130 likes | 289 Views
Write the following on page 23. During the 15 th and 16 th Centuries, England evolved from a feudal monarchy with tyrant kings into a constitutional monarchy with a powerful Parliament. This is the story of how this happened. Henry VIII, King of England from 1509-1547
E N D
Write the following on page 23 • During the 15th and 16th Centuries, England evolved from a feudal monarchy with tyrant kings into a constitutional monarchy with a powerful Parliament. • This is the story of how this happened
Henry VIII, King of England from 1509-1547 • had 6 wives, 1st one was Catherine of Aragon, a Catholic, they had a daughter, Mary • He wanted a younger woman, the Pope would not grant him a divorce, • so he started the Church of England, making himself Head of the Church and divorced Catherine, to marry Anne Boleyn, a Protestant (non Catholic) • He and Anne had a daughter, Elizabeth • He grew bored with Anne and had her beheaded • Henry wanted/needed a son, he married Jane Seymour, and they had Edward IV, a very sickly child • Jane died after giving birth
Edward IV, only son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour • Crowned King of England in 1547 at the age of 9 • He was a very sickly child and died at age 15, leaving no male heir to the throne
Bloody Mary, Catholic daughter of Henry VIII, • becomes queen of England in 1553-1558 • begins persecution of Protestants. • She’s crazy and hates Elizabeth • She dies leaving no heirs
Elizabeth I of England, Protestant daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Bolyen • Became queen in 1558 upon the death of ‘bloody Mary’ • Elizabeth wanted Peace in England, chose NOT to persecute Catholics in revenge • Elizabeth was known as “The Good Queen”, “The Virgin Queen”, and ruled England during its Golden Age • Shakespeare and exploration of the New World began during her reign • Under her, England became the most powerful empire in the world • Elizabeth never married and had no children, died in 1603
James I, cousin of Queen Elizabeth, became King of England in 1603 • James’ mother was Mary, Queen of Scots, (not the same as Bloody Mary) and they were Protestants • His reign was marked by conflict with Parliament and social unrest • He died in 1625, and his son, Charles I, became King
Charles I, became King of England in 1625 • Charles was Protestant, but married a Catholic, which increased religious tensions in England • He began persecution of Puritans (these were Protestants who wanted to separate from the Church of England) • During the first years of his reign, Parliament issued the Petition of Right, following an on-going power struggle between the two • At the end of his reign, England entered a civil war and he was executed in 1647 • Puritan leader, Oliver Cromwell, was named Lord and Protector of England in 1651
Oliver Cromwell, reigned as Lord and Protector (essentially a dictator) from 1653-1658 • One of the most controversial figures in British history • Considered a regicidal dictator by some • Others consider him a great liberator • He was super religious, a devout Puritan, convinced that God was guiding his actions • He brutally persecuted and murdered Catholics in Ireland and Scotland • He had been buried in Westminster Abbey, but after the Royalists returned to power, they had his corpse dug up, hung in chains, and beheaded.
Charles II, son of Charles I, had been in exile since 1651 as he knew Oliver Cromwell would kill him • Upon Cromwell’s death, Charles returned to the throne in 1658 and the monarchy was restored • He had serious conflicts with Parliament and dissolved them in 1681 (told them they could no longer meet or make laws) • He ruled alone, with no Parliament, until his death in 1685 • He converted to Catholicism on his deathbed
James II, Catholic brother of Charles II, became king upon his brother’s death in 1685 • James wanted absolute power and ignored Parliamentary rules • He tried to pack Parliament with Catholics • When he couldn’t, he appointed them to the highest offices in England • Protestants feared that James would begin persecuting them again • They felt threatened and began plotting to overthrow him
William, Prince of Orange was a Protestant • He was not a blood relative of James II • He’d fought many wars against the powerful Catholic French King, Louis XIV • He was viewed as a champion by Protestants who feared a Catholic domination under James II
Mary, eldest, Protestant daughter of James II and his first wife, Anne Hyde • Her uncle was Charles II • Her father converted to Catholicism in 1669, but she and her sister remained Protestant • Her cousin was William of Orange • To appease Protestants in England, her father, James II, betrothed her to William of Orange • They were married in 1677
James II tried to establish Freedom of Religion to non-Anglicans (Catholics) by suspending acts of Parliament • Parliament and Protestants wanted him Out • In 1688, Parliament secretly requested that William of Orange return to England to remove James II • In exchange, Parliament would name him, and his wife, King and Queen • William and Mary ruled England from 1688 till 1694 • In 1689, Parliament issued the English Bill of Rights • England had removed a bad monarch in a bloodless revolution and further limited the power of the monarchy in writing