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Chapter 16 Part 4 Absolutism V Constitutionalism

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Chapter 16 Part 4. Absolutism V Constitutionalism. James II 1685-88. Inherited the throne on the death of his brother Charles II Was 55 years old and a recent convert to Catholicism Had outlived his first wife and had two grown and married daughters: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 16 Part 4

Chapter 16Part 4Absolutism

VConstitutionalism

Page 2: Chapter 16 Part 4

James II 1685-88 Inherited the throne on the death of his

brother Charles II Was 55 years old and a recent convert to

Catholicism

Had outlived his first wife and had two grown and married daughters:

Mary, who had married William of Orange

Anne, who had married the king of Denmark

First family and James…Anglican

Page 3: Chapter 16 Part 4

James II tried to return England to Catholicism

He appointed Catholics to high positions in Government and universities

James II issued The Declaration of Indulgences: granting freedom of worship to Catholics

And demanded that the above be read at Anglican services on two successive Sundays

Page 4: Chapter 16 Part 4

Then James had married a Catholic His wife delivered a son 1688

(Catholic)

Parliament was not willing to go along

Forced James II to abdicate His son WOULD HAVE been

James III Was called the Old Pretender (will

try to invade England in 1715 and take power (unsuccessfully)

Page 5: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Old Pretender Will grow up, marry, have a son of

his own Would have been Charles III Charles was called the New

Pretender HE tried to retake the English

throne with the help of the Scots in 1745

Was also called Bonnie Prince Charlie

Page 6: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Glorious Revolution James II’s daughters were both

Protestant The older daughter, Mary, and her

husband, William of Orange, were invited by Parliament to take the English throne

Page 7: Chapter 16 Part 4

William and MaryCharles I (England) 1625-1649

William II …Mary Charles II James II

William III (Orange/England)……….Mary II

Holy Christmas! Charles I was the grandfather of BOTH William and Mary! Yikes! (I guess it’s not just the Hapsburgs!

Page 8: Chapter 16 Part 4

William of OrangeAgreed IF he had the popular support

of the English

And if he could bring Dutch troops with him…

Clearly, he was prepared to invade England and take power if necessary

Page 9: Chapter 16 Part 4

Late 1688 William and Mary were declared

joint sovereigns by Parliament

Page 10: Chapter 16 Part 4

England as a Constitutional Monarchy

All Below constitute the English Constitution:

The English Bill of Rights (1689) The Petition of Right (1628) The Habeas Corpus Act (1679)

Page 11: Chapter 16 Part 4

The English Bill of Rights:

King could not be Roman Catholic Laws could be made only by

Parliament No standing army in peacetime

without Parliament’s approval Taxation only with Parliament’s

approval Prohibited excessive bail and cruel

and unusual punishment

Page 12: Chapter 16 Part 4

English Bill of Rights continued

Guaranteed the right to trial by jury, due process of law, reasonable bail

The right to bear arms (for Protestants)

Free elections to Parliament Parliament could only be dissolved

with its consent People have the right of petition

Page 13: Chapter 16 Part 4

John Locke Wrote his Second Treatise of Civil

Government (1690)

Was the most notable defense of the Glorious Revolution

Locke said that the people create a government to protect their “natural Rights” of Life, Liberty, and Property

Page 14: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Toleration Act 1689 Freedom to worship for Protestant

nonconformists (like Puritans and Quakers) but not the right to hold office

Freedom to worship was NOT extended to Catholics, Unitarians

BUT they were usually left alone

Page 15: Chapter 16 Part 4

1701 The Act of Settlement

If King William or his sister-in-law, Anne, died without children, the crown would pass to the granddaughter of James I (the electress dowager of Hanover) or to her heirs

The Stuarts were no longer in the line of Succession

When Anne died in 1714, crown went to George I (a Hanovarian)

Page 16: Chapter 16 Part 4
Page 17: Chapter 16 Part 4

1707 The Act of Union United England and Scotland =

Great Britain

Scots agreed to this to take advantage of English trade…it worked out well for them

Also, Scottish Presbyterians were worried that the Old and Young Pretenders might try to return and take the throne of Scotland

