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ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION. In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church
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INTRODUCTION • In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church • The decline of feudalism, the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation, and the Commercial Revolution all helped enrich European society and increase the power of European monarchs (hereditary rulers)
THE BIG QUESTION: • How did Europe’s rulers achieve absolute power?
WARS OF RELIGION • During the Reformation, most kings took control of religion within their own borders • Religious wars provided kings with an opportunity to build large standing armies • Introduced new government officials • Allowed tax increases (resistance was put down by the king’s army)
CHANGING ROLES OF THE NOBILITY • In the Middle Ages, nobles had been independent sources of power • In the 1600s, rulers began to “tame” the nobility by keeping watch over them. • Nobles kept wealth and privileges, but had to obey the king’s command • The growing urban middle classes often allied themselves with kings against the nobility
JUSTIFICATIONS FOR ROYAL POWER • “Reason of state” – justified doing whatever was necessary for the survival of the state • Some thought that without a strong central authority to keep order, society would break down, so kings were justified in seizing absolute power in order to maintain order in society • Divine right of kings – the king was God’s deputy on earth, and royal commands expressed God’s wishes
ACTIVITY • Complete the chart of absolute rulers. Include the years the monarch ruled, the country the monarch ruled, and key legislations or policies.
LEFT SIDE ACTIVITY • Choose one of the justifications for royal power and create a cartoon describing or illustrating it.
ABSOLUTISM IN RUSSIA • By the end of the 15th century, rulers around Moscow declared independence from Mongol rule (adopted the system of royal absolutism on a grand scale) • Conquered neighboring lands • The majority of population were serfs (just when serfdom was declining in Western Europe, it was increasing in Eastern Europe) • Russian nobility pledged absolute loyalty to the Tsar in return for their power over serfs
ACTIVITY • Add Peter the Great (1682-1725) and Catherine the Great (1762-1796) to your chart
Left Side Activity • Create a chart comparing absolutism in France and Russia. Include both similarities and differences
LIMITED MONARCHY IN ENGLAND • English monarchs were never able to establish absolute rule as those in France, Spain and Russia did • Checks had been placed on the English king’s power • Magna Carta (1215) guaranteed that Englishmen could not be fined or imprisoned without process of law and new taxes had to be approved by the king’s barons • Parliament: established as a legislative body made up of nobles and elected representatives
ENGLAND’S ROAD TO LIMITED MONARCHY • Create a flow chart describing the events leading to England’s Limited Monarchy: • Tudor Monarchs: Henry VIII and Elizabeth I • Early Stuart Monarchs: James I and Charles I • English Civil War (1642-1649): Oliver Cromwell • The Restoration: Charles II • The Glorious Revolution: William and Mary and the English Bill of Rights
POLITICAL THINKERS IN THE AGE OF ABSOLUTISM • Thomas Hobbes – Man was not naturally good and was incapable of maintaining social order, therefore absolute rule was necessary • John Locke – believed rulers obtained power from the people, not God. Promoted the “social contract”. The purpose of government was to protect natural rights (life, liberty, property) • Sir William Blackstone – explained English common law (judges following precedents of other courts) and England’s “mixed monarchy” where power was shared by king and Parliament.
EUROPEAN SOCIETY IN THE 18TH CENTURY • Social Order – The “Old Regime” • Society was aristocratic – people of noble birth were a race apart (superior to everyone else) • Nobles owned the most land, served as army officers, became Church bishops, and held the highest government positions