Title: State Building and the
1Chapter 15
- State Building and the
- Search for Order in the
- Seventeenth Century
2Social Crises, War, and Rebellions
- Economic Contraction
- Import of silver from Americas declined
- Economic recession intensified
- Population Changes
- 16th century saw growth
- First population recovery since the Black Death
- 17th century leveled off declined
- Population growth leveled off by 1620 and
declined slightly by 1750 - Population fluctuated narrowly for the rest of
the 17th century - Reasons war, famine, and plague along with a
little ice age which affected harvests
3Possible Test Question
- Seventeenth-century European population
- Increased dramatically due to greater food
production. - Decreased dramatically due to disease and war.
- Experienced great fluctuations as European
nations established colonies. - Fluctuated narrowly, constrained by famines and
diseases. - A and C.
4- The Witchcraft Craze
- Witchcraft existed for centuries as a traditional
village culture - Medieval church connected witchcraft to the
devil, making it an act of heresy - Establishment of the Inquisition in the 13th
century, increased prosecutions and executions - Accusations against witches
- Allegiance to the devil
- Attended sabbats
- Use of evil incantations or potions
5- Reasons for witchcraft prosecutions
- Religious uncertainty (areas of strife between
Protestants Catholics) - Social conditions old single women cut off from
charity by the new emphasis on capitalism over
communal interests became the scapegoats when
problems arose - Women as primary victims
- Most theologians, lawyers, philosophers
believed women were inferior to men more
susceptible to witchcraft - Begins to subside by mid-seventeenth century
- Fewer judges were willing to prosecute accused
witches - A more educated populous questioned the old view
of a world haunted by spirits
6Possible Test Question
- The witch hunts of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries - Came out of the social unrest deriving from the
shift from individualism to communalism. - were often directed against old single women.
- Were generally directed only at people who denied
that they were religious. - Were primarily restricted to rural areas.
- Were minimal in comparison to the late Middle
Ages.
7The Thirty Years War (1618 1648)
- Background
- Religious conflict (militant Catholicism
militant Calvinism) - Secular, dynastic-nationalist considerations were
more important - Tensions in the Holy Roman Empire
- Most of the fighting took place in Germany, but
it was a Europe wide struggle - Conflict for European leadership
- Between Bourbon dynasty of France vs.
- Habsburg dynasty of Spain Holy Roman
Empire - Posturing for war (think alliance system)
- Frederick IV of Palatinate (Calvinist) formed the
Protestant Union - Duke Maximilian of Bavaria (Catholic) formed the
Catholic League of German States - Germany divided into two armed alliances along
religious lines - Holy Roman Emperors looked to relatives in Spain
to help consolidate their authority in the German
States - German princes looked to Spains enemy France for
support
8The Bohemian Phase (1618-1625)
- Bohemian estates accepted Habsburg Archduke
Ferdinand as their king - Ferdinand set about re-catholicizing Bohemia
- Protestants rebelled in 1618, deposing Ferdinand
electing Protestant ruler Frederick V of
Palatinate (head of Protestant Union) - Ferdinand is elected Holy Roman Emperor
returned with the help of Maximilian of Bavaria
the Catholic League - Imperial forces Spanish retook Bohemia
captured Palatinate by 1622
9The Danish Phase (1625 1629)
- King Christian IV of Denmark intervened on the
Protestant side - Formed alliances with United Provinces England
- Christian IVs forces were defeated, ending
Danish supremacy in the Baltic Sea - Emperor Ferdinand II issued the Edict of
Restitution (1629) - Prohibited Calvinist worship
- Restored property to the Catholic church
10The Swedish Phase (1630 1635)
- Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden enters the war
- Gustavuss army defeated imperial forces moved
into central Germany - Imperial forces defeat the Swedes at the battle
of Nordlingen, ensuring that southern Germany
would remain Catholic - The emperor tried to use this victory to make
peace by annulling the Edict of Restitution of
1629 - The peace failed because the Swedes wished to
continue fighting the French Catholics under
Cardinal Richelieu were about to enter the war on
the Protestant side
11The Franco-Swedish Phase (1635 1648)
- Battle of Rocroi (1643) French defeat Spanish
troops, ending Spains military greatness - French defeat Bavarian Imperialist armies in
Southern Germany - War in Germany ends in 1648 but continues between
the French Spanish until 1659
12Possible Test Question
- The Thirty Years War
- Eventually involved every country in Europe and
Asia. - Is considered by most to be the first modern
war. - Is considered by most to be part of the larger
Bourbon-Habsburg struggle. - Was primarily fought in Spain.
