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Absolutism. 1650 - 1720. Where?. France - Bourbon - Louis XIV Prussia - Hohenzollern Russia - Romanov - Peter the Great Austria - Habsburg (least absolutist) Sweden - King Charles XI, Charles XII and King Gustavus III (that’s all on Sweden). Why?. War and taxes religious wars - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Absolutism1650 - 1720
Where?France - Bourbon - Louis XIV
Prussia - Hohenzollern
Russia - Romanov - Peter the Great
Austria - Habsburg (least absolutist)
Sweden - King Charles XI, Charles XII and King Gustavus III (that’s all on Sweden)
Why?
War and taxes
religious wars
English Civil War
Theorists supported it:
Jean Bodin (1530-1596)
“nothing upon earth is greater or higher; next unto God, than the mastery of kings and sovereign princes”
Thomas HobbesLeviathan 1651
state of nature
“war of every man against every man”
“poor, nasty, brutish and short”
obedience only comes when they are afraid of not doing so
social contract - surrender rights in exchange for protection
Jacques Bossuet1627 - 1704
kings ruled by “divine right” by virtue of the will of God
How did his idea differ from Hobbes?
power comes from God not a social contract
Absolutism v. Despotism
ruling without constraints does not mean arbitrary rule
Characteristics of Absolutismcontrol of the nobility
establishing a centralized and efficient bureaucracy
raising and maintaining large standing armies
successful at raising funds
image building through art and architecture
religious unity
Characteristics unique to Central and Eastern Europe
win over nobility at expense of peasants = serfdom
no strong middle class to challenge
autocracy in Russia
Limitations
resistance will eventually come from:
representative assemblies
middle class
enlightened thinkers
Setting stage for Louis XIVHenry IV (r 1589 - 1610) and duke of
Sully
Louis XIII (r1610 - 1643) and Cardinal Richelieu
promotes raison d’etat
attack on nobility
generalites and intendants
goes after Huguenots
stops revolts
Louis XIV (as boy only) and Cardinal Mazarin 1602-1661) Italian - “foreign plotter”
Fronde in ParisCause: financial crisis = need to increase taxes
Parlement of Paris refuses to approve increase
remonstrances - formal objections to the registration of new royal ordinances, edicts or declarations, which could be overriden by the king
Mazarin orders arrest of defiant members
barricades went up - Parisian mob rioted
Louis XIV is able to stop the frondeurs - not united, people want stability over chaos
Effects of Fronde
Louis XIV decides on absolutism
economy needs to be rebuilt
nobility needs to be controlled
Reign of Louis XIV1643 - 1715
Jean Baptiste Colbert (1619 - 1683)
finance minister to Louis XIV
increases the taille
mercantilismcan’t keep up with Versailles & wars
Image is everything
L’etate, c’est moit - I am the state
Versailles
Nicholas Fouquet “Never outshine the master”
Jean-Baptiste Moliere - plays
Religion
“One king, one law, one faith”
Revocation of Edict of Nantes 1685
Persecution of Jansenists
Louis XIV - foreign policy
expansion of French borders = wars for prestige and to contain Habsburg power: Spanish & Austrian
France’s “natural” frontiers - east to Rhine River and south to Pyrenees Mts.
balance of power
biggest opponent - William of Orange,
Louis’ WarsWar #1
War of Devolution 1667 - 1668
France v. Triple Alliance: England, Sweden and Dutch Republic
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
War #2
The Dutch War of 1672
Louis v. Prince William of Orange and his coalition: Austria and SPanish Habsburg, Brandburg (future Prussia)
Treaty of Nimwegen 1678 - Louis able to keep Franche-Comte
War #3
War of the League of Augsburg 1688
a/k/a Nine Years’ War
in the colonies = King William’s War
Treaty of Ryswick 1697 - Louis gets Alsace
War # 4 - last oneWar of the Spanish Succession 1702-1713
Background to war
Louis v. William of Orange’s coalition: Grand Alliance
Results:
Treaty of Utrecht 1713
Treaty of Rastatt (Rastadt) 1714
Louis XIV’s death = 1715
tried to burn memoirs = recovered by his officials
contained confession that perhaps he had “loved glory too much”
foreshadows the coming of....?
Next up. . . .
Peter the Great - Russia - Romanov Dynasty - Autocrat - even more powerful than an Absolutist Monarch