Download Section 2.8

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Section 2.8
The New
Monarchies
Monarchs begin to crack Feudalism
• Guarantee protection of
law
• Heredity viewed favorably
– By bourgeoisie (town
people)
• Begin to tax
– To pay for large armies
– Feudal law and custom
• Incorporate Roman Law
for prestige
– Titles of majesty and
sovereign
Question: What would Machiavelli think
of the New Monarchs?
Origins, Nature, and Accomplishments
England’s New Monarchy
• Parliament controlled by
feudal lords (blocked
consolidation)
• Tudors emerge victorious
after War of Roses
– Between houses of York
and Lancaster
• Had slowed trade,
agriculture, industry
York
Lancaster
The Tudor
Dynasty:
Elizabeth of York
•Henry VII
•Henry VIII
•Mary Tudor
•Edward
•Elizabeth
Henry Tudor, a Lancastrian
claimant
England’s New Monarchy
• Henry VII (1485-1509)
– Passed laws against livery and
maintenance
– Weakens Barons
• Lords prevented from maintaining
private armies and wearing livery
(family insignia)
– Passed laws favoring upper middle
class
• Trade, money interests
• Star Chamber
– King’s private council
– No jury present
– Ignore parliament
– Decided property disputes, disturbances
of peace
– Accepted because it kept order
France’s New Monarchy
• Charles VII (1422-1461) and Louis XI of
Valois Family
– Charles expelled English in 1453
• Except Calais
– Reorganized royal council
• Gave more power to middle class
– Built up royal army
• Established regular companies of cavalry,
archers (paid by king)
– Controlled taxes
• Gabelle (salt tax) and Taille (land tax)
– Controlled clergy
• Concordat of Bologna
– Rescinded Pragmatic Sanction (1438)
» Had denied Pope revenue
– Pope received annates ($ from
French clergymen)
– Louis got to appoint bishops and abbots
Spain’s New Monarchy
• Aragon and Castile
– Ferdinand and Isabella united
Spain through marriage
– True unifying force was
Catholicism
• Crusade against Moors
• Inquisition served as
unifying legal force
• Catholicism viewed as
Spanishness
Spain’s New Monarchy
• Catholicism viewed as Spanishness
• Reconquista-Jews and Moors expelled
in 1492
• Moriscos (Muslim converts) and
Marranos (Jewish converts) were
viewed as “unfaithful”
• Inquisition tortured thousands
• Spain emerged as “defender of the
faith”
• Exported Catholicism to New
World
• Crusade mentality permeated
society
Holy Roman Empire’s New Monarchy
• Comprised of 3 States
• Princely States- hereditary
dynasties (Brandenburg)
• Ecclesiastical- Abbacies (owned
vast amounts of territory)
• Imperial Free Cities- (about 50)
bourgeoisie dominated
• Imperial Knights-lords of small
estates (loyal to HRE)
– Emperor
• Elected by Princes (fiercely
independent/jealous)
• By 1452 had dwindled to 7
electors
– Elected Hapsburgs from Austria
• Ruled HRE until 1806
Charles I
Rise of Hapsburgs
Maximilian I (1493-1519)
marries heiress of Burgundy
and Netherlands
Their Son Philip marries Joanna
of Spain (heiress to Ferdinand
and Isabella)
Their son Charles I inherits
Austria, Netherlands, Burgundy,
Spain, New World
Elected HRE in 1519 as
Charles V
His brother Ferdinand is elected
King of Bohemia and Hungary
Fear of Universal Monarchy
spreads
Charles I of Spain and
Charles V of the HRE
Stage is Set for Revolution
•
•
•
•
Image of Church greatly diminished
Few reform-minded leaders in Church
Monarchs are centralizing power
Fear of Universal Monarchy ushers in new
alliances