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AP European History
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Enlightened Despots ◦ 18 th -century monarchs ◦ NOT democratic ◦ BUT used absolute power to reform their countries. Areas of reform: Law Social and economic conditions Education Notice! No English monarchs here!
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Many of them read the works of the philosophers of the “Age of Reason” or were advised by councilors who had. ◦ Who were the philosophers? Locke Hobbes Montesquieu Voltaire Rousseau The Physiocrats
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Many monarchs realized that to improve their states, they needed to reform. Several key absolute rulers invited many of the living philosophers to advise them.
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Voltaire pushed the idea that a ruler can justify her/his power by improving society. ◦ Voltaire is the philosopher who said: “I may disagree with what you have to say, but I shall defend to the death your right to say it.”
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◦ spent a lot of time at the court of Frederick the Great of Prussia (Voltaire was the first to call him “the Great”) ◦ corresponded with Catherine the Great of Russia.
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Frederick of Prussia (1712- 1786) ◦ Reign 1740-1786 ◦ (Frederick William Hohenzollern II) ◦ Wrote poetry and essays, played music, even wrote some philosophy. ◦ Strategic thinker
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Reforms ◦ Abolished torture (except for treason & murder) ◦ Established elementary schools ◦ Promoted industry and agriculture ◦ After “Seven Years War,” helped peasants rebuild. ◦ Established some religious freedom
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Reign 1740-1780 Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, empress of the HRE, and a ton of other titles. ◦ Husband Francis I – Francis Stephen of Lorraine – was the Emperor in name only Got to the throne by “Pragmatic Sanction” which recognized succession through female line. ◦ But as soon as her dad died, Frederick of Prussia invaded. ◦ Her appeal to the Hungarian Diet for help was “over the top”
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Her son, Josef II, became HRE; the two ruled together for some time. Devout Catholic; 16 children (10 to adulthood) ◦ Among them, Marie “Let them eat cake”Antoinette Disagreed with many Enlightenment Philosophers.
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Reforms ◦ Protected the rights of serfs: codes established regulating relationship with lords ◦ Freed all peasants on crown lands ◦ Started a paid bureaucracy (civil servants) ◦ Set up elementary schools funded by local and state funds. ◦ Created a tariff union of all parts of the HRE ◦ Kicked the Jesuits out of the country
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Reign with Mom (1765-1780); all by himself (1780-1790) Huge fan of Enlightenment philosophers. ◦ When MT died, he pushed for even greater reforms. “Too many notes”
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Reforms ◦ Serfdom completely abolished. ◦ Taxes were made equal for both serfs and nobles ◦ Freedom of the press ◦ Took property from the church to fund hospitals. ◦ Relaxed laws binding Jews to villages. His brother Leopold, however, was a huge reactionary, and rolled back a lot of the reforms.
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Reigned 1762-1796 German-born princess who staged a coup against her incompetent husband, Peter III. ◦ Did the Romanov dynasty end with her? Ignored son Paul, but practically raised grandson Alexander by herself. Major reformer…
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Reform ◦ Reorganized local government and established a civil service. ◦ Decreased use of torture ◦ Codified laws. ◦ Toured the countryside incognito. Potemkin village comes from this tour. Potemkin
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Backlash! ◦ When Pugachev rebellion arose, she back-pedaled some of the reforms. Toyed with the idea of freeing the serfs. The Don Cossack, Pugachev
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Enlightened Despots were not democrats, but top-down reformers. ◦ They liked Enlightenment philosophy—especially Voltaire’s brand. Reforms in general: ◦ Codification of laws ◦ Limit church power ◦ Construct hospitals and elementary schools ◦ Develop centralized bureaucracy ◦ Modify serfdom
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