The Seven Years` War
Download
Report
Transcript The Seven Years` War
Chapter 18
The Eighteenth Century: European States,
International Wars, and Social Change
Europe in 1763
1. In the Dutch Republic local and national affairs were dominated by the municipal oligarchies. When the burghers (artisans, merchants, and
shopkeepers) sought democratic reforms to open up the municipal councils, they were crushed with the aid of Prussian troops. The old order was
preserved.
2. In Brandenburg-Prussia the army and the bureaucracy became the backbone of the king and government. In both instances, the nobility
(Junkers) were utilized. The close bond between the nobility and the army translated into the military's loyalty to the monarchy.
3. Austria was a sprawling empire of different nationalities, languages, religions, and cultures. These made centralization very difficult. The loss
of Silesia to Prussia in the War of Austrian Succession forced Empress Maria Theresa (1740-1780) to prepare for the inevitable conflict in the
future. One way to strengthen the power of the state was to overhaul the administration and the armed forces. Begun during the war, it resulted in
a more bureaucratic and centralized government as well as a strengthened army. The later reforms of Joseph II (1780-1790) which reflected
Enlightenment ideas, sought to further strengthen his state.
4. The eighteenth century in Spain was one of reform as a new ruling family, the French Bourbons, was initiated by Philip V (1700-1746), though
the War of the Spanish Succession had to be fought to confirm the king. New ideas brought revitalization to Spanish institutions. With the loss of
the Italian territories and the Netherlands by the Treaty of Utrecht in the seventeenth century, the new Spanish Bourbons had fewer administrative
problems and less drain on precious economic resources than their predecessors.
5. In Russia, Peter the Great was succeeded by a series of incompetent leaders. This changed when the German princess Catherine (17621796) succeeded her murdered husband Peter III in 1762. She may have wished to emulate Joseph II of Austria but Catherine knew that the rule
of Russia was dependant on the nobility. In reorganizing government, she divided the state into fifty provinces which were further broken down
into districts ruled by noblemen. In 1785 the privileges of the nobility were confirmed by the Charter of the Nobility. Catherine also gained
considerable territory as a consequence of her war with the Turks (1769-1774) and the partitions of Poland (see Acetate 57, Map 18.2).
Question:
1. In what manner were governments altered in the eighteenth century to address the need for more centralized power?
Europe in 1763
The European States
Enlightened Absolutism?
Natural Rights
Declaration of Independence
Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws
Rousseau and Voltaire
The Atlantic Seaboard States
France: Louis XV, 1715-1774
1743 decides to rule alone
Louis XVI, 1774-1792
Great Britain: King and Parliament
United Kingdom of Great Britain, 1707
Ministers chosen by the king to make Policy and guide
Parliament
Hanoverians – George I, 1714-1727 and George II,
1727-1760
Robert Walpole, 1721-1742, prime minister
John Wilkes
Decline of the Dutch Republic
Absolutism in Central and Eastern Europe
Prussia: Army and Bureaucracy
Frederick William I, 1713-1740
General Directory
Bureaucracy
Junkers
Army
Frederick the Great, 1740-1786
Law code
Maintains serfdom
Expansion into Silesia
The Partitions of Poland
1. In Poland not only was the king kept weak by the nobles but the army was quite small. Such weakness invited trouble.
2. The partition of Poland between 1772 and 1795 was a result of the concerns of Frederick II (1740-1786), the Great, who feared the
consequences of the Russian military victory against the Turks (see Acetate 53, Map 15.4) in 1769 which had resulted in significant gains in the
Balkans. An apprehensive Austria made it known that it opposed further Russian expansion because it would upset the balance of power in the
region. Frederick concurred and convinced Russia to take Polish territory instead. At the same time, Austria and Prussia took slices out of
Poland. For Poland the loss represented thirty percent of its lands and half its population.
3. After the first partition, Russia exercised influence over Poland. Taking advantage of another Russian-Turkish conflict in 1788, Poland
established a brief independence. When the war ended in 1792, Russia and Prussia took two more bites out of Poland.
4. In 1794-1795 a rebellion broke out in Poland against Russian interference. After the insurrection was crushed, Austria, Prussia, and Russia
finished carving up Poland and its disappeared as a state.
