Rick Gill Assignment #11.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Absolutism in England.
Advertisements

The Development of the English Monarchy
Parliament Limits the English Monarchy
The Stuarts Alunno: Ferrari Davide Classe: 4ALS Data:
Limited Monarchy in England. Parliament had placed limits on the king's power beginning with King John and the Magna Carta. Parliament is a legislative.
The Tudors and Parliament
English Civil War and Glorious Revolution. James I and the Origins of the English Civil War James was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and, because Elizabeth.
Parliament Limits the English Monarchy
Unit 4 Enlightenment and Absolutism Lesson 4 England Rejects Absolutism (REJECTED)
English Civil War, The Glorious Revolution & the Restoration.
Aim/Goal: How did Parliament emerge supreme in England? Do Now: Some have said that the person or group which controls the “purse” of a nation has the.
Bell Ringer: 11/16 & 11/17 Peter the Great wanted to ______________________ Russia by making it more like western Europe. Peter the Great wanted to ______________________.
The English Exception The European World. Charles I Fights Parliament / 1625: / Charles I enthroned / always needed money / at war with both Spain and.
Political Revolutions England. English Revolution Stuarts of Scotland –James I Forced the Anglican Religion on the people of England Dismissed Parliament.
Key Terms – England in the 17 th Century Charles I Divine Right Petition of Right William Laud English Civil War Cavaliers Roundheads Oliver Cromwell Lord.
 King John forced to sign the Magna Carta, agreeing to obey laws & consult with Parliament (legislature = make laws) Magna Carta Video  1603.
Absolutism – England 16.3.
Oliver Cromwell & the Restoration
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.
Parliament Limits the English Monarchy.  Parliament is England’s legislature; they “held the purse strings”  Parliament’s financial power was an obstacle.
Parliament Limits English Monarchy Chapter Rulers’ Relations With Parliament Ruler Relations with Parliament James 1 ( )
England from  James I  Charles I  Civil War  Oliver Cromwell  Richard Cromwell  Charles.
CONSTITUTIONALISM IN ENGLAND. THE ENGLISH EXCEPTION  Successful centralization without absolutism  Strong, centralized government  Parliamentary, aristocratic.
Early Modern England Title page from Leviathan, by Thomas Hobbes.
What is Parliament? Parliament is the government. In the United States, we have Senators and Congressmen that.
English Kings v. Parliament in the 1600s and 1700s The English Civil War, the Restoration, and The Glorious Revolution.
SSWH14.B. Charles I and Parliament  Wars caused Charles I to constantly need more money  Parliament usually refused to give him the funds he wanted.
Cavaliers and Roundheads
England Moves toward Representative Government The Rights of Englishmen are Secured
(The English Revolution)
Absolutism – England Objectives 1.Analyze how clashes between the Stuarts and Parliament ushered in a century of revolution. 2.Understand how the.
Parliament Triumphs in England The Age of Absolutism Chapter 4, Section 3.
ENGLISH CIVIL WAR. The Beginning of Trouble Started when James I took the throne after Elizabeth died Started when James I took the throne after Elizabeth.
Revolution and Change in Britain. Elizabeth I Protestant Who Succeed? No Children Lots of debt to who would follow Elizabeth dies in 1603 no heir.
English Monarchs vs. Parliament “The Battle Royal”
The Early Stuarts Elizabeth I dies after a 45 year reign without an heir in James I, son of Mary Stuart, the first Stuart king clashes with Parliament.
Monarchs of Europe: England. The Tudors and Parliament During this time of absolute monarchs in Europe, the Parliament in England was working to limit.
English Civil War – Glorious Revolution.  James I wanted absolute power when he inherited the throne from Queen Elizabeth  Elizabeth wanted absolute.
England and Constitutionalism
The Struggle for Power in England. E.Q. 4: What type of government did Britain have and how was it challenged during the Stuart dynasty? Key Terms: constitutional.
England’s Struggle to End Absolutism English Civil War.
English Civil War How a Constitutional Government was formed CONSTITUTIONALISM.
Unit 8 The English Civil War. The Stuarts Cousins from Scotland Political issues Believed in divine right and absolutism in a country with a history of.
English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution Adair Doran.
Parliament Limits the English Monarchy. Monarchs Clash with Parliament (James I took over after Elizabeth died; his son, Charles I, takes over when he.
Charles I; Civil War; Oliver Cromwell; The Commonwealt Liza Langa.
Triumph of Parliament in England
Cavaliers vs Roundheads
The Development of English Civil Rights World History - Libertyville HS.
Chapter FOUR; Section THREE England After Elizabeth Elizabeth dies with no heir. James I, of Scotland, assumed the English throne, believed in divine right.
AP EURO Unit #1 – Age of Absolutism Lesson #6 English Civil War.
Kick off October 29, 2013 Identify the correct term or person that best fits each of the following descriptions: 1.Treaty that gave the rulers of German.
English Revolutions. Rule in England The mid-late 17 th Century was a very unstable time for the English monarchy. Power changed hands several times.
English Civil War ( ).
The English Revolutions The Winds of Change. Notes Page  This is your visual aide as an additional tool for note taking  Complete the notes for each.
Monarchy in England Tudor Dynasty Queen Elizabeth I ( ) –the last Tudor monarch –daughter of Henry VIII –forced to work w/ Parliament –thus, NO.
Monarchy in England. Main Idea In contrast to the absolute monarchies of Spain and France, the English monarchy was limited by Parliament Following a.
Warm Up…  Who were the two ruling families of England during Absolutism? Which family worked with Parliament, and which did not?  Explain how Parliament.
The Triumph of England’s Parliament from Tudor Rule to Stuart Rule During the Age of Absolutism Chapter 17 Lesson 2 Notes The Thames River.
 In 1603, Elizabeth died. She never married, so there were no heirs to continue the Tudor Dynasty  Mary Stuart’s son, James I became the King of England—
The English Civil War. In 1603, Elizabeth I died without children. The throne of England passed to her cousin James, who was already King of Scotland.
English Civil War & Glorious Revolution
Brain Boost Create a thinking map that compares and contrasts England before the English Civil War/Glorious Revolution with England after the E.C.W. and.
TheAge of Revolutions 1/9/18.
The Evolution of English Constitutionalism
English Stuarts and the English Civil War
Lesson #7 English Civil War
The English Civil War Part 2 - The actual war.
Portugal SPAIN Spain.
Presentation transcript:

