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English Civil War & Glorious Revolution
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Monarchs work with Parliament From 1485 to 1603 English monarchs believed they had the divine right to rule Monarchs also understood the need for a good relationship with Parliament Parliament – legislative branch of England Parliaments power: Legalize actions of monarchs Approve funding for taxes and war Consultants of monarchs
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Let the Revolutions Begin JAMES I After Elizabeth died with no heir, her cousin James Stuart took the throne James I was already king of Scotland but became King of England as well Clashed with Parliament over funding for wars, taxes and court affairs
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CHARLES I Poor relationship with Parliament Parliament refused to approve Charles increase in taxes unless he signed the Petition of Right Petition of Right – prohibits king from raising taxes without Parliaments consent prohibits king from jailing anyone without legal justification
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Charles signed doc. and then dissolved Parliament Ignored petition and ruled England without Parliament for 11 yrs. Forced new religious ideas on people in England and Scotland resulting in rebellion Needed funds to fight the rebellion and turned to Parliament for help When they met Parliament launched its own rebellion against the crown Declared that it could not be dissolved without its own consent Executed chief ministers and consultants to the king
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English Civil War Charles responded by attempting to arrest top Parliamentary leaders Leaders escaped and raised their own army causing civil war Civil war lasted from 1642 until 1651
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Cavaliers vs. Roundheads Supporters of the crown were called Cavaliers – heavily favored to win Wealthy Well trained Supporters of Parliament were called Roundheads Town dwelling manufacturers Puritans
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Roundheads were led by Oliver Cromwell Cromwell organized a New Model Army where officers were selected for skill rather than social class Cromwell’s well-disciplined army beat Cavaliers By 1647 King Charles was at the mercy of Parliament
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Off With His Head! King was put on trial King was publicly executed First time a monarch was tried and executed by his own people Clear message – No ruler could claim absolute power and be above the law!
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Cromwell and the Commonwealth England was declared a republic under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell Republic - officials are chosen by the people Issues continued between supporters of the old monarch and religious groups (Catholics) Cromwell suppressed any outside aggression by limiting the people’s rights
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Eventually Cromwell took on title Lord Protector and ruled as a dictator Puritans took control of society Theaters, taverns were closed Sunday was set aside for religious observance Encouraged religious education Once Cromwell died in 1658, the Puritans lost control of England
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CHARLES II 1660 Parliament welcomed Charles II as new monarch Charming, popular king Reopened theaters, taverns and held a lively court Accepted the Petition of Rights Had a better relationship with Parliament
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JAMES II & the Glorious Revolution Inherited throne in 1685 Openly practiced Catholic faith angering many Protestant followers Many were afraid he would restore Roman Catholic Church Parliament invited his own daughter Mary and her husband William to overthrow the king When Mary and William landed with army, James fled Bloodless overthrow became known as Glorious Revolution
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English Bill of Rights Before being crown Mary and William had to accept acts passed by Parliament Acts became known as English Bill of Rights: Guaranteed Parliaments power over monarchs Gave Parliament control over spending – “Power of the purse” Guaranteed trial by jury Abolished excessive fines and unjust punishments Affirmed habeas corpus – no person can be held in prison without being charged first Limited rights of Catholics Created a limited monarchy Limited monarchy - constitution or legislative body limited the monarch power
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Constitutional Governments Evolve After Glorious Revolution Britain’s constitutional government evolved Constitutional Gov’t – a gov’t whose power is defined and limited by the law Political Parties were developed Tories – aristocrats, preserve older traditions, broad royal powers Whigs – favored Parliament over crown, supported religious toleration
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The cabinet system developed A handful of parliamentary advisors to set policies and advise the king Prime Minister became an official title Prime minister was the head of cabinet Became chief official of British gov’t Overtime power of Prime Minister would exceed that of the monarch
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In your timeline you must discuss : 6 people/leaders 12 Events – each event must have a brief description which can include individual leaders 6 pictures – pictures must represent events DO NOT draw a picture of a monarch You may set up your timeline however you want but it must be easy to follow and read Your timelines should not include dates but they should follow the sequence of events during the time period English Civil War Timeline
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