Title: The Wars of Religion (1560s-1648)
1TheWars ofReligion(1560s-1648)
2Civil War In France (1562-1598)
3The Valois FamilyThe Beginning of the End
- Henri II was the last powerful Valois
- Three weak sons followed
- Francis II
- Charles IX
- Henri III
- Catherine de Medici controlled the sons
- Was mother to the boys
- Played both sides in the civil war (Politique)
- Developed a reputation for cruelty
4Catherine de Medici
5Francis II His Wife, Mary Stuart
6The French Civil War
- There were two sides
- Guise family led Catholics in North
- Bourbon family led Huguenots in South
- Fighting for the royal inheritance
- Catherine supported the Guises in the first
phase. - St. Bartholomews Day Massacre
- August 24, 1572
- 20,000 Huguenots were killed
- Henri of Navarre, a Bourbon, survived
7St. Bartholomews Day Massacre
8The French Civil War
- Catherine started supporting the Bourbons.
-
- Henri of Navarre defeated Catholic League
becomes Henry IV of France. - Effects of Civil War
- France was left divided by religion
- Royal power had weakened
- Valois family now replaced by Bourbons
CatholicLeague
ProtestantUnion
CIVILWAR
9Triumphal Entry of Henry IV Into Paris Peter
Paul Reubens
10Henry IV of France
- Ended Spanish interference in France
- Converted to Catholicism
- Did this to compromise and make peace
- Paris is worth a mass.
- This was an example of politique the interest of
the state comes first before any religious
considerations - Fighting for the royal inheritance
- Passed Edict of Nantes in 1598
- Granted religious rights to Huguenots
- Did not grant religious freedom for all
11Imperial Spain and Philip II
12Kagans Four Pillars of Spanish Power
- New World Riches
- Incredible wealth from gold and silver mines BUT
Spain never entirely free of debt - Increased Population
- Gap between rich and poor grew immensely Spanish
peasantry most heavily taxed in all of Europe - Efficient Bureaucracy Military
- Lesser nobility efficient, loyal bureaucratic
machine - Supremacy in the Mediterranean
- Battle of Lepanto, 1571 1/3 of Turkish fleet
sunk or captured - 1580 Philip inherits Portugal Spanish army
dominates resistance
13el Escorial
14el Escorial
15- Revolt in the Netherlands 1568-1648 (a.k.a. The
Eighty Years War)
16Habsburg History
- Charles V (1515-1556)
- Born in Ghent, Belgium in 1500 inherits Low
Countries 1515 - Seen as one of their own
- Philip II inherits 1556 but he is SPANISH! and
CATHOLIC! therefore resented - Calvinism strong in Netherlands
- Philip great defender of Catholic faith -
tries to root out Calvinism by force (Spanish
Inquisition Spanish troops)
17Dutch Revolt
- Philip makes his sister Margaret, regent
Cardinal Granvelle, head councilor - But Calvinists angry and attack Antwerp
churches, libraries, statues, altars destroyed - William of Orange (the Silent) Count of
Egmont - (German but has estates in Netherlands)
organizes Calvinist province leaders against
Spanish war at sea (Dutch, Danes, Scots
English) - William changes religion three times for
political reasons to resist oppressive Spanish
rule in the Netherlands Catholic
?Lutheran?Calvinist Puritan
18Duke of Alba
- U6.2 6
- Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, duke of Alba, who was
appointed captain-general of the Netherlands
The Duke of Alba presiding over the Council of
Troubles
19- Calvinist Dutch privateers, known the Sea
Beggars, assault the port of Brill in April 1572
during the Netherlands revolt against Spanish
domination. The Sea Beggars, who used their
shallow draft boats to effectively control
important waterways, were a significant factor in
the success of the Dutch Revolt. - "Dutch Revolt." Image. Hulton Archive. World
History The Modern Era. ABC-CLIO, 2010. Web. 12
Sept. 2010. lthttp//worldhistory.abc-clio.com/gt
20Spanish Fury -
- What was the Spanish Fury, Nov. 4, 1576?
- What was the Pacification of Ghent, Nov. 8, 1576?
To what other treaty can it be compared? - Jan. 1577 Union of Brussels 2 yrs. Unified
Netherlands! - What was the Perpetual Edict?
- Was the Dutch Revolt over?
