360 likes | 581 Views
Absolute Monarchs in Europe 1500-1800. By M.D. Bergquist World History Instructor Alexander High School. Europe Developed Into Absolute Monarchies. Feudalism had collapsed. National monarchies replaced. Intense competition for land and trade lead to many wars.
E N D
Absolute Monarchs in Europe1500-1800 By M.D. Bergquist World History Instructor Alexander High School
Europe Developed Into Absolute Monarchies • Feudalism had collapsed. • National monarchies replaced. • Intense competition for land and trade lead to many wars. • Religious differences sparked civil wars. • Absolute monarchy emerged to protect the nation and preserve order. • “Gunpowder Revolution” began.
European Monarchies sought to consolidate power • Hapsburgs one of the most powerful families • Charles V was H.R.E. and the king of Spain • Divided his realm upon retirement • Philip II got Spain, Holland, and S. Italy • Ferdinand (brother) was H.R.E www.theotherside.co.uk/tm-heritage/ background/flanders.htm http://www.tudorhistory.org/people/charles5/charlesv.jpg
Philip IIKing of Spain (1556-1598) • Philip II 1556 • Sought to strengthen power through war • Seizes Portugal 1580 • Wealthy from Gold and silver from Americas • Defender of Catholicism • Golden Age of Spanish art and literature • Weakened Spain by incessant wars and poor economic choices. www.tudorhistory.org/ people/
Prudent King who build the El Escorial palace
B. Last of the Spanish Hapsburgs • 1550-1650, Spain’s golden century • Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote • Wars, inflation, and wastefulness hurt Spain • Lost skilled artisans in Jews and Muslims • Philip’s successors overtaxed the people • Rebellion • Charles II, 1665 was the last Hapsburg • No heir • Other kings plotted to take over
France was wracked by religious warfare until Henry of Navarre agreed to be king (1589-1610) • First of Bourbon dynasty • Issued Edict of Nantes which promised religious toleration. • Began to rebuild French economy. • Assassinated leaving 9-year old son to rule. http://www.kfki.hu/~arthp/html/p/pourbus/frans_y/
Cardinal Richelieu created a strong monarchy. • Regent (1624-1642) for Louis XIII (1610-1643) • Richelieu broke the power of nobles and Protestants by destroying walled cities and castles. • Used the middle class for government jobs. • Challenged Hapsburg power by intervening in Thirty Years War. http://home.nyu.edu/~rgr208/richelieu.jpg
When Louis XIII died leaving his five year-old son as king Cardinal Mazarin became regent (1643-1661). • Continued Richelieu policies. • Generally disliked by the French people because of increased taxes and continued consolidation of royal power. • Fronde Revolt by nobles harshly suppressed. http://www.ac-strasbourg.fr/pedago/lettres/Victor%20Hugo/Notes/Mazarin.htm
Louis XIV becomes the most powerful king in Europe (1643-1715) • When Mazarin died, Louis assumed full control at age 23. • Worked long hours to strengthen France. • National army • Broke power of nobles and Protestants. • Restored economy via mercantilism. • Builder of the Palace of Versailles. http://www.royalty.nu/Europe/France/LouisXIV.html
Solidified absolutism • Promoted own image: • Sun King • Louis the Great • God’s representative on earth
Religious unification • “One king, one law, one faith” • Revoked Edict of Nantes, 1685
Louis XIV, The Sun King • The best and worst example • Of absolute monarchy. • “L’Etat c’est moi!” • Crippled France by fighting • a series of losing wars and • revoking the Edict of Nantes • On his deathbed he urged his • young grandson and heir • to avoid wars.
