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Please enter the room quietly and make note of the daily objective, class work and homework in your agendas. Will the person responsible for retrieving the journals for your table please do so. . Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525):. Absolute Monarchy -. Divine right of Kings -.
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Please enter the room quietly and make note of the daily objective, class work and homework in your agendas. Will the person responsible for retrieving the journals for your table please do so.
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): Absolute Monarchy - Divine right of Kings - Louis XIV - Constitutional Monarchy - federalism -
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): A ruler has complete power over the government and its subjects. Absolute Monarchy - Divine right of Kings - Louis XIV - Constitutional Monarchy - federalism -
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): A ruler has complete power over the government and its subjects. Absolute Monarchy - A theory which states that a king's right to rule comes directly from God. Divine right of Kings - Louis XIV - Constitutional Monarchy - federalism -
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): A ruler has complete power over the government and its subjects. Absolute Monarchy - A theory which states that a king's right to rule comes directly from God. Divine right of Kings - A powerful leader in France. Louis XIV - Constitutional Monarchy - federalism -
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): A ruler has complete power over the government and its subjects. Absolute Monarchy - A theory which states that a king's right to rule comes directly from God. Divine right of Kings - A powerful leader in France. Louis XIV - A form of government in which a king's or queen's power is limited by a constitution. Constitutional Monarchy - federalism -
Vocab Word Search (Pages 521 - 525): A ruler has complete power over the government and its subjects. Absolute Monarchy - A theory which states that a king's right to rule comes directly from God. Divine right of Kings - A powerful leader in France. Louis XIV - A form of government in which a king's or queen's power is limited by a constitution. Constitutional Monarchy - federalism - A form of government in which power is shared between local and national levels.
The Political Impact of the Reformation How did the Reformation affect how nations were ruled?
Typo in Section: Constitutional Monarchy in England. It should be 1649 NOT 1694.
Read the section Changes in Warfare on page 521 answer these questions: 1) What did the large armies that fought in the Thirty Years War show? 2) Who fought wars in the Middle Ages?
Read the section Changes in Warfare on page 521 answer these questions: 1) What did the large armies that fought in the Thirty Years War show? The growing power of Europe's secular leaders. 2) Who fought wars in the Middle Ages?
Read the section Changes in Warfare on page 521 answer these questions: 1) What did the large armies that fought in the Thirty Years War show? The growing power of Europe's secular leaders. 2) Who fought wars in the Middle Ages? Small armies supplied by lords.
Read the section Changes in Warfare on page 521 answer these questions: 3) Why did only strong kings win wars during the Thirty Years War?
Read the section Changes in Warfare on page 521 answer these questions: 3) Why did only strong kings win wars during the Thirty Years War? They could tax a large area.
Small manors HUGE COUNTRIES
Read the section Growing Power of Secular Rulers on page 522 and answer these questions: 1) Who did the Thirty Years War strengthen? 2) Whose power was weakened by the Thirty Years War?
Read the section Growing Power of Secular Rulers on page 522 and answer these questions: 1) Who did the Thirty Years War strengthen? Secular rulers. 2) Whose power was weakened by the Thirty Years War?
Read the section Growing Power of Secular Rulers on page 522 and answer these questions: 1) Who did the Thirty Years War strengthen? Secular rulers. 2) Whose power was weakened by the Thirty Years War? The political power of the pope.
Political power of Kings starts to go up Political power of the Pope starts to go down.
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 1) What powers does an Absolute Monarch have? 2) Due to the Divine Right of Kings what is a king entitled to?
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 1) What powers does an Absolute Monarch have? They made laws and declared new taxes. 2) Due to the Divine Right of Kings what is a king entitled to?
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 1) What powers does an Absolute Monarch have? They made laws and declared new taxes. 2) Due to the Divine Right of Kings what is a king entitled to? To unquestioning obedience.
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 3) What were the ways that Louis XIV exerted his power (name four)? 4) What policy did Louis XIV reverse?
