1 / 44

Absolute monarchs in Europe

Absolute monarchs in Europe. Chapter 5 in text book Pages 152 to 185. Spain’s Empire & European Absolutism. Charles V… Hapsburg King (Spain, Am. Colonies, parts of Italy, Austria, & Netherlands) Devout Catholic Fought Muslims Opposed Lutherans Agreed to the Peace of Augsburg in 1555

magar
Télécharger la présentation

Absolute monarchs in Europe

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. Absolute monarchs in Europe Chapter 5 in text book Pages 152 to 185

  2. Spain’s Empire &European Absolutism • Charles V… • Hapsburg King • (Spain, Am. Colonies, parts of Italy, Austria, & Netherlands) • Devout Catholic • Fought Muslims • Opposed Lutherans • Agreed to the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 • Allowed German princes to choose a religion for their territory • 1556, divided empire & retired in a monastery • Ferdinand (brother) – Austria & the Holy Roman Empire • Philip II (son) – Spain, Spanish Netherlands, & Am. Colonies

  3. King philip II • 1580 – King of Portugal died w/out heir • Philip was the king’s nephew & seized Portugal • Including territories in Africa, India, & East Indies • Claimed b/t ¼ & 1/5 of every shipload of treasure from the American Colonies • Built large army & navy with wealth. Built palaces. • Became great patron of the arts • Defended Catholism against the protestants and Muslims (attacked Queen Elizabeth I)

  4. Spanish Art & Literature • El Greco (“the Greek”) • Born in Crete • Brilliant clashing colors, distorted human figure, & had symbolic emotional expressions in paintings • Showed deep Catholic faith of Spain • Painted saints & martyrs • Diego Velazquez • 50 years after El Greco • Used rich colors • Painted the pride of the Spanish monarchy • Court painter to Philip IV of Spain

  5. Miguel de Cervantes • 1605, Wrote Don Quixote de la Mancha • Birth of modern European novel • Story… poor Spanish nobleman went crazy after reading too many books about heroic knights & then dressed up as a knight & mistook windmills for giants

  6. Spanish empire weakens • Wealth from Americas caused economic problems • Severe Inflation… • Rise in the price of goods & services • Taxes… • 1500, Spain expelled the Jews & Moors • Lost valuable artist & businesses • Nobles didn’t have to pay taxes & tax burden fell on the lower class – Spain never developed a middle class • Guilds… • Dominated business markets • Used old-fashion methods to produce products • Spanish cloth & manufactured goods more expensive than those made somewhere else

  7. Wars… • Borrowed money from German & Italian bankers • Silver from Americas sent to pay loans • Philip had to declare Spain bankrupt three times • Dutch Revolt… • Had little in common with Spanish rulers • Netherlands were mostly Calvinist & had a very productive middle class • Philip raised taxes on the Dutch & tried to crush the Protestant faiths • Dutch fought Spain for 11 years • 1579, 7 northern provinces (Protestant) became independent • 10 southern provinces were Catholic & remained with Spain

  8. Independent Dutch prosper • Practiced religious toleration • NOT a kingdom, but a republic • United Provinces of the Netherlands • Each province elected a governor – power depended upon the merchants & landowners

  9. Dutch art • 1600’s had the best banks, but also the best artist in Europe • Rembrandt van Rijn • Portraits of the wealthy middle-class merchants • Group portraits • Used sharp contrast of light and shadows • Jan Vermeer • Had domestic indoor settings • Often painted women doing everyday activities

  10. Dutch trading empire • Stable government • Economic growth • Replaced Italians as the bankers of Europe • Had largest fleet of ships in the world • 1636- 4,800 ships • Created the Dutch East India Company • Dominated the Asian spice market & Indian Ocean trade

  11. Theory of absolutism • Rulers wanted to be absolute monarchs • Kings/Queens who held all of the power within their states’ boundaries • Goal was to control every aspect of society • Believed in divine right • Idea that God created the monarchy & that the monarch acted as God’s representative here on Earth • Answered only to God, not to subjects

  12. Europe’s monarchs gain power • Feudalism declines & cities grow • Political, economic, legal, & social system of the middle ages in Europe • National kingdoms centralize authority • Growing middle-class usually backed monarchs • Church authority broke down = monarchs got greater control

