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Chapter 21. Absolute Monarchs in Europe 1500-1800. Section 1. Spain’s Empire and European Absolutism. Absolutism. A political theory holding that all power should be vested in one ruler or other authority. Philip II. Accomplishments defended Roman Catholicism helped stimulate the arts.
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Chapter 21 Absolute Monarchs in Europe1500-1800
Section 1 Spain’s Empire and European Absolutism
Absolutism • A political theory holding that all power should be vested in one ruler or other authority.
Philip II • Accomplishments • defended Roman Catholicism • helped stimulate the arts
Northern Dutch • Gained their freedom from Spain • United Provinces of the Netherlands • Established a republic
United Provinces of the Netherlands • Differed from neighboring states • elected governors • power depended on landowners and merchants
Absolutism • Monarchs • Believed in Divine Right • God created the monarchy • Monarch acted as God’s representative on Earth • Answers only to God; not subjects
Section2 The Reign of Louis XIV
French Civil Wars • 1562-1598 • Main cause • Religious differences
How did religious and political turmoil in France encourage absolutism? Skepticism?
Henry of Navarre • Protestant prince • Catholic King • First king of the Bourbon dynasty
Edict of Nantes • Issued in hopes of bringing an end to violent religious conflicts in France
Cardinal Richelieu • Minister to Louis XIII • Increased the power of the Bourbon monarchy • Moved against the Huguenots • Weakened the power of the nobles
Louis XIV • Known as the Sun King • France’s most powerful ruler • Boasted, “I am the state”
Cardinal Mazarin • Minister to Louis XIV • Policies drove nobles to rebel against king
Jean Baptiste Colbert • Minister of Finance under Louis XIV • Mercantilism policies • Caused France’s economy to grow and prosper
Versailles • Palace built for Louis XIV • Political purpose • Showed the power of Louis XIV • Was the envy of other monarchs
Spanish Empire • Weakened • Experienced a period of severe inflation and heavy taxes
Section 3 Central European Monarchs Clash
Peace of Augsburg • German rulers agreement to settle religious differences
Thirty Years War • A war in Europe between 1618 and 1648 • Developed into a struggle for dominance between various powers, notably France, Spain, Sweden, and the Holy Roman Empire • Began as a war between the Catholic Holy Roman Emperor and some of his Protestant German states.
Peace of Westphalia • Ended the Thirty Years War
Austria • Maria Theresa • Inherited the Austrian thrown • Only after Charles VI had European power sign an agreement declaring they would recognize the heir
Prussia • Austria’s greatest enemy under Maria Theresa
Fredrick the Great • King of Prussia • Believed a ruler should be a father to his people
Maria Theresa • War of Austrian Succession • fought over the possession of lands that belonged to Maria Theresa
Section 4 Absolute Rulers of Russia
Ivan the Terrible • First Russian ruler to adopt the title of czar
Ivan the Terrible • Why he was called terrible: • Organized a police force that murdered people he considered traitors
Ivan the Terrible • Boyers • Landowning nobles • Suffered the greatest loss of power
Peter the Great • Serfs • Essential part of the Russian economy
Peter the Great • Liked visiting the west • Wanted to learn about Western customs and technology
Peter the Great • Westernized Russia • Raised the status of women • Made nobles wear western fashion
St. Petersburg • Built by Peter the Great • Why? • Wanted a city on a seaport • Near water routes to Europe • Made it easier to travel west
Section 5 Parliament Limits the English Monarchy
Constitutional Monarchy • 1600s • England’s system of government
James I • King of Scotland • Inherited Elizabeth I’s throne and her conflicts with Parliament
Charles I • King of England • Lost the English Civil War • Tried and put to death
Puritans • Won the English civil war • How? • Cromwell • Defeated the Royalists • Puritans held the king prisoner
Oliver Cromwell • Puritan leader • Ruled England after the end of the English Civil War • Abolished the monarchy • Ruled as a military dictator
Restoration • “Restored” the monarchy, as an institution, to power in England • Began when Charles II took the throne