The Netherlands Group of 17 provinces ruled by Philip II, the King of Spain 1559 Philip left the Netherlands and put his half-sister Margaret of Parma.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Philip II & the Dutch Revolt
Advertisements

Imperial Spain and Philip II
Chapter 7: Crisis and Absolutism in Europe
The Holy Roman Empire (know the Location) NOT Holy, NOT ROMAN, and NOT an Empire. A loose collection of GERMAN Kingdoms, principalities, & church holdings.
16 th Century religious reform movement Led to new Christian sects not answerable to the Pope Also known as the PROTESTANT REFORMATION.
Albrecht Dürer, “The Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand” (on Mount Ararat, by the Persian King Saporat, at the order of Emperor Hadrian), painted in 1508.
Religious Wars. The French Wars of Religion ( )  French concerned with the spread of Calvinism  Calvinists (called Huguenots)  Come from all.
Phases of the Thirty Years’ War. Bohemian Period of the Thirty Years’ War Catholics name Ferdinand II as Holy Roman Emperor, who immediately revokes religious.
Philip II Cardinal Grenvelle Duke of Alba Don John Francis,Duke of Alencon.
Imperial Spain and Philip II
Netherlands Revolt Mid-sixteenth century Netherlands was very different from either France or Spain – 17 autonomous provinces, the most important.
 Huguenots- (French Protestants)- watched by French monarchs as early as 1520 when protestant ideas arrived in France  Huguenot persecution became policy.
William III of Orange (r. England ) 1516 Charles of Habsburg becomes King of Spain and Netherlands Reign of Charles as Holy Roman Emperor.
The English Revolution. Religious Tensions Left Over From the Reformation - France 30 years of fighting breaks out in France and ends in 1589 Henry IV.
D UTCH W AR OF I NDEPENDENCE Presented by: Christina Perricone, Betsy Lucas, LiAnn Linck, Chris Immen, Nick Gioia, Ricky Manz, and John Raneri.
Paragraph The Dutch had: No ruler, no regent And they were losing the war against Spain. Spain send a new regent for the Spanish Netherlands: Duke.
Aim: Why was there religious conflict in the Netherlands during the 1500s? Basic Characteristics in the 1500s – Seventeen Provinces (today would be Belgium.
Europe in Crisis: The Wars of Religion
Robert WadeJPII HS AP European History.  Ruled by Philip II through his father HRE Charles I when he abdicated  Unlike his father, who had been raised.
Maggie Hill.  Charles V abdicated the Spanish branch of his throne to his son, Philip II.  Brought the entire Iberian Peninsula under his rule  Titular.
Religious Wars and State Building Oh you Protestants, what have you done…
Imperial Spain and the Reign of Philip II Make sure to print-out Handout of the same name from my blog and place it in your Review Notebook!!
Philip II Great Wealth from Spanish colonies Increased Wealth and Population = Inflation. This caused less food and fewer jobs. Wages stayed the same while.
Wars of Religion.
The Age of Absolutism The 15th and 16th Centuries marked a period of strong monarchies and the birth of nation states. Ferdinand and Isabella expelled.
Spain’s Catholic Crusades ( ) Spain’s Catholic Crusades ( ) Wars of Phillip II Wars of Phillip II French Civil Wars ( 1562.
Religious Wars in Europe World History I Philip II of Spain.
The Life and Times of Philip II. Philip II: Family Passionately Catholic: enforced Catholicism in Spain, spread Catholic influence in Europe Son of Holy.
The Thirty Years’ War ( ) The Peace of Augsburg did not extend recognition to non-Lutheran Protestants First continent-wide war in modern.
WORTH: Spanish Religious War French Religious War English Religious War Thirty Years War Vocabulary and Art Religious Wars.
Religion, Politics and War 16 th & 17 th centuries.
Philip II and the Revolt in the Netherlands. Spanish Empire of Philip II.
Sides Protestant France Sweden Dutch Danes German States – Palatinate (SW Germany) – Bohemia Catholic Spain Holy Roman Empire German States – Bavaria.
 By mid 16 th it was militant Catholicism v. militant Calvinism -> spread their word and defeat the other side  This was a religious/spiritual struggle.
Spain vs. Netherlands and England BY: BRANDON MOON AND MARK EDELSTEIN.
Drill – Do you think we truly have freedom of religion in this country? Do we deserve freedom of religion? Why or why not? 2. Homework –
The Age of Religious Wars ( )
Spanish Possessions of Habsburgs under Philip II.
Outside reading books need to be completed by 10/22… 20 days.
Religious Turmoil in the Netherlands and England.
Chapter Outline Chapter 14 Europe at War, Civilization in the West, Seventh Edition by Kishlansky/Geary/O’Brien Copyright © 2008, Pearson Education,
The Wars of Religion 1525 – Causes: Attempts to enforce religious uniformity Religion as an excuse for rebellion.
In general, states in the northern Europe became Protestant while those in the South remain Catholic and in both cases royal authority increased at the.
 Read the Peace of Augsburg primary source (in your drive) and answer the questions that accompany it.
Europe in Crisis Chapter 12, Lesson 1
Europe in Crisis 3.06 Compare the influence of religion, social structure, and colonial export economies on North and South American societies Evaluate.
Tremendous Tuesday Oct. 6 th  Get a book please  Take your seat  Begin Warm-Up Warm-Up What is this image suggesting about the Netherlands? What can.
12.2 Revolt of the Netherlands, Spain, England, The Armada.
Imperial Spain Spain was succeeding in almost every aspect (militarily, politically, economically) when Philip II tried to tighten his control on the Netherlands.
Religious Wars have a political impact! War of three Henrys, Protestant Revolts, 30 Years War.
Chapter 7. Conflict between Catholics and Protestants was at the heart of the French Wars of Religion Both Catholicism and Calvinism had become.
Chapter 5 Religious War And State Building. France Saw rise of Huguenots (Protestant Calvinists) Made up of many nobility and middle class. Rivaled the.
Spain’s Catholic Crusade Philip II ( ): Like his father, Charles V, fanatically sought to re- impose Catholicism in Europe.
Click to begin Click to begin Mr. Lindenmuth AP Chapter 12 Review.
Imperial Spain and Philip II
Take out your notes from this weekend.
Religious Wars Spain and England.
JEOPARDY! Age of Religious Wars Mr. Lindenmuth Click to begin
Title Layout Subtitle.
Learning objective – to be able to explain the impact of the Netherlands on Anglo-Spanish relations between 1566 and I can describe the key features.
Historians views What happened in the Netherlands?
The Religious Wars.
The Protestant Reformation
THE EUROPEAN WARS OF RELIGION c
Religious Wars of Europe
French Wars of Religion –
Spain “The Golden Age”.
Religious Wars.
16TH CENTURY: RELIGIOUS WARS & POLITICS
Religious Wars have a political impact!
Presentation transcript:

