Title: What happened in England?
1What happened in England?
- The development of limited monarchy
- (Constitutional Monarchy)
2Constitutional Monarchy
- A CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY is a form of government
established under a constitutional system which
acknowledges an hereditary or elected monarch as
head of state. - Though the king or queen may be regarded as the
government's symbolic head, it is the Prime
Minister who actually governs the country. For
example Queen Elizabeth II of England.
3The Monarch and Parliament
- What was Parliament?
- The representatives of the people.
- Why did England have a Parliament?
- Magna Carta in 1215.
4Magna Carta
- 1215 barons had enough listed their grievances
- List became known as Magna Carta (Great Charter)
- John met barons at Runnymede
- It introduced the idea that even the king must
obey some laws!
5Magna Carta
- The king must not interfere with the Church
- When a baron inherits land he should pay the king
no more than 100 - The king cannot collect new taxes unless the
barons and bishops agree - No freeman can be put in prison without trial by
a jury - Justice will be without delays or bribes
- Traders must be able to travel freely without
having to pay tolls - The Kings men must not take anyones goods
without paying for them. - As soon as peace is restored, all foreign
merchants should leave the country.
6The Tudors and Parliament
7- Edward, Mary, Elizabeth
- After Henrys death and short reign of son
Edward, Mary I became queen - Often called Bloody Mary, briefly made England
Catholic again - 1558, Mary died Elizabeth crowned queen
- Returned England to Anglican Church with
Parliaments help
- Tension
- Tension developed between Parliament, queen
- Parliament pressured her to marry so she would
have heir to throne - Elizabeth refused, knowing marriage would limit
her freedom - Still managed to talk Parliament into approving
funds she needed
8Elizabeth in Charge
- Major reason for Elizabeths good relationship
with Parliament, her willingness to let members
speak minds without fear of punishment - Close ties shown in fact that she called
Parliament into session 10 times in 45-year reign
- Elizabeth clearly in charge, but had difficulty
keeping subjects from questioning her actions - Earl of Essex rebelled against authority
- Asked publicly, Cannot princes err? Cannot
subjects receive wrong? Is an earthly power or
authority infinite? - Essex tried, executed as a traitor
- Not the last to question Elizabeths authority
9How did Parliament interfere with absolute
monarchy?
- Parliament wanted to share power with the
Monarch. - James expected to be an absolute monarch and was
challenged by Parliament.
10The Stuarts and Parliament
- The Tudors success with Parliament not repeated
- Relative of the Scotland Tudors succeeded
Elizabeth
11England
- James I
- Son of Mary Queen of Scots
- Raised by Scottish leaders
- Divine right of kings
- Royal monopolies
- Dissolved Parliament
- Lost favor of the people
- Puritans' opposition
12English monarchs attempted to establish absolute
system
- James I (1603-1625) fought with Parliament over
his authority. - Puritans wanted Anglican Church to reflect a
Calvinist view. - James refused to cooperate, except for a new
Bible translation.
www.bbc.co.uk/history
13James I and the clash with Parliament
- James I wanted absolute power when he inherited
the throne from Queen Elizabeth - Elizabeth wanted absolute power too, but was
better at flattering parliament to get her way - Always conflict between the royalty and
parliament over - royalty wants for royal
court and foreign wars
14James I continued
- Also annoyed people b/c he refused to make
Puritan reforms (get rid of Catholic practices).
- Hated when anyone told him what to do (sound
familiar?) - Known for the King James Bible the Puritan
translation of the old Bible
15James I
- Reigned 1603-25
- The people disliked him
- Jamestown Plymouth, Massachusetts founded
- England went into debt James demanded high taxes
- Argued with Parliament wanted absolute monarchy
as in Henry VIIIs day
16King James I
17Charles I Defies Parliament
When James I died in 1625, his younger son was
crowned king as Charles I.
18England
- Charles I
- Son of James I
- Revolt in Scotland
- Scottish people did not feel fairly treated
- Imposition of bishops versus presbyters
- War with France
- Unable to raise taxes without Parliament
- Long Parliament
- Civil War
- Death of the king
- Roundheads vs Cavaliers
19Charles I
- 1625, James I dies and his son, Charles I, gets
the throne - Always needed for war
- When parliament denied requests, he dissolved
parliament - 1628, parliament gets back together and asks
Charles to sign the Petition of Right
20What was the Petition of Right?
- An agreement between Parliament and the King that
said the king must - Get Parliaments consent to raise taxes.
- Not imprison subjects without due cause.
- Not have martial law or house soldiers in time of
peace.
21Petition of Right
- No imprisonment without due cause
- No taxation without parliaments consent
- No putting soldiers in private homes
- No martial law during peacetime
- Charles I signed the petition and then ignored it
even dissolved parliament again and levied mad
taxes on the people
22How did the Petition of Right limit the monarchy
in England?
