Chapter 15 State Building and the Search for Order in the Seventeenth Century
Apr 01, 2015
Chapter 15
State Building and the
Search for Order in the
Seventeenth Century
Timeline
Social Crises, War, and Rebellions
Economic ContractionPopulation ChangesThe Witchcraft Craze
Witchcraft before the sixteenth and seventeenth centuryIncreased prosecutions and executionsAccusations against witchesReasons for witchcraft prosecutions
• Religious uncertainty• Social conditions
Women as primary victimsBegins to subside by mid-seventeenth century
The Thirty Years War (1618 – 1648)
BackgroundReligious conflictDynastic-nationalist considerations Tensions in the Holy Roman Empire
The Bohemian Phase (1618 – 1625)The Danish Phase (1625 – 1629)The Swedish Phase (1630 – 1635)The Franco-Swedish Phase (1635 – 1648)Outcomes
Peace of Westphalia (1648)Social and economic effects
Map 15.1: The Thirty Years’ War
A Military Revolution?
War and Politics in Seventeenth-Century Europe
New Tactics
New Technologies
The Cost of a Modern Military
Rebellions
Peasant Revolts (1590 – 1640)France, Austria, Hungary, Portugal and Catalonia
Russia (1641, 1645 and 1648)
Switzerland (1656)
Noble Revolts in France (1648 – 1652)
Absolute Monarchy in France
Foundations of French AbsolutismCardinal Richelieu (1624 – 1642)
• Policies and goals
• Administrative reforms
Cardinal Mazarin (1642 – 1661)• The Fronde – Noble Revolt
The Reign of Louis XIV (1643 – 1715)
Administration of the GovernmentDomination and bribery
Religious PolicyEdict of Fontainebleau (1685)
Financial IssuesJean Baptist Colbert (1619 – 1683)
Daily Life at VersaillesPurposes of VersaillesCourt life and etiquette
The Wars of Louis XIVProfessional army: 100,000 men in peacetime; 400,000 in wartimeFour wars between 1667 – 1713
• Invasion of Spanish Netherlands (1667)• Annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, occupation of Strasbourg (1679)• War of the League of Augsburg (1689 – 1697)• War of the Spanish Succession (1702 – 1713)
Map 15.2: The Wars of Louis XIV
The Decline of Spain
Bankruptcies in 1596 and in 1607Philip III (1598 – 1621)Philip IV (1621 – 1665)
Gaspar de Guzman and attempts at reform
The Thirty Years’ WarExpensive military campaignsCivil WarThe Netherlands lost
Absolutism in Central and Eastern Europe
The German StatesThe Rise of Brandenburg-Prussia
• The Hohenzollern Dynasty
• Frederick William the Great Elector (1640 – 1688) Army General War Commissariat to levy taxes
• Frederick III (1688 – 1713) King of Prussia (1701)
Map 15.4: The Growth of Brandenburg-Prussia
The Emergence of Austria
Habsburgs
Leopold I (1658 – 1705)Expands eastward
Conflicts with the Turks• Siege of Vienna (1683)
Multinational Empire
Italy: From Spanish to Austrian Rule
Defeat of the French in Italy by Charles V (1530)
Spanish Presence (1559 – 1713)
Consequences of the War of the Spanish Succession
Russia: From Fledgling Principality to Major Power
Ivan IV the Terrible (1533 – 1584)First Tsar
Romanov Dynasty (1613 – 1917)
Stratified SocietyTsar
Landed aristocrats
Peasants and townspeople
The Reign of Peter the Great (1689 – 1725)
Visits the West (1697 – 1698)Reorganizes armed forcesReorganizes central government
Divides Russia into provinces
Seeks control of the Russian Church Introduces Western Customs
Book of Etiquettes
Positive Impact of Reforms on Women“Open a window to the West”Attacks Sweden
Battle of Narva (1700)Great Northern War (1701 – 1721)Battle of Poltava (1709)Peace of Nystadt (1721)Russia gains control of Estonia, Livonia and Karelia
St. Petersburg
The Winter Palace – St. Petersburg, Russia
Map 15.5: Russia: From Principality to Nation-State
The Great Northern States
DenmarkMilitary losses
Bloodless revolution of 1660
SwedenGustavus Adolphus (1611 – 1632)
