there are around 70 million people living in 1 million square miles of europe. transportation was...
TRANSCRIPT
FORMATION OF STATES
• There are around 70 million people living in 1 million square miles of Europe.
• Transportation was slow, hazardous, communications sporadic and uncertain.
• The urban life you see in Renaissance Italy did not exist in any other part of Europe yet, although town and city growth is occurring.
• The most important development of the 13th and 16th centuries was the gradual rise of national states.
• By the end of the 15th century, national monarchies prevailed everywhere in the West except Germany and Italy.
Rise of the National State• The establishment of royal authority depended on
many factors– The ruler himself– Rulers less dependent on nobles and were able to
maintain standing armies of their own. – Diplomacy and well planned marriages– Territories could be purchases. – Representative institutions began to arise although the
monarchs still held the majority of the power.
Muscovy• At the beginning of the 16th century, the principality of Muscovy was the
largest in Europe. • Under Ivan III “the Great” and Ivan IV “the terrible” Muscovy expanded by
1.5 million sq. miles. This land was never lost. • Several factors allowed for this expansion
– Mongol Empire deteriorating, allowing Ivan to escape the yoke of their rule.
– The fall of Constantinople made Muscovy the Heir to eastern Christendom.
– Ivan III had no rivals for his throne. Ivan III “the Great” extended the privileges of his nobility and organized a military class who received land for their service. He also developed a theory on ruling that rested on the divine vs. temporal power, combining the religious authority of the Orthodox Church with his power.
• Ivan IV “the terrible” did not trust the boyars (nobility) like his grandfather.
• During his brutal suppression of supposed conspiracies several thousand families were murdered by Ivan IV- earning his nickname “the terrible”
• He also made the Boyars situation similar to that of the military class, whose members owned their fortunes to the Tsar.
England• The only state to suffer no fear of foreign invasion in the 15th
century. • However, three decades of warfare between English nobles
created a monarchy that had lost both prestige and power.• Henry Tudor, Henry VII, put an end to dynastic stability at one
by marrying Elizabeth of York in whose heirs would have a legitimate claim to the throne.
• Henry VII and his son Henry VIII both began taming the subjects of England and creating a new batch of nobles that owed their loyalty and titles to the Tudors.
• The financial problems of the monarchy were not as easy to tame.
• English kings had to gain the assent of Parliament in order to tax the English people.
• It wasn’t until Henry VIII’s reign that the crown was wealthy again.
• Henry VIII confiscated the wealth of the Catholic Church and instantly solved all the wealth problems of the crown.
• Thomas Cromwell, Henry’s chief minister, accelerated the process of centralizing the government under the king with his diplomacy and negotiations.
France• France was frequently at war with its neighbors
– This ended with the 100 years war in the mid 15th century. – The Swiss took care of the Burgundy problem for France and themselves as well.
• France’s nobles were in constant rivalry for the throne. – Louis XI ended this by marrying his daughters off to Prince’s of provinces, and all
estates without male heirs were inherited by the King.
• French people were loyal to their province vs. an overall king. – Louis XI’s daughters marriage and his consolidation of French provinces created
a unified state.
• The North and South were divided by culture and language.– The French monarchy is the first to develop a national army raised and directed
by the King but supplied and equipped regionally. – By the beginning of the 16th century, the French King could raise and an equip
an army of his own.
Spain• Prior to the 16th century, Moors/Muslims, occupied the
province of Granada in the South and Portugal dominated the Western Coast.
• The Spanish people were also divided into a number of separate states.
Spain• The 2 most important were Castile and Aragon. • Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile exchanged
wedding vows secretly in 1469 while their kingdoms fought civil wars.
• Their combined resources were enough to complete the Reconquista, or reconquering the kingdom of Grenada from the Moors in 1492 uniting Spain.
• However, the idea of a Holy War had a darker side with unexpected consequences.
The Inquisition and the Jews• Converted Jews called conversos fell under attack by the
Spanish Inquisition, a church tribunal that tested their new faith and loyalty.– Thousands of Conversos were killed and thousands more had their
wealth taken for the Reconquista. – In 1492 Ferdinand and Isabella expelled all Jews from Spain. – Charles V was a central figuring in unifying Spain.