- Was exclusively caused by religious differences.
13Possible Test Question
- The event that sparked the Thirty Years War was
- A rebellion of Protestant nobles against the
Catholic ruler Ferdinand in Bohemia. - The invasion of France by Frederick IV.
- The Spanish conquest of the Netherlands and
subsequent local enforcement of the bloody
Inquisition. - The overthrow of Spanish rule in Mesoamerica by
Dutch pirates and privateers. - Englands victory over the Spanish Armada.
14Outcomes of the 30 year war
- Peace of Westphalia (1648)
- All German states were free to determine their
own religion - France Sweden gained territory
- Holy Roman emperor reduced to a figurehead
- Made clear that religion politics were now
separate - Social and economic effects
- Decline in German Population
- Some areas of Germany were devastated, others
were untouched experienced economic growth - Most destructive European war to date
15Possible Test Question
- As a result of the Peace of Westphalia of 1648
- The German population was to be converted to
Catholicism. - All German states could choose their own
religions, except for Calvinism. - German states were allowed to determine their
religion. - The institution of the Holy Roman Empire was to
be the ruling force in Germany for the next 100
years. - The Holy Roman Empire was dismembered.
16Outcomes continued
- Peace of Pyrenees (1659)
- Ends the conflict between France Spain
- Spain becomes a 2nd class power
- France emerges as the dominant European nation
- Some historians feel the 30 years (1618-1648)
should actually be called the 50 years war
(1609-1659) stretching from the formation of the
Protestant Union Catholic League to the Peace
of Pyrenees
17Map 15.1 The Thirty Years War
18A Military Revolution?
- War and Politics in Seventeenth-Century Europe
made it essential that a ruler had a powerful
military - New Tactics
- Battalions of infantry armed with pikes became
superior to cavalry - Gustavus Adolphus employed a standing army
(conscripts) instead of mercenaries - Mixed musketeers with pikemen effectively (volley
of shots followed by a rush) - Adolphus used a similar strategy with cavalry
- New Technologies
- Firearms, cannons, standing armies, mobile
tactics - The Cost of a Modern Military
- Heavier taxes making war an economic burden
- State bureaucracy grew and so did the power of
state government
19Possible Test Question
- The military revolution, or changes in the
science and practice of warfare between 1550 and
1650, saw armies - Become more disciplined but less flexible.
- Align in units of blocks rather than lines.
- Abandon the use of cavalry.
- Change from mercenaries to conscripts for
manpower. - Change from conscripts to more reliable mercenary
soldiers.
20Rebellions
- Peasant Revolts (1590 1640)
- France, Austria, Hungary, Portugal and Catalonia
experienced Peasant revolts - France also had nobles revolt 1648 to 1652
- Russia (1641, 1645 and 1648)
- Peasant revolts in the cities
- Sweden, Denmark United Provinces
- Revolts involving clergy, nobles, workers
- Most revolts were due to the 30 Years War and
discontent over government
21Absolute Monarchy in France
- Absolutism sovereign power or ultimate
authority in the state rested in the hands of a
king who claimed to rule by divine right - Foundations of French Absolutism
- Political Theorist Jean Bodin defined sovereign
power as authority to - Make laws, tax, administer justice, control the
state determine foreign policy - Bishop Jacques Bossuet wrote
- Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy
Scripture God established kings so their rule
was divine
22Possible Test Question
- Absolutism means
- The real power in any state must be religious and
exercised by the church. - Ultimate authority rests solely in the hands of a
king who rules by divine right. - Subordinate powers have an absolute right to
advise the king on conducting the affairs of
state. - No matter how humble, male citizens have an
absolute right to participate in politics. - Rule by a secular dictator, justifying his/her
authority by supposedly serving the people.
