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Transformations of Europe, 15001750 Chapter 16 Early Modern Europe • How did traditional Christian beliefs and revolutionary ideas of the Enlightenment shape Europe? • How did there come to people of great wealth and great poverty during this period? • How did differing policies in the areas of religion, foreign relations, and economics determine the very different experiences of early modern European states? • Most importantly, how did the competition between states and ideas create a Europe able to take control of the whole world by the end of this period? Culture and Ideas • The Reformation breaks the religious unity of Europe and contributes to long and violent wars • In 1500 the papacy finished a period where rival popes vied for power and began a massively expensive program of building churches to showcase Renaissance art and highlight the power of the church • To pay for these items they aggressively raised funds, including through the sale of indulgencesthe forgiveness of past sins Martin Luther • A young professor of sacred scripture (1483-1546) • Believed salvation only came through faith, not actions, he wrote the pope • Who condemned him for his disagreement • And Luther began the movement called the Protestant Reformation • He declared Christian belief should be based on the word of God in the Bible, not the authority of the pope • Luther used the printing press to get his ideas out and he won over many fellow Germans who objected to an Italian pope’s use of German funds to beautify Rome More Protests • John Calvin (1509-1564) also called for a return to authentic Christian practices and beliefs • He believed like Luther in faith over works, and he believed in curtailing the power of the clerical hierarchy and in simplifying church rituals • Unlike Luther, he also believed in predestination • Also he wished to see regional synods to decide doctrinal issues • Calvin himself lived simply • The success of both reformers did depend on the local political and economic conditions The Counter-Reformation • The Catholic Church held a 20 year conference in the city of Trent to decide how to respond • One reform were the Jesuits, known for being well educated and establishing overseas missions • Bitter wars of religion raged, including the 30 years war 1618-1648 • The Kings of France and Spain actively supported the papacy • England initially, until Henry VIII was unable to obtain an annulment to marry a mistress • Henry VIII confiscated church lands, monasteries and convents, and gave lands to his supporters or sold them to buy a navy Local Religions, Traditional Culture and Witch-Hunts • Religion in the European countryside remained a little unorthodox, with pre-Christian practices, local folk customs, love magic and spells • Which was of course blended with Christianity • During the early modern period occasional outbreaks of hysteria about the presence of witches in communities broke out • Thought to reflect rising anxieties in the countryside about poverty, social tensions and ambitious new religious and political institutions The Scientific Revolution • Aristotle wielded great influence on Science through Middle Ages and well into the Renaissance, and a variety of his ideas were accepted by the church as true • But in the 16th century careful observations and mathematical calculations began to challenge various Aristotelian views • Condemned by Luther, the RC Church was slower to condemn Copernicus, who had dedicted his book to the pope, and Galileo • Pope Gregory XIII used the latest astronomical findings to issue a more accurate calendar, still in use today • But the church finally condemned Galileo and forbade him from continuing to publish his findings, perhaps because of his sarcastic treatment of his enemies • Printed books spread these and other ideas across Europe • Newton’s work beautifully set out the math of these discoveries, and in Protestant England he was the most important man of his era The Early Enlightenment • The application of the scientific method to everything from agricultural practices to laws, to religion and to social hierarchies • Enlightenment thinkers often faced bitter opposition for their views • Other influences besides the Scientific Revolution affected this movement, including the horrific wars of religion and intolerance that swept Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries • Voltaire, “no opinion is worth burning your neighbor for” • Europe in 1750, with the help of the printing press, was a place of sharp political and religious divisions and controversy • Up against ancient and powerful institutions Social and Economic Life • A small number of noble families with access to high offices in the church, government and the military, and were exempt from taxes • A large class of prosperous commoners that included many clergy, bureaucrats, professionals, military officers, merchants, craftspeople, and rural landowners • And the vast majority of population—poor laborers who struggled to avoid starvation • Some social mobility, especially in the cities The Bourgeoisie • In 1500 the only northern European city with a population over 100,000 was Paris • By 1700 both Paris and London had populations over 500,000 and 20 European cities had cities of over 60,000 • Urban wealth came from manufacturing and trade both within Europe and overseas • The French called the urban class that dominated these trades the bourgeoisie, who lived simply but comfortably, some with servants The Netherlands • Provided a good example of the bourgeois enterprise • Turned out a variety of goods in factories and workshops—finishing and printing of textiles woven elsewhere, refining sugar, brewing beer from grain imported from the Balkans, imitated Chinese ceramics, printed books in many language (the Dutch did not censor books) • In 1700 Amsterdam had a population of 200,000 and was Europe’s major port • Great ship designers and builders, they created a sturdy high capacity cargo ship that required only a small crew • Dutch mapmakers supported distant travel • Amsterdam was known for its safe and stable banking system—so Amsterdam always had capital available for various enterprises • Religious freedom made it a haven for Jewish merchants, as well • The Dutch government aided business by investing in infrastructure, canals and draining lowlands for agriculture Joint-Stock • The Dutch government pioneered chartering joint-stock companies • They sold stock to individuals to raise the large sums necessary to finance overseas ventures • Share the wealth, share the risk • Investors could buy and sell their shares at a specialized financial market, called a stock exchange—the largest of the 17th and 18th centuries was in Amsterdam • Major insurance companies emerge at this time as well • After 1650, the English took on Dutch domination of overseas trade by doubling their fleet and taking on the Dutch in a series of wars The Very Successful Bourgeoisie • Use their wealth to buy estates or buy their way into a landed family • They could retire from their business and become members of the gentry • They loaned money to the poor and to members of the nobility who needed cash • Important for the governments to support the contracts written between the nobility and the bourgeoisie for these interactions to take place