21Unity broken
- Alex Farnese, Duke of Parma (Margarets son) to
break unity in 1579 - William of Orange and friends hold 7 northern
provinces establish the Union of Utrecht, deny
Spanish control - Southern provinces form Catholic union, Union of
Arras, and accept Spanish control - Dec. 1580 the Apology (U2.6 11)
- Dutch Declaration of Independence (1581)
- French duke of Alençon (deposed in 1583)
- July 1584, William of Orange assassinated
- Maurice aided by England and France
22Fall of Philip II in the Netherlands
- How did Philip II undermine his own ability to
re-take the Netherlands in the 1580s? - Elizabeth I, Queen of England dilemma
- either help Protestants thereby antagonizing
Philip - or not help, but Spain might invade England if
they gain Netherlands - so she helps the Dutch secretly then openly and
in 1588 she defeats the Spanish Armada in the
English Channel
23The Netherlands . . . after the revolt
- 1609 revolt ends Union of Utrecht becomes
United Provinces (aka Dutch Republic) but do
not gain independence from Spain until 1648 with
the Treaty of Westphalia (end of 30 Years War)
24The Spanish Hapsburgs Europe (1556)
Philip II consolidated Hapsburg landsat the end
of the 16c.
25The Spanish NetherlandsUnion of Utrecht, 1579
The United Provinces still recognized Spanish
rule, but, in 1581, they declared their
independence.
26The Netherlands (1609)
27The Dutch Federation
REGENTS - provincial level - held
virtually all the power - strong advocates of
local independence
STADHOLDER - States General
representative from each province - responsible
for defense and order
STATES GENERAL - federal
assembly - foreign affairs (war) - all issues had
to be referred to the local Estates
28England (1553-1603)
- The Reign of Mary I and Elizabeth I
Queen Elizabeth II welcomes Pope Benedict XVI to
Scotland, Sept. 16, 2010 BBC
29Queen Mary I, r.1553-1558
- Born 1513, ½ sister of Edward and devout
Catholic daughter of Catherine of Aragon U2.7
1, 2 - 1554 married Philip II of Spain
- Distrust made Catholicism more unpopular
- 300 heretics were burned at the stake, public
mass executions (i.e. Thomas Cranmer, John
Hooper) - U7.3 3 - How did being in exile actually make
this group more radical? - 1558 Mary dies of stomach cancer
- England actually more Protestant than in 1553
30Queen Elizabeth I (r. 1558-1603)
Queen Mary I (r.1553-1558)
31Queen Elizabeth I, (r. 1558-1603)
- Born 1533, legitimate child?? Act of
Succession, 1534 (but Edward rescinds this act) - imprisoned by Bloody Mary on charges of
conspiracy - sexually abused by Catherine Parrs 4th husband,
Lord Thomas Seymour (also her uncle by marriage) - 1558 ascends the throne
32Elizabethan Religious Settlement, 1559-1603 U2.7
4 5
- Re-establishes Church of England (Anglican
Church) w/ aid of Sir William Cecil 1559
reaffirms the Act of Supremacy (original AoS,
1534) - Act of Uniformity, 1559 Book of Common Prayer
(Edward VI) - broad, ambiguous dogmas that accommodated many
believers - all required to belong BUT those who refused
Puritans (English Calvinists) Catholics are
mildly tolerated (ignored) as long as they didnt
threaten unity of her rule - 1563 ThirtyNine Articles moderate
Protestantism official religion within the
Church of England
33- From left to right are as follows Philip and
Mary with War, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Elizabeth I
with Peace and Plenty
34Catholic Protestant Extremists
- English nobles in Ireland adopt 39-Articles BUT
- native Irish remain Catholic - view the Church of
Ireland as political tool of ruling English class - Catholic extremists supported by Spain and France
- U2.7 6
- Puritans, Presbyterians and Congregationalists
also a problem U2.7 7
35Deterioration of Relations with Spain U2.7 8
- 1567, Spain troops under Duke of Alba occupy
Netherlands is England the next target? - 1570 Pope Pius V excommunicates Elizabeth
- Sea Beggars take Brill in the Netherlands
- 1571 Spain defeat Turks in Battle of Lepanto
English enter defense pact w/ France - 1570s state-sanctioned piracy against Spanish
begins - 1585, Treaty of Nonsuch English soldiers and
cavalry sent to Netherlands
36Mary,Queen of Scots (Stuart) U2.7 9
Elizabeth I (Tudor)
37Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots
- Queen of Scotland, Catholic heir to English
throne after Elizabeth - 1568, forced to flee by John Knoxs Calvinists
(Presbyterians) - also possibly involved with death/murder of first
husband, Lord Darnley - believed to be involved in several plots to take
throne from Elizabeth - 1571 Ridolfi Plot
- 1582 Duke of Guise Plot
- 1583 Throckmorton Plot
- 1586 Babington Plot
- Feb. 18, 1587 beheaded after 19 years internment
38Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588
- Spanish Fleet led by Duke of Medina-Sidonia -
25,000 Spanish sailors, 130 ships, 123,790
cannonballs - English fleet led by Sir Francis Drake - 197
ships smaller, more agile (U2.710)
39Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588
- The Spanish Plan to reach the Netherlands and
pick up the Duke of Parmas men get them across
to England for war! - Problems Winds vs. them takes 3 wks to reach
N. Spain, then - July 30 1st battle then English follow the
Armada up the Channel - August 6 Calais but Duke of Parma isnt ready
- Armada low on water, food, ammunition English
are preparing an attack to prevent the rendezvous
of the Armada and the Dukes army
40(No Transcript)
41Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588
- August 7 English attack with fireships set
some of the larger Spanish galleys on fire - By 4pm on Aug 8
- Spanish face defeat so escape to North Sea ---
lose numerous ships to wind run aground on
cliffs of Ireland --- tragedy!!! - By Aug 12 Duke of Medina-Sidonia capitulates
- 15,000-20,000 Spaniards dead ½ of the navy
- Between 1/3 and ½ of Spanish ships destroyed
- The invincible armada católica is defeated!