23Cardinal Richelieu (1624 1642)
- Cardinal Richelieu (1624 1642)
- Louis XIIIs chief advisor
- Initiated policies that strengthened the monarchy
- Eliminated political military rights of
Huguenots (French Calvinists) but preserved their
religious ones - Transformed the Huguenots into more reliable
subjects - Eliminated noble threats to the crown
- Sent out royal officials (intendants) to reform
strengthen the central government - Richelieu ran the crown into debt
- Mismanagement of funds 30 Years War
expenditures
24Possible Test Question
- As Louis XIIIs chief minister, Cardinal
Richelieu was most successful in - Evicting the Huguenot presence from France after
the La Rochelle rebellion. - Expanding the political and social rights of the
Huguenots. - Creating a reservoir of funds for the treasury.
- Emerging victorious from the Fronde revolts of
the nobility. - Strengthening the central role of the monarchy in
domestic and foreign policy.
25Cardinal Mazarin (1642 1661)
- Cardinal Mazarin (1642 1661)
- Richelieus successor
- Louis the XIII died a few months later
- Louis the XIV inherited the crown at the age of 4
- Mazarin was Italian born, so he was resented
- The Fronde-Noble Revolt
- Nobles sided with Parlement of Paris-both opposed
taxes levied to pay for 30 Years War - 1st Fronde- Nobles of the robe (lawyers
administrators) ended in compromise - 2nd Fronde Nobles of the sword, (medieval
nobles) was crushed as nobles began fighting
amongst themselves - After the Fronde ended, the people of France
looked to the crown to provide stability
26Possible Test Question
- The series of noble revolts known as the Fronde
resulted in - The assassination of Cardinal Mazarin in 1661.
- Renewed power for the Parlement of Paris.
- A unified noble army securing and increasing its
own power. - French citizens looking to the monarchy for
stability. - The reappearance of the Estates General as
Frances law-making body.
27The Reign of Louis XIV (1643 1715)
- Louis XIV took control of France at the age of 23
- Administration of the Government
- Domination and bribery
- Dominated the actions of ministers and
secretaries - Stacked the royal council with loyal followers
from new aristocratic families - Issued bribes to control provinces and the people
who ran them - Religious Policy One King, one law, one faith
- Edict of Fontainebleau (1685)
- Revoked the Edict of Nantes (1598)
- Destruction of Huguenot churches closing of
Protestant schools - Over 200k Huguenots left France, weakening the
economy strengthening Protestant opposition to
Louis in other countries
28Possible Test Question
- Louis XIV restructured the policy-making
machinery of the French government by - Personally dominating the actions of his
ministers and secretaries. - Stacking the royal council with loyal followers
from relatively new aristocratic families. - Selecting his ministers from established
aristocratic families. - All of the above.
- A and B.
29Possible Test Question
- Louis XIVs Edict of Fontainbleau
- Created new ranks of intendants to govern various
regions of France. - Revoked the earlier Edict of Nantes, curtailed
the rights of French Protestants, and caused
thousands of highly skill Huguenots to flee the
country. - Established new standards of court etiquette and
was intended to diminish the power of great
nobles. - Removed most French bishops from their sees and
replaced them with nobles to strengthen Louis
control of the French Catholic Church. - Moved the Estates General from Paris to
Fontainebleau.
30- Financial Issues
- Jean Baptist Colbert (1619 1683) (controller
general of finances) - Helped Louis avoid economic disaster
- Followed mercantilist approach decrease
imports, increase exports - Raised tariffs on imports causing tension with
neighboring countries - Tax burden still fell on the peasants
31Possible Test Question
- The economic policies of jean-Baptiste Colbert,
Louis XIVs controller general of finances - Were noted for their innovation and originality.
- Used new accounting practices to take the tax
burden off the peasants. - Were based on the economic theory of mercantilism
that stressed government regulation of economic
affairs to benefit the state. - Gave Louis the large surplus in the treasury
needed to carry out his wars. - Could best be described as laissez-faire.
32Palace at Versailles
- Daily Life at Versailles
- Purposes of Versailles
- Intended to overawe subjects impress foreign
dignitaries - Housed royal officials princes
- Court life and etiquette
- Set the standard for European monarchies
- Princes nobles were arranged according to
seniority - Real purpose was to exclude them from power by
including them in the life of the king at
Versailles
33Possible Test Question
- The costly palace built by Louis XIV, that became
the envy of all European monarchs, was - Fontainebleau.
