1 / 34

The Age of Absolutism

The Age of Absolutism. Spain: Unification. 1500’s: first modern European power Ferdinand and Isabella had unified the country Religion Culture Goals (Americas). Spain: Charles V. Grandson of F & I Ruled two empires: Hapsburg and Spain Fought religious wars vs. Protestants and Muslims

gates
Télécharger la présentation

The Age of Absolutism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Age of Absolutism

  2. Spain: Unification • 1500’s: first modern European power • Ferdinand and Isabella had unified the country • Religion • Culture • Goals (Americas)

  3. Spain: Charles V • Grandson of F & I • Ruled two empires: Hapsburg and Spain • Fought religious wars vs. Protestants and Muslims • Becomes frustrated, quits, enters a monastery

  4. Spain: Philip II • Son of C the V • Ruled for 42 years • Palace was ‘Escorial’ • Hard worker, ambitious, and expanded Spanish influence

  5. Spain: Philip II • Centralized power to the throne • Defended the Catholic Reformation • Fought wars to spread Catholic power • #1 enemy was England

  6. Spain: War vs. England • Philip sent an armada to invade England • 130 ships, 20,000 men, lots of firepower • English ships were lighter and faster • English victory, devastating loss for Spain

  7. Spain: Decline • Begins with defeat of the Armada Reasons for decline: • Poor rulers • Costly overseas wars • Neglect of farming and commerce

  8. Spain: Golden Age • 1550 to 1650 • Brilliant art and literature • Don Quixote • Europe’s 1st modern novel • Mocks feudal past

  9. France: Henry IV • Huguenot prince • “A chicken in every pot” • Brought peace and unification to France • Religious toleration • Strong royal power • Assassinated in 1610

  10. France: Louis XIV • Became King at 5 yrs. old • Great grandson of Philip II • “Sun King” • “I am the state.” • Strengthened royal power • Built strong army

  11. France: Louis XIV • Built a palace at Versailles • Symbol of wealth and power • Rules for 72 years • Legacy: France is most powerful nation in Europe at time of his death

  12. France: Decline Reasons: • Costly wars • Revoking of Edict of Nanthes • Huguenots left France

  13. England: Parliament • Legislative body • Monarchs worked closely with Parliament • $$$$$$$ • Validity • Most often voted the way King/Queen wanted them to

  14. England: Monarch vs. Parliament • Stuarts take over the throne • James I clashes with Parliament • Starts collecting taxes on his own • Claimed absolute power • Charles I signed Petition of Right • Parliament must approve taxes • Charles ignored it • Parliament revolts

  15. England: Monarch vs. Parliament • Parliament tried and executed top officials • Leads to English Civil War

  16. England: Civil War • Why? Who holds the power: Parliament or Monarch? • Cavaliers: • Supported the King • Wealthy nobles • Well trained

  17. England: Civil War • Roundheads • Supported Parliament • Country and small town folk • Puritans • Led by Oliver Cromwell • Roundheads win • King Charles I executed and monarchy is abandoned

  18. England: Oliver Cromwell • Began a Commonwealth • Attacked Catholics, esp. in Ireland • Took title of Lord Protector • Virtual dictator • After his death, England welcomes back monarchy

  19. England: English Bill of Rights • William and Mary take over the throne • Glorious Revolution (bloodless) • Accepted the English Bill of Rights • Parliament was now more powerful than the monarch • Also gives rights to citizens • Right to a trial by jury, limited freedom of religion

  20. England: Constitutional Gov’t • Political Parties emerge • Whigs and Tories • Reform vs. old traditions • Cabinet System • Group of advisors for monarch • Prime Minister • Head of the cabinet • Leader of the majority party in House of Commons • Today: more power than monarch

  21. Austria and Prussia • Reading Guide

  22. Russia: Peter the Great • Gained power at 10 yrs old • Not well educated • Learned about Western Europe • Changes going on • Technology • Visited W. Europe

  23. Russia: Peter the Great • “Westernized” Russia • Brought in experts from Europe • Tough sell  became absolute monarch to force new ideas • Solidified control over nobles • Favorable laws • Harsh punishments for not changing customs (beards)

  24. Russia: Peter the Great • Lasting legacies: • Built St. Petersburg  “window to the West” • Created largest country in the world, expanding east • Did not end serfdom

  25. Russia: Catherine the Great • German princess, married to Russian heir • Russian heir assassinated; Catherine takes throne

  26. Russia: Catherine the Great • Embraced Western ideas • Ruthless monarch • More power to nobles, even less to peasants • Waged war against Ottoman Empire and won • Gained Black Sea port • Peter the Great unable to defeat Ottomans

More Related