Christina (1633 – 1654)
Charles XI (1697 – 1718)
The Ottoman Empire and the Limits of Absolutism
The Ottoman EmpireSuleiman the Magnificent (1520 – 1566)Attacks against EuropeAdvances in the MediterraneanOttomans viewed as a European PowerNew Offensives in the second half of the 17th century
The Limits of AbsolutismPower of rulers not absoluteLocal institutions still had powerPower of the aristocracy
Map 15.6: The Ottoman Empire
The Golden Age of the Dutch Republic
The United Provinces
Internal DissensionThe House of Orange and the Stadholders
The States General opposes the House of Orange
William III (1672 – 1702)
Trade damaged by wars
Life in Seventeenth-Century AmsterdamReasons for prosperity
England and the Emergence of Constitutional Monarchy
James I (1603 – 1625) and the House of StuartDivine Right of KingsParliament and the power of the purseReligious policies
• The Puritans
Charles I (1625 – 1649)Petition of Right“Personal Rule” (1629 – 1640): Parliament does not meetReligious policy angers Puritans
Civil War (1642 – 1648)
Oliver Cromwell
New Model Army
Charles I executed (January 30, 1649)
Parliament abolishes the monarchy
Cromwell dissolves Parliament (April 1653)
Cromwell divides country into 11 regions
Cromwell dies (1658)
Restoration & a Glorious RevolutionCharles II (1660 – 1685)Declaration of Indulgence (1672)Test Act (1673) – Only Anglicans could hold military and civil officesJames II (1685 – 1688)
Devout CatholicDeclaration of Indulgence (1687)Protestant daughters: Mary and AnneCatholic son born in 1688Parliament invites Mary and her husband, William of Orange, to invade EnglandJames II, wife and son flee to France
Mary and William of Orange offered throne (1689)Bill of RightsThe Toleration Act of 1689
Responses to the RevolutionThomas Hobbes (1588 – 1679)
Leviathan (1651)People form a commonwealthPeople have no right to rebel
John Locke (1632 – 1704)Two Treatises of Government Inalienable Rights: Life, Liberty and PropertyPeople and sovereign form a governmentIf government does not fulfill its duties, people have the right to revolt
The Flourishing of European Culture
The Changing Faces of ArtMannerism and Baroque
• Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598 – 1680) Throne of Saint Peter
• Artemisia Gentileschi (1593 – 1653) Judith Beheading Holofernes
French Classicism and Dutch Realism• French classicism emphasized clarity, simplicity, balance and
harmony of design• Dutch Realism: realistic portrayals of secular, everyday life
Rembrandt van Rijn (1606 – 1699)
The Baroque Trevi Fountain in Rome
A Wondrous Age of TheaterGolden Age of Elizabethan Literature (1580 – 1640)
William Shakespeare (1564 – 1614)• The Globe Theater• Lord Chamberlain’s Company
Spanish TheaterLope de Vega (1562 – 1635)
• Wrote 1500 plays – about 1/3 survive
French Theater (1630s to 1680s)Jean Baptiste Molière (1622 – 1673)
• The Misanthrope• Tartuffe
Discussion QuestionsWhy were so many women targeted during the witchcraft craze?How did the Thirty Years’ War affect the different participants?Was French absolutism truly absolute? Why or why not?What purposes did Versailles serve?How did Western ideas influence the reign of Peter the Great in Russia?What gains did Parliament make at the expense of the monarchy during the course of the seventeenth century?How did English political thinkers react to the the English revolutions?How did the art and plays that emerged after the Renaissance reflect the societies of their day?
Web LinksThe Museum of WitchcraftChateau VersaillesThe Thirty Years War HomepageThe State Hermitage Museum – St. Petersburg, RussiaThomas HobbesRenaissance and Baroque ArchitectureMr. William Shakespeare and the InternetNational Drama: Spain to 1700