, oh God!”
From the poetry of the troubadours
From the poetry of the Trouvers
From the lyrics of Francois Villon
From Rabelais' Gargantua and Pantagruel
From the poetry of the Vagants
176 . S: Vagants wrote on
177 . S: The word vagant means:
stray
Student
Free
178 . S: Famous vagant poets were
Archipite of Cologne
Adam de la Al
Bertrand de Born
Hugon (Primate) Orleans
179 . S: The main genres in the lyrics of the Vagants:
Parody
Confession
Pastoral
Ballad
canson
Madrigal
180 . S: Basic artistic techniques in the lyrics of the vagants:
Bilingualism
Pun
Parody
Retardation
speech characteristic
181 . S: Where did the following lines come from:
According to the laws of nature
We must live in the world.
Roman Rabelais "Gargantua and Pantagruel"
From The Decameron by G. Boccaccio
From the poetry of the Vagants
182 . S: These lines
I am Francois, which I am not happy about.
Alas, the death of the villain leads,
And how much does this ass weigh;
The neck will recognize soon.
F. Villon completed:
- "Ballad of the Hanged"
- "The Ballad of the Poetry Contest in Blois"
- "The Ballad of the Ladies of Old"
this is an independent quatrain
183 . S: The main tropes in the lyrics of F. Villon
Oxymoron
Antithesis
Metonymy
Citation
184. S: The first line of F. Villon's "Ballad of the Poetry Contest in Blois" is:
- "I'm dying of thirst over the stream"
- "I am accepted by everyone, expelled from everywhere"
- "I'm François, which I'm not happy about"
“I know everything but myself”
185 . S: An oxymoron is a poetic device
close to hyperbole
epithet form
Form of metaphor
Connection of the unconnectable
186 . Q: Establish a correspondence between works and their authors:
- "Big Testament"
- "Game about Robin and Marion"
- "The Miracle of Theophilus"
- "The Romance of the Rose"
François Villon
Adam de la Al
Jean de Main, Guillaume de Lorris
187. Q: Match the small forms of the epic with those European countries, in the folk literature of which they existed:
Ballad
France
Germany
Spain
188 . S: There are two directions in the city theater:
folk drama
Liturgical drama
fantasy drama
realistic drama
189 . Q: Match urban theater dramas with their genres:
- "Game about Adam and Eve"
- "Lawyer Patelen"
- "The Miracle of Theophilus"
Mystery
Miracle
190. Establish a correspondence between countries and works of urban literature:
Ballads of Robin Hood
A novel about the Fox
Pop Amis
France
Germany
191 . S: The transitional figure from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance is
petrarch
Boccaccio
192 . S: Dante writes the Divine Comedy
In exile in Italy
At home, in Florence
In France
193. S: Dante's Divine Comedy is written:
in Latin;
In Italian;
French
194. S: " New life» Dante in terms of genre:
Autobiographical story
Installation of poems and comments to them
Instruction in the art of versification
Treatise on love
195 . Q: Distribute the sins according to their severity in the circles of Hell, based on the ethical concept of Dante:
Adultery
Gluttony
Greed and waste
Anger and sadness
Violence
Betrayal
196 . S: The beginning of the scientific study of the life and work of Dante is laid:
Giovanni Boccaccio
Lorenzo Medici
Francesco Petrarch
197 . S: Dante's main work was originally called
Comedy
Divine Comedy
Incomparable Comedy
Hell, Purgatory and Heaven
198 . S: Who set a goal for themselves, releasing their creation into the light:
“To tear out the living people and the state of misfortune and bring them to a state of happiness”?
Perarca
199 . S: Symbolic numbers in " Divine Comedy»
200. S: In The Divine Comedy, Hell opens:
Forest of suicides
Around voluptuaries
201 . S: In the Limbo of Dante's Hell are
Worthless
Unbaptized babies
Pagans who died in the pre-Christian era
Heretics
202 . S: Beatrice in the Divine Comedy performs:
unattainable ideal;
A wonderful memory
Actor
203 . S: The worst sin in the Dante hierarchy:
Adultery;
Anger and despondency;
Betrayal
204. S: The first circle of Hell is busy
Killers
Deceivers
suicidal
voluptuous
205 . S: The sixth circle of Hell is reserved for
Traitors and false advisers
Deceivers and blasphemers
Suicides and heretics
Angry and sad
206 . S: The prime mover of the universe in the "Divine Comedy" is
Divine love
God's wrath
human act
207 . S: "New Life" Dante - the first in European literature
Autobiographical story
memoir prose
Philosophical studies
208 . S: Dante's New Life is divided into
Four parts;
Three parts;
Two parts
209 . S: In each part of the Divine Comedy,
100 songs
210 . S: Total number songs in the Divine Comedy
211 . Dante belonged to the party
Black gfelphs
white gfelwof
Gibbelins
212. S: It was an early hour, and the sun was in the clear firmament
Accompanied by the same stars again.
What is the first time when their host is beautiful
Divine moved love.
From which work of Dante are these lines
- "New life"
- Divine Comedy
213. S: The Divine Comedy begins with
214. S: Who and where meets Dante with these words:
It was time, he found help
in my face; I look young
Lead him to the right path.
Beatrice in Hell
Beatrice in Purgatory
Beatrice in "New Life"
Beatrice in Paradise
215 . The leading scholars who study Dante's work are:
A. L. Dobrokhotov
A. A. Ilyushin
A. K. Dzhivelegov
N. I. Golenishchev-Kutuzov
M. M. Bakhtin
V. E. Khalizev
216. S: About whom G. Boccaccio writes:
Ravenna sheltered the exile,
Her body, spirit - God's grace,
And envy receded before consent.
About Francesco Petrarch
About Torquato Tasso
About Lorenzo Medici
About Dante Alighieri
Virgil;
Beatrice
218 . Dante, creating the "Divine Comedy", set the goal
Save humanity;
Save your hometown;
Save your family;
Save Beatrice.
219. The ashes of Dante rest in
Florence
Ravenna
220 . The Divine Comedy is written
Tercinami;
apartments;
Octaves.
221 . Dante's guide to Paradise is
Virgil;
Beatrice;
Apostle Peter.
222 . S: Dante's guide to Paradise is
Virgil
Beatrice
Guardian angel
223 . Dante's guide to Hell is
Virgil;
Beatrice;
224 . In Dante's Purgatory
Passes through the fiery river;
He endures torment as a proud sinner;
Arguing with Beatrice.
225 . Dante visits other worlds because
Writes a poem in the genre of vision;
Cannot climb Virtue Hill;
Wants to find the perfect person.
226 . last word in each part of the Divine Comedy there is a word
Luminaries;
227 . "Prologue" adjoins
Purgatory;
228 . Dante places the pope
In Purgatory.
229. Dante, passing through Hell and Purgatory,
Becomes an atheist;
Does not agree with the divine will;
He overcomes his own sinfulness.
230 . Dante considers the mission of the Poet:
Correction of mankind;
Creation of a perfect work;
The ability to resurrect the past.