AP Euro Cheat Sheet 2026
All AP European History periods from the Renaissance to the present — key movements, turning points, must-know figures, and DBQ/LEQ writing shortcuts on one printable page.
📅 AP Euro Periods — Dates, Weight & Key Developments
| Period | Dates | Exam Weight | Key Developments |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | c. 1450–1648 | ~20% | Renaissance (humanism, secularism), Italian city-states, printing press (Gutenberg), Protestant Reformation (Luther 1517, Calvin, Henry VIII), Counter-Reformation (Council of Trent, Jesuits), voyages of exploration, Scientific Revolution beginnings, Columbian Exchange effects on Europe |
| 2 | 1648–1815 | ~30% | Absolutism (Louis XIV — "I am the state"), Scientific Revolution (Newton, Galileo, Bacon), Enlightenment (Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu), Glorious Revolution, French Revolution (1789), Napoleonic Era, balance of power, mercantilism → early capitalism |
| 3 | 1815–1914 | ~30% | Congress of Vienna (conservatism, balance of power), romanticism, nationalism and unification (Germany, Italy), industrialization and social consequences, liberalism, Marxism, imperialism (Scramble for Africa), feminism beginnings, Charles Darwin, Otto von Bismarck |
| 4 | 1914–present | ~20% | WW1 (causes: MAIN — Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism), Russian Revolution, Treaty of Versailles, Great Depression, rise of fascism (Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin), WW2, Holocaust, Cold War, European integration (EU), decolonization, fall of communism, 1989 |
💡 The Intellectual Revolutions — Must Know
| Movement | Period | Key Figures | Core Ideas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Renaissance | c. 1350–1600 | Petrarch, Erasmus, Machiavelli, da Vinci, Michelangelo | Humanism, individualism, secular values, classical antiquity revival, "the Prince" — ends justify means |
| Scientific Revolution | c. 1543–1700 | Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Newton, Bacon, Descartes | Heliocentrism, empiricism, inductive method, laws of motion/gravity, challenged Church authority |
| Enlightenment | c. 1690–1789 | Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Smith, Wollstonecraft | Natural rights, separation of powers, social contract, religious tolerance, free markets, women's rights |
| Romanticism | c. 1780–1850 | Wordsworth, Goethe, Delacroix, Beethoven, Byron | Reaction against Enlightenment rationalism; emotion, nature, nationalism, the sublime, folk culture |
| Realism / Marxism | c. 1840–1900 | Marx, Engels, Courbet, Dickens, Darwin, Nietzsche | Class conflict, dialectical materialism, industrial critique, evolution challenges religious worldview |
⚖️ Key Political Ideologies
| Ideology | Core belief | Key figure / example |
|---|---|---|
| Conservatism (post-1815) | Preserve tradition, order, monarchy; oppose rapid change; gradual reform only | Edmund Burke, Metternich, Congress of Vienna |
| Liberalism (19th c.) | Individual rights, constitutional government, free markets, limited state power | John Stuart Mill, Manchester School, Gladstone |
| Nationalism | People sharing language/culture should have their own state; drove unification of Germany and Italy | Bismarck, Cavour, Garibaldi, Mazzini |
| Socialism / Marxism | Workers own means of production; class struggle; abolish capitalism | Marx & Engels (Communist Manifesto 1848), Paris Commune 1871 |
| Fascism | Ultra-nationalism, totalitarian state, violence as political tool, anti-communism | Mussolini (Italy), Hitler (Germany), Franco (Spain) |
🔥 The French Revolution — Fast Summary
The most tested single event on AP Euro. Know the 3 phases and their causes.
| Phase | Dates | Key Events | Key Figures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moderate Phase | 1789–1792 | Estates-General, Tennis Court Oath, storming of Bastille, Declaration of Rights of Man, Women's March on Versailles, Constitutional Monarchy | Louis XVI, Lafayette, Third Estate bourgeoisie |
| Radical Phase (Reign of Terror) | 1792–1794 | First French Republic, execution of Louis XVI, Committee of Public Safety, 40,000 executions (guillotine), de-Christianization | Robespierre, Danton, Marat |
| Thermidorian Reaction / Directory | 1794–1799 | Robespierre executed, conservative backlash, corrupt Directory, coup (18 Brumaire) → Napoleon | Robespierre's rivals, Napoleon Bonaparte (rise) |
Causes shortcut: Financial crisis (debt from American Revolution) + social inequality (Third Estate pays taxes, has no power) + Enlightenment ideas (natural rights, consent of governed) + bad harvests (food shortages = angry peasants).
✍️ AP Euro DBQ / LEQ / SAQ Writing Shortcuts
| Component | Quick Tip |
|---|---|
| Thesis | One defensible claim + line of reasoning. "Although [concession], [argument] because [reason 1], [reason 2], [reason 3]." Put in intro AND conclusion. |
| Contextualization | Broader context from a different time/place that connects to the prompt. Full paragraph. "In the decades preceding the French Revolution, Enlightenment ideas about natural rights..." |
| Evidence (DBQ) | Use at least 6 documents for the evidence point. Cite, quote, or paraphrase — don't just say "Document 3." Connect each doc to your argument explicitly. |
| Sourcing / HAPP | Explain how Historical Context, Audience, Purpose, or Point of View shapes the document's meaning. "As a Jesuit priest, the author would prioritize Counter-Reformation arguments over humanist critiques." |
| Outside Evidence | One specific fact not in the documents + how it supports your argument. Names, dates, events all count if connected to the argument. |
| Complexity | Qualify by time/region, show cause and effect at multiple scales, or explain a tension within your argument. One strong explanation earns the point. |
🎯 Top AP Euro Essay Topics (Change & Continuity)
| Topic | Key Change | Key Continuity |
|---|---|---|
| Role of the Church (1450–1648) | Authority challenged by Reformation (Luther, Calvin); secular rulers gained church power (Henry VIII) | Catholic Church remained dominant in southern Europe; Council of Trent strengthened doctrine |
| Role of women | Enlightenment produced feminist arguments (Wollstonecraft); suffrage gained early 20th c. | Patriarchal family structure persisted; women excluded from politics through most of the period |
| State power (absolutism → democracy) | Enlightened despotism (Frederick the Great) → constitutional monarchy (Glorious Revolution) → democracies | State power over citizens expanded regardless of political system |
| Economic systems | Mercantilism → early capitalism (18th c.) → industrial capitalism → welfare state | Inequality between wealthy and poor persisted; rural peasant poverty lasted into 20th c. |
| Nationalism & identity | Replaced dynastic/religious loyalty with ethnic/national identity; drove unification & WWs | Regional and local identities persisted alongside national ones |