vocab. absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries. ...

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ABSOLUTISM, ENLIGHTENMENT, & REVOLUTION Vocab

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 Huguenots: French protestants.  Intendents: Government agents used by Louis XIV who collected taxes and administered justice.  Edict of Nantes: Declaration made by Henry of Navarre of France allowing Huguenots freedom to worship in France.

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Page 1: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

ABSOLUTISM, ENLIGHTENMENT,

& REVOLUTIONVocab

Page 2: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states’ boundaries.

Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy and that the monarch acted as God’s representative on earth.

Page 3: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Huguenots: French protestants.

Intendents: Government agents used by Louis XIV who collected taxes and administered justice.

Edict of Nantes: Declaration made by Henry of Navarre of France allowing Huguenots freedom to worship in France.

Page 4: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Enlightenment: intellectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of individuals to solve problems.

Philosophe: social critics or philosophers from France.

Social contract: Idea from Thomas Hobbes that suggested all humans are naturally selfish and wicked and must hand over their rights to a strong ruler to create/run their government.

Page 5: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Estate: social classes of France. 1st Estate: Church leaders. 2nd estate: rich nobles. 3rd estate: 97% of the people.

Tennis Court Oath: a pledge made by the members of France’s National Assembly in 1789, in which they vowed to continue meeting until they had drawn up a new constitution.

National Assembly: a French congress established by representatives of the Third Estate to enact laws and reforms in the name of the French people.

Estates-General: Gathering of all three estates of France called by the king.

Page 6: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Jacobins: radical political party during the French Revolution

Guillotine: a machine for beheading people, used as a means of execution during the French Revolution.

Great Fear: a wave of senseless panic that spread through the French countryside after the storming of the Bastille in 1789.

Bastille: French prison torn down in the early days of the French Revolution.

Page 7: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Reign of Terror: period from 1793-1794 when Maximilien Robespierre ruled France nearly as a dictator and thousands of political figures and ordinary citizens were executed.

Page 8: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Continental System: Napoleon’s policy of preventing trade between Great Britain and continental Europe intended to destroy Great Britain’s economy.

Reign of Terror: period from 1793-1794 when Maximilien Robespierre ruled France nearly as a dictator and thousands of political figures and ordinary citizens were executed.

Napoleonic Code: a comprehensive and uniform system of laws established for France by Napoleon.

Battle of Trafalgar: an 1805 naval battle in which Napoleon’s forces were defeated by a British fleet under command of Horatio Nelson.

Page 9: Vocab.  Absolute monarch: kings or queens who held all of the power within their states boundaries.  Divine right: idea that God created the monarchy

Scorched-earth policy: the practice of burning crops and killing livestock during wartime so that the enemy cannot live off the land.

Peninsular War: a conflict in which Spanish rebels, with the aid of British forces, fought to drive Napoleon’s French troops out of Spain.

Legitimacy: the hereditary right of a monarch to rule