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Chapter 15 Part 1 Wars of Religion 1559-1648

Chapter 15 Part 1

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Chapter 15 Part 1. Wars of Religion 1559-1648. Wars of Religion 1559-1648. Hapsburg-Valois Wars (1519-1559) The last of the purely dynastic wars of the 16 th Century Considered political rather than religious since both the French and Hapsburgs were Catholic - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 15 Part 1

Chapter 15Part 1

Wars of Religion1559-1648

Page 2: Chapter 15 Part 1

Wars of Religion1559-1648

Hapsburg-Valois Wars (1519-1559) The last of the purely dynastic wars

of the 16th Century Considered political rather than

religious since both the French and Hapsburgs were Catholic

France believed that a divided German State on its eastern border was more important than Western European religious hegemony

Page 3: Chapter 15 Part 1

1560-1648 Wars will be fought over religious issues Spain will try to end Protestantism

in Western Europe and the spread of Islam in the Mediterranean

French Catholics will try to squash the Huguenots

The HRE will try to re-impose Catholicism in Germany

A Civil War in England between Puritans and Anglicans

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Spain Under Philip II Spain will enjoy its

Golden Age

Philip will try to re-impose Catholicism in Western Europe

Built the Escorial: A palace, monastery and mausoleum in the Baroque style

Symbolized the power of Philip AND his commitment to Catholicism

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The Escorial

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Spain v the Turks Spain waged war against the Turks in

the Mediterranean to benefit the Christian merchants

The Battle of Lepanto (1571) Spain defeated the Turkish navy off of the coast of Greece

Crusade-like religious fervor

Ended the Ottoman threat in the Mediterranean

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Spain and the Dutch Revolt1566-1587

The Spanish Netherlands were 17 sovereign provinces each led by a Statholder

Each were self-governing: Made own laws, collected own taxes

Were connected economically and by a common ruler (Spanish monarch) BUT no sense of Federation

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The Spanish Netherlands All provinces sent representatives to the

States General BUT important decisions were made in home provinces

In the South 10 provinces spoke French and made their $ through textiles: wool and linen

In the North 7 provinces spoke Dutch and made $ through fishing, shipping and international Banking

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Antwerp Was the chief European financial and

commercial center

Antwerp was at the center of many intersecting trade routes

Stuff came from all over the world Harbor could accommodate 2500 ships

at one time 5,000 merchants from all over the world

gathered daily at the Bourse (the stock exchange)

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Other Dutch trading Centers

Bruges Ghent Brussels

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The Netherlands and the Church

Corruption in the Church and Renaissannce ideas prompted a call for reform

1520’s and 1530’s: The Bible was translated into Dutch and the spread of Luther’s ideas

The Netherlands was urban (unlike the rest of Europe) and ideas spread rapidly

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The Netherlands under Charles V

Charles was born in Ghent Was Flemish. Spoke language, knew

customs Charles V identified with the

Netherlands and they with him

When the Dutch embraced Calvinism (Dutch Reformed) Charles reacted with mild repression and condemnation…not effective

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Philip II and the Netherlands

Philip was Spanish No identification with the Dutch

When young was a wild child When older pious, religious,

intolerant

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Remember Lutheranism was no threat to

existing political authority

Calvinism was. They encouraged opposition to what they believed was “illegal authority”

By 1560’s most Dutch cities had strong militant minorities of Calvinists

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The Dutch A big middle class population Calvinism had appeal:

Intelligent seriousness Moral gravity Emphasis on hard work

Working class in the North converted because the bosses would only hire Calvinists

Were well-organized and had financial backing

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1556 Philip II appointed his ½ sister, Margaret as

Regent of the Netherlands She was supposed to impose the

Inquisition But lacked money so raised taxes Dutch resisted…pointed out that the

Dutch paid more taxes than the Spanish

She raised taxes anyway

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Revolt August 1556 Grain prices went way up Hurt poorest classes the most The Dutch attacked: not people but

religious idols in churches Was incited by Calvinist preachers First target: Cathedral of Notre Dame

(Antwerp) Built 1124-1518. Was huge, beautiful

Was totally dismantled by mobs in 6 days Then 30 more churches and libraries

were burned

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Philip II sent 20,000 Troops under command of the

Duke of Alva Ruthless extermination of religious

and poliltical dissidents

Now…inquisition AND tribunal Called the Council of Blood 3-3-1568: 1500 executed Margaret was revolted and resigned

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Alva levied a 10% sales tax on ALL transactions

Caused widespread hardship

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1568-1578 Civil War Provinces united under William the

Silent (of Orange)

Catholics v Protestants The Provinces v the Spanish

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1578 Philip sent nephew, Alexander Farnese with

German mercenaries To crush revolt Farnese fought patiently…one city at

a time One city after another fell to the

Spanish

THEN at Antwerp, William the Silent opened the dikes and flooded the city

Drove the Spanish out Stalemate

Page 22: Chapter 15 Part 1

The Union of Utrecht Was formed by the 7 northern

provinces 1581 Declared independence from

Spain North had many canals Was highly defensible Could break dikes and flood invaders

out

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The 10 Southern Provinces

Remained under Hapsburg control Land was flat Not defensible

Power and influence : landed Nobility

In the North: commercial aristocracy

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The Northern Provinces asked for English help

Chief market for English wool War in the Netherlands hurt the

English economy

Elizabeth hedged Then William the Silent killed… If the Provinces failed was England

next?

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1585-1587 Elizabeth sent help

2,000 troops and 250,000 English lbs

In the meantime… Philip was getting old and was

distracted Turks again in the Mediterranean Wives # 3 and 4 died Heir died Revolt of the Moriscos in Grenada

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Philip wanted to bring England back to

Catholicism Philip had earlier proposed to

Elizabeth and was rebuffed Now Philip backed a plot to

assassinate Elizabeth and replace her with Mary Queen of Scots

Plot was discovered Mary Queen of Scots was executed

by Elizabeth

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Pope Sixtus V Outraged by death of Mary Queen of

Scots Sent Philip II one million ducats ($)

to send a fleet to England and crush Elizabeth

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May 9, 1588 The War of the Spanish Armada

Spain 130 ships to the English Channel

England 150 ships: smaller but more maneuverable and more fire power

Storms and squalls in the Channel

Only 65 ships made it back to Spain

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Spain Will rebuild fleet and continue with

Golden Age

BUT 1609 truce with the Netherlands providing for independence of the Northern provinces

The independence of the United Provinces will not be formally acknowledged by other European powers until 1648

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Note Johan van Oldenbarneveldt took over for

Wm the Silent HE got English help HE arranged the truce with Spain HE helped to for the Dutch East India

Co. in 1602 Purpose of the DEIC was to protect

Dutch trade in the East and to damage the Spanish at sea

The DEIC even had the authority to govern territory