- Versailles.
- Aix-la-Chapelle.
- Avignon.
- Mont St. Michele.
34The Wars of Louis XIV
- The Wars of Louis XIV
- Professional army 100,000 men in peacetime
400,000 in wartime - Louis XIV waged war to insure French dominance in
Europe and preserve the Bourbon dynasty - Four wars between 1667 1713
- Invasion of Spanish Netherlands (1667-1668)
- Triple Alliance (English, Dutch Swedes) forced
Louis to sue for peace (received a few towns in
the Spanish Netherlands) - Dutch War (1672-1678)
- Louis invaded the United Provinces leading
Brandenburg, Spain, the Holy Roman Empire to
form a coalition to stop him - Received Franche-Comte from Spain
- Annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, occupation of
Strasbourg (1679) led to new opposition.
35Louiss Wars
- War of the League of Augsburg (1689 1697)
- Spain, The Holy Roman Empire, the United
Provinces, Sweden, England formed the League of
Augsburg - Caused economic depression and famine in France
- Treaty of Ryswick ended the war causing Louis to
give up most of the territory he had previously
gained
36Louiss Wars
- War of the Spanish Succession (1702 1713)
- Louiss grandson was set to inherit the Spanish
throne, (Phillip V) scaring neighboring countries
about a united Spain France - Coalition of England, United Provinces, Habsburg
Austria, the German states opposed France
Spain - Peace of Utrecht (1713)
- Confirmed Phillip V as ruler of Spain
- Affirmed thrones would remain separate
- Coalition gained French Spanish territory
- England emerges as a strong naval force, gaining
territory in America from France - Louis XIV died 2 years later, leaving France
broke and surrounded by enemies.
37Map 15.2 The Wars of Louis XIV
38Possible Test Question
- The War of the Spanish Succession was effectively
concluded with the Peace of Utrecht in 1713 which
- Gave the French king control of Spanish
territories. - Gave France control over the Spanish Netherlands,
Naples, and Milan. - Greatly benefited England, by then a strong naval
power. - Destroyed the European balance of power.
- Ended the independence of Spain, which was now
under Bourbon rule.
39The Decline of Spain
- Bankruptcies in 1596 and in 1607
- Phillip II
- Spent money on war
- Philip III (1598 1621)
- Spent money on court luxuries
- Allowed nobles to run the country (widespread
corruption) - Philip IV (1621 1665)
- Chief minister Gaspar de Guzman attempts reform
- Aimed at curtailing power of the Catholic Church
and the aristocracy - The Thirty Years War
- Expensive military campaigns
- Civil War
- The Netherlands lost
40Absolutism in Central and Eastern Europe
- The German States
- The Rise of Brandenburg-Prussia
- The Hohenzollern Dynasty
- Frederick William the Great Elector (1640 1688)
- Army (standing army of 40K men)
- General War Commissariat to levy taxes
- Evolved into an agency for civil government
- Reinforced serfdom through concessions to the
nobles - Used Mercantilist Policies
- High tariffs, subsidies, monopolies
- Frederick III (1688 1713)
- Aided Holy Roman Empire in the War of Spanish
Succession - In return, he was granted the title King of
Prussia (1701)
41Possible Test Question
- Frederick William the Elector built
Brandenburg-Prussia into a significant European
power by - Establishing religious uniformity in his kingdom,
as evidenced in his eviction of the Huguenots. - Freeing the peasants from the dominion of the
nobles. - Using his army whenever possible to gain his
ends. - Making the General War Commissariat the
bureaucratic machine of his state. - Allying Prussia with England and Russia against
France and the Holy Roman Empire.
42The Emergence of Austria
- Habsburgs
- Gave up hope of a German empire, turned to
Eastern Europe - Leopold I (1658 1705)
- Expands eastward
- Conflicts with the Turks
- Siege of Vienna (1683)
- Defeated Turks (1687) gained Hungary,
Transylvania, Croatia, and Slovenia - Gained Spanish territory in Netherlands and
Northern Italy from the War of Spanish Succession - Austria did not have a centralized government
controlled by the monarchy. Instead they relied
on loyalty from regional nobility.