  13. Crises lead to absolutism • 17th century – continuous warfare • Gov’t built huge armies & increased taxes • Widespread unrest & peasants revolted • Monarchs increased their power & regulated everything from religious worship to social gatherings • Created new gov’t bureaucracies to control the country’s economy • No longer limited by nobles & representative bodies

  14. French Monarchy • 1559, King of France Henry II died • 4 sons – 3 ruled & were incompetent • King Francis II – 15 years old; died 1560 • King Charles IX – 10 years old; died 1574 • King Henry III – 24 years old; died 1589 • Power came from mother Catherine de Medicis • Wars between French Catholics & the Huguenots (French Protestants) caused great struggles for the French Monarchs • 8 religious wars from 1562 to 1598

  15. Henry of Navarre – Henry IV • Descendant of King Louis IX • 1st marriage was to Margaret the daughter of King Henry II & Catherine. • No children from this marriage • 1589 – Catherine & King Henry III dies; Prince Henry of Navarre inherited the throne • took the name King Henry IV • 1st king of the Bourbon dynasty • Gave up protestant beliefs & became Catholic for his country • 1598- Created the Edict of Nantes – Huguenots could live in peace in France & set up their own houses of worship

  16. Devote reign to rebuilding France & its prosperity • Wanted peace for his country, but some hated him for giving up his protestant faith • 2nd marriage to Marie de Medici • 1610 – a man jumped into Henry’s carriage and stabbed him to death • His son Louis XIII took over the throne • 9 years old; Marie (mother) guided him • Weak king • Appointed strong minister; Cardinal Richelieu

  17. Cardinal Richelieu • Essentially the ruler of France • Was the leader of Catholic church in France • Moved against the Huguenots • Didn’t allow Protestant cities to have protective walls • Weakened the nobles’ power • Forced them to take down fortified castles • Wanted France to be the strongest state in Europe • Greatest obstacle – Hapsburg rulers • Spain, Austria, Netherlands, parts of Holy Roman Empire • Caused France to go to war • 30 years’ war

  18. Louis XIV Comes to power • Son of Louis XIII • 1643 – became king at the age of 14 • True ruler was Richelieu’s successor Cardinal Mazarin • Ended 30 years’ war in 1648 • Nobles hated Mazarin b/c of higher taxes & more power to the centralized government • Nobles led riots against Mazarin & threatened the life of Louis XIV • Noble’s rebellion eventually failed

  19. 1661 - Cardinal Mazarin died • At 22 years old Louis took control of gov’t • Weakened noble’s power & excluded them from councils • Increased power of gov’t agents • Devoted to helping France attain economic, political, & cultural brilliance • Jean Baptiste Colbert – minister of finance • Believed in mercantilism • Made France self-sufficient & expanded manufacturing • Increased taxes on imports • Encouraged people to move to New France, fur trade $$$$

  20. 1658 – Louis XIV canceled Edict of Nantes • Thousands of Huguenot artisans & businesses left • Surrounded himself with luxury • Built the Palace at Versailles – 11 miles SW of Paris • (Page 166 in text) • In 2003 dollars cost est. $2.5 billion • 36,000 laborers • 6,000 horses • Great patronage of the arts • Made opera & ballet more popular • Stated purpose of art was to glorify the king & promote values that supported his absolute rule

  21. Louis XIV’s disastrous wars • 1660 – France was most powerful country in Europe • 1667 – invaded Spanish Netherlands • Gained 12 towns • 1672 – he led army into Dutch Netherlands • Dutch flooded countryside on purpose • 1678 – Treaty of Nijmegen ended war • France gained several towns • End of 1680’s – European alliance formed to stop France; weak countries came together to balance power in Europe

  22. War of Spanish Succession – • 1700 – King of Spain Charles II died childless • Throne promised to Louis XIV’s grandson who was 16 years old; Philip of Anjou (Philip V-King of Spain) • 1701 – Several European nations didn’t want the French Bourbons to have this much control…WAR! • Treaty of Utrecht ended the war in 1714… • Grandson remained King of Spain • Great Britain took Gibraltar from Spain • France gave Great Britain Nova Scotia & Newfoundland • Austrian Hapsburgs took Spanish Netherlands & Spanish lands in Italy • Prussia & Savoy were recognized as kingdoms

