APEH Comprehensive Study Guide
... o Burned at the stake in 1498 after the French were removed from Italy Charles VIII (r. 1483-1498), led French invasions of Italy that made it a battleground for international ambitions between France and Spain and effectively ended the sovereignty of most Italian city-states Niccolò Machiavelli (14 ...
... o Burned at the stake in 1498 after the French were removed from Italy Charles VIII (r. 1483-1498), led French invasions of Italy that made it a battleground for international ambitions between France and Spain and effectively ended the sovereignty of most Italian city-states Niccolò Machiavelli (14 ...
The Renaissance - Grants Pass School District 7
... [APE 1.3 IIA/B/C] The Reformation saw increased state control of religion (for example the Spanish Inquisition, and the top down control by Henry VIII and Elizabeth via the Book of Common Prayer. But The Reformation also led to challenges against the state. Calvin and the Anabaptists refused to subo ...
... [APE 1.3 IIA/B/C] The Reformation saw increased state control of religion (for example the Spanish Inquisition, and the top down control by Henry VIII and Elizabeth via the Book of Common Prayer. But The Reformation also led to challenges against the state. Calvin and the Anabaptists refused to subo ...
Mark scheme - Unit F966/01 - Historical themes - Option A
... Some candidates may answer this question sequentially but a more effective and synoptic approach would be to look at the respective objectives thematically to identify similarities and differences or to organise their essays according to differences and similarities. Irish rebellions were generally ...
... Some candidates may answer this question sequentially but a more effective and synoptic approach would be to look at the respective objectives thematically to identify similarities and differences or to organise their essays according to differences and similarities. Irish rebellions were generally ...
Chapter 1
... the several centuries usually denoted as ‘dark ages’, this security was found in different local princes and potentates, who offered protection in exchange of their counsel and military support.11 They became their vassals.12 Vassals who had pledged allegiance to an overlord, could in turn establish ...
... the several centuries usually denoted as ‘dark ages’, this security was found in different local princes and potentates, who offered protection in exchange of their counsel and military support.11 They became their vassals.12 Vassals who had pledged allegiance to an overlord, could in turn establish ...
France
... France Hugh Capet marks the birth of the Capetian dynasty, a royal lineage which, through its various branches, will dominate France until the 19th century. Although the royal domain of Hughes Capet was small, located south of Paris and extending to the city of Orleans, the kingdom he supposedly rul ...
... France Hugh Capet marks the birth of the Capetian dynasty, a royal lineage which, through its various branches, will dominate France until the 19th century. Although the royal domain of Hughes Capet was small, located south of Paris and extending to the city of Orleans, the kingdom he supposedly rul ...
Mark scheme - Unit F966/01 - Historical themes - Option A
... Lanfranc, Anselm, Becket and Langton and this is sufficient for the highest marks. However, relevant reference to others, such as Theobald or Hubert Walter, should be credited. There is some evidence to support the idea that Anglo-Norman archbishops did more to strengthen the church than those in th ...
... Lanfranc, Anselm, Becket and Langton and this is sufficient for the highest marks. However, relevant reference to others, such as Theobald or Hubert Walter, should be credited. There is some evidence to support the idea that Anglo-Norman archbishops did more to strengthen the church than those in th ...
Lesson: Unit-6 ,Chapter 4 Absolutist State in France Author: Amrit
... Absolutist State in France possessed large allodial domain and controlled numerous slaves. They extended their loyalty to Muscovite court but retained their own military levies and retainers. Their rights as landowners were somewhat limited by Ivan III. By losing their right to depart from service, ...
... Absolutist State in France possessed large allodial domain and controlled numerous slaves. They extended their loyalty to Muscovite court but retained their own military levies and retainers. Their rights as landowners were somewhat limited by Ivan III. By losing their right to depart from service, ...
PDF format - Princeton University Press
... After his father’s death Henry III continued to assert the Plantagenets’ claims to the lost French lands, although his attempts, like John’s, to en force these claims by specifically military action never achieved success. His principal opponent for most of his reign was Louis IX (1226–1270), and th ...
... After his father’s death Henry III continued to assert the Plantagenets’ claims to the lost French lands, although his attempts, like John’s, to en force these claims by specifically military action never achieved success. His principal opponent for most of his reign was Louis IX (1226–1270), and th ...
secondary education 4
... Absolutism wasn’t successful in all of Europe and a new political model (Parlamentarianism) started to develop in England and the United Provinces during the 17th century. In both cases economic prosperity allowed an important middle class (bourgeoisie) to grow. This new group wanted political repre ...
... Absolutism wasn’t successful in all of Europe and a new political model (Parlamentarianism) started to develop in England and the United Provinces during the 17th century. In both cases economic prosperity allowed an important middle class (bourgeoisie) to grow. This new group wanted political repre ...
Kingdom of France
... hoping to study International Relations. She loves both history and international politics, and is thrilled to put both her passions to use in providing interesting and exciting crises for you during the conference. History has always played an important role in international politics. As a student ...
