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Warm Up Write the Roman Numerals for #1-20. –We will be using them today in class and you need to know them.
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Absolutism
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French Wars of Religion
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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)
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St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
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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
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Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIII
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Louis XIV; the Sun King Louis XIV became king at 4; Cardinal Mazarin chief minister –23 when Mazarin died, held absolute power “Sun king” - everything came from him; – “L’Etat c’est moi” “I am the state” –Best example of absolutist monarch Royal court moved to Versailles (outside Paris), 3 purposes: –personal household of the king –offices of state located there –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
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Louis XIV
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Palace of Versailles
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Hall of Mirrors
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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
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Thirty Years War
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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)
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Frederick William
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Russia Ivan the Terrible- czar (Caesar) –expanded territory, –mental illness, killed son – left Russia with no heir 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 (men had to shave beards) –fought war w/ Sweden to gain port on Baltic Sea, access to open water –1703 began building St. Petersburg, finished during Peter’s lifetime, Russian capital
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Peter the Great
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Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great
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