  23. Louis XIV’s Death & Legacy • 1715 – Died in bed • This prompted rejoicing throughout France • POSTITIVES - France ranked above all in art, literature, & statesmanship, military leader of Europe, strong American colonial empire • NEGATIVES – constant wars, debt due to Versailles, resentment over taxes, abuse of power plagued his heirs – led to revolution

  24. Thirty Years’ War • Peace of Augsburg (1555) – Churches in Germany could be either Catholic or Lutheran – NOT Calvinist • 1608 – Lutherans join the Protestant Union • 1609 – Catholic German Princes formed the Catholic League • 1618 – Ferdinand II closed Protestant churches in the Czech kingdom of Bohemia & they revolted • German Protestant Princes also saw this as a chance to go after the Catholic emperor • So begins the 30 years’ war…

  25. Conflict over religion, territory, and power among European ruling families; 1618 to 1648 • PHASE ONE – Hapsburg Triumphs • First 12 years Hapsburg armies from Austria & Spain crushed Protestant troops • Allowed to plunder/rob & destroy everything in their path • Stopped Czech uprising • Defeated German protestants helping Czechs • PHASE TWO – Hapsburg Defeats • Protestants of Sweden drove Hapsburg troops out of North Germany & changed the tide of war (1630) • 1635 – French troops (Catholic) joined Protestants so Hapsburgs wouldn’t have more control than France

  26. Peace of Westphalia • 1648 – Ended the 30 years war • Weakened Hapsburg states of Spain & Austria • Strengthened France b/c they received German territory • German Princes became independent of the Holy Roman emperor • Europe became a group of equal, independent states – abandoned the Catholic Empire • New peace negotiations – all participants meet to settle problems & decide terms of peace • Still used today

  27. Austria Grows Stronger • After war several states were seriously weakened • Hapsburgs of Austria worked to become absolute monarchs • Reconquered Bohemia & wiped out Protestantism • Created a new Czech nobility that pledged loyalty to the Hapsburgs • Centralized gov’t & created army • Reconquered Hungary from the Ottoman Empire • 1711 - Charles VI becomes Hapsburg ruler • Controlled Czechs, Hungarians, Italians, Croatians, & Germans

  28. Maria Theresa • Charles VI eldest daughter (Maria) would be heir to all of his Hapsburg territories • While in power… • She decreased the power of the nobility • Limited amount of labor that nobles could force peasants to do • Faced years of war – main enemy was Prussia over land • Her most famous child was Marie Antoinette – wife of Louis XVI of France

  29. Rise of Prussia • Frederick William inherited title of elector of Brandenburg • AKA - The Great Elector/King Frederick William I • His son started to use the term “king” • After 30 years war, decided to have strong army (best in Europe) to ensure safety • Weakened representative assemblies • The Junkers (Prussia’s nobility) resisted growing power of king • They were then given exclusive right to be officers in army

  30. Frederick the Great • Son of King Frederick William I • Loved music, philosophy, & poetry – not military • While in power… • Softened some of his father’s laws • Became an aggressor in foreign affairs • Encouraged religious toleration & legal reform • Died without a son to succeed him

  31. The Seven years’ war • Maria Theresa made alliance with France • Alliance = Austria, France, & Russia • Frederick II signed treaty with Britain • Alliance = Prussia & Britain • 1756 – Frederick attacked Saxony (Austrian ally) and eventually every European nation was involved • War didn’t change Europe’s borders • France lost colonies in North America • Britain gained sole domination of India

  32. Ivan IV – Ivan the terrible • 1533 – came to power when he was 3 years old • The boyars (nobles) fought for power & tried to control Ivan • At 16 he seized power & crowned himself “czar” • Means Caesar • 1st Russian ruler to officially use the title • Married Anastasia (1st of 8 wives) • related to a boyar family The Romanovs

  33. GOOD PERIOD, 1547 to 1560 – • Won great victories • Added lands to Russia • Gave Russia code of laws • Ruled justly • RULE BY TERROR, began in 1560 – • After Anastasia died; he accused Boyars of poisoning her • Organized his own police force who hunted down & killed those Ivan thought were traitors; he then gave their land to other nobles • Thousands were killed • 1581 – had fight with oldest son which resulted in the son’s death • Ivan’s 2nd son took throne 3 years later after his death • Had a stroke while playing chess

