140 likes | 288 Views
The Age of Absolutism in Europe 1600-1715. Europe during the Age of Absolutism. The Thirty Year ’ s War. Treaty of Westphalia (1648) Changed the way countries dealt with one another – national sovereignty was respected for the first time
E N D
The Thirty Year’s War • Treaty of Westphalia (1648) • Changed the way countries dealt with one another – national sovereignty was respected for the first time • England and France became the two dominant powers of the 17th Century and led the revolutions in science, philosophy and political theory
Thomas Hobbes (1588 –1679) • English philosopher • Wrote Leviathan – life began in a state of nature • Man is inherently selfish and aggressive • Left on own, chaos and conflict would rule • Citizens need law and to follow a sovereign to avoid chaos
Absolutism in France • Louis XIV epitomized the absolutist belief that the monarchy personified the state • Absolutism was created under Cardinal Richelieu who secularized France and fostered loyalty to the French state
Absolutism in France cont. • Cardinal Richelieu centralized power by alienating the nobility • The greatest threat to the monarchy was the nobility • Monarchs created standing armies for the first time • Louis XIV built the Palace of Versailles as a testament to his power and used it to gain control of the nobility
Versailles Grande Gallerie • Daily routines at Versailles were exploited by Louis XIV • The nobility competed against each other to perform menial tasks for the king
Baroque Art • Stylistically complex • Meant to evoke emotion by appealing to the senses • Bernini’s sculptures captured figures in the state of intense emotion • Rembrandt van Rijn rejected traditional arrangements for portraits by not giving equal prominence to each member of the group
Absolutism in Eastern Europe • Tsar Peter I (Peter the Great) of Russia • Modernized Russia through Westernization • Taxed his subjects heavily to pay for his projects • Killed 1000 members of streltsy when they tried to depose him
17th Century England • Constitutionalism not Absolutism ruled • English monarchs held accountable to Parliament • James I (1603-1625) supported absolute rule
The Glorious Revolution (1688) • William of Orange, the Dutch monarch was asked by the English people to depose their king, James II • A bloodless coup ensued as James II fled England • Parliament now reigned supreme • The Bill of Rights (1689) outlined the powers and rights of Parliament
Works Cited • Google Images • Legacy by Garfield Newman • http://www.historyteacher.net/EuroProjects