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The New Monarchs AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 1 The New Monarchs: Essential Questions 1. What were the general characteristics of the New Monarchs? 2. In what ways was Henry VII a New Monarch? 3. In what ways were Louis XI and François I New Monarchs? 4. In what ways were Ferdinand & Isabella New Monarchs? 5. What was the Reconquista? 6. What was the Expulsion of 1492? 7. What was the Inquisition and how was it used to enforce the policies of the Spanish monarchs? 8. What was the Alhambra and how did its architecture reflect Moorish/ Islamic influences? 9. In what ways was the Holy Roman Empire a New Monarchy? 10. Who was Charles V and what problems did he face during his reign? 12. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 2 From Feudalism to New Monarchs: Reflections On “But as the inability of the kings to protect their realm had generated feudalism, so the inability of feudal lords to maintain order among themselves, or to provide a uniform government for an expanding commercial economy, weakened the barons and strengthened the kings. The zeal for martial contests absorbed the aristocracies of feudal Europe in private and public wars; the Crusades, the Hundred Years’ War, the Wars of the Roses, and finally the wars of religion drank up their blood. Some of them, impoverished and recognizing no law, became robber barons who pillaged and murdered at will; and the excesses of liberty called for a unified power that would maintain order throughout the realm. Commerce and industry generated a growing and wealthy class outside the feudal bond; merchants resented feudal tolls and the insecurity of transport through feudal domains; and they demanded that private law should be superseded by a central government. The king allied himself with their class and the rising towns; they provided the finances for the assertion and extension of his authority; and all who felt oppressed or injured by the lords looked to the king for rescue and redress. The ecclesiastic barons were unusually vassal and loyal to the king; the popes, however often at odds with royals, found it easier to deal with a monarch than with a scattered and half-lawless nobility. Upheld by these diverse forces, the French and English kings made their power hereditary, instead of elective, by crowning a donor before their own death; and men accepted hereditary monarchy as the alternative to feudal anarchy. The improvement of communication and the increased circulation of money made regular taxation possible; the mounting royal revenue financed larger royal armies; the rising class of jurists attached themselves to the throne, and strengthened it by the centralizing influence of Roman law.” Source: The Story of Civilization: The Age of Faith, Will Durant (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957), pp. 565-66. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 3 New Monarchs: General Characteristics • provided order ✓ civil peace imposed on violent and chaotic societies ✓ monarchy offered as a guarantee of law and order • universal nature ✓ hereditary monarchy ✓ monarchs referred to themselves as “sovereign” • competed for power with nobility/local princes ✓ destruction of feudal or common law ✓ enlisted support of growing middle class AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 4 New Monarchs: General Characteristics (cont’d) • use of Roman law ✓ ✓ ✓ welfare of the people is the highest law (salus populi suprema lex) kings could make and enact law by their own authority: what pleases the prince has the force of law (quod principi placuit legis habet vigorem) note: Roman law was used in New Monarchies on mainland Europe (“the continent”), but not in England where the English continued to use traditional common law • expanded government bureaucracies ✓ ✓ established efficient systems of taxation to raise money for the crown expanded government agencies to carry out royal laws • encouraged a sense of national identity • established national militaries loyal to the monarchy the “new monarchs” had various degrees of success in • NOTE: establishing these characteristics AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 5 Characteristics of the New Monarchs: Reflections On “The growth in the number of royal official helped rulers consolidate more effective power. Rulers had always had some kind of advisory council, but the importance of their advisors grew in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Chanceries, treasuries, and courts of law represented an early stage of bureaucratization. Serving as royal officials, some humble men of talent began to reach positions of influence within the states. Rulers still earned revenue from their own lands. But in order to meet the expenses of their states, they drew income from taxation, the sale of offices (posts in the service of the monarch that were often prestigious and lucrative) and government bonds, and the confiscation of land from recalcitrant nobles. Like other rulers, popes also centralized administration and finances, selling posts. Rulers imposed taxes on salt, wine, and other goods, imposition from which nobles and clergy