European monarchs
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Transcript European monarchs
EUROPEAN
MONARCHS
Chapter 18
Royal Theories
A ruler with
COMPLETE control
God hand-picks those who
rule and therefore Monarchs should have
complete control – because they are God’s
choice
SPAIN
CHARLES I (Charles V)
Hapsburg
Territory
included Spain, Low Countries of Belgium,
Netherlands, land in Americas
1519: Holy Roman Emperor “Charles V”
Works
closely with RCC, Protestants a direct threat
Declares Martin Luther an Outlaw
Years of War against Protestants
Spain
: 1555, each German
prince right to decide Protestant or Catholic
Spain Splits Empire
1556: Divides empire between brother and son
Brother
took over old Hapsburg holdings in
Austria
Son (Phillip II) rules Netherlands, Spain, Sicily,
and American colonies
Charles lives rest of life in monastery
SPAIN
1550 – 1650: Golden Age of Art
El
Greco
Diego Velázquez
Miguel de Cervantes
SPAIN
PHILLIP II
Devout
Catholic, leader of
Counter Reformation
Married to Mary I of England
Clashed with Protestants in
Low Countries (Netherlands,
Belgium, Luxembourg)
Spain
1560’s:
Revolt! Dutch refuse to declare allegiance
“
” with Duke of Alba
1609: Seven northern provinces become
Netherlands, southern remain in Spain’s hands
SPAIN
England assists Dutch in Revolt
: Spain’s fleet of
ships sent to invade England
Fire Ships!
After loss, several more ships lost on trip
around England
Spain loses power due to
Phillip’s government too centralized
Trusted
no one
No industries – only money from New World
Bankrupt 4 times
Think…
How did Spain vast empire affect the varied
people they controlled? How did Phillip II
trying to maintain power affect the People?
FRANCE
: French protestant
Henry of Navarre = HENRY IV
Wedding
in Paris leads to
10,000-70,000 Huguenots
killed
Henry of Navarre lives!
Escaped death by denying religion
“Paris
is well worth a mass”
HENRY IV
: right to
worship, hold office, rule where
Huguenots are in majority
FRANCE
Young Louis XIII weak leader
Cardinal Richelieu
Chief minister and most
trusted adviser
Determined to strengthen
monarchy
Edict & Revocation of Nantes
Read the
Edict of
Nantes and
the
Revocation
of the Edict
of Nantes
Answer
guided
Questions
To strengthen Monarchy Richelieu…
Cut off Port city of
14 months, until starving citizens surrendered
Ordered walls to be torn down
Turn all churches Catholic
Punished Nobles for Revolts
Sided with Protestants in 30 Years war to
undermine Hapsburg power
La Rochelle’s defeat was a signal to all
Protestants to GET OUT of France!
FRANCE
LOUIS XIV
“I
am the State” (didn’t need
Cardinal’s help)
Sun King
: Louis
in charge of all military,
political, economic initiatives
I lost my voice
I can’t talk very loud so I need you to be
quiet so I can talk and you can hear me.
Today’s agenda:
1. Watch “Elizabeth” clip
2. View page 539, answer question
3. Read pages 540-544
1.
Answer Reading checks, Cardinal
Richelieu, Economics, 1-3
How did Louis XIV deprive Nobles power?
Deprived Nobles of influence
Versailles (forced Nobles to come to
him)
Influenced dress, dining and
gambling to bankrupt nobles
Revokes Edict of Nantes, outlaws
Protestantism
200,000 Huguenots flee
1701
Spanish
King died, Louis wants throne for his son
Other monarchs didn’t want this connection
England, Netherlands, Holy Roman Empire
fought France
:
Louis’s
Grandson gets throne, but France and
Spain can’t be ruled by same monarchs
Think…
How did French Monarchs try to maintain
power, and how did this affect the People?
Huguenots? Nobles?
