chapter 13 iii strengthening the monarchy

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Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

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Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy. Between 1337 and 1453, England and France fought a series of wars called the Hundred Years’ War . It began when Edward III of England laid claim to the French crown. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Chapter 13 iii

Strengthening the Monarchy

Page 2: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Between 1337 and 1453, England and France fought a series of wars called the Hundred Years’ War. It began when Edward III of England laid claim to the French crown.

Page 3: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Henry V of England took Crecy and won at Agincourt in 1346 with the new terror weapon, the longbow! Oh, yeah, and the cannon thingie.

Page 4: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Henry VI lost much of this land due to the unexpected influence of the heavy plow in England. (story time)

With theplow, people

had morefree time,

and...

You

Mr. Baker

Page 5: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

The French were demoralized and beaten, but a young woman named Joan of Arc helped France’s CharlesVII turn the war around in 1429. She believed thatshe was chosen byGod.

Page 6: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

She told the king that God spoke to her and called upon her to save France. With Charles’ support, she inspired victory at the siege of Orleans.

One of the mostest kick

buttest movies ever!!

Page 7: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Joan of Arc met with unexpected resistance, though (movie to soon follow.)

Page 8: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

At the end of the campaign

inspired by Joan, only the port city

of Calais was still held by the

English.

Page 9: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Effects of the 100 Years’ War:

1. French unity to repel the English. 2. Social conflict in England. Nobles bitter over lost land. 3. Helped end feudalism. 4. Formation of national armies. 5. New styles of warfare (castles and knights out, infantry in.)

Page 10: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

But maintaining these new, professional, standing armies was expensive! The kings turned to the new middle classes for tax revenue.

Thatdarn king!

He’shot!!

Page 11: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

In France, Louis XI, son of Charles VII, strengthened the bureaucracy, kept the nobles under court control, and promoted trade and agriculture.

Morecentral

authority!

Page 12: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

His primary goal was to unify France into one cooperative country. (Other countries still not united: Germany, Italy, Russia)

I’m a unificator, not a divider-upper!

Page 13: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Although war isn’t “good” for anyone, the Hundred Years’ War allowed accelerated social and political development in Western Europe.

Page 14: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

England’s Royal authority eroded during the 100 Years’ War and a struggle over control of the crown between nobles led to the War of the Roses.

Page 15: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

This ended with a victory by Henry Tudor (Henry VII) as the first Tudor king of England. He killed all challengers, avoided foreign wars, and strengthened the monarchy.

Page 16: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Henry VII (Henry Tudor) was one of the reasons that England became stronger than other parts of the world.

I kill because I care.

Page 17: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Spain regained control of their country by fighting the reconquista (reconquest) and expelling all Muslims.

All MuslimsOUT!!

Page 18: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

This reconquista was ruthlessly efficient. It led to the Spanish Inquisition in which Jews and Moors (African Muslims) could convert to

Christianity or be killed.

Page 19: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Many were tortured, excommunicated, and killed to create an atmosphere of fear (almost like Stalin did.)

Things to do:

•Kill

•Torture

•excommunicate

Page 20: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Could anyone have expected this from the Inquisition?

Page 21: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

In 1469, Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile were married to unify the nobles of Spain under one crown.

We’ll rulethe world!

Page 22: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

The Holy Roman Empire encompassed the areas of Germany, Spain, Poland, Hungary, and small parts of other countries.

Page 23: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Maximilian I founded the Hapsburg Dynasty of HRE’s. Choosing a HRE was now about who you were related to.

No honey,it’s Kelly’sturn to be

HRE.

Page 24: Chapter 13 iii Strengthening the Monarchy

Catholic armies fought against Mongols and Turks in Hungary, Teutonic Knights in Poland, and the Ottoman Empire.