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The Age of Absolutism in Europe 1600-1715

The Age of Absolutism in Europe 1600-1715. The Thirty Years’ War Map. The Thirty Year’s War (1618-1648). Fought between Protestants (Hapsburgs) and Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire Treaty of Westphalia (1648)

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The Age of Absolutism in Europe 1600-1715

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  1. The Age of Absolutism in Europe1600-1715

  2. The Thirty Years’ War Map

  3. The Thirty Year’s War(1618-1648) • Fought between Protestants (Hapsburgs) and Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire • Treaty of Westphalia (1648) • Changed the way countries dealt with one another – national sovereignty was respected for the first time • England and France became the two dominant powers of the 17th Century and led the revolutions in science, philosophy and political theory

  4. Europe during the Age of Absolutism • Fought between Protestants (Hapsburgs) and Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire

  5. Absolutism in France • Louis XIV epitomized the absolutist belief that the monarchy personified the state • Absolutism was created under Cardinal Richelieu who secularized France and fostered loyalty to the French state

  6. Absolutism in France cont. • Cardinal Richelieu centralized power by alienating the nobility • The greatest threat to the monarchy was the nobility • Monarchs created standing armies for the first time • Louis XIV built the Palace of Versailles as a testament to his power and used it to gain control of the nobility

  7. Palace of Versailles

  8. Versailles Grande Gallerie • Daily routines at Versailles were exploited by Louis XIV • The nobility competed against each other to perform menial tasks for the king

  9. Palace Gardens

  10. Versailles King’s Bedroom (right) Palace view from the side (below right) Gardens extending to the east of the palace (below left)

  11. Louis XIV and the Arts • Moliere, France’s greatest playwright in the 17th Century • Mocked and alienated the aristrocracy in his plays • Received support and funding from Louis XIV

  12. Baroque Art • Stylistically complex • Meant to evoke emotion by appealing to the senses • Bernini’s sculptures captured figures in the state of intense emotion • Rembrandt van Rijn rejected traditional arrangements for portraits by not giving equal prominence to each member of the group

  13. Absolutism in Eastern Europe • Tsar Peter I (Peter the Great) of Russia 1689-1725 • Modernized Russia through Westernization • Taxed his subjects heavily to pay for his projects • Killed 1000 members of Streltsy when they tried to depose him

  14. St. Petersburg The Cathedral of the Spilled Blood

  15. 17th Century England • Constitutionalism not Absolutism ruled • English monarchs held accountable to Parliament • James I (1603-1625) supported absolute rule • Charles I (1625-1649) fought with Parliament over money for his wars with Spain • Charles II (1660-1685) learned the lessons of his predecessors – don’t mess with Parliament • James II (1685-1688) was an unpopular king because of his open Catholicism and return to absolute rule

  16. The Glorious Revolution (1688) • William of Orange, the Dutch monarch was asked by the English people to depose their king, James II • A bloodless coup ensued as James II fled England • Parliament now reigned supreme • The Bill of Rights (1689) outlined the powers and rights of Parliament

  17. Ruler cannot: Suspend Parliament’s laws Levy taxes without permission Interfere with freedom of speech Penalize a citizen who criticizes the King English Bill of Rights 1689

  18. Revolutions in Thought • The gulf between the church and science widened in the 17th Century • In 1633 Galileo was tried before the church for his theories of heliocentrism (the sun not the earth was the center of the universe) • Galileo defied the church and was tortured into silence

  19. The Scientific Revolution • From mid 16th to the beginning of the 18th Century, a revolution in science would challenge how Europeans perceived themselves and the universe • Isaac Newton formulated his Three Laws of Motion • William Harvey – his human blood circulation discoveries challenged the accepted belief that the heart worked by divine intervention

  20. The Scientific Method and The Birth of Modern Philosophy • For centuries it was believed that truths were arrived at by studying the Bible • The 17th Century saw a rise in systematic skepticism, experimentalism, and reasoning based on observed facts and mathematical laws • Francis Bacon – direct observation was essential to ascertain truth • Rene Descartes – applied mathematical methods and reasoning to philosophy

  21. Thomas Hobbes (1588 –1679) • English philosopher • Wrote Leviathan – life began in a state of nature • Man is inherently selfish and aggressive • Left on own, chaos and conflict would rule • Citizens need law and to follow a sovereign to avoid chaos

  22. John Locke (1632 – 1704) • English philosopher • Believed that over time people would join together to benefit from cooperation • Through a Social Contract, sovereignty would remain with the people

  23. Works Cited • Google Images • Legacy by Garfield Newman • http://www.historyteacher.net/EuroProjects

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