... hoping to study International Relations. She loves both history and international politics, and is thrilled to put both her passions to use in providing interesting and exciting crises for you during the conference. History has always played an important role in international politics. As a student ...
Document
... o The Vikings raided western European villages; stole anything they could carry; burned everything they could not; and killed anyone who stood in their way. The Vikings were known for carrying out surprise attacks. o The Vikings changed the social and political structures of western Europe. Due to t ...
... o The Vikings raided western European villages; stole anything they could carry; burned everything they could not; and killed anyone who stood in their way. The Vikings were known for carrying out surprise attacks. o The Vikings changed the social and political structures of western Europe. Due to t ...
Royal Power Grows - individualsandsocieties
... Channel to England. At the Battle of Hastings, William and his Norman knights triumphed over Harold. William the Conqueror, as he was now called, became king of England on Christmas Day 1066. Although William’s French-speaking nobles dominated England, the country’s Anglo-Saxon population survived. ...
... Channel to England. At the Battle of Hastings, William and his Norman knights triumphed over Harold. William the Conqueror, as he was now called, became king of England on Christmas Day 1066. Although William’s French-speaking nobles dominated England, the country’s Anglo-Saxon population survived. ...
France in 1328
... well as in that of their neighbours who were successively drawn into it: Scotland, Germany, Italy and Spain. It laid the foundations of France’s national consciousness, even while destroying the prosperity and political pre-eminence which France had once enjoyed. It formed her institutions, creating ...
... well as in that of their neighbours who were successively drawn into it: Scotland, Germany, Italy and Spain. It laid the foundations of France’s national consciousness, even while destroying the prosperity and political pre-eminence which France had once enjoyed. It formed her institutions, creating ...
Chapter 8
... – Capetian Dynasty • The Feudal scheme gradually spread across northern Europe. Lords at the level of Counts became, in turn, the Vassals of Dukes. In the year 987 the Great Lords of France chose Hugh Capet as their king and became his Vassals. The Kings of France enjoyed little real power for anoth ...
... – Capetian Dynasty • The Feudal scheme gradually spread across northern Europe. Lords at the level of Counts became, in turn, the Vassals of Dukes. In the year 987 the Great Lords of France chose Hugh Capet as their king and became his Vassals. The Kings of France enjoyed little real power for anoth ...
Royal Power Grows - Tenafly High School
... his own English nobles. He lost his struggles with each. Ever since William the Conqueror, Norman rulers of England had held vast lands in France. In 1205, John suffered a setback when he lost a war with Philip II and had to give up lands in Anjou and Normandy. Next, John battled with Innocent III o ...
... his own English nobles. He lost his struggles with each. Ever since William the Conqueror, Norman rulers of England had held vast lands in France. In 1205, John suffered a setback when he lost a war with Philip II and had to give up lands in Anjou and Normandy. Next, John battled with Innocent III o ...
Chapter 27: Rise of Monarchies - Bellbrook
... SECTION 3 The Hundred Years’ War In the early 1300s, the English still held a small part of southwest France. The kings of France, who were growing more powerful, wanted to drive the English out. In 1337, the English king, Edward III, declared himself king of France. This angered the French even mo ...
... SECTION 3 The Hundred Years’ War In the early 1300s, the English still held a small part of southwest France. The kings of France, who were growing more powerful, wanted to drive the English out. In 1337, the English king, Edward III, declared himself king of France. This angered the French even mo ...
Chapter 27: The Rise of Monarchies
... SECTION 3 The Hundred Years’ War In the early 1300s, the English still held a small part of southwest France. The kings of France, who were growing more powerful, wanted to drive the English out. In 1337, the English king, Edward III, declared himself king of France. This angered the French even mo ...
... SECTION 3 The Hundred Years’ War In the early 1300s, the English still held a small part of southwest France. The kings of France, who were growing more powerful, wanted to drive the English out. In 1337, the English king, Edward III, declared himself king of France. This angered the French even mo ...
I. FRENCH ABSOLUTISM A. INTRODUCTION
... 21. war concluded that union between France & Spain was forbidden 22. Louis' wars had people believing France was threatening things they held dear a. life, property, independence 23. Europe thought Louis dreamed of conquering all of Western Europe 24. Louis' objective ran counter to England's conce ...
... 21. war concluded that union between France & Spain was forbidden 22. Louis' wars had people believing France was threatening things they held dear a. life, property, independence 23. Europe thought Louis dreamed of conquering all of Western Europe 24. Louis' objective ran counter to England's conce ...
FRENCH ABSOLUTISM
... 21. war concluded that union between France & Spain was forbidden 22. Louis' wars had people believing France was threatening things they held dear a. life, property, independence 23. Europe thought Louis dreamed of conquering all of Western Europe 24. Louis' objective ran counter to England's conce ...