The Netherlands Group of 17 provinces ruled by Philip II, the King of Spain 1559 Philip left the Netherlands and put his half-sister Margaret of Parma in charge with help from a special council

End of the Dutch Revolt

Cardinal Granvelle 1561 headed the council to control Netherlands Hoped to check Protestant gains through internal church reforms Wanted to break the local autonomy of the 17 stadtholders of each province Wanted to establish a strong centralized gov’t from Madrid

Calvinism in the Netherlands Netherlands had many merchant cities—Antwerp, most magnificent and independent and a Calvinist stronghold By 1560, cities housed many Calvinists, some who fled from France William of Orange (“the Silent”) – opposed Phillip II’s and Cardinal Greenville’s persecution of Dutch Calvinists –Returns from exile in Germany to lead the Dutch

Due to the rising tide of Calvinism, Cardinal Granvelle was removed from office in 1564 Philip II began to insist the decrees of the Council of Trent be enforced in Netherlands Compromise of 1564— agreement between Dutch nobles to resist Spain –led to rebellion

Duke of Alba The “sea beggars” revolt is violently put down by Philip II ‘s, Duke of Alba who executes thousands of suspected heretics Alba established the “Council of Blood” (Troubles) to execute Calvinists Spanish levied new taxes against the Dutch to pay for suppressing the revolt Tens of thousands fled the Netherlands during Alba’s cruel six year rule.

William of Orange Returns Orange was in exile during Alba’s reign He returned to set up his movement in his three provinces of Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht The “sea beggars” sparked rebellions against Alba and his successor, Don Luis de Requesens (1573)

Pacification of Ghent Spanish Fury – After Requesen’s death, Spanish mercenaries leave 7,000 people dead in Antwerp on November 4, 1576 Nov. 8, the massacre unites Protestant and Catholic Netherlands versus Spain under the Pacification of Ghent

Union of Arras and Union of Utrecht Two groups: Union of Utrecht (Calvinists) in the north and Union of Arras (Catholic) in the south 1577 Spain signs humiliating Perpetual Edict calling for the removal of all Spanish troops from the Netherlands William of Orange becomes leader of the country Union of Arras (southern Catholic) makes peace with Spain fearing Protestant domination—will be called the Spanish Netherlands Union of Utrecht (northern Protestant) formed to oppose Union of Arras

Netherlands Independence Philip II declared William of Orange an outlaw and placed a 25,000 crown bounty on his head Orange responded with publicly denouncing Philip as a heathen tyrant in his Apology William of Orange is assassinated and replaced by his son Maurice who with the help of England and France finally defeat Spain –The Union of Utrecht becomes the United Netherlands Spain first signs truce in 1609 and recognizes full independence of the Netherlands in 1648 with the Peace of Westphalia

Summation: Revolt in the Netherlands Throughout the conflict, the Dutch received naval assistance from Elizabeth I’s “sea dogs” against the Spanish Armada When England defeats the Spanish Armada, Spain, exhausted, is forced to concede control of the Northern provinces, but the Southern provinces settle with Spain for protection

What was the role of religion in the Dutch Revolt? Discuss the causes of the Dutch revolt against Spain. What were William Of Orange's aims and methods during the Dutch Revolt? What were the consequences for the emerging power of England? Was the 16th century Dutch revolt successful? What were its outcomes?