  34. Rise of the Romanovs • Ivan’s 2ndson, Czar Feodor I, took throne but was physically & mentally incapable of ruling • Ruled a short time & died without an heir • Time of Troubles – • Boyars struggled for power • Heirs of czars died mysteriously • Impostors tried to claim throne • 1613 – Russian representatives met to chose the next czar; Michael Romanov – grandnephew of Ivan’s wife • Began the Romanov dynasty which ruled for 300 years • 1613-1917

  35. Peter the great • AKA – Czar Peter I • Originally shared throne with ½ brother • Until 1696 @ the age of 24 • REFORMS – • Bought Russian Orthodox Church under gov’t control • Abolished Office of Patriarch (head of church); Holy Synod would run church under Peter’s direction • Reduced power of landowners • Hired European officers to teach his army new tactics • Imposed very high taxes to pay for military

  36. GOAL #1 – to learn about European customs & manufacturing techniques. To Westernize Russia • To achieve goal he… • Introduced potatoes • Started 1st Russian newspaper • Women were allowed to attend social gatherings • Nobles had to give up their traditional clothing for Western European fashions • Education: • School of Navigation • Schools for art & science

  37. GOAL #2 – To have a seaport that would make it easier to travel west. • Fought Sweden 21 years to gain a piece of the Baltic coast • Built a new city on swampy land • Named it St. Petersburg after his patron saint • After completed, nobles were forced from their homes to make new ones in the new capital • Peter died in 1725 with Russia finally being a strong European power

  38. The English monarchy • Queen Elizabeth I died in 1603 with no heir • Her cousin James Stuart took throne – King James I • Ruler of Scotland & England • Countries are not united until 1707 even though they have same ruler • 1625, James I dies & his son Charles I takes throne • All of these absolute monarchs had financial troubles due to lavish lifestyles & wars with Spain and France

  39. Petition of Right • 1628 - Charles I requested money from Parliament & they made him sign document that stated... • No imprisonment without due cause • No new taxes without Parliament’s approval • Soldiers would not be housed in the king’s private homes • No martial law in peacetime • For the 1st time the law was higher than the absolute ruler • 1629 – Charles ignored it & dissolved Parliament • To get funds he imposed fees, fines, & taxes

  40. English Civil War • Charles needed $ & had to call upon Parliament • They passed laws to limit royal power • Charles tried to arrest Parliament leaders, but they escaped • A mob of Londoners stormed the palace & Charles escaped to north England where he raised an army • War between Charles I & his supporters (The Royalist/Cavaliers) vs. opponents of King Charles I (Puritan supporters of Parliament/Roundheads) • 1642 to 1649

  41. Oliver Cromwell – Puritan general • took control in 1644 • By 1647 he held Charles I as prisoner • 1649 – Charles I was put on trial for treason against Parliament • He was found guilty • Sentenced to death by public beheading • Never before had a reigning monarch faced a public trial and execution • Cromwell took control of the throne

  42. Cromwell’s rule • 1649 – abolished monarch & House of Lords and established a commonwealth; republican form of gov’t – then became a military dictator • Crushed an uprising in Ireland, seized lands & homes and then gave them to English soldiers • Created laws that promoted Puritan morality & abolished “sinful” activities… • Theater, Sporting Events, & Dancing • Had religious toleration for all Christians with the exception of Catholics • Even allowed the Jews back into England

  43. Charles II reigns • Cromwell died in 1658 & his gov’t collapsed • 1659 – Parliament put the oldest son of Charles I on the throne • Restored monarchy & rule is called the “Restoration” • 1679 – Parliament passed habeas corpus • “to have the body” • Gave every prisoner the right to obtain a writ or document ordering that they be brought before a judge to specify charges • Now a monarch couldn’t put people in jail just because • Had no children & his brother James II took throne in 1685

  44. James II • Offended subjects b/c of his Catholic beliefs • Had an older daughter, Mary, that was protestant & a new son who was Catholic • Parliament didn’t want a Catholic monarchy & convinced Mary and her husband William of Orange (prince of Netherlands) to overthrow her father, James II • James II fled to France when Williams army came into London • Glorious Revolution – bloodless overthrow

More Related