- England new European naval super power
42TheThirty Years War (1618-1648)
431618-1648
44Characteristics of the Thirty Years War
- The Holy Roman Empire was the battleground.
- At the beginning ? it was the Catholics vs. the
Protestants. - At the end ? it was Habsburg power that was
threatened. - Resolved by the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648.
45The Bohemian Phase 1618-1622
- Ferdinand II inherited Bohemia.
- The Bohemians hated him.
- Ferdinand refused to tolerate Protestants.
- Defenestration of Prague ?May, 1618
- Bohemia named a new king, Frederick II.
46The Bohemian Phase 1618-1622
- Ferdinand II becomes Holy Roman Emperor.
- Frederick II borrowed an army from Bavaria.
- Frederick lost his lands in the fighting.
- The rebellion in Bohemia inspired others.
47Bohemian Phase
48The Danish Phase 1625-1629
- Ferdinand II tried to end all resistance.
- Tried to crush Protestant northern Holy Roman
Empire. - Ferdinand II used Albrecht von Wallenstein for
the army. - Wallenstein defeated Protestants in north.
- Edict of Restitution (1629)
- Restored to Catholics all lands lost since 1552.
- Deprived all Protestants, except Lutherans, of
their religious and political rights. - German princes feared Ferdinand ? he fired
Wallenstein in effort to calm them.
49Danish Phase
50AlbrechtvonWallenstein
51The Swedish Phase 1630-1635
- France Sweden now get involved.
- Both want to stop Habsburg power.
- Sweden led the charge.
- France provided support.
- Catholic Cardinal Richelieu is supporting
German Protestants over German Catholics - Why? Richelieu cared more about breaking the
Habsburg encirclement of France than unifying
Christianity under the Catholic Church. Richelieu
is a Politique!!! - Gustavus Adolphus invaded the HR Empire.
- Ferdinand II brought back Wallenstein.
- Swedish advance was stopped.
- German princes still feared Ferdinand II.
- Wallenstein assassinated to appease them.
52Swedish Phase
53GustavusAdolphus
54The French Phase 1635-1648
- France Sweden switched roles. Richelieu and
France go from supporting the Protestant cause
financially to actively sending troops to fight
the Catholic League - All countries in Europe now participated.
- This phase was most destructive!
- German towns decimated.
- Agriculture collapsed ? famine resulted.
- 8 million dead ? 1/3 of the population from 21
million in 1618 to 13.5 million in 1648 - Caused massive inflation.
- Trade was crippled throughout Europe.
55Loss of German Lives in 30 Years War
56The Peace of Westphalia (1648)
- Political Provisions
- Each Ger. prince became free from any kind of
control by the HR Emperor. - The United Provinces Dutch Neths. became
officially independent ? so. part remained a
Spanish possession (Belgium today). - Fr. recovered. most of the German-speaking
province of Alsace. - Sweden ? got lands in No. Ger. on the Baltic
Black Sea coasts. - Switzerland became totally independent of the HR
Emperor ? Swiss Confederation. - Sweden won a voice in the Diet of the HR Emp.
- Brandenburg got important territories on No. Sea
in central Germany.
57The Peace of Westphalia (1648)
- Religious Provisions
- Calvinists would have the same privileges as the
Lutherans had in the Peace of Augsburg. - The ruler of each state could determine its
official religion, BUT except in the hereditary
lands of the Habsburgs, he must permit freedom
of private worship.
58Treaty of Westphalia (1648)
591688-1700
60Nobody Was Happy!
- Many Protestants felt betrayed.
- The pope denounced it.
- Only merit ? it ended the fighting in a war that
became intolerable! - For the next few centuries, this war was blamed
for everything that went wrong in Central Europe.
61What were the long-range effects of the Thirty
Years War?