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 3) What were the ways that Louis XIV exerted his power (name four)? He appointed town and Church officials, the chief of police of Paris. He installed troops in major towns to keep order. He formed a ministry of war to control the French army. He raised taxes to pay for the construction of roads, canals, and buildings. 4) What policy did Louis XIV reverse?
Read the section Absolute Monarchy in France on pages 522 - 523 and answer these questions: 3) What were the ways that Louis XIV exerted his power (name four)? He appointed town and Church officials, the chief of police of Paris. He installed troops in major towns to keep order. He formed a ministry of war to control the French army. He raised taxes to pay for the construction of roads, canals, and buildings. 4) What policy did Louis XIV reverse? A policy that kept Protestant churches open (he closed them).
King Louie XIV Absolute Monarch
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 1) What did England have a long history of and what document is an example of this? 2) What event happened in England in 1642?
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 1) What did England have a long history of and what document is an example of this? Limiting royal power an example of this is the creation of the Magna Carta. 2) What event happened in England in 1642?
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 1) What did England have a long history of and what document is an example of this? Limiting royal power an example of this is the creation of the Magna Carta. 2) What event happened in England in 1642? Parliament's troops fought against the king's army in what became known as the English Civil War.
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 3) What things did the new government in England do in 1649? 4) When William and Mary retook the thrown of England, what was it known as?
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 3) What things did the new government in England do in 1649? They put the king on trail and executed him. 4) When William and Mary retook the thrown of England, what was it known as?
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 3) What things did the new government in England do in 1649? They put the king on trail and executed him. 4) When William and Mary retook the throne of England, what was it known as? The Glorious Revolution.
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 5) What was the English Bill of Rights and what did it protect?
Read the section Constitutional Monarchy in England on page 523 - 524 and answer these questions: 5) What was the English Bill of Rights and what did it protect? It was a list of rights, it protected the rights of people to hold property and worship where they chose.
William and Mary Constitutional Monarchs (Glorious Revolution) Textbook 524
Experiments in Self-Government Geneva, Switzerland
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 1) In Geneva what did Calvinist church members start to do and what first experience did this start to give Europeans? 2) What did people start to voice along with their opinions about religion?
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 1) In Geneva what did Calvinist church members start to do and what first experience did this start to give Europeans? They began to elect their own leaders and it gave them their first practical experience with self-government. 2) What did people start to voice along with their opinions about religion?
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 1) In Geneva what did Calvinist church members start to do and what first experience did this start to give Europeans? They began to elect their own leaders and it gave them their first practical experience with self-government. 2) What did people start to voice along with their opinions about religion? Their also expressed their views on political issues.
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 3) Who was John Althusius and what did he believe? 4) What would federalist ideas come to influence?
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 3) Who was John Althusius and what did he believe? A Calvinist city official and he thought his city should be free to rule itself. 4) What would federalist ideas come to influence?
Read the section Experiments in Self-Government on page 524 - 525 and answer these questions: 3) Who was John Althusius and what did he believe? A Calvinist city official and he thought his city should be free to rule itself. 4) What would federalist ideas come to influence? Federalist ideas would later influence those who wrote the Constitution of the United States.
Self-government was the idea at the center of the United States Constitution John Althusius believed in self-government Federalism - A form of government in which power is shared between local and national levels.
The Reformation of England (Video): 1) Who was the king of England through much of Luther and Calvin's lives? 2) How does the pope reward Henry VIII? 3) What is Henry the VIII's problem and what does he pass? 4) What replaces the Roman Catholic Church in England? 5) What do puritans want from the Church of England and where do they finally end up?
Using the notes in your journal and the information in your textbook create a Compare and Contrast map in your journal. Your topic: How were Absolute Monarchies and Constitutional Monarchies the same and how were they different? Different Different Same Absolute Monarchy Constitutional Monarchy Same Different Different Same Different Different