43Possible Test Question
- The Austrian Empire in the seventeenth century
- Was unified by linguistic and ethnic ties.
- Was defeated at Vienna by a Turkish army in 1687.
- Was a highly centralized, absolutist state under
Leopold I. - Lost a German empire, but gained one in eastern
and southeastern Europe. - Successfully expanded into Western Europe.
44Italy From Spanish to Austrian Rule
- Defeat of the French in Italy by Charles V (1530)
- Allowed Italian rulers to stay in power as long
as they acknowledged Spanish superiority - Spanish Presence (1559 1713)
- Tightened control under Phillip IIs reign
- Consequences of the War of the Spanish Succession
- Austria gained Spanish possessions and began to
influence Italy
45Possible Test Question
- Which of the following exerted the most influence
on Italy by the eighteenth century? - France
- England
- Spain
- The Ottoman Empire
- Austria
46Russia From Fledgling Principality to Major Power
- Ivan IV the Terrible (1533 1584)
- First Tsar
- Expanded territory eastward
- Extended autocracy of Tsar by crushing Russian
nobility (boyars) - Romanov Dynasty (1613 1917)
- National Assembly chose Michael Romanov as the
new Tsar - Stratified Society
- Tsar
- Landed aristocrats bind peasants to the land
- Surplus of land, shortage of workers
- Peasants and townspeople
- Tied to their land and businesses (highly
repressive system of serfdom) - Led to peasant revolts
47Possible Test Question
- Russian society in the seventeenth century
- Witnessed the reign of Ivan the Terrible.
- Witnessed profound religious reforms in the
Russian Orthodox church. - Was characterized by a highly oppressive system
of serfdom. - Saw the rise of the merchant class to power.
- Saw the end of serfdom and the emergence of a
prosperous free peasantry.
48The Reign of Peter the Great (1689 1725)
- Visits the West (1697 1698)
- Seeks to modernize Russia
- Mostly technical
- Reorganizes armed forces
- Modernized military standing army of 210,000
- Created a navy
- Reorganizes central government
- Divides Russia into provinces
- Seeks control of the Russian Church
- Introduces Western Customs
- No spitting on floor or scratching oneself at
dinner - Cutting off beards and coats
49The Reign of Peter the Great
- Positive Impact of Reforms on Women
- Upper class women were encouraged to mingle with
men - Women could choose who they wanted to marry
- Open a window to the West
- A port easily accessible to Europe
- Attacks Sweden
- Battle of Narva (1700)
- 8,000 Swedes defeat 40,000 Russians
- Great Northern War (1701 1721)
- Battle of Poltava (1709)
- Russian army defeats Swedish army
- Peace of Nystadt (1721)
- Russia gains control of Estonia, Livonia and
Karelia - St. Petersburg
- Window to the West (port in the Baltic Sea)
- New Russian capital
50Possible Test Question
- Peter the Greats foreign policy had as its
primary goal - Opening of a port easily accessible to Europe.
- Destruction of the Ottoman Empire.
- Capture of the Scandinavian countries.
- Control of Constantinople and the Dardanelles.
- Conquest of Siberia.
51The Winter Palace St. Petersburg, Russia
52Map 15.5 Russia From Principality to
Nation-State
53The Great Northern States
- Denmark
- Military losses
- 30 Years War Northern War with Sweden
- Bloodless revolution of 1660 (Denmarks Estates)
- Limited power of nobility
- Reestablished hereditary monarchy
54The Great Northern States
- Sweden
- Christina (1633 1654)
- More interested in philosophy religion
- Abdicated the throne so she could become Catholic
- Charles XI (1660 1697)
- Defused potential peasant revolt against nobility
- Built Swedish monarchy into an absolute monarchy
- Charles XII (1697-1718)
- Brilliant general who got Sweden into to many
wars - Lost most of Swedens northern empire to Russia
- Sweden became a 2nd rate power after the Great
Northern War
55Possible Test Question
- Scandinavia in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries witnessed - Denmark expand so as to dominate the Baltic.
- Sweden become a second-rate power after the Great
Northern War. - Sweden and Denmark join forces to defeat and
occupy Poland in 1660. - The economic dominance of Sweden over the rest of
northern Europe. - The conquest of Sweden by Norway.
