1 / 45

17 th Century Weather Crisis- Most of Europe is worse off except for the Dutch.

17 th Century Weather Crisis- Most of Europe is worse off except for the Dutch. Less grain production: smaller and fewer animals. Absolutism and Constitutionalism in Western Europe 1589-1715 - Mostly France. Larger standing armies . Increased 10 times by 1659 Heavy taxes Bureaucracies.

Télécharger la présentation

17 th Century Weather Crisis- Most of Europe is worse off except for the Dutch.

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. 17th Century Weather Crisis-Most of Europe is worse off except for the Dutch.

  2. Less grain production: smaller and fewer animals

  3. Absolutism and Constitutionalism in Western Europe 1589-1715- Mostly France Larger standing armies . Increased 10 times by 1659 Heavy taxes Bureaucracies

  4. Absolutism • Sovereignty (in one ruler ) • Control of force and laws within its borders • Like Medieval Kings – Divine Right • Eliminate the threat of the nobility • Regulated religion sects

  5. How the Sovereign solved financial problems • Borrow money from the nobles in exchange for future tax exemptions • Create bureaucracies to levy taxes and find other ways to raise revenues • France – used middle class as collectors • Spain and Eastern Europe – aristocratic mix

  6. Difference between the Medieval public officers and the 17th Century • Medieval and Renaissance viewed money they collected as their private property • 17th Century- money belongs to the state, collectors are representatives of the King

  7. Absolutism • Permanent standing armies • Concerned themselves with the private lives of subjects- secret police and spies. • Not totalitarianism – no sophisticated mass media – TV – radio - recordings

  8. Absolutism • Glorification of the State • Art • Ceremonies • Building projects • Theatre

  9. For Louis – The glorification of the state and of the monarch were one in the same • “Le etat c’est moi!” I am the state.

  10. Absolutism • War and expansionist foreign policies • Acquire new territories • Europe • New World • Modern sophisticated weaponry • Land • Sea

  11. French Absolutism • Henry IV • Real Politique • A chicken in every pot • Aligns himself the common man • Places himself above all nobility • Becomes Catholic • Edict of Nantes • Over seas trade • Highway system • Wanted a United nations

  12. French Absolutism • Sully – Chief finance minister • Protestant • Few wars – Savoy 1610 • Paulette – lowered taxes on the poor and taxed the wealthy for holding royal offices- Permanent Judges • Taxes declined but revenues increased

  13. Richelieu • 1628 becomes First Minister of the French • Domestic Policies • Crown – Remade France’s administration. • Raison d’ etat • All must be subordinate to the Monarch • Crush upstart nobles • Divided France into generalities • Intendants were appointed directly by the monarch from the new judicial nobility and could that not be native of the district • Foreign Policy – Subdue Habsburg expansion from surrounding France

  14. Louis XIII(r. 1610-1643) • Ends political independence of “a state within a state.” • Huguenot’s would not allow Catholics to worship freely in their cities. • La Rochelle 1627 – tied to Protestant Holland and England • City falls in 1628 • King reinstates Catholics • Towards French unification

  15. Absolutism • Many riots over taxes and “outsiders” • Local authorities were helpless • By the end of the 17th century municipal authority was better integrated into the national structure. The French Academy – a French language and culture Economy – France never controlled the entire economy so it was not a complete absolutism.

  16. The Fronde • The term means “ slingshot” or … the rebellion of aristocrats and country folk to the reign of Louis • Louis XIII under Mazarin is too weak to subject all the nobles • French provinces refused to pay taxes • French defeat Spain 1643 – War of the Pyrenees “no need for taxes” • Three significant results • The gov. would have to compromise with the local elites • French economy was disrupted • Louis XIV was traumatized

  17. The Sun King… Louis XIV (1643 –1715) “ After me, the deluge.” • Silence and caution… “Je verrai” • Acted in every way like a king • Complete domestication of the nobles… perhaps cooperation is a better term. • The Palace at Versailles • Create a sense of awe • French replaces Latin as the international language • Used court ceremonials to undermine powerful nobles

  18. Colbert • The Economy should serve the state • Mercantilism • Concept that resources are limited • Sell more goods then you buy • System of state inspections to insure quality • Control tariffs (taxes on foreign goods) • Merchant Marine and Sea power • 1683 France leads the world in productivity • 1685 The most highly centralized state in Europe • Agriculture still main business. Peasants emigrated

  19. Goodbye to the Edict of Nantes • The Edict was never to be permanent • Religious pluralism was not in the 17th Century mindset

  20. French Classicism • Glorification of the state through • Plays - Moliere • Paintings - Poussin • Architecture • Greco-Roman history

  21. Architecture

  22. Louis XIV’s Wars • Standardized the army • Uniforms • Commissariat • Clear means of promotion • Gains little territory • Collapse of the wheat harvest 1693-4

  23. War of the Spanish Succession1701-1713 • Charles II of Spain is “unable to rule” land must be divided • Dutch and English would accept French rule of the Netherlands. Spain and France under French control was not acceptable • The Grand Alliance – Check France’s domination at home and abroad

  24. The Peace of Utrecht 1713 • Philip of Anjou remains King of Spain • France gives up much of Canada • Depletes Spain and increases English power • Austria, not the Dutch gain Spanish Netherlands

  25. Decline of Spain • Absolutist • Standing army • Bureaucracy • National taxes • Most taxes fell on the poor

  26. Decline of Spain 17th Century • Expulsion of Jews and Moors depletes the middle class • Europeans began to trade with Spanish colonies • Declarations of bankruptcy • Aristocrats saw money-making as vulgar • Inflation • Weakening of the monarch - inbreeding

  27. Don Quixote • Illusions of previous greatness • Idealistic but impractical • “ The Spaniard convinced himself that reality was what he felt , believed and imagined.”

  28. Constitutionalism • The limiting of governmental power by law • By Republic or Monarchy • At this time there is not a democratic –republic in Europe

  29. The Growing Power of Capitalism - England • Social mobility – Growing wealth of ‘Country gentry and middle class business men • The House of Commons “ we could buy the House of Lords three times over.” they wanted political power that was equal to their economic strength • English nobility, unlike the French had no stigma associated with taxes as long as they had a say in political affairs. • English nobility unlike the Spanish used their position and money in capitalistic ventures • Calvinism – Hard work, thrift, delay gratification

  30. Decline of Absolutism in England • From Elizabeth I in the late 16th century to 1689 the monarchy loses power • 1603 – James IV of Scotland becomes James I of England

  31. James I • Male lovers made him lose respect in Parliament • George Villiers the first Duke of Buckingham

  32. Charles I (r.1623-1649)

  33. Stuart, Stuart,Cromwell, Stuart • Hobbes – the Social Contract • Charles I –Treacherous • Triennial Act • Parliament would not provide him with an army to suppress “northern rebellions” • English Civil War • Parliament VS. The Royalists • 1649 King is beheaded • Cromwell – Puritan , Military Dictator- Navigation Act • Restoration – Charles II Stuart 1660 - 85 • James II Catholic , Divine Right • Glorious Revolution 1688

  34. ll • Charles Beheaded

  35. Cromwell

  36. Charles II

  37. James II

  38. English Bill of Rights 1689 • William and Mary

  39. The Dutch Republic: A loose confederation of states

  40. The Hague

  41. The Dutch Republic of the Seventeenth Century ( 1600’s) • Ruled by wealthy merchants with middle class values • Dutch East India Company – Overseas Imperialism • Navigation Acts 1651 – All English goods be transported by English Ships • Wars of 17th and early 18th centuries caused decline

More Related