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World History II SOL Review. Age of Revolutions. English Civil War. English kings wanted to be absolute monarchs Parliament prevented kings from being absolute monarchs (Parliament controlled money)
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World History IISOL Review Age of Revolutions
English Civil War • English kings wanted to be absolute monarchs • Parliament prevented kings from being absolute monarchs (Parliament controlled money) • Charles I forced to sign Petition of Right - king cannot raise taxes without Parliament’s consent and king cannot imprison anyone without just cause
English Civil War • 1642 – Charles I led troops into Parliament – Civil War • 1649 – Charles I executed
Commonwealth • Oliver Cromwell ruled England after the execution of Charles I
Restoration • Charles II restored the monarchy to England in 1660 (reopened theaters and pubs)
Glorious Revolution • James II – too Catholic for England • 1688 – Parliament forced James II to flee and invited William and Mary (James II’s daughter) to rule England if they accepted the English Bill of Rights • England – limited monarch and a powerful Parliament
French Revolution • Causes – influence of Enlightenment ideas + American Revolution • Events – Storming of the Bastille + Reign of Terror (executed over 40,000 people with the guillotine) • Outcomes – End of absolute monarchy of Louis XVI + Rise of Napoleon
Impact • Independence came to French, Spanish, and Portuguese colonies in the Americas • Touissant L’Ouverture – Haiti’s independence • Simon Bolivar – The Liberator (liberated South America)
Artists, Philosophers, and Writers + New Technologies • Bach – Baroque composer • Mozart – Classical composer • Delacroix – romantic painter • Cervantes – novelist • New Forms of Art and Literature – paintings depicted classical subjects, public events, and living people (portraits) + novel • Technologies – all-weather roads (year round transportation) + new farm tools + improved ship designs
Congress of Vienna – Legacy of Napoleon • Unsuccessful attempt to unify Europe under French domination • Napoleonic Code • Awakened feelings of national pride and growth of nationalism
Congress of Vienna – Legacy of Congress of Vienna • Balance of Power – no country should dominate Europe • Restoration of monarchs – legitimacy • New political map – new boundaries • New philosophies – conservatives and liberals
Rise of Nationalism • National pride, economic competition, and democratic ideals stimulated the growth of nationalism • Congress of Vienna – led to discontent in Europe (did not include nationalists and liberals)
Revolutions of 1830 and 1848 • Liberal – change government • National – homeland • France 1830 – constitutional monarch (liberal revolution) • Belgium 1830 – gained independence (national)
Italy • Cavour – prime minister of Sardinia (organized unification of Italy) • Garibaldi – leader of the Red Shirts + conquered Kingdom of the Two Sicilies • Papal States – last to join Italy
Germany • Bismarck – prime minister of Prussia (responsible for the unification of Germany) • Realpolitiks – do whatever it takes to get and hold power • Franco-Prussian War led to the unification of Germany and Italy