56The Ottoman Empire
- The Ottoman Empire
- Suleiman the Magnificent (1520 1566)
- Attacks against Europe
- Pushed as far west as Vienna
- Advances in the Mediterranean
- Controlled most of the Mediterranean Sea until
the Spanish navy defeated them at the battle of
Lepanto - Ottomans viewed as a European Power
- Capital city of Constantinople was the most
populous European city - New Offensives in the second half of the 17th
century - Ottoman Empire was viewed as the sleeping giant
of Eastern Europe
57Map 15.6 The Ottoman Empire
58Limits of Absolutism
- The Limits of Absolutism
- Power of rulers not absolute
- Local institutions still had power
- Power of the aristocracy
- Limited Monarchy and Republics
- Poland, the Dutch Republic and England
- Poland - ruled by Sejm (two chamber assembly)
- Controlled by nobles who elected the king
- Poland lacked a strong central government
- weakened by warfare nobles protecting their own
interests
59Possible Test Question
- The political institution known as the Sejm made
seventeenth-century Poland - An absolutist, monarchical state dominated by
King Sigismund III. - A powerful militaristic machine threatening its
neighbors. - A land without powerful nobles.
- An impotent, decentralized state.
- A republic.
60Golden Age of the Dutch Republic
- The United Provinces
- Officially recognized by the Peace of Westphalia
- Internal Dissension
- The House of Orange and the Stadholders
- The States General opposes the House of Orange
- Weakened calls for republican government until
death of William III - William III (1672 1702)
- Established a monarchy but it collapsed upon his
death due to the fact that he didnt produce a
male heir to the throne - Involved in wars
- Undermined Dutch strength in trade
- Experienced a serious economic decline by 1715
- Life in 17th century Amsterdam
- Financial center of Europe
- City built up to accommodate the population
growth - Huge profits as an arms provider for foreign wars
61Possible Test Question
- The Golden Age of the Dutch Republic in the
seventeenth century witnessed - William of Orange become king in 1672.
- The economic prosperity of the United Provinces
ruined by a series of wars late in the century. - The temporary weakening of the States General.
- A and C.
- All of the above.
62England Constitutional Monarchy
- James I (1603 1625) and the House of Stuart
- Took over after Elizabeths death
- Claimed he ruled by Divine Right of Kings
- Parliament and the power of the purse
- Religious policies
- The Puritans controlled most of the lower House
of Commons - Charles I (1625 1649)
- Petition of Right
- Prevented any taxation without Parliaments
consent - Personal Rule (1629 1640) Parliament does
not meet - Charles I tries to collect taxes without
Parliament - Forced to call Parliament to raise tax money to
fight Scottish rebellion - Religious policy angers Puritans
- Charles I married a Catholic (Louis XIIIs sister
Henrietta) - Charles I calls Parliament and the members make
changes to limit royal authority - Charles I arrests radical members of Parliament
and Parliament rebels starting the English Civil
War
63Possible Test Question
- The Petition of Right (1628), among other things,
- Stated that the King of England was elected.
- Maintained that the King could pass no new tax
without the consent of Parliament. - Restored order in the English military.
- Made the English monarchy purely ceremonial.
- Made the Anglican Church the established church.
64Civil War (1642 1648)
- Oliver Cromwell
- New Model Army effective against Royalists
- Extreme Puritans who believed they were fighting
for God - 1st phase
- Charles I is captured after 1st Phase of Civil
War (1646) - Charles I escaped and got the Scotts to help
invade England - Charles I is captured, tried, executed (Jan.
30, 1649) - Parliament abolishes the monarchy
- Cromwell dissolves Parliament (April 1653)
- Cromwell divides country into 11 regions ruled by
military - Cromwell dies (1658)
- Army reestablishes the monarchy, Charles II
65Restoration a Glorious Revolution
- Charles II (1660 1685)
- Reestablished Anglican church
- Parliament suspected he was Catholic because his
brother James was - Charles II passed Declaration of Indulgence
(1672) - Suspended laws passed by Parliament against
Catholics and Puritans - Parliament passed Test Act (1673) Only
Anglicans could hold military and civil offices - James II (1685 1688)
- Devout Catholic
- Issued new Declaration of Indulgence (1687)
- Protestant daughters Mary and Anne
- Catholic son born in 1688
- Parliament invites Mary and her husband, William
of Orange, to invade England - James II, wife and son flee to France
66- Mary and William of Orange offered throne (1689)
- Bill of Rights
- Affirmed Parliaments right to make laws tax
- laid the foundation for a constitutional monarchy
- The Toleration Act of 1689
- Granted Puritans right to free public worship
- Ironically the Toleration Act still didnt
tolerate Catholics
67Possible Test Question
- The Glorious Revolution in 1688 in England was
significant for - Restoring Charles II and the Stuart dynasty to
power. - Bloodlessly deposing James II in favor of William
of Orange. - Returning England to a Catholic commonwealth.