- The king had to follow rules.
- Especially important the king had to ask
Parliaments permission to raise taxes
23More of Charles I
- The people hated the taxes (obviously)
24What did Charles do to limit Parliaments Power?
- He did not allow them to meet for over ten years.
- When they did meet he tried to arrest
Parliaments leaders - This started the English Civil War.
25Charles loses his head in an argument
- Charles I (1625-1649) pursued an aggressive
foreign policy with Spain. - Continually sought new funds from Parliament,
members checked his power by forcing him to sign
the Petition of Right, 1628. - When Charles dissolved Parliament and tried to
raise money, civil war resulted.
www.mdarchives.state.md.us/.../
01glance/images/charles1.jpg
26Parliamentary Parties
- Tories for a strong king, tended to be Anglicans
landless nobles (who got their titles from the
king) - Whigs for a strong Parliament, tended to be
Anglicans who supported religious freedom, as
well as merchants and lawyers also included
Puritans
27The English Civil War
- Conflict Continued
- Conflict continued between king who believed in
absolute monarchy, Parliament that saw itself
independent - Conflict led to war, kings death
- Parliament Reconvened
- 1640, Charles I finally reconvened Parliament to
ask for more money - Long Parliament did not disband for several
years
- Limited Kings Powers
- Having been ignored 11 years, Parliament took
opportunity to further limit kings powers - Demanded Parliament be called at least every
three years
- Grudging Acceptance
- Parliament also ruled king could no longer
dismiss Parliament - Charles accepted new rules but awaited right
time to overturn
281642 Civil War
- Erupted because Charles I refused to let
Parliament meet from 1629-40. When they finally
did meet, refused to give him money unless he
agreed to limit his own powers. - Tories willing to fight nicknamed Cavaliers
(Fr. Chevalierknight) - Puritans flocked to the banner of General Oliver
Cromwell known as Roundheads for their closely
cropped, plain hair, in contrast with the
fashionably long haired Cavaliers - Puritanism swept the lend arts and sciences that
flourished since Elizabeth went underground
29War with Parliament
- Strategy
- Charles moment came when radical Puritan group
in Parliament moved to abolish appointment of
bishops in Anglican Church - King, whose power connected to power of church,
was outraged
- Charles Tries Power Grab
- Charles decided to arrest Puritan leaders for
treason - Led troops into House of Commons, but men had
already escaped - Charles had tipped hand on intentions to take
back power
- Civil War Begins
- Some members of Parliament decided to rise up
against king - Charles I called for support of English people
- 1642, English Civil War began
30English Civil War
- Since Charles I ruled over Scotland AND England,
there were several religions - Charles I wanted ONE religion ended up in Civil
War when the Scots rebelled - War cost , so Charles needed Parliament.
Parliament hated him and wanted to limit his
power - Supporters of Charles I Royalists
- The opposition supports Parliament Roundheads
31Royalists and Roundheads
- Without Parliaments funding, king relied on
contributions to pay army - Wealthy nobles called Royalists for allegiance to
Charles - Parliament could back its army by voting for
funding - Supporters of Parliament called Roundheads for
short, bowl-shaped haircuts - Roundheads included Puritans, merchants, some
from upper classes
32More Civil War
- Under leadership of Oliver Cromwell, the puritan
roundheads finally won (1646) - Took Charles I hostage, tried him in front of the
public and executed him - The decapitation -
33Trial and Execution
- Eventually Rump Parliament charged king with
treason, put him on trial - During trial, Charles defended self with great
eloquence, refused to even recognize Parliaments
authority to try him - In the end, Charles sentenced to death for
treason - January 30, 1649, publicly beheaded in front of
own palace - To some he was martyr to others tyrant who got
what he deserved
34Results of the English Civil War
- Charles I lost and was tried and executed
(Beheaded). - England was ruled by a military dictatorship for
9 years. - The Restoration lasted for 28 years.
- Glorious Revolution changed kings without
violence.
35Oliver Cromwell defeats kings forces and became
Lord Protector
- Charles executed for treason.
- On paper, England was a republic but in practice
a dictatorship. - Cromwell suppressed revolt in Ireland.
- Imposed Puritan ideals on English.
