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Unit 6 Part I. Absolutism and Scientific Revolution Chapters 5 and 6. Absolute Rule. Absolutism: Period when a series of European monarchs who ruled alone and increased the power of their central government. Absolute Rulers: Centralization of power
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Unit 6 Part I Absolutism and Scientific Revolution Chapters 5 and 6
Absolute Rule Absolutism: Period when a series of European monarchs who ruled alone and increased the power of their central government
Absolute Rulers: • Centralization of power • Many believed in concept of divine right!
England’s Absolute Monarchy Fight for the throne—Wars of the Roses Lancaster (Red) vs. York (White) Henry Tudor (Red) wins = Henry VII
Under Elizabeth • England was invaded by Philip II b/c he had grown impatient waiting for England to become Catholic again.
1588 Sp. Armada-”Prot. Wind” • Elizabeth was successful in defeating the Spanish Armada!
Queen Elizabeth I • Died with no heirs • Cousins in Scotland – Stuart Dynasty—now begins
James I 1603-1625 Tensions with Parliament – Divine Right Remembered for giving the Puritans an English translation of the Bible (King James Version)
Magna Carta • King John was forced to sign this document in 1215! • Limited the king’s power & protected the baron’s rights
Charles I –1625-1649 • Son of James I • Divine Right • Dissolved Parliament for 11 years
Irritated the Puritans –Many left=Great Migration • Ireland Revolted, Scotland invaded-Charles needed Parliament
Charles I cont… English Civil War—Charles led an army (Cavaliers) and invaded Parliament Cromwell (Puritan) leader of the Roundheads (supporters of Parliament) defeated the royalists/Cavaliers twice
Royalists vs Puritans • Charles I vs Oliver Cromwell • Charles I tried for treason and beheaded!!
Oliver Cromwell-1653-1658 Tried to establish a Republic with a constitution (people would elect leader) Eventually dissolves Parliament—ruled as military dictator
Charles II 1660-1685 • Restoration!!! Restored the Monarchy • Gave in to Parliament b/c of his Dad • Got New York from the Dutch
James II 1685-1688 • Catholic—remarries has a Catholic son • His daughter—Mary is Protestant
Wanted Absolute Authority • Eventually fled the country after invasion by William of Orange (son-in-law)
William and Mary1688-1694 (Mary) 1702 (William) James II was not liked, but they could not execute him…they knew when he died Mary (daughter/Protestant) would inherit the thrown. His son would rule first (Catholic) Parliament decided to invite Mary and William (husband) to invade country 1688
William and Mary cont… • First dual monarchy • They work well with Parliament and accept limited power (Limited Constitutional Monarchy-monarchs power limited by a constitution) • Parliament will pass many laws—protecting the rights of individuals
English Parliament Habeas Corpus—individual has the right to be seen by a judge w/in a reasonable amount of time either to be released or charged w/a crime
English Bill of Rights-monarch could not interfere in the elections or operations of Parliament …and some basic rights to citizens
English Parliament cont… Act of Toleration-Religious freedom to dissenters (not Anglican)
Anne (sister of Mary) 1701-1714 • Estab. A cabinet (group of advisors) • Leader of the Cabinet=Prime Minister
Anne con’d • Act of Union (1707) Joined Scotland and England into the United Kingdom Last of the Stuart dynasty
Away from England Colonies French and Indian War American Revolution
Treaty of Paris Proclamation of 1763 • Treaty of Paris
Treaty of Paris Proclamation of 1763 • Ended the American Revolutionary War • King George III of England forbid American settlers to go beyond the line along the Appalachians. (After England claimed the French lands from the French and Indian War)
France • Mid-1500s—France destroyed by religious conflicts btwn Huguenots and Catholics
St. Bartholomew’s Day King of France attempted to kill the leader’s of the Huguenots…once the killing started mobs of Catholic Parisians started to began a general massacre of Huguenots. (the king’s sister, Margaret, had just married Henry of Navarre—the leader of the Huguenots)
1589—Henry of Navarre became Henry IV (Bourbon) a Protestant wins the throne helps to resolve chaos in France
Converts to Catholicism • Edict of Nantes: Allowed the Huguenots to practice their own religion—Religious Toleration
France cont… • 1610—Louis XIII • 9 years old • Appointed Cardinal Richelieu as chief minister
Strengthened the gov’t • Destroyed power of the nobles & Huguenots • Hand picked his own successor – Mazarin
(wanted to turn France into an absolute monarchy and make it the strongest European power)
France cont… • 1643—Louis XIV—72 years of rule • 5 years old with Mazarin as chief minister until 1661 (23 yrs old then)
Rebellion broke out when he was a child and vowed to never let it happen again
Believed in divine right Never used the Estates-General (similar to Parliament) Took the sun as his symbol—sun=center SUN KING=center of French nation
France cont… • Louis XIV • Strengthened the gov’t • Tax collections—intendants (middle class) • Army=strongest in Europe • Diversified economy: Home-taxes-wealthiest state in Europe • Colonies-Furs
France cont… • Louis XIV • Extravagant Lifestyle • Palace of Versailles (p. 141) • Sponsored the Arts