were generally exempt. States in the sixteenth century became the great collectors and distributors of revenue. Moreover, the gradual growth of public debt was another sign of the increased authority of monarchial states. Royal dependency on the loans of merchant-bankers enriched the latter, providing more capital for their ventures. Rulers, surrounded by courtiers and councils, lived in a grander fashion. As they worked to consolidate their authority and territories, thrones became increasingly hereditary. As even wealthy people were apt to die young, such succession arrangements, which varied throughout Europe, mattered considerably.” Source: A History of Modern Europe: From Renaissance to the Present, John Merriman (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2010), p. 29. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 6 The New Monarchy in England: Henry VII (1485-1509) the Wars of the Roses in • ended 1485 of the Roses (1455-85): civil ✓ Wars war in England for control of the English crown House of Lancaster ✓ combatants: (red rose) v. House of York (white rose) war won by Henry Tudor of ✓ civil the House of Lancaster when Henry defeated Richard III of the House of York at the Battle of Bosworth Field (1485) Tudor was crowned King ✓ Henry Henry VII (1485), who later married Elizabeth of York (1486) to help ease tensions between the two families Henry VII: The First Tudor Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 7 The New Monarchy in England: Henry VII (1485-1509) • prohibited “livery & maintenance” livery & maintenance: traditional practice whereby the nobility ✓maintained private armies banning of the nobles’ armies allowed the monarchy to gain ✓anHenry’s upper-hand over the nobles • utilized the Star Chamber ✓Star Chamber: royal council used as a court to settle territorial disputes and deal with security ✓issues, helping to bring peace to the kingdom • used Justices of the Peace to enforce laws throughout the kingdom • made the English monarchy fiscally stable ✓kept England out of costly wars encouraged English trade (especially in wool) and expanded the cloth ✓industry at home Elizabeth of York Source: Wikipedia his frugality allowed him to not have to call Parliament very often ✓during his reign created a climate where bankers could play a more prominent role in ✓both the economy and politics (as members of Parliament) AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 8 Henry VII: Reflections On “Naturally Henry’s political penetration would prompt him to utilize the general exhaustion for the establishment of a strong monarchy of the kind just then triumphantly emerging in France and Spain. Of such a program there would be would be two outstanding opponents: the great nobles who had made the crown their plaything during the Wars of the Roses and the parliament, which in an earlier period had firmly established its right to a substantial share in government. In a lifetime of narrowly concentrated effort Henry put a curb on both of his opponents. By a law (Statute of Livery and Maintenance), which deprived the nobles of the right to keep under arms great bodies of retainers, he extinguished the centers of provincial resistance to the royal will. To make assurance doubly sure he established an extraordinary court, the court of Star Chamber. It sat in London under his eye and visited punishment on the recalcitrant nobles as well as on all other malefactors whom the local courts were too feeble to bring to justice. In curbing parliament Henry took a far less drastic course because the parliament was an integral feature of the English constitution and well entrenched in the affections of the people. With shrewd self-restraint he even adopted a policy of ostensible co-operation with the rival institution. Although he owed his throne to his having been victor in a civil broil, that is, to the fortunes of war, he stirred the representatives of the nation to an enthusiastic response when he requested them to legalize his accession by a formal resolution. Throughout his reign he scrupulously observed the ancient custom by which the king could raise no taxes except with the consent of parliament. Then, with his supplies obtained, he husbanded the returns like a miser in order not to be obliged to demonstrate too frequently his dependence on a popular body. In the last thirteen years of his reign he took counsel with his parliament only twice and, partly out of gratitude for his re-establishment of the domestic peace, it showed no disposition to bring him under control. No doubt the legal claim of parliament to be associated with the king in governing England remained intact. Nonetheless, from failing to appear regularly in London, the parliament tended to fall into oblivion, leaving the king to occupy the national stage alone. All facts considered, it may be safely asserted that Henry Tudor renewed the prestige of the crown and created, certainly not a royal absolutism, but a strong monarchy pointed in that direction.’ Source: A History of Europe from the Renaissance to the Present Day, Ferdinand Schevill (New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1950), pp. 82-83. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 9 Henry VII: Reflections On Under the blows of necessity Henry developed the virtues and vices that seemed to him demanded by his place.…He loved ‘the felicity of full coffers,’ says Bacon, because he knew their persuasiveness in politics. He taxed the nation ingeniously, bled the rich with ‘benevolences’ or forced gifts, made avid use of fines to feed his treasury and discourage crime, and winked as judges fitted the fine not to the offense but to the purse. He was the first English king since 1216 who kept his expenses within his income, and his charities and generosities mitigated his parsimony. He devoted himself conscientiously to administration, and skimped his pleasures to complete his toil. His life was darkened with perennial suspicion, not without cause; he trusted no one, concealed his purposes, and by fair means or dubious he achieved his ends. He established the Court of Star Chamber to try, in secret sessions, obstreperous nobles too powerful to fear local judges or juries; and year by year he bought the ruined aristocracy and the frightened prelacy into subordination to the monarchy. Strong individuals resented the decline of liberty and the desuetude of Parliament; but peasants forgave much in a king who disciplined their lords, and manufacturers and merchants thanked him for his wise promotion of industry and trade. He had found an England in feudal anarchy, a government too poor and disreputable to win obedience or loyalty; he left to Henry VIII a state respected, orderly, solvent, united, and at peace. Source: The Story of Civilization: The Reformation, Will Durant (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957), pp. 108-09. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 10 The New Monarchy in France: Louis XI (1461-83) •background ✓Valois dynasty known as “The Spider” (reputed to have woven a ✓web of plots and conspiracies) •expanded French boundaries ✓gained land in northern France (Picardy & Amiens) ✓forced the English out of Normandy •raised taxes without parliamentary consent the Estates General (the French parliament) asked ✓Louis to rule without parliament in hopes of bringing order to the kingdom Louis XI Source: Wikipedia -imposed a permanent tax on salt -imposed a permanent tax on land ✓Estates General met only one time during his reign AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 11 The New Monarchy in France: Louis XI (1461-83) the nobility, who had • weakened formed an anti-centralization alliance called The League of the Public Weal ✓ ✓ league was led by Charles the Bold and Louis XI’s brother Charles, Duke of Berry Louis XI made minor concessions to the league (granting them some land rights), but, in exchange, the League of Public Weal was disbanded his own infantry and, • abolished instead, hired Swiss mercenaries Louis XI Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 12 Louis XI: Reflections On “In his struggle against the great nobles who were his most dangerous opponents, Louis sought the support of churchmen and merchants. Although he continued to limit papal authority in France, he pleased the churchmen by revoking the document that had established a national ‘Gallican’ church. He taxed the merchants heavily, but he won the support of many by appointing them to high office. Priests and burghers helped Louis subdue all but one of France’s semi-independent duchies, even though a ‘League of Public Weal’ was organized against him. His greatest achievement was to destroy forever the threat of Burgundy to the French monarchy. He subdued other neighboring principalities by force, bribery, or promises. Finally by arranging the marriage of his son to the heiress of Brittany, the way was paved for the absorption of the last important French duchy into the national monarchy. Like Henry VII of England, Louis left his country with an increased sense of national unity and with a strong and well-organized central government. The remaining noble houses of importance were allied by marriage to the royal family. Even though Louis was succeeded by two weak kings from whom the dukes attempted to regain their independence, the central government had become so strong that it survived their attacks.” Source: Medieval and Early Modern Times: The Age of Justinian to the Eighteenth Century, Carlton J.H. Hayes & Frederick F. Clark (New York: MacMillan Company, 1966). pp. 233-34. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 13 The New Monarchy in France: Francis I (1515-47) • background ✓ ✓ ✓ Valois dynasty intelligent and well educated patron of the arts a new French port (Le • founded Havre) in order to expand trade and exploration exploration of Asia and • supported the “New World” ✓ Francis I ✓ sent Jacques Cartier to explore the St. Lawrence River & Québec opened up trade between France & India Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 14 The New Monarchy in France: Francis I (1515-47) • bureaucratic reforms ✓ ✓ replaced Latin with French as the official administrative language of the government required the Roman Catholic Church in every parish to record births, marriages and deaths of Bologna (1516): establishment of the “Gallican • Concordat Church” in France ✓ ✓ concordat: