Transcript Section 1
HOLT
World History
CHAPTER 20
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Enlightenment and Revolution
in England and America
Section 1: Civil War and Revolution
Section 2: Constitutional Monarchy in England
Section 3: English Colonial Expansion
Section 4: The Enlightenment
Section 5: The American Revolution
HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
Objectives:
Explore what led to the conflicts between Charles I and
Parliament.
Examine how the rebellion in Ireland helped start the
English Civil War.
Identify who would have supported the two sides in the
English Revolution.
Investigate what led to the downfall of republican
government in England.
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
Charles I and Parliament
Charles I believed in divine right of kings, was
married to a French Catholic princess
Parliament opposed his tax measures
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
The Long Parliament
Irish were dispossessed by British, treated brutally
Parliament wanted to be in charge of the army
Charles refused to compromise, led troops into
House of Commons to arrest opponents
Neither side would compromise
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
English Civil War
Cavaliers – called royalists, supported the king
Roundheads – supported Parliament
Oliver Cromwell – organized New Model Army
and defeated Charles
Rump Parliament – abolished monarchy and
House of Lords, proclaimed England a
commonwealth, tried Charles I for treason
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
Cromwell’s Commonwealth
Raised money from taxes and land sales
Army was disciplined and powerful
Enemies had no organized army
Encouraged trade and manufacturing
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Civil War and Revolution
End of the Revolution
Cromwell quarreled with Parliament, then
dissolved it
Charles II restored monarchy
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Constitutional Monarchy in England
Objectives:
Explain how religious attitudes affected the rule of
Charles II and James II.
Describe how Parliament reduced the power of the
monarchy after the Restoration.
Identify the principal features of Britain’s limited
constitutional monarchy.
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Constitutional Monarchy in England
The Restoration and the Glorious Revolution
Political parties develop – Charles tried to increase
toleration for Catholicism; Tories supported Anglican
Church, Whigs opposed having Catholic ruler
The Glorious Revolution – bloodless transfer of power in
English monarchy; religious attitudes led to suspicion,
conflict with Parliament, and opposition to the kings’
policies
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Constitutional Monarchy in England
Changes in English Government
Habeas Corpus Act and Declaration of Rights – protected
individuals against unfair arrest and imprisonment, unfairly
high bail, or cruel or unusual punishment
Toleration Act and Act of Settlement – religious freedoms
to Dissenters, but not Roman Catholics or Jews; Act of
Settlement kept Catholics from the English throne
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
Constitutional Monarchy in England
Parliamentary Rule
Growing power of Parliament – monarch must
consult with Parliament; development of cabinet
and prime minister
Act of Union – united England and Scotland into
Great Britain
Constitutional monarchy – monarch remained head
of state, royal powers were limited by constitution
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
English Colonial Expansion
Objectives:
Investigate who the sea dogs were and what they
accomplished.
Explore the results of the British mercantilist
policy.
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
English Colonial Expansion
The Beginnings of the British Empire
Explorers and sea dogs – English sea captains who
challenged the Portuguese and Spanish
monopolies of sea trade, plundered foreign ships,
helped defeat Spanish Armada
The British in India – British East India Company
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
English Colonial Expansion
The British in America
British settlements – Jamestown and Plymouth
Mercantilism and the British colonies –
discouraged colonial manufacturing and forced
colonists to sell certain products only to Britain
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 4:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Enlightenment
Objectives:
Identify the principal characteristics of
Enlightenment thinking.
Analyze the similarities and differences in the
ideas of important Enlightenment philosophers.
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 4:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Enlightenment
Crusaders of the Enlightenment
Believed that natural law governed human
behavior and that truth could be determined by
logic, secularism, and individualism
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WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 4:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Enlightenment
Political Criticism
Montesquieu – government divided into branches
to create checks on political power
Voltaire – criticized intolerance and attempts to
suppress personal freedoms
Rousseau – distrusted reason, opposed strong
government, supported popular sovereignty
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 5:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The American Revolution
Objectives:
Explain how Americans responded to British
policies after the French and Indian War.
Describe what type of government Americans set
up after the American Revolution.
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AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 5:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The American Revolution
Empire and Conflict
British-French rivalry – Seven Years’ War; British
won control of much of North America
Increased imperial control – Sugar Act, Stamp
Act, “taxation without representation”
Intensified conflict – colonists hardened their
resistance to British policies
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WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 5:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The American Revolution
American Independence
The Declaration of Independence – government is created
to protect individual rights and cannot exist without the
consent of the governed, who can alter or abolish it
The war for independence – weak American government,
brutal Hessian mercenaries, strong American military
leadership
War and peace – French alliance with United States, as
well as Spain and Netherlands, brought American victory
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 5:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The American Revolution
Governing a New Nation
The Articles of Confederation – weak central
government, placed power in individual states
The Constitution – federal government with three
branches: executive, legislative, and judicial; Bill
of Rights guaranteed citizens certain rights
Effects of American independence – democracy
that inspired loyalty
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