... 21. war concluded that union between France & Spain was forbidden 22. Louis' wars had people believing France was threatening things they held dear a. life, property, independence 23. Europe thought Louis dreamed of conquering all of Western Europe 24. Louis' objective ran counter to England's conce ...
The Middle Ages in Western Europe
... 1. English longbowmen mow down French knights at the Battles of Crecy (1346 CE), Poitiers (1356CE) and Agincourt (1415 CE) 2. Joan of Arc – leads the French army to victory at Orleans, turning the tide of the war in favor of the French. *. She is later captured by the English and burned at the stake ...
... 1. English longbowmen mow down French knights at the Battles of Crecy (1346 CE), Poitiers (1356CE) and Agincourt (1415 CE) 2. Joan of Arc – leads the French army to victory at Orleans, turning the tide of the war in favor of the French. *. She is later captured by the English and burned at the stake ...
LEGAL HISTORY II TEACHING GUIDE Nr. 2 “The origin of European
... necessarily consulting the assemblies of the estates (rex legibus solutus). They became legislators. This marked an important development, as in the Middle Ages the king could not alter the order established by God through creation, but only maintain and protect it. Ultimately, the absolute kings es ...
... necessarily consulting the assemblies of the estates (rex legibus solutus). They became legislators. This marked an important development, as in the Middle Ages the king could not alter the order established by God through creation, but only maintain and protect it. Ultimately, the absolute kings es ...
What political structure did the strong nation state replace?
... What action by Louis XIV caused the emigration of 250,000 Huguenots and the closure of Protestant schools & ...
... What action by Louis XIV caused the emigration of 250,000 Huguenots and the closure of Protestant schools & ...
Absolute Monarchs - Lincoln Park High School
... The War of Spanish Succession was fought between Louis and the rest of Europe. After many defeats across Europe, Louis accepted the Treaty of Utrecht. Philip did get the Spanish throne, but Louis gave up much of the territory he had taken and agreed that Spain and France would never be ruled by th ...
... The War of Spanish Succession was fought between Louis and the rest of Europe. After many defeats across Europe, Louis accepted the Treaty of Utrecht. Philip did get the Spanish throne, but Louis gave up much of the territory he had taken and agreed that Spain and France would never be ruled by th ...
Struggle for Power in England
... Henry II made great use of the traveling judges. He established definite circuits, or routes, on which the judges were to travel. Thus they became known as circuit judges, and they enforced the king's law throughout England. In the 1200s the 12-member jury developed in the court system. Juries decid ...
... Henry II made great use of the traveling judges. He established definite circuits, or routes, on which the judges were to travel. Thus they became known as circuit judges, and they enforced the king's law throughout England. In the 1200s the 12-member jury developed in the court system. Juries decid ...
Ancien Régime
The Ancien Régime (French pronunciation: [ɑ̃.sjɛ̃ ʁeʒim], Old Regime or Former Regime) was the monarchic, aristocratic, social and political system established in the Kingdom of France from approximately the 15th century until the later 18th century (""early modern France"") under the late Valois and Bourbon dynasties. The term is occasionally used to refer to the similar feudal social and political order of the time elsewhere in Europe. The administrative and social structures of the Ancien Régime were the result of years of state-building, legislative acts (like the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts), internal conflicts and civil wars, but they remained a confusing patchwork of local privilege and historic differences until the French Revolution ended the system.Much of the medieval political centralization of France had been lost in the Hundred Years' War, and the Valois Dynasty's attempts at re-establishing control over the scattered political centres of the country were hindered by the Wars of Religion. Much of the reigns of Henry IV, Louis XIII and the early years of Louis XIV were focused on administrative centralisation. Despite, however, the notion of ""absolute monarchy"" (typified by the king's right to issue lettres de cachet) and the efforts by the kings to create a centralized state, Ancien Régime France remained a country of systemic irregularities: administrative (including taxation), legal, judicial, and ecclesiastic divisions and prerogatives frequently overlapped, while the French nobility struggled to maintain their own rights in the matters of local government and justice, and powerful internal conflicts (like the Fronde) protested against this centralization.The need for centralization in this period was directly linked to the question of royal finances and the ability to wage war. The internal conflicts and dynastic crises of the 16th and 17th centuries (the Wars of Religion, the conflict with the Habsburgs) and the territorial expansion of France in the 17th century demanded great sums which needed to be raised through taxes, such as the taille and the gabelle and by contributions of men and service from the nobility.One key to this centralization was the replacing of personal ""clientele"" systems organized around the king and other nobles by institutional systems around the state. The creation of the Intendants—representatives of royal power in the provinces—did much to undermine local control by regional nobles. The same was true of the greater reliance shown by the royal court on the ""noblesse de robe"" as judges and royal counselors. The creation of regional parlements had initially the same goal of facilitating the introduction of royal power into newly assimilated territories, but as the parlements gained in self-assurance, they began to be sources of disunity.