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The Glorious English Revolution

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Here, King and Parliament struggled to determine the roles each should play in ... by Calvinism, wished to remove any trace of 'popery' from the Church of England. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Glorious English Revolution


1
The Glorious English Revolution
2
AbsolutismEngland and Constitutional Monarchy
  • Monarchy One ruler who acquires his or her
    position through inheritance or family ties.
  • Absolute Monarchy - the one ruler has total,
    unlimited authority and power

3
AbsolutismEngland and Constitutional Monarchy
  • The most prominent example or resistance to
    absolute monarchy came in the 17th C. England.
  • Here, King and Parliament struggled to determine
    the roles each should play in governing England
  • The outcome was much different than on the
    continent

4
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • With the death of Queen Elizabeth I in 1603 the
    Tudor dynasty came to an end and the Stuart line
    of rulers was inaugurated.
  • King James I took the throne (son of Mary Queen
    of Scots)
  • He believed in the Divine Right of Kings, this
    alienated the parliament which was accustomed to
    the Tudors rule in which the Monarch and
    Parliament worked together

5
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • King James I (r. 1603-1625)
  • Known for the authorization of the King James
    version of the bible

6
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • The Puritans were alienated by James strong
    defense of the Anglican church.
  • Puritans were protestants within the Anglican
    church who, inspired by Calvinism, wished to
    remove any trace of popery from the Church of
    England.
  • Many of Englands wealthy landowners, below the
    level of Nobility, had become Puritans.
  • They formed and important and large part of the
    House of Commons, the Lower House of Parliament.
  • It was not wise to alienate them.

7
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • The conflict that had begun during the reign of
    James I came to a head during the reign of his
    son, Charles I (r. 1625-1649).
  • Charles also believed in the divine right of
    Kings.
  • From the onset of his reign it became apparent
    that the constitutional issues between the
    Monarch and Parliament would not be easily
    resolved.

8
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • King Charles I (r. 1625-1649)
  • Supported by the High Church, Nobility
    peasants.
  • Opponents were the wealthy landowners, middle
    class, merchants, and Puritans

9
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Religious differences also added to the hostility
    between them.
  • Charles attempted to impose more ritual on the
    Anglican Church, Puritans saw it as a return to
    Catholicism.
  • When Charles tried to force the Puritans to
    accept his religious policies, thousands went to
    America instead.

10
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Grievances finally mounted until England finally
    slipped into a civil war (1642-1648) that was won
    by the Parliamentary forces.
  • Parliaments success over the King was largely
    due to the success of Oliver Cromwell, the
    Puritan Army leader.

11
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Oliver Cromwell (r. 1649-1658)
  • Believed he was doing battle for God.

12
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Charles I was tried and convicted (68-67 vote) by
    Parliament and was executed.
  • After his execution Parliament abolished the
    Monarchy and the House of Lords and proclaimed
    England a Republic or Commonwealth.

13
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • However, Cromwell and his army, unable to work
    effectively with Parliament, dispersed it by
    force.
  • In its place, Cromwell established a military
    dictatorship, ironically using more arbitrary
    policies than those of Charles I.
  • After Cromwells death in 1658, the army decided
    that military rule was no longer feasible and
    restored the monarchy in the person of Charles
    II, the son of Charles I

14
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Charles II (r. 1660-1685)

15
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • However, to the chagrin of the Puritans Charles
    II was sympathetic to Catholicism.
  • Moreover, his brother James, heir to the throne,
    did not hide the fact he was Catholic.
  • Parliaments suspicions were aroused when Charles
    II took the audacious step of issuing a
    declaration of indulgence - suspending laws
    parliament had passed against Catholics and
    Puritans after the restoration of the Monarchy.

16
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • Parliament would have none of it and induced the
    King to suspend the declaration. He did.
  • The accession of James II (r. 1685 - 1688) to the
    crown virtually guaranteed a new constitutional
    crisis for England.
  • An open and devout Catholic, James attempts to
    further Catholic interests made religion once
    more a primary cause of conflict between King and
    Parliament.

17
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • King James II (r. 1685-1688)
  • Fervent Catholic, tried to persecute the
    protestants.
  • He was hated by the English populace and
    Parliament

18
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • James named Catholics to high positions in the
    government, Army, Navy, and Universities.
  • In 1687, he issued the Declaration of
    indulgences, thus suspending all laws excluding
    Catholics and Puritans.
  • Parliamentary outcries against James policies
    stopped short of rebellion since members knew
    that he was an old man, and his successors were
    his protestant daughters Mary and Anne, born to
    his first wife.

19
Absolutism England Revolution and Civil War
  • But, on June 10, 1688 a son was born to James
    second wife, also a Catholic.
  • Suddenly the specter of a Catholic hereditary
    monarchy loomed large on the horizon.
  • A group of prominent English nobleman
    Parliament invited the Dutch chief executive,
    William of Orange, husband of James daughter
    Mary, to invade England and lead a Protestant
    revolution.

20
End of Absolutism William and Mary
  • William and Mary raised an Army and invaded
    England while James, his wife, and infant son
    fled to France.
  • With almost no bloodshed, England had undergone
    its Glorious Revolution.
  • In January 1689 Parliament offered the throne to
    William and Mary, who accepted it along with the
    provisions of the Bill of Rights

21
End of Absolutism William and Mary
  • William III (r. 1689-1702)
  • Died when he was thrown from a horse when the
    horse stepped in a mole hole.
  • Mary II (r. 1689-1694)
  • Died early from smallpox
  • Jacobite plots were frequent during their reign.

22
End of Absolutism William and Mary Jacobites
  • Throughout the reigns of William and Mary and
    Anne, other descendants of James II claimed to be
    the rightful King.
  • The Jacobites were the Scottish Highlanders, who
    supported James and Charles.

23
End of Absolutism William and Mary Bill of
Rights
  • The Bill of Rights affirmed
  • Parliaments right to make laws and levy taxes
  • The rights of citizens to keep arms and be tried
    by a jury
  • By deposing one King and establishing another,
    Parliament had destroyed the Divine Right
    theory of Kingship (William was, after all, King
    by grace of Parliament, not God) and asserted its
    rights to participate in the Government.

24
End of Absolutism Britains Constitutional
Monarchy
  • Parliament did not have complete control of the
    Government, but it now had the right to
    participate in affairs of state.
  • Parliament strengthened its control over the
    collection and expenditure of public money.
  • Future sovereigns were thereafter unable to
    conduct the countrys business without recourse
    to the House of Commons for funds to do so
  • Over the next century, it would gradually prove
    to be the real authority in the British system of
    Constitutional Monarchy.
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