Page 18: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Cabinet System (18th Century)

Leading ministers who were members of the House of Commons AND had the support of the majority of its members made policy and conducted the business of the country

Page 19: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Prime Minister Considered the leader of the

government A member of the majority party Generally the liaison between the

monarch and the House of commons

Page 20: Chapter 16 Part 4

Robert Walpole Though the title of PM was not jet

used, he is considered to be the first PM

He led the Cabinet from 1721-42

Established the precedent that the cabinet was responsible to the House of Commons

Page 21: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Hanoverians as Monarchs

George I 1714-27 usually presided over cabinet meetings (but did not speak English)

George II 1727-60 did not preside over Cabinet meetings and did not speak English

George III (grandson of II) tried to be a better English king but the role had been diminished as a result of the disinterest of Georges I & II

Page 22: Chapter 16 Part 4

The United Provinces of the Netherlands

aka The Dutch Republic

First ½ of the 17th Century was the “Golden Age” of the Netherlands

Government was dominated by the Bourgeoisie

Their wealth and power limited the power of the state

Page 23: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Government of the Dutch Republic

Was an organized CONFEDERATION of 7 provinces

Each province sent one representative to the ESTATES GENERAL

Holland and Zeeland were the richest and most influential of the provinces

Page 24: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Government of the Dutch Republic

Each province and city was autonomous (self-governing)

Each province had an elected STATHOLDER (governor) and military leader

In times of crisis all 7 provinces would elect the same Statholder…usually from the House of Orange

Page 25: Chapter 16 Part 4

Religious Toleration Calvinism was dominant but was

split between two factions:

Dutch Reformed: the majority and most powerful

Arminians: Calvinism without the belief in predestination

Page 26: Chapter 16 Part 4

Religion Arminians: most merchant class Enjoyed full civil rights after 1632

Catholics and Jews: full toleration but fewer rights

Religious toleration fostered trade and led to a cosmopolitan society

Page 27: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Greatest Mercantile Nation of the 17th Century

Amsterdam became the banking and commercial center of Europe

Replaced Antwerp (dominant in the 16th C)

Amsterdam was the richest city in Europe

Population 100,000+ Banking dominance because of the

lower interest rates than English banks

Page 28: Chapter 16 Part 4

The Dutch Few Natural Resources So it relied on commerce

Had the world’s largest fleet dedicated to trade

Was a hub of European trade due to its many outstanding ports

Little government interference with free enterprise

Page 29: Chapter 16 Part 4

Industries Fishing: the cornerstone of the

Dutch economy Major Industries: Woolens,

furniture, sugar refining, tobacco cutting, brewing, pottery, glass, printing, paper making, weapons manufacturing, ship building

DEIC and DWIC: Corporate ventures of private individuals and the state

Page 30: Chapter 16 Part 4

DEIC Challenged the Portuguese in the

East including South Africa, Sri Lanka, and parts of Indonesia

DWIC traded exclusively with Latin America and Africa

Page 31: Chapter 16 Part 4

Foreign Policy Participated in the Thirty Years’ War

against the Hapsburgs 1670’s wars with England and

France Significant economic decline

resulted

Page 32: Chapter 16 Part 4

Middle Class Values Even the wealthy had middle class values

Wealth was fairly evenly divided

The poor in the Netherlands were not as poor as that class in the rest of Europe BUT

Hard times and the end of the Golden Age due to the costly wars: 30 Years’, the Dutch Devolution, 2nd Dutch War, 4 separate Anglo-Dutch Wars

Page 33: Chapter 16 Part 4

Sweden

Sweden was a world power Controlled much of the Baltic region

Page 34: Chapter 16 Part 4

Gustavus Adolphus Reorganized the government

The Riksdag: an assembly of nobles, clergy, townsmen, and peasants SUPPOSEDLY had the highest legislative authority

BUT the real power was with the monarchy and nobility

Page 35: Chapter 16 Part 4

Swedish Government The Nobles had the dominant role in

the military and bureaucracy

The central government was divided into 5 departments, each controlled by a noble

Focused on trade rather than building a huge military