ENGLAND
Elizabeth I & Parliament
Parliament passed laws
favoring Protestantism
Parliament pressured her to
marry
Allowed MP’s speak their
minds without fear of
punishment
Called 10 times in 45 years
Still an absolute ruler
Robert Dudley
Queen’s Favorite
Duke of Anjou
Possible Marriage
ENGLAND
Elizabeth died with no heir
Mary Queen of Scots (Elizabeth’s
cousin) was put to death for trying to
overthrow Elizabeth
Her son was King of Scotland
James I
First Stuart to rule
Believed firmly in DIVINE
RIGHT and ABSOLUTE
MONARCHY
Trouble with Parliament
Country in debt, viewed as
“outsider” from Scotland
James I
: strict Calvinists
demanding further reform
from Church of England, take
power away from Church
officials
James
I sees Puritans as threat
Refuses most requests of
reforms
Puritans flee to New World
(Pilgrims!)
ENGLAND
Charles I
Popular
until marrying a Catholic
Princess
Requested money from Parliament
Parliament refuses unless Charles I
signs:
: placed limits
on king’s power
King can not levy taxes without
consent of Parliament
Direct Challenge to:
Charles I
Taxed without permission
Dismisses Parliament when
they become outraged
1629: Charles will rule
without Parliament
(example
of Absolute
Monarchy)
ENGLAND
1640: Charles I in debt thanks to
rebellions in Scotland
Has to reconvene Parliament
to ask for money
“
” did not
disband for many years
After being ignored for 11 years
MPs demanded Parliament be
called at least once every 3
years
ENGLAND
Puritans moved to abolish the appointment of
bishops in Anglican Church
Charles I led troops into House of Commons to
arrest Puritan leaders for Treason
Already
escaped
Charles’ intentions shown: to take back power
Parliament rises up against king
Charles I supported by people
1642: Civil War began!
English Civil War
: nobles who
supported king
:
supporters of Parliament
Puritans,
Merchants, some
upper classes
Led by: OLIVER
CROMWELL
ENGLAND
Royalist Army
outmatched
1646,
surrender
Oliver Cromwell
dismisses all Parliament
members who disagree
with him
English Civil War
Label and
analyze the
Map of the
English Civil
War
Answer
guided
questions
ENGLAND
Rump Parliament tries
Charles I for treason
Charles refuses to recognize
Parliament’s authority
Found guilty, Executed in
front of own palace
Lord Protector Cromwell
House of Commons outlaws
House of Lords and Monarchy
England becomes a
Cromwell: “
of England,
Scotland, Ireland”
Demanded
complete obedience
ENGLAND
RESTORATION
Cromwell
dies, son, Richard,
weak leader
Parliament reconvenes and
vote to bring back monarchy
1660: Parliament invites
Charles’ son to be king
Restoration & Charles II
Charles
II
Supported
religious
toleration
Habeas Corpus Act of 1679
“may you have body”
Guarantees
right to
appear in court to see if
accused should be held
or released
1665: Bubonic Plague
returns, killing 100,000+
Charles being presented the first
pineapple grown in England
Columbian Exchange!
ENGLAND
JAMES II
Charles
II brother
Married to a catholic whose
Catholic sons outrank James’
protestant daughters
GLORIOUS REVOLUTION
1688:
Nobles invited James’ daughter
Mary and her husband William to
become King & Queen
Glorious Revolution
William and Mary
Had to sign:
: prevents
monarchs from
levying taxes without
Parliament’s consent
Creating a:
monarchy limited by
law
The Glorious Revolution
Read about
William &
Mary and
the Glorious
Revolution
Answer
Guided
Questions
ENGLISH MONARCHS
Think…
How did English monarchs’ willingness or
unwillingness to work with Parliament
affect the People? English Civil War?
English Bill of Rights?