- Parliaments establishment of a new monarch
through a series of bloody wars. - The abolishment of the monarchy in favor of a
republican commonwealth.
68Possible Test Question
- The incident that prompted the nobles to depose
James II was - His marriage to the Duchess of Orange.
- The death of his first wife.
- The birth of a Catholic son.
- A religious alliance with France.
- Economic collapse caused by the South Sea
Bubble.
69Responses to the Revolution
- Thomas Hobbes (1588 1679)
- Leviathan (1651)
- People form a commonwealth for protection
- People have no right to rebel
- Believed in strong government to maintain social
order - John Locke (1632 1704)
- Two Treatises of Government
- Inalienable Rights Life, Liberty and Property
- People form a government to protect their rights
- If government does not fulfill their social
contract with the people, the people have the
right to revolt
70Possible Test Question
- Thomas Hobbes
- Felt that man was suited best to be in a pristine
state of nature, without government interference. - Stated that mankind was animalistic, and needed a
strong government to maintain social order. - Was a firm believer in democracy.
- Said that the best form of government was a
theocracy. - Argued in favor of revolution when the ruler
broke the social contract.
71Possible Test Question
- John Locke was responsible for
- Synthesizing previous doctrines on international
law. - The idea of society as being in a constant state
of war. - Advocating political democracy for the entire
populace. - Emphasizing the social contract between the
people and government. - Disestablishing the Church of England.
72Flourishing European Culture
- The Changing Faces of Art
- Mannerism
- Early 16th century
- Broke away from balance and harmony of High
Renaissance - Art characterized by elongated human forms,
suffering yearning for a religious experience - El Greco was the most famous Mannerism artist
- Greek artist who studied in Italy painted
churches in Spain
73Laocoon by El Greco
74Possible Test Question
- The artistic movement Mannerism reached its peak
with the work of - Fra Angelico.
- Bernini.
- Peter Paul Rubens.
- El Greco.
- Rembrandt.
75- Baroque
- Replaced Mannerism, embraced by Catholic reform
movement - Used classical ideals of Renaissance to invoke an
emotional response - Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)
- Used violent motion, heavily fleshed nudes,
dramatic light and shadows intense emotion in
his paintings - Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598 1680)
- Architect sculptor
- Greatest figure of Baroque art
- Completed Saint Peters Basilica
- French Classicism and Dutch Realism
- French classicism emphasized clarity, simplicity,
balance and harmony of design and rejected
emotionalism of Baroque art - Dutch Realism realistic portrayals of secular,
everyday life - Rembrandt van Rijn (1606 1699)
76Possible Test Question
- The Baroque painter who used violent motion,
heavily fleshed nudes, and dramatic use of light
and shadow, and rich sensuous pigments in his
paintings was - Rembrandt van Rijn.
- Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
- El Greco.
- Artemisia Gentileschi.
- Peter Paul Rubens.
77Possible Test Question
- The greatest figure of Baroque art was
- Rembrandt van Rijn.
- Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
- El Greco.
- Nicholas Poussin.
- David Caspar Friedrich.
78The Baroque Trevi Fountain in Rome
79A Wondrous Age of Theater
- Golden Age of Elizabethan Literature (1580
1640) - William Shakespeare (1564 1614)
- The Globe Theater
- Lord Chamberlains Company
- Spanish Theater
- Lope de Vega (1562 1635)
- Wrote 1500 plays about 1/3 survive
- French Theater (1630s to 1680s)
- Jean Baptiste Molière (1622 1673)
- The Misanthrope
- Tartuffe