Title: The 17th and 18th(Neoclassical) Century 1625-1798
1The 17th and 18th(Neoclassical) Century1625-1798
2A Turbulent Time Historical Background
- In 1649, the English shocked the world by
beheading their king and abolishing the monarchy. - In the decades before the civil wars tore England
apart, revolutions in science and religion had
already unsettled peoples worldview.
3Changes
- The new astronomy had exiled the Earth from the
center of the universe to the vastness of
infinite space. - New religious creeds had altered or abolished the
traditions of centuries. - John Donne wrote, with his newfound insecurity,
Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone.
4Monarch is Back
- By the 1700s, though, a monarch was back on the
throne, and a new, competitive society had sprung
up, with a looser social structure and greater
freedom in religion and politics.
5Charles I and Parliament
- Crowned in 1625
- Clashed with Parliament over money
- King Charles needed money for his wars, and
Parliament refused to fund them.
6Loans? No Loans?
- The king then extorted loans from his wealthy
subjects and pressed the poor into service as
soldiers and sailors. - Parliament tried to prevent such abuses of power,
so Charles eventually dissolved Parliament and
would not call it into session for 11yrs.
7Religious Controversy
- He insisted the clergymen conform, or observe
all the ceremonies of the Anglican Church. - Puritans- Calvanists who wished to purify the
Church of its Catholic traditions- were enraged
by some of these requirements.
8The Civil War
- Charless problem grew worse after he was forced
to fight Scottish rebels outraged by his
insistence on religious conformity. - Desperate for money, he summoned a hostile
Parliament - Parliament condemned Charles I as a tyrant in
1642 - Civil war broke out
- In 1645, Parliaments forces, led by Oliver
Cromwell, defeated the royalist army and captured
Charles
9Cromwell Rules
- Radical Puritans dominated Parliament
- Tried and convicted the king for treason
- Charles I was beheaded on January 30, 1649
- Cromwell led the new government, called the
English Commonwealth - He dissolved Parliament in 1653 and named himself
Lord Protector - He ruled as a dictator until 1658 when he died
10Outlawing
- Civil war had not led to the free society that
many who had fought against the king expected. - Hopes, economic hardship unrest
- The Commonwealth fueled discontent by outlawing
- Gambling
- Horse racing
- Newspapers
- Fancy clothes
- Public dancing
- The theater
11The Restoration
- By Cromwells death, England had had enough
taxation, violence, and disorder. - In 1658, Parliament offered the crown to the
exiled son of Charles I, who became Charles II in
1660. - The monarch was restored
12- In sharp contrast to the drab Puritan leaders,
Charles II and his court copied the plush
fashions of Paris - Charles
- Avid patron of the arts and science
- Invited Italian composers and Dutch painters to
live and work in London.
13European Political Thinkers
Thinker Major Ideas Quotation
Thomas Hobbes Leviathan (1651) People are driven by selfishness and greed. To avoid chaos, they give up their freedom to a government that will ensure order. Such a government must be strong and able to suppress rebellion The condition of man in the state of nature is a condition of war of everyone against everyone.
14European Political Thinkers
Thinker Major Ideas Quotation
John Locke Two Treaties of Government (1690) People have a natural right to life, liberty, and property. Rulers have a responsibility to protect those rights. People have the right to change a government that fails to do so. Men being by nature all free, equal, and independent, no one can be put out of this estate and subjected to the political power of another without his own consent.
15A Glorious Revolution
- Charles IIs successor James II
- Devout Catholic.
- Parliament invited Mary, the Protestant daughter
of James II, to rule England jointly with her
husband, William of Orange. - Rather than fight, James escaped to France
- The people of England hailed the event as the
Glorious Revolution of 1688 because not a drop
of blood had been shed.
161689 Bill of Rights
- William and Mary agreed to Parliaments Bill of
Rights - This bill guaranteed Parliament the right to
approve all taxes and forbade the monarch to
suspend the law. - England thus attained a limited, or
constitutional, monarchy.
17Tories and Whigs
- In ensuing decades, two political factions
crystallized in Parliament the conservative,
aristocratic Tories and the Whigs, drawn largely
from Britains growing merchant class. - A cabinet of ministers drawn from Parliament, and
eventually unified under the leadership of a
prime minister, began to rule the country.
18An Agricultural Revolution
- By the late 1600s, new farm tools made it
possible for farms to produce much more food. - Population surged upward
- Many people left the countryside
- Growing towns
- Became factory hands who ran the machines of the
early Industrial Revolution
19The Enlightenment
- The scientific revolution that made industry
possible stemmed from a larger development in
thought known as the Enlightenment. - Through reason and observation of nature, human
beings could discover the order underlying all
things
20Literature of the PeriodThe Schools of Jonson
and Donne
21Ben Jonson ( 1572-1637)
- Strove for the perfection and harmony he found in
his beloved classical authors, turning away from
the ornate style of Elizabethan times to create
his own modern, strong voice. - He wrote poems, plays, and masques (court
entertainments)
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23Ben Jonson
- Took seriously the role of the poet
- He believed, in fact, that no other profession
could compare to it. - Poets, he wrote, encourage young men to all good
disciplines, inflame grown men to all great
virtues and keep old men in their best and
supreme state - A person could not be a good poet without being
a good man, he asserted
24John Donne ( 1572-1631)
25John Donne
- Pioneered a new, witty, cerebral style later
known as Metaphysical Poetry - Characterized by
- Unusual degree of intellectualism
- Subtle arguments that raid the worlds of science,
law, and philosophy for surprising but strangely
accurate comparisons.
26Examples of such
- A Valediction of Weeping
- Compares his tears, which reflect his lovers
face, to coins that are stamped with her image - A Valediction Forbidding Mourning
- Compares parted lovers to the two legs of a
drawing compass
27The Puritan Writers
- Perhaps the greatest poet of the 17th century was
a Puritan, not a Cavalier John Milton - The Puritan movement also produced the
best-selling prose writer of the century, John
Bunyan - Only the Bible sold more copies than Bunyans
religious narrative, The Pilgrims Progress.
28John Milton ( 1608-1674)
- Learned disciple of Greek and Latin authors
- Studied the Old Testament in Hebrew
29Milton
- Went blind in 1652 as a result of his labors
- Composed an epic that would explain why God
allows suffering in this world The epic,
Paradise Lost, reflects Miltons humanistic love
of poetry and his Puritan devotion to God.