RUSSIA
1500’s Russia far behind western
Europe in technology, centralized
government
Run by church officials and boyars
: landowners
1546: Young prince claims title
: (version of Caesar) Emperor
Ivan IV
Early Reforms:
general
council included
merchants and lower level
nobles
promoted military officers on
merit
reduced Boyars power
Expanded borders and
increased trade
Ivan IV TERRIBLE!
Ivan the Terrible
1560s:
Ivan changes
Became
suspicious of his closest
advisors
Created a private police force to
punish opposition
1565: seized land from 12,000 boyars
Killed thousands in Novgorod,
suspected they wanted to separate
from Russia
1581: killed his own son
Russia
“
”
many rulers because of lack of
heir
1613: Michael crowned czar–
first Romanov
RUSSIA
Peter I
1682:
became czar as child,
sister ruled until he was 17
Labored side-by-side with
thousands of carpenters
building a navy
Takes
navy
Azov from Turks with
Peter the Great
Realizes
Russia needs to
Modernize
:
bringing elements of the
western culture to Russia
1697: journeyed to Europe in
disguise to learn hands-on
skills and recruit experts to
Russia
RUSSIA
Reforms:
brought Church under
state control
Built up Russian industry
Started first newspaper
Sponsored new schools
Modernized the calendar
Promoted officials based on
service
Early 1700s: fights Sweden
for a warm-water port
Becomes new capital
RUSSIA
1761: Peter III becomes Czar
His wife, Catherine grew
angry at his weak rule
Peter III murdered
Catherine II becomes
“Czarina”
Catherine the Great’s
Reforms:
Removed restrictions on trade
Updated Russia’s legal and
education system
Promoted Science and Arts
Catherine the Great
War and revolt led Catherine to
strengthen the authority of the
monarchy
Reorganized local
governments
Put administration in hands of
landowners and nobles
Reduced taxes as thank you, and
gave them absolute control
Think…
How different it must have been to be a
Russian under Ivan, Peter, or Catherine.
How would each experience be different?
30 YEARS WAR
Holy Roman Empire
Made
up most of Central Europe
Ruled By Hapsburgs
Dozens of Small states trying to stay independent
1618: official of HRE orders 2 protestant churches
shut down
Local Protestants throw HRE representatives out
window (into garbage… they were fine)
Nobles in Austria, Bavaria revolt against HRE
30 YEARS WAR (1618-1648)
CATHOLIC SIDE
HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
PROTESTANT SIDE
BAVARIA
AUSTRIA
DENMARK
SWEDEN
Eventually included all of Europe
•One of the longest, most destructive wars in
European History
•Mostly Protestants v. Catholics
•Destroyed Germany, brought famine and
disease to Europe
•
: Ended the war, extended
toleration, reduced the power of the Holy Roman Empire,
strengthened the rulers within it
BIG WINNERS OF TREATY
AUSTRIA
Hapsburg
1740 HRE Emperor
Charles VI dies
without male heir
“
:”
Female
PRUSSIA
can rule
Maria Theresa
Hohenzollerns
Frederick II “The
Great”
Took Silesia from
Austria
Offered Maria
Theresa an alliance–
she refuses
Maria Theresa
Read about
Maria
Theresa’s
life
Answer
guided
questions
AUSTRIA AND PRUSSIA
1740: War of Austrian
Succession
&
enter on
side
hoping to gain territory
1748:
asks
for peace hoping to rebuild
new alliances – she DID
Prussia keeps Silesia
Prussia’s victory intensified
rivalry between Austria &
Hungary
Seven Years War (1756-1763)
Continuation of
Austrian Succession
(best army)&
(best
navy)
,
,
hate Prussia &
GB
Fighting extended to
North America & India
over colonies
Rivalries will
continue…
George Washington rose
to fame in the F&I War
Collins Type III
What was the cause of the Thirty Years War,
the War of Austrian Succession, and the Seven
Years War?
What effects did these wars have?
FCA
1: Written neatly, in pen
FCA 2: Correct Spelling and Capitalization
FCA 3: Answer question completely in 2 ¶