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Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Religious War and Henry IV Louis XIII and Richelieu

Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Religious War and Henry IV Louis XIII and Richelieu Faces of History: Cardinal Richelieu The Monarchy of Louis XIV. Absolute Monarchy and France. Absolute Monarchy and France. Main Idea

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Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Religious War and Henry IV Louis XIII and Richelieu

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  1. Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus Religious War and Henry IV Louis XIII and Richelieu Faces of History: Cardinal Richelieu The Monarchy of Louis XIV Absolute Monarchy and France

  2. Absolute Monarchy and France Main Idea Henry IV, Louis XIII, and Louis XIV strengthened the French monarchy, with Louis XIV setting the example of an absolute monarch for the rest of Europe. • Reading Focus • How did Henry IV end France’s wars of religion? • How did Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu strengthen the French monarchy? • What were the main events in the monarchy of Louis XIV?

  3. The Age of Absolutism Witness History Audio: Life at Versailles Henry IV Restores Order France was torn apart by religious wars between Catholics and Protestants until Henry IV took the throne and issued the Edict of Nantes, which allowed Protestants to practice their religion freely. He also helped to reduce the power of the nobles and strengthen the monarchy. After his death, Cardinal Richelieu served as chief minister to Louis XIII. Richelieu held great influence and orchestrated the further diminishment of the powers of nobles and Protestants. Section 2: France under Louis XIV Color Transparency 95: St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre 1 of 8

  4. Soon after Protestant Reformation began in Germany, it spread to France 1560s, one in ten French was Huguenot, French Calvinist Protestant Many noble families Huguenots Large number of Protestants threatened Catholic French monarchy Monarchy thought all should share “one king, one law, one religion” Religious conflict a challenge to absolute monarchy Religious War and Henry IV

  5. Henry IV Massacre • Henry of Navarre denied his religion, escaped death • Later in line to be king, but as Huguenot had to fight Catholic troops to claim throne • 1593, won acceptance by converting to Catholicism • Crowned as Henry IV • Explained conversion by saying, “Paris is well worth a mass.” • In France fighting broke out between Catholics and Huguenots • 1572, Catholic queen of France ordered Huguenots in Paris killed • Assassins started with nobles in city for Henry of Navarre’s wedding • Event became known as Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre • Violence spread; final Huguenot death toll up to 70,000 Conflict and a New King

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  7. Compromise • Henry knew compromise needed to restore peace • Edict of Nantes in 1598; gave Huguenots limited freedom of worship • Also, right to hold office, rule in 200 cities where in majority • Subjects no longer had to follow religion of throne; for French Catholics, ended religious wars, but Catholicism official religion • Progress • Henry IV then focused on repairing war-torn country • Improved financial situation, eliminated debt, built up surplus • Created new industries, encouraged agriculture, stimulated trade, drained swamps, built canals, roads • Became one of France’s most respected monarchs

  8. Summarize What were some of the high points and low points in the life of Henry IV? Answer(s): possible answer—high points: being crowned king, Edict of Nantes, reforms; low points: Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, having to fight to claim throne

  9. Young King Resistance Risky Starved Out City • Mother, as regent, governed in his place for several years • When Louis XIII old enough to rule, Catholic churchman, Cardinal Richelieu, became chief minister, advisor • Richelieu wanted to reduce power of Huguenots, strengthen monarchy • 1627, used situation at port city, La Rochelle, to signal resisting monarchy carried risks • La Rochelle had sided with English forces that took nearby island • Richelieu’s troops cut off supplies to city • Ordered walls torn down, all churches to become Catholic Louis XIII and Richelieu • Henry ruled for another ten years • In 1610 he was stabbed by a fanatic Catholic • Young son Louis XIII crowned

  10. Punishing Nobles Fighting Catholics • Richelieu’s spies uncovered series of planned revolts • Punishments were severe • Richelieu had three prominent nobles publicly executed for treason • As chief minister, Richelieu also directed foreign policy • Thirty Years War pitted Catholics against Protestants in Central Europe • Richelieu involved France on side of Protestants in attempt to bring down Hapsburgs Threat from Nobles • Richelieu and the king saw the nobles as a threat • Cardinal Richelieu turned to suppressing them

  11. Identify Who did Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu see as their enemies? Answer(s): Huguenots, nobles, the Hapsburg family

