Wars of Religion - Nutley Public Schools
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Transcript Wars of Religion - Nutley Public Schools
Factors Leading to the
Wars of Religion
1. Protestant Reformation
2. Catholic Reformation
3. Prevailing medieval mental linking religion with
political issues
The Wars of Religion will start in GERMANY
Round 1: Germany (15211555)
HRE Charles V had troubles:
Little control over the HRE (Germany) patchwork of
over 300 principalities (resisting his authority)
Size of the HRE border issues from France and the
Ottoman Turks
Plagued with money problems can’t fund his armies
This keeps Charles V from dealing with the Lutherans
for over 20 years!
Round 1: Germany (15211555)
1546 Charles V attacked and defeated an alliance of
Lutheran princes (Schmalkaldic League) but he was
never able to impose firm control
1555 Charles V agrees to the Peace of Augsburg
Compromise giving each German prince the right to
choose the realm's religion as long as it was Catholic or
Lutheran
Round 1: Germany (15211555)
Peace of Augsburg outlawed Calvinists, Anabaptists,
other non-Lutheran Protestants
This causes problems:
1. Calvinism keeps spreading across Germany
2. Charles V gives up his throne after 30 years
3. Thousands of refugees flee to the Spanish
Netherlands, France, and England spreads Calvinist
and Anabaptist beliefs
Round 1: Germany (15211555)
Charles V’s abdication leads to more problems:
1. Lands in Austria and the Imperial title goes to his
brother Ferdinand
2. Charles V’s son Philip II (a staunch Catholic) inherits
Spain, the Netherlands, most of Italy
This spreads the religious violence to other countries!
The Spanish Netherlands
(1566-1648)
Philip II abused the Spanish Netherlands
Taxed them heavily to pay for his Spanish wars
Tried to impose his Catholic beliefs on them
Brought in the Inquisition to get rid of Calvinists and
Anabaptists
Started a cycle of revolts/protests and Spanish
repression until 1648
1648 Spain recognized Dutch independence
The French (1562-1598)
Catholic majority against the Huguenot (French
Calvinists) minority
Conflict last for over 30 years b/c:
Huguenots had a number of leaders who were nobles
Concentrated in largely fortified cities
Enthusiastic and well organized into local congregations
This bred a cycle of chaos/destruction where anarchy
would steadily weaken the French gov’t power
The French (1562-1598)
A series of assassination after 1588 (defeat of the
Spanish Armada) led to a Huguenot duke inheriting
the throne Henry IV
He “converts” to Catholicism to give his enemies no
reason to kill him
Grants the Huguenots religious freedom with the Edict
of Nantes in 1598 – does not grant freedom for all!
The French were will to submit to a stronger rule in
order to stop the warfare this would set the stage for
Louis XIV
Elizabethan England and
the Spanish Armada
Extremely tolerant, excellent leader to her people a
“golden age” for England (1558-1603)
Philip II wants to re-establish Catholicism in England
Tries to put Mary Queen of Scots (Catholic) on the
throne in the 1570’s Elizabeth imprisons then
executes her
Elizabeth help the Dutch against Spain, raids Spanish
shipping
Elizabethan England and
the Spanish Armada
Philip’s Plan: Armada and Spanish Army in Flanders
would meet up crush the English crush the
Dutch rebels crush the Huguenots
Spain looked like the superior power but England
developed new tactics and ship designs that
revolutionized naval warfare
Sleeker ships powered by sails
Relied on cannons (new design)
Elizabethan England and
the Spanish Armada
The English attacked when the Spanish stopped in
Calais to get supplies and contact the Army of
Flanders
Forced the Spanish out into the open used superior
ship speed and power to defeat the Spanish
A “protestant wind” (storm) added to the damage
By the time the Spanish fleet returned home, half of it
had been destroyed
Decline of Spain
This did not destroy Spain as a power but did signal
the end of Spanish dominance in Europe!
Spain wreaks itself in the Thirty Years War (16181648)
France will replace Spain as the main superpower
Dutch Republic and England become the dominant
naval and economic powers in Europe
Change in European
Mentality
People are tired of religious wars and disputes
People take a more secular (worldly) view
By the late 1600’s these views would develop into the
scientific and cultural movement know as the
Enlightenment
Characteristics of the
Thirty Years War
Holy Roman Empire is the battleground
At the beginning Catholics vs. Protestants
At the end Hapsburg power that was threatened
Resolved with the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648
Causes of the Thirty Years War
Causes: Religious Wars and fear of Hapsburg Spain
and Austria (ruling family dynasty)
Europe is split into two camps:
Protestant: German P’s, Denmark, Dutch Republic,
England, Sweden, Catholic Venice, and Catholic France
Catholic: German C’s, Spain, Austria, Spanish
Netherlands, Naples, Milan, the Papacy, and Poland
Kings and princes building up armies in preparation
Bohemian Phase: 16181622
Ferdinand II inherited Bohemia
Bohemians hate him
Ferdinand refused to tolerate Protestants
Defenestration of Prague
May 1618
Bohemia named a new king,
Frederick II
Bohemian Phase: 16181622
Frederick is a mediocre king
Ferdinand sweeps away Bohemian opposition
Confiscated large tracts of land
Exile Protestants
Reclaimed Bohemia for the Catholic Church
The rebellion in Bohemia inspired others!
Danish Phase: 1625-1629
Ferdi tried to end all resistance
Tried to crush Protestant
northern HRE
Used Albrecht von Wallenstein
to for the army
Bohemian military leader and
politician, offered his services
and an army of 30,000 100,000 men
Wallenstein defeated the
Protestants in the north
Danish Phase: 1625-1629
Edict of Restitution: 1629
Restored to Catholics all lands lost since 1552
Deprived all Protestants, except Lutherans, of their
religious and political rights
However, German princes feared Ferdinand he fired
Wallenstein in an effort to calm them
The Swedish Phase: 16301635
France & Sweden get involved
Both want to stop the Hapsburg power
Sweden led the charge, France supported
Gustavus Adolphus invaded the HRE
Ferdi II brought back Wallenstein
Swedish advance stopped
German princes still fear Ferdi Wallenstein
assassinated to appease them
The French Phase: 16351648
France and Sweden switch roles
All countries in Europe now participated
This is the most destructive phase!
German towns decimated
Agriculture collapsed famine resulted
8 million dead 1/3 of population (1618-1648)
Caused massive inflation
Trade crippled throughout Europe
Loss of
German Lives
in the Thirty
Years War
Peace of Westphalia (1648)
Political and Religious Provisions But no one was
happy!
Many Protestants felt betrayed
Pope denounced it
Only merit it ended the fighting in a war that became
intolerable
For the next few centuries, this war was blamed for
everything that went wrong in Central Europe
Change in European
Mentality
People are tired of religious wars and disputes
People take a more secular (worldly) view
By the late 1600’s these views would develop into the
scientific and cultural movement know as the
Enlightenment