Questions:
1. Why would Austria and Prussia be concerned about the growing expansion of Russia?
2. Why was Poland unable to stop its dismemberment?
3. Which state was the real winner in the carving up of Poland?
The Partitions of Poland
Austrian Empire of the Habsburgs
Empress Maria Theresa, 1740-1780
Loss of Silesia in War of the Austrian Succession,
1740-1748
Shares throne with Joseph II, 1765-1780
Joseph II, 1780-1790
Reforms
Russia Under Catherine the Great, 1762-1796
Reform – Instruction, 1767
Strengthens landholders at expense of serfs
Rebellion of Emelyan Pugachev, 1773-1775
Territorial expansion
Destruction of Poland
The Mediterranean World
Spain
Bourbon rule and reform
Portugal
Italy dominated by Austria
Scandinavian States
Sweden
Denmark
Enlightened Absolutism Revisited
Rarity and brevity
Reality
The Seven Years' War
1. Paralleling the growth of absolutist states was the expansion of armies and the willingness to use them. Between 1740 and 1780, the army of
France grew from 190,000 to 300,000 men; Prussia from 83,000 to 200,000; Austria from 108,000 to 282,000; and Russia from 130,000 to
290,000.
2. There were three areas of conflict in the Seven Years' War: Europe, North America, and India. In Europe, Prussia and Britain faced Austria,
France, and Russia. Although Prussia had early successes, it was gradually worn down and was saved only when Russia withdrew from the
conflict in 1762 due to the accession of Peter III (1762) who admired Frederick the Great of Prussia and refused to fight him. The removal of
Russia in conjunction with the loss of the will to fight by Austria and France assured a stalemate that eventually forced peace in 1763. Though
Prussia had to relinquish some of the territory it had gained in the war, Austria recognized Prussia's retention of Silesia.
3. The American phase of the war, called the French and Indian War, witnessed British victories on the Great Lakes and the fall of Quebec in 1759
and Montreal the following year. As the key to French holdings in North America, Quebec's capture sealed the fate of French Canada. A year
earlier, Ft. Duquesne fell giving the British control of the upper Ohio River. By 1762 the British also held the French sugar islands in the West
Indies (except Saint Dominigue) and had captured Havana, Cuba, from France's ally Spain.
4. The war in India resulted in the defeat of the French by the British in 1757 and 1761. Nevertheless, the peace permitted the French to retain
footholds at Pondicherry and Chandernagore. The British victory had the effect of forcing the French to refocus their eastern interests on Southeast
Asia.
5. The Treaty of Paris in 1763 placed Canada and the French lands east of the Mississippi River in British hands. France's ally Spain also had to
cede Florida to the British but in return Britain recognized the cession of France's Louisiana territory west of the Mississippi River to the Spanish.
6. The recognition of Prussian occupation of Silesia by the Treaty of Paris marked the continued growth of Brandenburg-Prussia since its
creation as a single state in 1688. First seized in 1740, Silesia added to Prussia population, industry, and natural resources. Further expansion of
Prussia came in 1772 when it acquired West Prussia. At the same time, Prussia joined Austria and Russia in carving up Poland (see Acetate
57, Map 18.2).
Questions:
1. How was the Seven Years’ War a continuation of the War of Austrian Succession?
2. For the future, what were the implications of the territorial settlements of the Treaty of Paris?
The Seven Years’ War
Wars and Diplomacy
War of the Austrian Succession, 1740-1748
Vulnerability of Maria Theresa
Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1748
Seven Years’ War, 1756-1763
Diplomatic Revolution
European War
Indian War
North American War
William Pitt the Elder
British victory
European Armies and Warfare
Professional armies
Class division in the armies
Size of armies
Use of tactics to preserve armies
Economic Expansion and Social Change
Growth of the European Population
Falling death rate
Improvements in diet
Lack of hygiene
Outbreaks of disease
Family, Marriage, and Birthrate Patterns
Treatment of Children
Impact of Rousseau’s, Emile
Infanticide
Foundling institutions
Nuclear family
Late marriages
Family economy
Agricultural Revolution
Increased land under cultivation
Increased livestock
Jethro Tull (1674-1741)
Potato and maize
Enclosure
New Methods of Finance and Industry
National Banks
National debt
Investment in colonial trading companies
Textile and cottage industry
Mechanized production
Flying shuttle
Richard Arkwright (1732-1792), “water frame”
Mechanized looms, 1780s
Global Economy: Mercantile Empires and Worldwide Trade
Colonial Empire
Portuguese and Spanish decline
British and French growth
British and French rivalry in the East
Global Trade
Slavery and sugar factories
Social Order of the Eighteenth Century
Peasants
Domination by wealthy landowners
Obligations
Village as center of culture
Diet
The Nobility
Military service
Country house
The Grand Tour
Educational purpose
Inhabitants of Towns and Cities
Urban oligarchy
Emergent middle class
Petty bourgeoisie
Laborers
Poverty