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Absolutism Unit. Chapter 1.1. Spanish Power Grows: Charles V. 1516: Ferdinand & Isabella’s grandson, Charles I Became King Ferdinand of Spain
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Absolutism Unit Chapter 1.1
Spanish Power Grows: Charles V • 1516: Ferdinand & Isabella’s grandson, Charles I Became King Ferdinand of Spain • 1519: When his other grandfather died, Charles became heir to the sprawling Hapsburg Empire (parts of modern day France, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands and took the title of Charles V
Charles V • Ruled two empires involved constant warfare • Fought to suppress Protestantism in the German states but eventually failed • Faced the Muslim Ottoman Empire • Based in Turkey • Stretched into Eastern and Central Europe
Charles V • Succumbed to the pressure and abdicated • Entered a monastery in 1556 • Divided his empire between his brother and son • Brother Ferdinand ruled the Hapsburg lands in Central Europe • Son Philip II, at age 29, received Spain, Netherlands, some southern Italian states , and Spain’s overseas empire.
Philip II • Ruled for 42 years • Expanded Spanish influence • Strengthened the Catholic Church • Made Spain the top European Power
Known as hard-working, devout, and ambitious. • Was unique as he seldom hunted, never jousted, & lived simply • Lived at an isolated somber palace outside Madrid, known as the Escorial • Church • Residence • Tomb for the royal family
Philip II 8. Ruled during Siglo do Oro aka Spain’s Golden Age a. Philip II was a patron of the arts and also founded academies of science and mathematics b. El Greco i. born on the Greek island of Crete ii. Studied in Italy before settling in Spain iii. Painted dramatic religious pictures and portraits iv. Used vivid color
El Greco’s Works El Espolio The Burial of the Count of Orgaz
c. Deigo Velazquez i. influenced by El Greco ii. Known for his portraits of Spanish Royalty Portrait of the Infanta Maria Theresa
d. Lope de Vega i. wrote more than 1,500 plays ii. Known for his comedies and action-packed romances e. Miguel de Cervantes i. Most well known writer from Spain’s Golden Age ii. Author of Don Quixote
Timeout For Philip II Reaction Slides
Philip II • Experiences an epic fail with the Spanish Armada • By the 1580’s, Philip viewed England’s Queen Elizabeth I as chief Protestant enemy • Encouraged English captains such as Francis Drake, known as sea dogs, to plunder Spanish Treasure ships and to loot Spanish cities in the Americas
Philip II • Philip prepared a huge armada, or fleet to carry a Spanish invasion force to England • Sailed in 1588 • More than 130 ships • More than 20,000 men • 2,400 pieces of artillery • Confident about a pending victory b. Spanish ships were outmaneuvered by lighter, faster English Ships c. Strong winds favored the British, scattering the armada! d. Defeat marked the beginning of the end of the Spanish power
II. An Empire Declines • Philip II’s successors ruled far less ably than he had. • Economic problems • Costly overseas wars drained wealth out of Spain almost as fast as it came in • Gov’t heavily taxed the small middle class, weakening a group that in other European countries supported royal power
3. Expulsion of Muslims and Jews from Spain deprived the economy of many skilled artisans and merchants 4. As Spain’s power dwindled in the 1600s and 1700s, Dutch, English, and French fleets challenged-and eventually surpassed-Spanish power both in Europe and around the world.