Rick Gill Assignment #11

Questions Who were the leaders during the English Revolution? What was the conflict between Charles I and Parliament? What occurred during the Civil War? What are the Cromwell rules? What were the results of the English Revolution?

English Revolution Leaders - James I - A Stuart – Who disliked Parliament - Was originally king of Scotland - Believed in divine right - Define and quote page 29 - Contrasted with English tradition of Parliament

James I cont. - Not popular - Liked provoking Puritans - Anglican

Charles I - Son of James I - Continued tradition of Divine right - Always looking for money - Loved extravagance - Fought unpopular wars with Spain and France

Charles vs. Parliament - Needed money to support extravagant lifestyle and wars - Wasn’t able to raise money on his own and turned to Parliament - Parliament refused - Dissolved parliament twice - Recalled hoping for more money

Charles vs. Parliament - Parliament demanded new powers each time Charles asked for money - Parliament also demanded 2 advisors be executed for their abuses of power - Charles agreed - Frustrated with Parliament – Attacked with 500 soldiers - Parliament escaped and called army

Civil War (7 Years War) - Charles with other nobles had a more professional army - Supporters called Royalists - Oliver Cromwell (Puritan) led Parliament against King - Army included militia farmers and town’s people

Civil War (7 Years War) - Supporters called Roundheads - Cut their hair short - Scottish joined Parliament attacking from North and defeating the King - Charles escaped to Scotland arrested and returned to England - Charged with treason found guilty and executed

Cromwell Rules - Cromwell supporters decided they did not want a new King - Charles son Charles II - People in Scotland and Ireland supported Charles II - Fought Cromwell and Parliament - Cromwell won

Cromwell Rules - Parliament become ineffective - Cromwell appointed himself Lord Protector (Dictator) - Very unpopular - Blue laws were unpopular

Results of the English Revolution - Cromwell dies and his son was unable to succeed him - Charles II was invited back to England and appointed King by Parliament - James II took over when Charles II died - James was Catholic and unpopular

Results of English Revolution - James was kicked out of England - William and Mary took over - Showed Parliament had power to choose a monarch