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Eastern Absolutism
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Absolutism in Eastern Europe In eastern Europe during the seventeenth century the rights of the peasants were taken away In the west peasants gained rights As a labor shortage swept eastern Europe workers became a necessity The movement of peasants was restricted Peasants lost their land and were forced into more obligations for their lords.
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Absolutism Continued Between 1500 and 1650 conditions worsened and serfs could be killed for nothing Political factors accounted for the new serfdom Weaker kings were forced to give more freedom to landlords Landlords sold directly to foreign capitalists and abolished the need for a middle class
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The Hapsburgs War and the threat of war aided the absolute monarchies Would-be absolutists gained power in 3 areas: a) imposed and collected permanent taxes without consent b) maintained permanent armies c) conducted relations with other states as they pleased
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Holy Roman Empire Since 1556 the Habsburgs had been the Duke of Austria and Holy Roman Emperor After the Treaty of Westphalia (1648) the Holy Roman Empire was in decline containing over 300 states that could conduct their own foreign policy The Hapsburgs were exhausted after the Thirty Years’ War, but they still remained emperors of the Holy Roman Empire The imperial army was small and slow to mobilize and was no longer the source of power for the Habsburgs, so they turned to marriage
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The Habsburgs and Europe The Habsburgs through marriage will inherit Austria, Hungary, Bohemia, Spain, The Netherlands, and part of Italy Ferdinand III (1637-1657) centralized the government of the German-speaking provinces However this led to problems with a diverse population and the serfs 3 days of unpaid labor a week were demanded from serfs, many serfs worked everyday except Sunday (the Corvee)
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Difficulties of Habsburg Rule The Habsburgs controlled a many different cultures and religions that all wanted autonomy These different groups and lands impeded Habsburg absolutism In 1679 Hungarian protestants started an insurrection that spread to Moravia, Silesia, and Moravia King Leopold I (1658-1705) gave concessions to Hungarian landowners but other protestants called on the Turks for help In 1683 the Turks laid siege to Vienna
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The War of the Holy League 1686-1687 The siege was broken by the King of Poland on crusade In response Poland-Lithuania and Austria formed the Holy League The Habsburgs turned to fight the Ottomans, who under Suleiman the Magnificent ruled the most powerful empire in the world Habsburg armies will recapture Hungary, Transylvania, and Croatia from the Turks The Peace of Karlowitz (1699) brought and end to the Ottoman threat to Europe and will begin a long period of Ottoman decline that will last for 219 years
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Habsburg Post 1700 The Habsburg state had 3 parts: a) Austria b) kingdom of Bohemia c) kingdom of Hungary 1713, Charles VI, Pragmatic Sanction, Hapsburg possessions would never be divided even if it meant a female heir During the War of Spanish Succession the Hungarians led by Prince Francis Rakoczy rebelled Rakoczy was defeated but it led to a compromise a) Hungary accepted Habsburg rule b) Charles VI restored the rights of the aristocracy of Hungary
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Prussia The Hohenzollern family had little real power Choosing the Holy Roman Emperor was of little value and they had no military strength The Hohenzollern power-base was Brandenburg and was cut off from Prussia, which was part of Poland 1618 Hohenzollern prince died and Prussia returns to elector of Brandenburg
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In the Thirty Years’ War Prussia was destroyed by invading armies The power of the Estates (the Junkers) was weakened and elector Frederick William (Great Elector) assumed absolute control He wanted to unite 3 areas: Prussia, Berlin, and the Rhine To pay for standing armies soldiers doubled as tax collectors and policemen Rise of Frederick William (1640-1688)
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Creation of Prussia There are 2 reasons he was successful 1) the wars between Sweden and Poland and the wars of Louis XIV seemed to create a sense of permanent crisis 2) the Junkers were unwilling to join the commoners against the crown By 1688 Prussia was one state
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Frederick William I (1713-1740) “the soldier king” truly established Prussian absolutism He created the best army in the world and gave society military values Frederick William I always wore a uniform Created a strong centralized bureaucracy Parliamentary government vanished as Frederick William enlisted the Junkers to help him Prussia was 12th in population, 4th largest army by issuing the first draft and military reserves of Europe “Sparta of the north” Frederick William I
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Russia The Mongols ruled the eastern slavs for more than 200 years Mongol rule was absolute and violent, uprisings were brutally suppressed The Mongol Khan was supreme ruler Mongols used local princes to collect taxes and as servants Through cooperation, Moscow became the most loyal city
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Rise of the Tsars The prince of Moscow was the tsar and he was an absolute rule Moscovite authority was based on: a) Ivan III stopped acknowledging the khan as a supreme ruler b) after the fall of Constantinople (1453) the tsars saw themselves as heirs to the Caesars and Orthodox Christianity All the other kings of Europe were heretics 1505 the tsar of Moscow became ruler of all Russia
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The tsar claimed a God-given right to rule Ivan III (1462-1505) confiscated 80% of Novgorod. Kept half and gave the rest to his nobles, causing a rise in service nobility Ivan IV “the Terrible” (1533-1584) claimed all nobles had to serve the tsar in order to hold office His purges depopulated much of Russia Ivan believed he owned all the trade and industry Contrasts with capitalism in western Europe Ivan Consolidates Power
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The “Time of Trouble” (1604-13) followed the death of Ivan the Terrible, especially after Ivan’s son and heir died Peasant rebellion caused problems for the aristocracy Social confusion and possible war brought the nobles to their senses In 1613 Michael Romanov was elected the new tsar The tsar relaxed obligations of nobility, but increased pressure on the peasants By 1649 Serfdom became official 90% of peasants became serfs The Time of Trouble
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Peter the Great - (nearly7ft tall) Peter was fascinated by geography and spent 18 months touring Europe He force the nobles to accept western ways including shaving and allowing women to attend social functions He built a new capital called St. Petersburg (1703) the “window to the West” Forced China to accept Russia’ claim for Siberia Moscovy in 1689, was 3 times larger than the rest of Europe, but people were the primary unit of taxation Peter westernized Russia's military, and bureaucracy Peter the Great 1682-1721
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Moscovy in 1689, was 3 times larger than the rest of Europe, but people were the primary unit of taxation The best part of the army was the cavalry comprised of the boyars and nobility Every nobleman had to join the army or civil service for life Created a standing army of 200,000 men, recruitment was for life Peter also built a navy by importing foreign shipbuilders to train his men Peter the Great Reforms the Military
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Russia won the Great Northern War (1700-21) with Sweden After Sweden's defeat Sweden faded as a major power Russia annexed Latvia and Estonia Westerners and western ideas flowed to Russia The gap between the educated and the peasants widened New ideas of statehood took hold and Russia became closer to Europe than Asia Peter failed to gain a port on the Black Sea End of Peter's Rule
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1762 Catherine seized the throne from her weak husband Peter III Enlightened monarch (?) Allowed nobles to treat serfs as they pleased Defeated the Ottomans and expanded Russia’s southern border to the Black Sea Divided Poland with Austria and Prussia. Poland ceased to exist until 1919 Catherine was the last of great absolute monarchs She died in 1796 when Europe was challenging the idea of the monarchy Catherine the Great
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Poland is a good example of what could happen if the nobles became too powerful. Poland was a large state in Eastern Europe The “Noble Republic” – the nobles elected the kings Any noble could veto any law in the parliament. Poland - A failed state
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Consequences? The complete collapse of central government The enserfment of the peasant population for the profit of the nobles. The eventual disappearance of Poland from map of Europe in 1795. A result of no constitutionalism and no absolutism
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