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Chapter 17: Transformation of the West

This chapter explores the Protestant Reformation, the rise of absolute monarchies, the scientific revolution, and the enlightenment in the Western world. It discusses the spread of new religious ideas, the consolidation of power by monarchs, advancements in science, and the shift towards reason and knowledge in society.

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Chapter 17: Transformation of the West

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  1. Chapter 17: Transformation of the West Ms. Sheets AP World History

  2. Protestant Reformation • 1517: Martin Luther posted “95 Theses” on church door in Wittenberg, Germany • Protested Catholic Church’s use of indulgences, Latin Bible, celibacy for priests, idea of Pope • Luther is excommunicated • Luther believed salvation was obtained only through faith in Christ, NOT on following Church practices • Viewed Christian participation in commerce favorably • Luther’s ideas spread rapidly via prints

  3. Results of Protestant Reformation • Spread of belief that salvation can be achieved through faith alone • Creation of new Protestant churches throughout Northern Europe and America • Supported culture of questioning of political/religious leadership • Papal power decreases  monarchs’ power increases • Desire to read Bible  Increase in literacy • Increase in status of women  promotion of love between husband and wife • Growing literacy and the spread of the printing press  spread of new religious ideas

  4. Protestant Developments • Second Protestant Reformation: Henry VIII • Pope refused to annul first marriage to Catherine of Aragon as she had not produced a male heir • Jean Calvin: Calvinism • Pre-destination (God predetermined the people who will be saved)

  5. The Catholic Reformation • Catholicism is threatened by sudden and extreme interest in Protestantism • Roman Catholic Church launches Counter Reformation or Catholic Reformation • Council of Trent, church assembly: abandon sale of indulgences • Goal: incite Catholic fervor into Europeans, assert personal relationship with Christ through Church • New missionary efforts • Jesuits: Americas and Asia

  6. Religious divisions • Protestantism changes politics in 16th c. Europe • Holy Roman Emperor remained Catholic, but German princes turned to Protestantism (resented power of Pope and HRE) • 1618-1648: Thirty Years War • Ends with Treaty of Westphalia

  7. Absolute monarchy • Characteristics • Divine Right • Strong, professionalized army • High taxes to support wars • Utilize bureaucracies • King Louis XIV (reigned 1638-1715) • “I am the state” • Patron of the arts, Palace of Versailles • Stopped convening Estates-General (French parliament) and passed his own laws • Sent bureaucrats to provinces

  8. Absolute monarchy, cont. • King Louis XIV, cont. • Created state-run manufacturing • Promoted internal economy to improve tax revenues for wars • Limited imports from other nations; uses colonies to provide raw materials • Absolute monarchies set up in Prussia, Spain, Austria-Hungary

  9. parliamentary monarchy • Britain used a parliamentary monarchy • King shared power with representatives selected by the nobility and upper urban classes • 1642-1649: English Civil War • Assertion of Parliament’s power over the British monarch • Glorious Revolution of 1689 • Overthrow of English King James II • Significance of Parliamentary Monarchy • Right of revolution • Monarchs should be restrained by institutions that protect public • Power of parliament over king • Political groups can compete for influence

  10. Italian renaissanceVs.Northern Renaissance Italian Renaissance • Challenged medieval intellectual, religious values • Focused on humanism • City-states in Northern Italy Northern Renaissance • Intense religious devotion • Artists travel to Italy • Detailed realism, focus on nature • Landscape/genre painting • 1450: Johannes Gutenberg, invention of mechanical movable type printing press • France, Low Countries, Germany, England

  11. Scientific Revolution • 17th and 18th centuries: New ideas in science that laid foundations for modern scientific thought • Create laws for nature based off of Greek and Islamic science • Copernicus (Polish) • Disproves Ptolemy’s geocentric theory • Proves heliocentric theory • Galileo (Italian) • Confirms heliocentric theory using telescope • Observes motions of planets • Condemned by the Catholic church

  12. Scientific Revolution, cont. • William Harvey (English) • Circulatory system powered by heart • René Descartes (French) • “Father of Modern Philosophy” • Skeptical of accepted learning • “I think, therefore I am” • Isaac Newton (English) • Defined forces of gravity • Basic principles of motion • Francis Bacon (English) • Empirical research: utilize observations, data

  13. Scientific Revolution, cont. • Scientific institutes established to advance research • Growing belief that people could control and calculate environment • Insurance companies • Doctors attack healers, quacks • Deism: a god created the Earth, but its only role was to set natural laws in motion • Reconciles religion with science • The West becomes a leading center for science research

  14. The Enlightenment • Scientific Revolution led to the Enlightenment • Change in attitudes about politics, society, economics • Continued scientific advances • Basic Beliefs: • Human beings are good but can be educated to be better • Reason is the key to truth • Religions that rely blindly on faith and do not tolerate diversity are wrong • Began with philosophes (French philosophers) meeting in salons • Denis Diderot: editor of the Encyclopédie, compilation of knowledge

  15. Political/economic enlightenment theories • Social contract: promoted by John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau • Governments must act on behalf of the people and through consent of the people • Scottish Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations(1776) • Laissez-faire economics • People act in self-interest but thrive through competition, promote economic advance • Government should avoid regulation in favor of the operation of individual initiative and market forces of supply and demand

  16. Family changes 1450-1750 • Religious change promoted greater concentrations on family life with Protestantism • Enlightenment encourages marriages based on love • Raises status of women • Later marriage ages • Change in attitude towards children • Emphasis on nuclear families • Limit family birth rates • Swaddling declined • Educational toys and books

  17. Social protest 1450-1750 • Beginning of the proletariat in the West • People without access to wealth-producing property • Population growth and rising food prices • Social tension; new ideas of equality • Witchcraft persecution, 1450-1750 • 60,000-100,000 suspected witches killed • New resentment against poor • Role of women? Religious tension?

  18. commercial revolution • Protestantism viewed involvement in commerce more favorably than Catholicism • Inflation in western Europe caused by gold and silver imports • Production could not keep pace with wealth • Trading companies were backed by governments but unregulated • Specialty areas • Wine, cheese, wool, shoemaking, metalwork • Prosperity increased for ordinary people

  19. Ongoing Change in commerce and manufacturing • Economic change • Commerce continued to spread • Europeans began to buy processed goods • Sugar, coffee, tea • Paid professional performers; shows excess money • Agricultural change • Draining swamps for more land • Seed-drills, use of scythes • Capitalism spread • Investments in hopes for larger profits • Domestic manufacturing

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