an agreement between a government and the Roman Catholic Church Concordat of Bologna: created the Gallican Church in France whereby the French government exercised some control over the Roman Catholic Church in France ➡ Pope would receive annates (a portion of annual profits) from French ecclesiastics (good for the Roman Catholic Church) ➡ French monarchy gained the right to appoint bishops and abbots (good for the French monarchy) many magnificent châteaux (palaces) in France, including • built Chambord AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 15 The New Monarchy in France: Francis I (1515-47) Château du Chambord Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 16 The New Monarchy in Spain: Ferdinand & Isabella Journal 8: In Spain, the New Monarchy took the form not so much of political centralization as of unification around the church. ––Palmer Chapter 8 • pp. 73-77–– Directions; Using sentences or detailed bulleted notes, identify & explain the evidence Palmer uses to support the thesis listed above. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 17 The New Monarchy in Spain: Ferdinand & Isabella to the personal union of Ferdinand of • background Aragon & Isabella of Castile ✓ ✓ ✓ Aragon ➡ kingdom included Mediterranean part of Iberian peninsula, Balearic Islands, Sardinia, Sicily, southern kingdom of Naples ➡ Ferdinand: king of Aragon (1479-1516) Castile (& Leon) ➡ kingdom included central part of Iberian peninsula and, after 1492, vast sections of the “New World” ➡ Isabella, queen of Castile (1474-1504) Personal Union ➡ Ferdinand and Isabella were married in 1469 ➡ two kingdoms remained separate politically but were ruled by the same people Iberian Peninsula, c. 1360 Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 18 The New Monarchy in Spain: Reflections On “The first object of [Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile] was to recover from the nobles the powers they had usurped from the Crown in both kingdoms. Everywhere in Europe at this time kings were strengthening themselves at the expense of the feudal baronage, so that the policy of the Spanish rulers was part of a general tendency…. [Ferdinand and Isabella] raised up a class of official nobles from the Commons, many of whom were lawyers, and inclined, as their way is, through familiarity with the maxims of Roman law, to uphold the royal authority. The new ministers of the Crown were chosen not for their pedigrees, but for personal merit. Of these the most famous was Cardinal Ximenes, who, having been promoted from the position of an obscure monk to be Archbishop of Toledo and Regent of Spain, energetically seconded his sovereigns’ efforts to crush the arrogant grandees. The Grandmasterships of the three great Spanish military orders of Santiago, Alcantara, and Calatrava had always attracted ambitious spirits, on account of the immense patronage and large armed forces at their disposal. But now, as they became vacant, Isabella appointed Ferdinand to each office; and from thenceforth they were annexed to the Crown, which thus enjoyed their revenues, and no longer had to fear their military strength.” Source: Europe in Renaissance and Reformation, 1453-1660, Mary A. Hollings (London: Methuen & Co. LTD, 1928), pp. 34-35. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 19 The New Monarchy in Spain: Ferdinand & Isabella & Isabella as “The Catholic Monarchs”: foundation • Ferdinand of the unification of Spain completed around religion ✓ Reconquista (the re-conquest): completed the drive to rid Spain of Moors (Arab Muslims) ➡ ➡ ✓ Fall of Granada (1492): Ferdinand & Isabella conquered the last foothold of the Moors in Spain as the Alhambra Palace (home to the Moorish rulers) was taken by the “Catholic Monarchs” The Expulsion of 1492: Muslims and Jews were expelled from Spain ➡ ➡ ✓ the Reconquista had been going on for centuries but was completed by Ferdinand & Isabella Muslims and Jews that did not convert to Christianity were forced to leave Muslims that converted to Christianity (Moriscos) and Jews that converted to Christianity (Marranos) would be closely watched in the future (by the Inquisition: see below) The Inquisition ➡ Ferdinand & Isabella used the Roman Catholic Church’s Inquisition (Church courts) to root out religious non-conformists (such as the suspect Moriscos & Marranos) ➡ those found guilty of heresy would be burned at the stake (auto de fé) AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 20 Architectural Spotlight: Alhambra Palace The Alhambra Palace was the magnificent fortress/palace of the Moorish kings until it was taken by Ferdinand & Isabella in 1492. The building is an excellent example of Moorish art as it features Islamic calligraphy, Islamic arches and arabesque (repeating geometric shapes) in its design. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 21 The New Monarchy in Spain: The Creation of Spain Ferdinand King of Aragon Isabella Joanna the Mad: Charles Habsburg: Queen of Castile Queen of Aragon & Queen of Castile (Charles would later be known as Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor & King of Spain) King of Spain AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 22 The New Monarchy in “Germany”: The Holy Roman Empire on the Holy • background Roman Empire confederation of states ✓ adating back to the Middle Ages (decentralized state) and diverse politically ✓ divided (decentralized state) ➡ hereditary dynasties: duchies, margariates, and others ➡ ecclesiastic (church) states: bishoprics and abbacies ➡ ➡ imperial free cities nobles or imperial knights who owned a manor and paid allegiance to the emperor The Holy Roman Empire, c. 1512 Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 23 The New Monarchy in “Germany”: The Holy Roman Empire • Holy Roman Emperor ✓ ✓ title given to the head of the Holy Roman Empire elected by 7 “electors” of the Holy Roman Empire ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ✓ Elector of Palatine Elector of Saxony Elector of Bohemia Elector of Brandenburg Archbishop of Mainz Archbishop of Trier Archbishop of Cologne political reality: Holy Roman Emperor was weak and decentralized when compared to counterparts in France and England Maximilian I Source: Wikipedia AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 24 The New Monarchy in “Germany”: The Holy Roman Empire • introduction of centralizing institutions, but they proved ineffective against the traditional rights and privileges of the member states ✓ ✓ Maximilian I (1493-1519) ➡ empire divided into administrative “circles” (ineffective) ➡ created an Imperial Council (weak) Charles V (1519-55) ➡ ➡ born to the Habsburg dynasty in the Flemish city of Ghent ➡ Charles was already king of Spain (crowned in 1516) and controlled vast territories around the world when he was elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1519 ➡ despite being the most powerful ruler in Europe at the time (the “universal monarch”?), Charles V was not able to centralize the power of the Holy Roman Empire (in fact, it was further decentralized) ➡ problems faced by Charles V personally troubled by illnesses and a jaw which made chewing difficult (the “Habsburg Jaw”) - Protestant Reformation: had the effect of further decentralizing the empire politically and religiously - war with France: France sought to keep the Holy Roman Empire weak and disunited - war with the Ottoman Empire: the Turks threatened to take over central Europe AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 25 Charles V & The Holy Roman Empire: Reflections On “Charles inherited a genuinely vast and unprecedented sprawl of territories from Maximilian, but no serious effort was made to give them any unity. He scurried from place to place, swapping around hats, crowns, necklaces and special cloaks. He was always reading up constitutions and mottos and being drilled on the membership and peccadillos of dozens of prickly aristocracies and urban oligarchies in different bits of Europe. At every turn he had to face rebellious townsfolk, Ottoman pirates, annoying Protestants, double-dealing German princelings and problematic family members.” Source: Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe, Simon Winder (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013), p. 89. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 26 Exam Skills (ES): Secondary Source Interpretation In the last sentence of author Simon Winder’s analysis of Charles V (see previous note slide), he argues that Charles had to face five major problems. From your study of sixteenth-century European history, find historical evidence to support three of the problems identified by the author. Problem Historical Example Explanation & Analysis You may use any of the materials you have read or studied for AP European History to assist you in this Exam Skills task. AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 27 Additional Notes 28 AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 28 Additional Notes 29 AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 29 Sources • A History of Europe from the Renaissance to the Present Day, Ferdinand Schevill (New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1950). • A History of Modern Europe: From Renaissance to the Present, John Merriman (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2010). • • • A History of the Modern World, 10/e, R.R. Palmer, et. al. (Boston: McGraw Hill, 2007). • Europe in Renaissance and Reformation, 1453-1660, Mary A. Hollings (London: Methuen & Co. LTD, 1928). • Medieval and Early Modern Times: The Age of Justinian to the Eighteenth Century, Carlton J.H. Hayes & Frederick F. Clark (New York: MacMillan Company, 1966). • • • • The Story of Civilization: The Age of Faith, Will Durant (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957) A History of Western Society, 5/e, John P. McKay, et. al. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1995). Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe, Simon Winder (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013). The Story of Civilization: The Reformation, Will Durant (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957). The Western Heritage, 9/e, Donald Kagan, et. al, (New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007). Wikipedia.com (en.wikipedia.com). AP European History • The New Monarchs • J.F. Walters, G.W.Whitton & M.A. Prokosch 30