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ell.gif
36Oliver Cromwell
- 1649 he got rid of the monarchy and established a
republican form of government - Sent most of the Parliamentary members home and
eventually established a military dictatorship
(he tore up the first constitution that his
associate produced) - Since Ireland was under English rule, the Irish
revolted against Cromwell and failed 616,000
Irish were killed by war, plague and famine
37England under Cromwell
- Commonwealth
- Englands government changed completely for the
next 11 years - House of Commons abolished House of Lords,
outlawed monarchy - Became commonwealth, government based on common
good of all people
- Lord Protector
- 1653, Cromwell given title Lord Protector of
England, Scotland, Ireland - Skilled leader, but demanded complete obedience
- Clamped down on social life, closed theaters,
limited other entertainment
- Foreign Issues
- Cromwell also had to deal with foreign issues
- Led military expeditions to Scotland, Ireland
- Economic policies led to war with Dutch over
trade also warred on Spain
38Puritan Morality
- Cromwell and the Puritans wanted to improve
Englands morality - Abolished all sinful things like theater
- Cromwell was tolerant of other religions despite
his deep Puritan beliefs (EXCEPT CATHOLICS)
39A Defender of Absolutism
40Interregnum
- Latin for between kings, 1649-60
- England became a Protectorate instead of a
commonwealth with Cromwell as Lord Protector - Scotland Ireland conquered (hence Irelands
anti-Protestant attitude - Oliver dies in 1658, his son Richard now Lord
Protector - Richard proves to be inept, so people overthrow
him in 1660, ask for monarchy
41The Monarchy Returns
Hobbess ideas reflected the fact that many
people were unhappy under Cromwell, especially
when he dismissed Parliament to rule alonelike a
king. Attitudes were changing so much that a
return to monarchy became possible.
Pepys Great joy all yesterday at London, and at
night more bonfires that ever, and ringing of
bellsevery body seems to be very joyfull in the
business
42Great Chain of Being
- May explain why English wanted a monarch again.
- A way of looking at the universe and how it works
- All beings and objects arranged in a hierarchy
with God at the top and mere dust at the bottom - By killing the king, the chain is disrupted and
chaos ensues
43Monarchy Restored
- When Cromwell died, so did his government.
- English invited
- Charles II (1660-1685) to restore monarchy.
- Reign was a period of calm marked by court
decadence.
44Restoration and Revolution
- English get sick of military rule and after
Cromwell dies, they ask the older son of Charles
I (Charles II) to rule England - Restoration of monarch restoration
- Allowed the return of theater and sports
- Passed important guarantee of freedom Habeas
Corpus - to have the body
- People need to know why theyre arrested
- Could not be held indefinitely without trial
45- The Reign of Charles II
- Charles had to address many issuesconflict with
Dutch continued religious tensions remained
role of Parliament still being developed - Charles supported religious toleration for
Catholics, but Parliament insisted on laws to
strengthen the Church of England - Restoration years, mixture of positive, negative
events
- Positive and Negative
- Charles reopened theaters, flowering of English
drama resulted - Habeas Corpus Act passed, guaranteeing someone
accused of a crime had right to appear in court
to determine if should be held, released - 1665, bubonic plague returned following year
Great Fire of London - After fire, Charles supported public construction
projects
46Monarchy In Crisis
- On Charles death, brother became king.
- James II (1685-1688) was pro-Catholic, which
angered many. - When his young wife produced an heir, Parliament
feared a renewed period of turmoil and removed
king from power.
www.bbc.co.uk/.../monarchs_leaders/
images/james_2_full.jpg
47James II
Later in Charless reign the question of who
would succeed him remained. His brother James was
next in line, but he was a Catholic.
48James II and the Glorious Revolution
- James II got the throne after Charles II died
- Everyone hated James b/c he was flamboyantly
Catholic and gave his Catholic friends good jobs - James was eventually peacefully overthrown by his
own daughter and her husband (protestants) - William and Mary then ruled England
49The Glorious RevolutionWilliam and Mary Restore
English Monarchy
- Parliament invited Mary, daughter of Charles I,
and a Protestant, to jointly rule with her
husband, William of Orange. (1689-1702) - Both agreed to follow Parliamentary laws and
accepted English Bill of Rights. - England became the only limited monarchy in
Europe. Parliament in control.
www.camelotintl.com/heritage/ rulers/images/willma
ry.gif
50What were the results of the Glorious Revolution?
- William and Mary ruled with Parliament
Constitutional Monarchy. - They agreed to a Bill of Rights that limited
governments (monarchs) power - Cabinet system developed with the Prime Minister
as leader.
51Changes in Government
52Political Changes
- First Constitutional Monarchy where laws limited
the rulers power - Bill of Rights
- No suspension of Parliaments laws
- No taxes w/o Parliaments consent
- Freedom of speech in Parliament
- No penalty for complaining about the King
53Political Changes Continued
- Established a Cabinet
- Cabinet was a link b/w the majority party in
Parliament and the King - Became center of power and policymaking
- Still exists today
- Leader of Cabinet Prime Minister
541707 Act of Union
- Unifies Scotland England
- Ireland is a subject nation
- Nation known as the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland