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Chapter 4, Section 1
Looking Back

By the 1500s, Spain emerged as the first
modern European power.
In 1492, Queen Isabella and King
Ferdinand of Spain financed Columbus’
voyage across the Atlantic.
This led to the Spanish conquest in the
Americas
Charles V and the
Hapsburg Empire

In 1519, Charles V inherited the Spanish
empire, as well as the Holy Roman Empire
and the Netherlands.
Charles V was a strict Catholic.
His greatest enemy was the Ottoman
Empire.
Under Suleiman, the Ottoman Empire
occupied much of Hungary and they
challenged the Spanish power in the
Mediterranean.

Charles V
Suleiman
Charles V and the
Hapsburg Empire

Charles V gave up his titles and entered a
monastery in 1556.
He divided the empire, leaving the Hapsburg
lands in central Europe to his brother
Ferdinand, who became Holy Roman
Emperor.
He gave Spain, the Netherlands, southern
Italy and the overseas colony to his son,
Philip.

Philip II and Divine Right

 Philip II wanted to expand Spanish influence,
strengthen the Catholic Church, and make his own
power absolute.
 Spain was the foremost power in Europe, much in
part from the silver in the Americas.
 He reigned as an absolute monarch.
 He asserted that he ruled by divine right.
 Philip saw himself as the guardian of the Roman
Catholic Church
 His greatest undertaking will be trying to assert
religious unification
The Wars of Philip II

In the 1560s, a general uprising occurred in
the Netherlands.
In 1581, the northern Protestant provinces
declared independence from Spain and
became known as the Dutch Netherlands.
They were not officially recognized as a
nation until 1648.

The Wars of Philip II

 By the 1580s, Philip saw England’s Queen Elizabeth
I as his Protestant enemy.
 Elizabeth I supported the Dutch independence from
Spain.
 She encouraged Sea Dogs to plunder Spanish
treasure ships.
 In 1588, Philip II the Spanish sent an armada to
defeat the English.
 Spanish armada was defeated.
In the 1600s and 1700s, Dutch, English and
French fleets challenged, and surpassed,
Spanish power in Europe and around the world.

Philip II of Spain
Elizabeth I of
England

The Spanish
Armada
Spain’s Golden Age

The century from 1550 to 1650 is called Spain’s
siglo de oro, or “golden age” for its brilliance in
art and literature.
Among the most famous painters were El Greco
and Diego Velazquez.
Spain also produced writers such as Lope de
Vega who wrote “The Sheep Well” and Miguel
de Cervantes who wrote “Don Quixote”, the
first modern novel in Europe.

El Greco, “View of Toledo”

Miguel de Cervantes’ Don
Quixote
Economic Decline

In the 1600s, Spanish power and prosperity
slowly declined.
 Lack of strong leadership. Philip II’s successors were
less able.
 Economic problems
 Costly overseas wars drained wealth from Spain.
 The government taxed the middle class heavily.
 American gold and silver led to inflation
By the late 1600s, France had replaced Spain as
the most powerful nation.
Chapter 4, Section 2
Rebuilding France

From the 1560s to the 1590s, religious
wars between Huguenots (French
Protestants) and the Catholic majority
tore France apart.
The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
occurred on August 24, 1572.
Over 3,000 Huguenots were murdered.
Breakdown of order in France.

Henry IV

 In 1589, a French Huguenot was king
 He became Catholic to rule France.
 “Paris is well worth a Mass”.
 Edict of Nantes in 1598 granted Huguenots religious
toleration.
 The government administered justice, improved
roads, built bridges, and revived agriculture.
 Laid the foundations for royal absolutism.
Richelieu

Henry IV was killed by an assassin in 1610
and his nine year-old son Louis XIII inherited
the throne.
In 1624, Louis appointed Cardinal Armand
Richelieu as his chief minister
Richelieu sought to destroy the power of the
Huguenots and nobles.
Richelieu picked his successor, Cardinal Jules
Mazarin who would then serve as chief
minister.
Louis XIV, the Sun King

 Five year old Louis XIV inherited the throne in 1643.
 When the chief minister died in 1661, Louis wanted
to take over government by himself
 Louis XIV firmly believed in divine right.
 Louis took the sun as the symbol of his absolute
power.
 “L’etat, c’est moi!”
 The Estates General, a representative council, did not
meet between 1614 and 1789.
 There was no check on royal power during this
time.

Strengthening Royal
Power

To strengthen France, Louis XIV followed the
policies of Richelieu.
He expanded bureaucracy and appointed
intendants, royal officials who collected
taxes, recruited soldiers, and carried out his
policies in the provinces.
 These jobs went to the wealthy middle class.
Followed mercantilist policies
The French army became the strongest in
Europe.
Colbert and the
Economy

Jean Baptiste Colbert followed mercantilist
policies to bolster the economy.
 He put high tariffs on imported goods.
He encouraged overseas colonies, such as
New France in North America, and regulated
trade with the colonies.
Colbert’s policies helped make France the
wealthiest state in Europe.
Versailles, Symbol of Royal
Power

Louis XIV created an immense palace
of Versailles in the countryside.
Versailles was the perfect symbol of the
Sun King’s wealth and power.
As both the king’s home and the seat of
government, it housed at least 10,000
people, from nobles and officials to
servants.
Versailles

Court Ceremonies

Louis XIV’s court had elaborate ceremonies.
Each day there was a ritual of the king’s
levee, or rising.
High-ranking nobles had the honor of
holding the royal wash basin, and help him
get ready for the day.
By luring nobles to Versailles, Louis turned
them into courtiers rather than warriors
battling for power.
Cultural Flowering

The king his court supported a
“splendid century” of the arts.
In painting, music, architecture,
and decorative arts, French styles
became the model for all Europe.
Ballet gained its first great
popularity at the French court.
Successes and Failures

Louis XIV ruled France for 72 years.
During his reign, French culture,
manners, and customs replaced those
of Renaissance Italy.
However, Louis XIV made some costly
mistakes
Wars of Louis XIV

 Louis XIV poured vast resources into wars to expand
French borders
 In 1700, Louis’s grandson Philip V inherited the throne
of Spain.
 Louis wanted Spain and France to be ruled as one nation.
 Other countries in Europe, especially England, didn’t
want this to happen.
 The War of Spanish succession dragged on from 17001713.
 The Treaty of Utrecht was signed by France, Philip V
would rule Spain and Louis XIV would rule France as
separate nations.

Persecution of the
Huguenots

Louis XIV saw France’s Protestant minority
as a threat to religious and political unity.
In 1685, he revoked the Edict of Nantes and
over 100,000 Huguenots fled France.
The persecution of the Huguenots was
perhaps the king’s most costly blunder.
 The Huguenots were the hardest working and
wealthiest of Louis’s subjects.
 Hurt the French economy
Looking Ahead

Louis XIV outlived his sons and grandsons.
When he died in 1715, his five-year-old greatgrandson inherited the throne as Louis XV.
Although France was the strongest country in
Europe, years of warfare, poor harvests, and
heavy taxes drained the treasury.