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The Constitutional Crisis and Settlement in Stuart England By: Jocelyn Thomas, Violet Velazquez, Lorena Mendez, Jacqueline Haupt, and Bridget Haupt – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20Constitutional%20Crisis%20and%20Settlement%20in%20Stuart%20England


1
The Constitutional Crisis and Settlement in
Stuart England
  • By Jocelyn Thomas, Violet Velazquez, Lorena
    Mendez, Jacqueline Haupt, and Bridget Haupt

2
James I
  • James developed sources of income by levying new
    custom duties known as imposition.
  • Since days of Elizabeth, puritans within the
    church of England sought elimination to get rid
    of and replace the hierarchical Episcopal system
    of church governance.
  • James rebuffed the puritans and declared his
    intentions to maintain and enhance the Anglican
    episcopacy.
  • Colonists had believed that reformation could
    probably go far in England and that only in
    America they could worship properly and reform
    church.

3
James I
  • James's court became a center of scandal and
    corruption (he was governed by favorites and
    people who had the most gossip.).
  • In 1604, he concluded a peace with Spain.
  • There was wise hesitancy in 1618 to rush English
    troops to the thirty years war.
  • In 1624, before Jamess death, England went to
    war against Spain.
  • The English puritans believed in strict
    observance of the Sabbath, disapproving any
    sports, games, or general social conviviality on
    Sundays.

4
James I
  • James had thought that these strictures prevented
    many Roman Catholics from joining the Church of
    England.
  • In 1618, he ordered the clergy of the Church of
    England to read the book of Sports from their
    pulpits.
  • In that Declaration , he had permitted people to
    engage in certain sports and games after church
    services.
  • Despite what the Kings intentions were, this had
    offended the Puritans. Lawful recreation such as
    dancing, either men or women archery for men
    leaping, vaulting, or any other harmless
    recreation, or from having of Hay games and
    Morris dancing-they still had hold on account
    still as prohibited all as unlawful games

5
James I
  • to be used upon Sundays only.
  • They had also by law prohibited bowling.

6
Charles I
  • Charles I , like his father , resorted to extra
    parliamentary measures.
  • Theses included levying new tariffs and duties,
    attempting to collect discontinued taxes, and
    subjecting English property owners to so called
    forced loan (though they were going to
    get repaid) and imprison those who refused to
    pay.
  • Parliament met in 1628, its members would grant
    new funds only in Charles recognized the Petition
    of Right. This document required that henceforth
    there should be no forced loans or taxation
    without the consent of Parliament, that no
    freeman should be imprisoned

7
Charles I
  • without due cause, and that troops should not be
    billeted in private homes.
  • In order to conserve his limited resources,
    Charles made peace with France in 1629 and Spain
    in 1630, again rousing fears that he was too
    friendly to Roman Catholic powers.
  • Charles might have ruled indefinitely without
    Parliament had not his religious policies
    provoked war with Scotland.
  • The Scots rebelled, and Charles, with
    insufficient resources of war, was forced in 1640
    to call Parliament.

8
The Long Parliament and Civil War
  • Parliament abolished the courts that they had
    enforced royal policy and prohibited the levying
    of the new taxes without its consent.
  • Even though the Parliament was separated by
    religion both moderate Puritans and more extreme
    Puritans (the independents) wanted to abolish
    the Book of Common Prayer. Yet both houses of the
    Parliament were determined to preserve the church
    of England in its current form.
  • The Division in the Parliament intensified when
    Parliament was asked to raise funds for an army
    to suppress the Rebellion in Scotland.

9
The Long Parliament and Civil War
  • Many people did not trust Charles with an army
    and then Suggested that the Parliament should be
    the Commander in Chief of the English armed
    forces.
  • By shock the house of Commons passed a militia
    Ordinance which gave authority to the Parliament
    to raise its own army.
  • Kings supporters were known as the Calvinist.

10
Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan Republic
  • The alliance with Scotland in 1643 that
    transformed Parliament to a Presbyterian system
    of Church government and the organization of the
    Parliament arm helped the Parliament become
    victorious.
  • Oliver and the army were willing to deal with a
    majority Church however, only if it Protestant
    dissenter to worship outside it.
  • Due to Charles greediness and trying to take
    advantage of the divided Parliament Oliver and
    his army foiled him.
  • Members who ha sympathy for the Monarch were
    kicked out from the Parliament in December 1648.

11
Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan Republic
  • The monarchy, the House of Lords, and the
    Anglican Church were terminated by the Parliament
    after Charles was executed on January 30, 1649.
  • England became a Puritan Republic from 1649-1660.
  • Cromwells army slaughtered Scotland and Ireland.
  • He failed to be a politician when the House of
    Commons wanted to disband his expensive army of
    50,000 men, he disbanded the Parliament and ruled
    as a Lord Protector afterwards.
  • Oliver was hated just as much as Charles.
  • He was hated for his Puritan prohibitions of
    drinking,

12
Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan Republic
  • theatergoing, and dancing.
  • Political liberty disappeared in the name of
    religious conformity.
  • The English were soon ready t rebuild the
    Anglican Church and the Monarchy after Oliver
    Cromwell died in 1658.

13
Charles II and the Restoration of the Monarchy
  • Charles II negotiated with the army in order to
    come back to England.
  • After 11 years of somber Puritanism he set a new
    tone.
  • England returned to the status quo of 1642 with a
    hereditary monarch, a Parliament of Lords and
    Commons that only met when the King called.
  • The King, in secrecy, favored religious
    toleration. He wanted to let loyal Catholics and
    Puritans to worship freely.
  • Ultra-Royalists excluded Roman Catholics,
    Presbyterians, and Independent from the official
    religious and political life of laws called the
    Clarendon Code(1661-1665).

14
Charles II and the Restoration of the Monarchy
  • The treaty of Dover in 1670 gave England and
    France the power to ally against the Dutch.
  • Charles was supposed to announce his conversion
    to Catholicism as soon as he got the cue from
    England.
  • Louis XIV promised to pay Charles a substantial
    subsidy however, it was never made.

15
The Glorious Revolution
  • Dominant political power in Muslim world after
    1516.
  • Its population was ethnically diverse,
    linguistically, and religiously.
  • Non Islamic persons could practice their own
    religion and manage their internal community
    affairs through their own higharchy.
  • They paid a special toll tax, couldn't serve in
    the military or wear certain colors.
  • Higharchies were chosen by who was most loyal.

16
The Age of Walpole
  • Retained control of eastern Mediterranean and
    lands bordering it.
  • Islam's outdistanced Europeans in learning,
    science, and military prowess.
  • Ships were designed for difficult waters.
  • Europeans developed a greater military and naval
    power and new weapons.
  • The Ottoman leaders were isolated from the
    leading Muslim subjects and from Europe.
  • Failing to develop its own structure, the
    Ottomans borrowed the Europeans technology and
    imported their foreign advisors.
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