  12. The Age of Absolutism An Absolute Monarch Arises Louis XIV ruled with absolute power and took the sun as a symbol of it. An army of 300,000 soldiers stood ready to enforce his will. His finance minister, Jean Baptiste Colbert, instituted mercantilist policies, which helped France to become the richest European state. Note Taking Transparency 116 Section 2: France under Louis XIV Versailles: Symbol of Royal Power Louis XIV lived a lavish lifestyle at the palace of Versailles, which was a symbol of France’s wealth. There, nobles became courtiers who posed no threat to the monarchy. The arts flourished with the support of Louis XIV. 2 of 8

  13. Rise of the Sun King Confident in Ability to Rule • Louis XIV also became king at young age, with mother as regent • Cardinal Mazarin, chief minister after Richelieu, provided advice • Louis raised to be king, taught skills needed from childhood • Young king supremely confident in ability to rule • When Mazarin died, 18-year-old Louis declared he would run government himself • “I am the state,” he declared The Monarchy of Louis XIV • Richelieu died in 1642, Louis XIII, 1643; Louis XIV crowned • Ruled during time of great power, prosperity and glory • His reign had lasting impact—both positive and negative Louis XIV chose the sun as his personal symbol, implying that the world revolved around him. He thus became known as the Sun King.

  14. The Age of Absolutism: Section 2 Color Transparency 96: Reign of Louis XIV 6 of 8

  15. Absolutism at Versailles • Absolute Monarchy • Louis XIV retained absolute power for rest of long reign • Began tradition of absolute monarchy to last more than century • Demanded to be in charge of all military, political, economic initiatives • Central Government • Drew power to himself, deprived nobles of influence • Built palace outside Paris at Versailles; demanded nobles visit regularly • Nobles gained prestige being servants at Versailles court, not by fighting • Absolutely Dependent • Additionally, Louis urged nobles to develop expensive new habits of dressing, dining, and gambling • As nobles grew poorer, had to depend on king’s generosity just to survive

  16. Versailles was a grand spectacle of kingly power Louis XIV’s style, ceremony emphasized political strength Practically every moment of king’s day required rituals by bowing courtiers Eating, dressing, walking in garden, all required a ritual Louis always knew who had given what he considered proper attention Spectacle at Versailles

  17. Money and the Military Most Powerful Ruler • Louis’ finances always a concern • Grand lifestyle cost great deal of money • Treasury saved by efficient policies of Jean-Baptiste Colbert • Limited imports, increased exports • Even reduced government’s debt • Louis needed cash to build up military, expand French territory • Enlarged army to more than 200,000 disciplined soldiers • Spent money on good equipment • Was most powerful ruler in Europe, taking France to war four times Louis and Protestantism • Louis smashed power of Huguenots • Edict of Nantes had protected Huguenots since reign of Henry IV • Even Richelieu had not be able to eliminate that protection • 1685, Louis revoked edict, outlawed Protestantism in France • Over 200,000 Huguenots fled—prosperous merchants, artisans • Loss of their skills, wealth helped cause financial crisis

  18. The Age of Absolutism A Strong State Declines European alliances were formed to keep French expansion in check. The War of the Spanish Succession ended with France agreeing not to unite with Spain. The flight of the Huguenots from France when the Edict of Nantes was revoked left the state without many of its best and brightest. Section 2: France under Louis XIV Color Transparency 96: Reign of Louis XIV QuickTake Section Quiz Progress Monitoring Transparency 3 of 8

  19. War over a Throne • No heir in Spain • Louis wanted to increase power beyond France’s borders; wars cost dearly • Most costly war, War of the Spanish Succession • Began when Spanish king died without an heir • Successor • Three rulers claimed they should name successor • Louis wanted Spanish throne for oldest son • Other European monarchs did not want France, Spain so closely connected • Alliances • 1701, England, Netherlands, Holy Roman Empire went to war against France • Fighting not limited to Europe, spread to North America as well • Conflict connected to phase of French and Indian Wars

  20. 1713, after many defeats, Louis accepted the Treaty of Utrecht Treaty said Louis’s grandson got Spanish throne Also said France, Spain never to be ruled by same monarch Louis had to give up most of territory he had taken War benefited England at expense of France, Spain Despite setback, Louis XIV remained in power until death, 1715—still absolute monarch Treaty of Utrecht

  21. Find the Main Idea What were some main events during Louis XIV’s reign? Answer(s): building of Versailles, cancellation of Edict of Nantes, War of the Spanish Succession, Treaty of Utrecht

  22. The Age of Absolutism: Section 2 Note Taking Transparency 116 5 of 8

  23. The Age of Absolutism: Section 2 Progress Monitoring Transparency (1 of 2) 7 of 8

  24. The Age of Absolutism: Section 2 Progress Monitoring Transparency (2 of 2) 8 of 8

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