280 likes | 298 Views
Bellwork Quiz. What Spanish king married Mary Tudor (along with 3 other women) and also utilized the Inquisition to reinforce/build his empire? What king is the most prominent example of absolute power? What did he build that best symbolizes this Age of Absolutism?
E N D
Bellwork Quiz • What Spanish king married Mary Tudor (along with 3 other women) and also utilized the Inquisition to reinforce/build his empire? • What king is the most prominent example of absolute power? • What did he build that best symbolizes this Age of Absolutism? • Name 1 of 2 issues that was the root of most European wars in the 17th/18th centuries.
AGE OF ABSOLUTISM Lesson: “Parliament limits the English Monarchy” Main Idea – In the 17th century, absolute rulers in England were overthrown and Parliament gained power. Why It Matters Now – Many government reforms of the this era influenced American democratic traditions.
The Stuart Dynasty • James I (1603-25) • Charles I (1625-49) • English Civil War (1642-49) • Cromwell/Commonwealth (1649-60) • Charles II (1660-85) • James II (1685-88) • William and Mary (III; II) (1689-94) • William III (1694-1702) • Anne (1702-1714)
The Stuart Dynasty • 1603 – Elizabeth I died after a 45 year reign with no heir. • Throne passed to her cousin James VI in Scotland = James I in England. • Difficult to rule both countries; James was unpopular in both.
Queen: Anne Children: Henry d. 1612 Elizabeth Charles I (r. 1625-49) 1607: Jamestown, VA 1611: KJV of the Bible Took 7 years to complete King James I1603-1625
James IWhy so unpopular??? • An outsider from Scotland • Tried to rule absolutely, disrespected Parliament (dissolved for a period) • Detached from government, allowed it to be dominated by his “favorites” • Lack of regal dignity • drunkenness, appearance, extravagant court, spent too much money
B. 1600 in Scotland Sickly, did not walk until age 7 Became heir when brother Henry died Queen: Henrietta Maria of France King Charles I (r. 1625-49)
Charles I • Even more unpopular than his father. • More civilized, but haughty and stubborn • Clashed with Parliament over 2 main issues: MONEY and RELIGION. • Dissolved Parliament in 1629 and declared he would rule alone; imposed illegal taxes w/out P’s consent • Many MP’s – Puritans; feared Catholic influence (Henrietta Maria)
Leading Up to War… • 1637 – Charles imposed the Book of Common Prayer in Scotland • Forced to call Parliament in 1640 to raise $ for military action. • Long Parliament – in place until 1660 • 1642- Charles tried to arrest ringleader MPs who opposed him. • They escaped…but the war began!
English Civil War1642-49 • King Charles and his supporters = Cavaliers • Parliament and supporters = Roundheads • Early battles won by the Cavaliers • 1645- Cavaliers suffered many defeats by the New Model Army led by Oliver Cromwell. • 1647- Charles was captured and placed under house arrest.
English Civil War • Charles was stripped of his title and put on trial for treason. It lasted 8 days. • He refused to enter a plea or defend himself. Why? • Beheaded in 1649. First time a monarch had ever been tried and executed by his own people. • The monarchy was abolished by Parliament and England became a republic known as the Commonwealth.
“Horrible Histories:” • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4b0G_auKCI • Charles’ Trial • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF76756no5Y • Charles’ Execution • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPmSR--BktE
Critical Thinking ? • Only 59 of the 159 commissioners signed Charles’s death warrant. Why do you think many of the people presiding over Charles’s trial refused to sign his death warrant?
The Restoration • 1658- Oliver Cromwell dies. • 1660- Charles II crowned king after Parliament votes to restore the monarchy. • Restoration of English culture, too. Theatres and taverns were reopened.
Charles II • 1662- married Catherine of Braganza (Portuguese princess) • She suffered many miscarriages, never produced an heir. • Charles did father several illegitimate children with his numerous mistresses. • Nicknamed the “merry monarch” • Easy-going, love of sports, entertainment, collector of mistresses
Charles II • A little too merry??? • Not pious or very serious • 1665- heat wave and outbreak of the Bubonic Plague (app. 70,000 died) • 1666- Great Fire of London (destroyed most of city, left over 100,000 homeless) • Legacy: Not overly significant, but 25 years of stable monarchy following a civil war and the Commonwealth.
Charles II (R. 1660-85)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2kyNbZc7oc
James II (Charles’s brother)R. 1685-88 *Problem: He was Catholic. Had 2 Protestant daughters from first marriage, Mary and Anne. In 1688, his wife had a son. Suddenly, the prospect of a Catholic line was very real. MP’s invited his daughter Mary (m. William of Orange) to overthrow King James.
The Glorious Revolution • William of Orange invaded with 15,000 troops in 1688. • James II fled to France. • A “bloodless revolution” • England became a constitutional monarchy. • W & M had to accept the English Bill of Rights before they were crowned.
William and Mary • She was popular; he was not • She was 5’11’’; he was only 5’6’’ • She died in 1694 at age 32 from smallpox • He died from complications after a horse fall that broke his collar bone in 1702
English Bill of Rights ~ Assured superiority of Parliament • Gave House of Commons the “power of the purse” • Parliament had final authority on war, taxes, and passing laws. • Monarch – no standing army allowed • MPs guaranteed free speech • People – right to petition the king • No cruel/unusual punishment
Queen Anne • The last Stuart monarch and younger sister of Mary II. (Father was James II) • 37 yrs old when she became queen. -Suffered 6 miscarriages, 11 stillbirths or infant deaths, and her only surviving son died at 11. • 1707- Act of Union – England and Scotland became Great Britain. • English throne passed to her second cousin, George of Hanover, who became King George I.