Transcript Absolutism
Warm Up
• Write the Roman Numerals for #1-20.
– We will be using them today in class and you need to know them.
Absolutism
French Wars of Religion
French Wars of Religion 1562-1598
•
Catholics v. Protestants (political /economic)
– French monarchy = Catholic • persecuted French Protestants (
Huguenots
) – many nobles = Huguenots –
St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre – Aug. 24, 1572- Paris
• • •
(Queen Mother, Catherine de Medici planned the massacre) Wedding celebration of Catholic princess to Huguenot heir to throne 70,000 + were killed throughout France
• 1589-
Henry IV of Navarre (1 st Bourbon king- royal family))
– converted to RC,
“Paris is worth a mass”
•
Edict of Nantes,
1598 – Catholicism still official religion – Huguenots had right to worship/hold political office • Henry IV eliminated French debt, created industries, encouraged trade and agriculture
(eventually reverted to Protestantism, annulled marriage, remarried, was assassinated for helping Huguenots on French border)
St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
France before Louis XIV
•
absolutism
– system in which ruler holds absolute (total, complete) power •
Cardinal Richelieu
– chief minister for Louis XIII •
Louis XIII inherited the throne as a child, had to eventually take it from his Italian mother and her Italian advisors
–
strengthened monarchy and helped create absolutism
– took away political/military rights of Huguenots w/o taking away religious rights –
set up network to spy on nobles,
• crushed conspiracies • Tore down nobles’ castles if not for French defense
Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIII
Louis XIV; the Sun King
• Louis XIV became king at 4; – “
L’Etat c’est moi
Cardinal Mazarin chief minister – 23 when Mazarin died, held absolute power • “Sun king” - everything came from him; ” “I am the state” – Best example of absolutist monarch • Royal court moved to
Versailles
– personal household of the king – offices of state located there (outside Paris), 3 purposes: – powerful subjects had to come there to talk to Louis (and serve him) – Long-term cause of French Revolution (wealth and royalty no longer in Paris)
Versailles = gilded cage, nobles help royal family dress, nobles ran out of money…had to rely on king, etc.
•
Ended tolerance of Huguenots ,closed churches
–
Protestants fled (200,000- mass exodus)
• Fought 4 wars; 1667-1713 – to gain power/prestige, many countries formed coalitions against Louis to keep him from controlling all of Europe
Louis XIV
Palace of Versailles
Hall of Mirrors
Thirty Years’ War
(1618-1648)
1. Began w/ Calvinist Bohemia (Czech Republic) v. Holy Roman Empire (Catholic)
– War fought in Holy Roman Empire (German provinces) – all nations in Europe, except England, involved – very bloody, 25-40% of German population killed • 50% of German males died • Height of European witch hunts (famine, droughts, death= blamed on supernatural powers)… Catholic leaders in HRE killed thousands of “witches”
2. Peace of Westphalia
– By 1648: • German states- could determine own religion/ own foreign policy • Limited power of HRE in German states
Thirty Years War
Central Europe
•
Frederick William the Elector
– set up powerful Prussian state (in HRE) > strong army – gov’t sponsored economic activity, civil service main occupation for middle class – Austrian Hapsburgs (royal family of Austria and Spain) created empire in SE Europe • Austria- never centralized absolutist state b/c so many ethnicities in it, never fully unified –
(we will come back to this problem in 1800’s)
Frederick William
•
Russia
Ivan the Terrible- czar
– expanded territory, – mental illness, killed son – left Russia with no heir (Caesar) •
Peter the Great-
1682 , absolutist monarch (Eastern Orthodox) – visited Europe,
westernized
Russia (made it more European) – formed standing army, created navy, wanted ordered state ruled by law – western customs/manners open water lifetime, Russian capital (men had to shave beards) – fought war w/ Sweden to gain port on Baltic Sea, access to – 1703 began building St. Petersburg, finished during Peter’s