Ferdinand IIHoly Roman Emperor (1619-1637) • Wanted greater control of his Protestant nobles. • Touched off the Thirty Years War, which eventually involved most of western Europe. • Took German States 100 years to rebuild. http://www.kaisergruft.at/anhang/ezhferdi.htm
The arrival of King Gustavus Adolfus’ Swedish forces. Next slide: Soldiers sack and loot a home. The Hanging Tree The Thirty Years War (1618-1648) • Hapsburgs v. German Protestants • Sweden v. Hapsburgs • France v. Hapsburgs • Peace of Westphalia, 1648 - created modern Europe. Musketeers prepare to fire a volley
The Thirty Years War Many cities were destroyed and an estimated 4 million Germans died. This is the Sack of Magdeburg www.millikin.edu/history/ civilconflict/photo4.htm
Eastern Europe • Slower to develop due to the many ethnic minorities and lack of development—primarily agricultural. • Feudalism still strong. • Hapsburg Family in control. • Maria Theresa, Queen of Austria. (1740-1780) http://www.batguano.com/VLBmcaroline.jpg
1740, Maria Theresa inherited the throne • Pragmatic Sanction was signed in 1718 to protect her rule • Charles VI did this • No training, but she was a good ruler and made Austria stronger
Prussia • France and Prussia opposed pragmatic sanction • Brandenburg-Prussia was ruled by the Hohenzollern family • Gained land in the Thirty Years’ War • 1. Great Elector • Frederick William created a permanent standing army • The nobles, or Junkers, opposed his plan to raise taxes • Frederick allowed the Junkers to be free of taxes and to have power over peasants • Frederick I took over and became a king for his help against Louis XIV
Frederick the Great (1740-1786) of Prussia was determined to make Prussia the dominate power. • Created a strong aggressive military. “ Most nations have an army, Prussia is an army with a nation”. • Promoted religious toleration and education at home. • Successfully made Prussia dominate power by defeating Austrians. • ( Seven Years War) www.ncl.ac.uk/~nhistory/ german.htm
Followed father’s hard military policies (big standing army) • Thought the role of a government was to expand its territories • Was an atheist who disliked his wife and never had kids
Austria vs. Prussia • Frederick the Great assumed that Maria would be easy to bully b/c she was a woman • Battled Prussia for a while but eventually lost • Eventually both countries (Austria and Prussia) got involved in different alliances throughout Europe
Ivan III The Great Ivan IV The Terrible Peter the Great 1672-1725 1462-1505 1533-1584 www.xenophongi.org/rushistory/ rusinwax/wax28s.jpg www.ronaldbrucemeyer.com/ archive/peter.gif
PETER THE GREAT • transform Russia into a modern state. • Westernization • Peter realized country needed to modernize to catch up with rest of Europe • Wanted westernization; to bring elements of Western culture to Russia • 1697, journeyed to western Europe to see what Russia needed to modernize • New Skills • Peter traveled in disguise, was sometimes recognized anyway • Learned hands-on skills, especially shipbuilding • Recruited European experts to bring skills to Russia • Rebellion • Trip cut short by rebellion of streltsy, military corps with political influence • Thought streltsy wanted sister on throne; had members tortured, executed • Disbanded streltsy, organized more modern army
In addition to modernizing army, Peter made many other reforms • Brought church under state control • Built up Russian industry • Started first newspaper in Russia • Sponsored new schools • Modernized calendar, promoted officials on service, not social status
Peter also founded a new city • Early 1700s, fought Sweden to acquire warm-water port • Other ports choked by ice much of year • Port farther south on Baltic Sea to keep Russia open to western trade all year, connect Russia to west • On land won from Sweden, Peter built new capital, St. Petersburg • Russia’s government moved to new city • Featured Western-style architecture
English monarchs attempted to establish absolute system • James I (1603-1625) fought with Parliament over his authority. • Puritans wanted Anglican Church to reflect a Calvinist view. • James refused to cooperate, except for a new Bible translation. www.bbc.co.uk/history
Charles loses his head in an argument • Charles I (1625-1649) pursued an aggressive foreign policy with Spain. • Continually sought new funds from Parliament, members checked his power by forcing him to sign the Petition of Right, 1628. • When Charles dissolved Parliament and tried to raise money, civil war resulted. : www.mdarchives.state.md.us/.../ 01glance/images/charles1.jpg
Oliver Cromwell defeats king’s forces and became Lord Protector • Charles executed for treason. • On paper, England was a republic but in practice a dictatorship. • Cromwell suppressed revolt in Ireland. • Imposed Puritan ideals on English. http://www.graham.day.dsl.pipex.com/civilwar-cromwell.gif
Monarchy Restored • When Cromwell died, so did his government. • English invited Charles II (1660-1685) to restore monarchy. • Reign was a period of calm marked by court decadence.
Monarchy In Crisis • On Charles’ death, brother became king. • James II (1685-1688) was pro-Catholic, which angered many. • When his young wife produced an heir, Parliament feared a renewed period of turmoil and removed king from power. www.bbc.co.uk/.../monarchs_leaders/ images/james_2_full.jpg
The Glorious RevolutionWilliam and Mary Restore English Monarchy • Parliament invited Mary, daughter of Charles I, and a Protestant, to jointly rule with her husband, William of Orange. (1689-1702) • Both agreed to follow Parliamentary laws and accepted English Bill of Rights. • England became the only limited monarchy in Europe. Parliament in control. www.camelotintl.com/heritage/ rulers/images/willmary.gif