1 / 27

Europe in the 1500s

Europe in the 1500s. European Politics. Economic transformation Religious upheaval Dominance of Spain & Portugal. Economic Changes in the 1500s. Population change European population doubles between 1460 & 1620 increases value of land Rising value of goods

issac
Download Presentation

Europe in the 1500s

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Europe in the 1500s

  2. European Politics • Economic transformation • Religious upheaval • Dominance of Spain & Portugal.

  3. Economic Changes in the 1500s • Population change • European population doubles between 1460 & 1620 • increases value of land • Rising value of goods • Ex. Cost of cereals increased 8x between 1460 & 1620 • factors driving increase • rising demand with increasing population • influx of silver and gold from New World fuels inflation.

  4. Economic Changes in the 1500s • Land ownership - shift from feudal based communal system to profit motive • nobles own lands • peasants have obligations and right to “commons” • rising value of land triggers “enclosure” • nobles begin selling or leasing lands • can hire laborers for low wages because of high unemployment caused by enclosure.

  5. Economic Changes in the 1500s • Agricultural Changes • land consolidation & rising rich/poor gap • “Convertible Husbandry” • replaces 3 field crop rotation • cereals, peas or beans, and cattle • Baltic becomes “Breadbasket for Western Europe”.

  6. Economic Changes in the 1500s Results • Growing, rootless population • Demand for land - primogeniture • Rise of consumerism • Demand for goods and materials • Reformation • Technology.

  7. Protestant Reformation • 1517 - Luther and 95 Theses • critical of RC Church practices, esp. selling indulgences • theologically unsound because salvation cannot be earned by works • Role played by printing presses.

  8. Protestant Reformation • Protestantism seen as personal salvation and way to renew corrupt society and government • religious and political movements of this time require support of princes • Luther gets support early • why?(beyond spiritual reasons) • Confiscate church lands • oppose Holy Roman Emperor • Germans can free themselves from Italian domination.

  9. Protestant Reformation • Luther only attacks church, not secular authority • 1524 Peasant revolt in Germany trying to decrease taxes, Luther sides with…. Foundering of the Church Nobles

  10. Spread of Protestantismto ~1560

  11. Reformation in England • England initially (1517-1534) remains staunchly Catholic • Dissention within the church hierarchy and distance from Rome weakens support for Pope • Henry’s inability to gain a male heir triggers the break between England and Rome.

  12. Henry VIII • Henry VIII and his six (!) wives • Pope delays giving an annulment • divorced, beheaded, died/ divorced, beheaded, survived • Act of Supremacy 1534 • Henry is head of “Church of England” - Anglican • “Catholic Lite” • beginnings of religious turmoil in England lasting until ~1660. Henry VIII

  13. Elizabeth I • daughter of Henry’s second wife - reigns from 1558-1603 • legality of claim • “Virgin” Queen • Male power & perception • Virginia • Catholic or Protestant? • Church of England.

  14. Elizabeth I • rising tensions with Spain • Mary Tudor & Catholicism • her husband • profit motive • monopolies • privateers • joint stock companies • assistance to Dutch rebels • increasing naval strength.

  15. Sir Francis Drake El Drago • Raiding in the Spanish Caribbean • Golden Hind • Capture of Santo Domingo • Assault on Florida • Roanoke. Francis Drake

  16. Spanish reaction • 1571 Battle of Lepanto • 1580 Portugal becomes part of Spanish empire • Phillip II seeks revenge on England • 1588 Spanish Armada.

  17. Spanish Armada • Fleet leaves Lisbon • 22,000 men • “Protestant Wind” • Psychological impact • Impact in New World.

  18. Foundations of Spanish and Portuguese Dominance • Technological change • Motive for discovery • Religion • Economic exploitation • Markets for European goods.

  19. Changing Ship Design Merchant Ship in 1532 in 1580

  20. Typical 1529 map

  21. New technologies

  22. Religious Motives • Catholics • oppose Protestants • seek to convert “heathens” • save their souls • easier to govern • Establishment of Spanish mission at Virginia Beach, VA - ~ 1570-1571 • Protestants • oppose Catholics • find Kingdom of Prestor John.

  23. Prester John

  24. Spain • dominance of native peoples • Bartolome de Las Casas • “black legend” vs. “deliverance from barbarism”.

  25. England • Late arrival in the new world - why? • Reformation splits England • occupation of Ireland • wars in Europe • privateering in the Caribbean • Roanoke colony - 1584 • purpose • pattern for future.

More Related