ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by...

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ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770)

Transcript of ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by...

Page 1: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770)

Page 2: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

INTRODUCTIONIn the Middle Ages, the power of

kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church

The decline of feudalism, the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation, and the Commercial Revolution all helped enrich European society and increase the power of European monarchs (hereditary rulers)

Page 3: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

THE BIG QUESTION:

How did Europe’s rulers achieve absolute power?

Page 4: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

WARS OF RELIGIONDuring the Reformation, most kings

took control of religion within their own borders

Religious wars provided kings with an opportunity to build large standing armiesIntroduced new government

officialsAllowed tax increases (resistance

was put down by the king’s army)

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CHANGING ROLES OF THE NOBILITY

In the Middle Ages, nobles had been independent sources of power

In the 1600s, rulers began to “tame” the nobility by keeping watch over them.

Nobles kept wealth and privileges, but had to obey the king’s command

The growing urban middle classes often allied themselves with kings against the nobility

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JUSTIFICATIONS FOR ROYAL POWER

“Reason of state” – justified doing whatever was necessary for the survival of the state

Some thought that without a strong central authority to keep order, society would break down, so kings were justified in seizing absolute power in order to maintain order in society

Divine right of kings – the king was God’s deputy on earth, and royal commands expressed God’s wishes

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ACTIVITYComplete the chart of

absolute rulers. Include the years the monarch ruled, the country the monarch ruled, and key legislations or policies.

Page 8: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

LEFT SIDE ACTIVITYChoose one of the

justifications for royal power and create a cartoon describing or illustrating it.

Page 9: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

ABSOLUTISM IN RUSSIABy the end of the 15th century, rulers

around Moscow declared independence from Mongol rule (adopted the system of royal absolutism on a grand scale)

Conquered neighboring landsThe majority of population were serfs (just

when serfdom was declining in Western Europe, it was increasing in Eastern Europe)

Russian nobility pledged absolute loyalty to the Tsar in return for their power over serfs

Page 10: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

ACTIVITYAdd Peter the Great (1682-1725) and Catherine the Great (1762-1796) to your chart

Page 11: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

Left Side ActivityCreate a chart comparing absolutism in France and Russia. Include both similarities and differences

Page 12: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

LIMITED MONARCHY IN ENGLANDEnglish monarchs were never able to

establish absolute rule as those in France, Spain and Russia did

Checks had been placed on the English king’s powerMagna Carta (1215) guaranteed that

Englishmen could not be fined or imprisoned without process of law and new taxes had to be approved by the king’s barons

Parliament: established as a legislative body made up of nobles and elected representatives

Page 13: ABSOLUTISM (1600-1770). INTRODUCTION  In the Middle Ages, the power of kings had been limited by nobles, parliaments, and the Catholic Church  The decline.

ENGLAND’S ROAD TO LIMITED MONARCHYCreate a flow chart describing the

events leading to England’s Limited Monarchy:Tudor Monarchs: Henry VIII and Elizabeth

IEarly Stuart Monarchs: James I and

Charles IEnglish Civil War (1642-1649): Oliver

CromwellThe Restoration: Charles IIThe Glorious Revolution: William and

Mary and the English Bill of Rights

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POLITICAL THINKERS IN THE AGE OF ABSOLUTISM

Thomas Hobbes – Man was not naturally good and was incapable of maintaining social order, therefore absolute rule was necessary

John Locke – believed rulers obtained power from the people, not God. Promoted the “social contract”. The purpose of government was to protect natural rights (life, liberty, property)

Sir William Blackstone – explained English common law (judges following precedents of other courts) and England’s “mixed monarchy” where power was shared by king and Parliament.

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EUROPEAN SOCIETY IN THE 18TH CENTURY

Social Order – The “Old Regime”Society was aristocratic – people

of noble birth were a race apart (superior to everyone else)

Nobles owned the most land, served as army officers, became Church bishops, and held the highest government positions