Peasants and Laborers • Serfdom had declined after the Great Plague of the 1340’s • But not so much in Eastern Europe, where large landowners continued to use serf labor • Brief expansion of African slave labor in Southern Europe around 1500, that declined as the market for slaves increased in the New World • Generally, poor living conditions, frequent famines a feature of rural poverty • By 1700 though, the introduction of New World crops did help—potatoes in the NW, corn meal in Italy • Major wheat producing regions, but the peasants could not afford to eat it • Serious deforestation throughout Europe Poverty and Violence • Even in prosperous Holland half the population lived in acute poverty • And an extreme disparity existed between the comfortable bourgeoisie and the nobility, and starving poor • Periodic violent rebellions over food shortabes and tax increases • Which were dealt with violently and severely Women and the Family • • • • • • • • • • Tied closely to the status of the husband In some places, though not all, women could inherit in the absence of male heir A woman could be the head of a convent Generally unmarried women were controlled by their fathers, married women by their husbands, widows might have some control In contrast to most parts of the world men and women often chose their own spouses Although royal and noble families negotiated their marriages based on needs for alliances Typically Europeans also married later than in other parts of the world, which limited family size 1/10 of births in urban areas were to unmarried woman, and many were left at churches, or at the homes of the nobility Bourgeois parents insisted on municipal schools for their sons And although barred from public schools it is thought that the women of Europe had the highest literacy rates of the world Political Innovations • Great diversity in the arrangement of states in Early modern Europe • The relationships between the nobility and the king (Holy Roman Empire vs. France, for example) • In some places, the relationship between commercial classes and the king (England, the Netherlands) • How limited the King was in the exercise of his powers • What kind of relationship existed between the Church and States? Example 1: The Holy Roman Empire • • • • • • • • • • Neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire (Voltaire) A Federation (Confederation?) of city-states and principalities bound loosely together Present day Germany, mostly Representatives of these city-states, called electors, elected their emperor In 1519 they elected Charles V, a Hapsburg (an Austrian noble family with vast holdings). Charles also had inherited Spain and all of its New World possessions Charles hoped to use all of his power and wealth to stop Protestantism and an Ottoman advance from the east The Ottomans made it to Vienna in 1529, and continued to cause trouble periodically until 1697 Catholic France worried about all that Hapsburg power and actually backed the Turks against them Charles split up his holdings and retired to a monastery, ending the idea of a unified Central European state for 3 centuries He also agreed to allow the princes of the various political units to decide on the religion of their state Example 2: England • Over time the tradition of getting the consent of Parliament about raising taxes had been established • And the Magna Carta had placed limits on the kings power to imprison and punish his nobles without a charge (a writ) and a trial • Charles I attempted to push back against these limits, and was executed in 1648, after a military defeat and trial in Parliament—this was the English Civil War • For 10 years, a Puritan commoner, Oliver Cromwell ruled instead of a king, after his death the Stuart line were restored • Trouble emerged again when a Stuart had his son baptized a Catholic— Parliament forced his exile and in 1689 created a Bill of Rights laying out the limits on an English king—he had to call a meeting or Parliament frequently, and consult them about changes in laws and raising an army in peacetime • It gave special status to the Church of England, but granted religious tolerance to Puritans Example 3: France • They had a Parliament, too, called the Estates General which was made up representatives of the Clergy, the Nobility and the Bourgeoisie • But the kings of France argued their power was given by God and absolute • They raised money by collecting taxes more efficiently, and by selling offices to the wealthy for cash • Louis XIV moved his court to Versailles in 1682, which could house 10,000 people • Conflict between nobles and plotting virtually ceased as the diversions and rivalries at court took the place of armed conflict Warfare • These various states were in almost constant conflict during the Early Modern period • Which meant they were constantly innovating to create the most efficient war technologies • Land wars slow and often ended in stalemates • Naval battles created more decisive results, which England usually won • The “Balance of Power” emerged as the guiding principle—coalitions and alliances switched around to keep one nation from dominating the continent How to Pay for Constant War • The commercial class was willing to pay taxes to support overseas trade and if the crown would support the enforcement of contracts without corruption • But not so many taxes that they were impoverished Example 4: Spain • All that New World wealth frittered away on aggressive warfare in Europe • And their Medieval social ideas meant they looked down on commercial development and the taxes they could have provided • High sales taxes encouraged smuggling and discouraged local manufacturing • 3% of the population controlled 97% of the land and they were exempt from taxes • Religiously intolerant of diversity, the Spanish Inquisition continued for centuries and enforced not just religious conformity, but restricted political reforms as well Example 5: The Netherlands • • • • • • • • • Very different policies from Spain Charles V, the Hapsburg ruler of Spain and central Europe also inherited the Netherlands Who revolted in 1566 and again in 1572 to avoid Catholicism and repressive business policies The Dutch raised funds, built an army and navy and fought the Spanish effectively Granted autonomy in 1609, and independence in 1648 Out of those wars the Dutch emerged as the leading commercial state in Europe, while Spain was ruined Because they pursued policies that advanced the commercial interests of individuals England will take careful note of the success of their rival, and set about favoring their commercial interests and using the taxation to fund the navy that will lessen the power of the Dutch, and prepare them to take on the French in the 18th century The Brits will also tax the estates of their landowners and create a central bank to house the cash (loan it out) to be ready to finance wars But in France • They also take advance commercial interests through promoting French manufacturing, taxing foreign goods, improving transportation within France • But in France the power of the nobility kept the French from taxing the vast wealth of their nobility • They were unable to manage their debts as efficiently as the Brits, which will lead to their military defeats in the 18th century, and its catastrophic revolution at the end of that century Commercial Interests