问题 材料题

城市化是人类社会现代化的重要标志之一。阅读下列材料,回答问题。

材料一 明清时期,江南地区出现了一些城市,如棉纺业发达的松江、陶瓷业发达的景德镇、冶铁业发达的佛山、长江的商品转运码头汉口等地。丝织巨镇盛泽镇,本是青草滩上一荒村,“明初居民止五六十家,嘉靖间倍之,以绫绸为业,始称为市”。因“丝绸之利日扩”,到乾隆时,“居民百倍于昔,绫绸之聚亦且十倍”。南京“织机逾百张”,繁阜喧盛。

材料二 美国《纽约时报》一记者在1871年游历广州时,对广州城市的繁荣惊叹不已:“宽阔的珠江,清式和西式的阁楼、宝塔、博物馆、清真寺、大厦、仓库、商铺,等等,这些建筑物看上去并没有分成街道,而是毫不间断地紧紧挨在一起。远处可见英国领事馆的小教堂,上面有钟楼和高高的十字架。”——《帝国的回忆:纽约时报晚清观察记》

(1)根据材料一概括指出明清时期城市发展有什么特点?结合所学知识分析具有这些特点的原因。

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(2)依据上述材料,提取广州在社会生活方面近代化的相关信息。结合所学知识分析近代广州社会生活较早走向近代化的原因。

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答案

(1)特点:出现专业化的城镇,城市商品经济发达,出现资本主义萌芽;南方城市人口迅速增加,规模扩大,反映了经济重心在南方和南方交通地位的变化。原因:明清时期,农业、手工业发展,大量农产品和手工业品投放市场;一条鞭法、摊丁入亩等赋税制度,使农民与封建政府的人身关系松弛;交通的便利,商品经济向农村延伸;重农抑商的思想受到冲击,社会兴起重商的风气。

(2)西式建筑物大量出现,外来宗教得到传播。原因:清代闭关锁国后,广州是对外贸易的重要港口,深受外来文化影响;广州是第一批开放通商口岸,近代生产方式产生较早;毗邻港澳,易受西方风尚的影响。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Elections often tell you more about what people are against than what they are for. So it is with the European ones that took place last week in all 25 European Union member countries. These elections, widely trumpeted as the world’s biggest-ever multinational democratic vote, were fought for the most part as 25 separate national contests, which makes it tricky to pick out many common themes. But the pest are undoubtedly negative. Europe’s voters are angry and disillusioned-and they have demonstrated their anger and disillusion in three main ways.

The most obvious was by abstaining. The average overall turnout was just over 45%, by some margin the lowest ever recorded for elections to the European Parliament. And that average disguises some big variations: Italy, for example, notched up over 70%, but Sweden managed only 37%. Most depressing of all, at least to believers in the European project, was the extremely low vote in many of the new member countries from central Europe, which accounted for the whole of the fall in turnout since 1999. In the biggest, Poland, only just over a fifth of the electorate turned out to vote. Only a year ago, central Europeans voted in large numbers to join the EU, which they did on May 1st. That they abstained in such large numbers in the European elections points to early disillusion with the European Union-as well as to a widespread feeling, shared in the old member countries as well, that the European Parliament does not matter.

Disillusion with Europe was also a big factor in the second way in which voters protested, which was by supporting a ragbag of populist, nationalist and explicitly anti-EU parties. These ranged from the 16% who backed the UK Independence Party, whose declared policy is to withdraw from the EU and whose leaders see their mission as "wrecking" the European Parliament, to the 14% who voted for Sweden’s Junelist, and the 27% of Poles who backed one of two anti-EU parties, the League of Catholic Families and Selfdefence. These results have returned many more Eurosceptics and trouble-makers to the parliament: on some measures, over a quarter of the new MEPS will belong to the "awkward squad". That is not a bad thing, however, for it will make the ’parliament more representative of European public opinion.

But it is the third target of European voters’ ire that is perhaps the most immediately significant, the fact that, in many EU countries, old and new, they chose to vote heavily against their own governments. This anti-incumbent vote was p almost everywhere, but it was most pronounced in Britain, the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland and Sweden. The leaders of all the four biggest European Union countries, Tony Blair in Britain, Jacques Chirac in France, Gerhard Schroder in Germany and Silvio Berlusconi in Italy, were each given a bloody nose by their voters.

The big question now is how Europe’s leaders should respond to this. By a sublime (or terrible) coincidence, soon after the elections, and just as The Economist was going to press, they were gathering in Brussels for a crucial summit, at which they are due to agree a new constitutional treaty for the EU and to select a new president for the European Commissi6n. Going into the meeting, most EU heads of government seemed determined to press ahead with this agenda regardless of the European elections--even though the atmosphere after the results may make it harder for them to strike deals.

The word "ire" (Line 1 Paragraph 4) most probably means ()

A. entertainment

B. wrath

C. syndrome

D. premise