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Absolutism and Constitutionalism
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Terms to Know Absolutism-a political system in which a ruler holds total power Divine Right of Kings- the belief that kings receive their power from God and are responsible only to God
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Wars of Religion- French Catholic French kings persecuted Protestants Huguenots- French protestants Henry of Navarre (Henry IV of the Bourbon dynasty)- Protestant, but converted to Catholicism (“Paris is worth a mass”) Edict of Nantes- recognized Catholicism as the official religion of France, but gave religious freedom to the Huguenots
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Wars of Religion- Spanish King Philip II- Catholic supporter Insisted on Catholicism in his kingdom (Spain, Netherlands, & possessions in Italy and the Americas) In the Netherlands, William the Silent (Prince of Orange) revolted & split from Spain (United Provinces of Netherland became Protestant) William Philip
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Wars of Religion- English Elizabeth Tudor (Elizabeth I) Act of Supremacy- named her “the only supreme governor” of both church & state Protestant ruler, but tolerant of Catholics 1588, Philip II of Spain ordered the Spanish Armada to attack England failed miserably- beaten by the English Navy & storms
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English Revolution 1603- Elizabeth died (no heir) King James I (cousin in Scotland) becomes King of England Protestant
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fought with Parliament all the time over power He returned Catholicism back to England Charles I
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English Civil War 1642- Civil War Cavaliers/Royalists- supported the king Roundheads- parliamentary forces led by Oliver Cromwell Roundheads won Charles I executed Cromwell dissolved the monarchy, declared England a republic (commonwealth) & became a military dictator (“Lord Protector”)
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The Restoration 1658- Cromwell died Parliament restored the monarchy under Charles II (son of Charles I) Charles II supported Catholicism & dismissed Parliament many times (dies) Charles II
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James II (Charles II’s brother) James II Catholic, had a son Parliament felt a long Catholic monarchy was coming
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The Glorious Revolution Parliament invited William of Orange & Mary (James II’s daughter) to raise an army and depose James II James II escapes to France & an almost bloodless overthrow was complete William & Mary forced to accept the Bill of Rights and establish a constitutional monarchy James II Sorry for taking your throne Dad!
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Louis XIV *the Sun King* Best example of the practice of absolutism in the 17 th century (1600s) Only 4 yrs. old when he becomes King of France (France ruled by Cardinal Mazarin) Louis XIV (23 yrs old) took control NICE LEGS!
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Versailles Personal household of the king Chief offices of the state located here (Louis could watch over them) Powerful subjects came to find favors & offices for themselves
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Frederick the Great Ruler of Prussia (later part of Germany) Built up Prussia’s army to be one of the biggest & best
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Peter the Great Of the Romanov dynasty Became czar ( Russian word for caesar ) in 1689 Attempted to westernize Russia Reorganized his army Divided Russia into provinces Ordered Western manners be taught Changed the clothing of those at court St. Petersburg constructed in 1703 & was Russia’s capital until 1918
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Thomas Hobbes Wrote Leviathan- work on political thought Before society was organized, human life was “poor, nasty, & short”. To save themselves from destroying one another, people made a “social contract” & agreed to form a state People in the state agreed to be governed by an absolute ruler (needed to preserve order in society)
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John Locke The mind was a blank slate- a tabula rasa Wrote Two Treatises of Government Believed humans lived in a state of equality & freedom (had certain natural rights- life, liberty, & property) Govt. would protect those rights, but the people had the right to overthrow that govt. if it wasn’t doing its job
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