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The Age of Absolutism Overview The European nation-state was consolidated in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Because this consolidation was achieved largely through the efforts of monarchs and their bureaucracies in the name of absolute power, this period is commonly known as the age of absolutism. Absolute power was justified through the principals of divine right, which asserted that monarchs held their titles directly from god and were accountable only to him for their actions on earth. Absolute power was not arbitrary, for rulers were meant to govern wisely and beneficently. Whether they did so, however, was not for their subjects to judge, and those who resisted a divinely appointed ruler were held to be in peril of damnation. The absolute monarchs used their power to centralize their authority, stripping provincial magnates and representative economy they attacked loyal privileges and exemptions, founded and directed new industries, established overseas colonies, and exerted control over trade and finance. To pay for these policies, collectively called mercantilism, they built standing armies. The ultimate purpose of this activity was to achieve what the French called gloire. Gloire was a combination of wealth, prestige, and honor; it belonged both to the nation and to the ruler. It was won in many ways, but chiefly through battle. For this reason, conflict was the norm of international conduct, and peace was regarded merely as a recuperative interval between wars. In general, those states which succeeded in achieving stable centralization, including England and Prussia, were better able to compete in an international arena whose material stakes were increasingly significant. Those states which, through larger, were more diffuse, such as the Holy Roman Empire and Russia, were relatively less successful and prone to often paralyzing civil disturbances. The case of France, whose wealth and dynastic ambition made it the leading Continental power of the period, showed the limits of a central authority that imposed itself of the traditional elite without conciliating it. Louis XIV, the greatest ruler of the age, was able to extend the powers of the French monarchy far beyond any of his predecessors and to dominate European politics for more than 50 years, but at his death the nobility regained much of its power, and its continuing conflict with the throne was a prime cause of the revolution of 1789. In contrast, England, where monarchy seemed to have sustained a grave defeat in the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the domination of an aristocratic and merchant elite produced a state at once more flexible and more unified than anything achieved on the Continent. As these episodes show, divine right absolutism was often vigorously challenged, and modern democratic theory was in large part forged through resistance to it. The efforts at state-building had profound effects on the institutions and orders of society. In England the needs of the state created a modern system of credit and finance and laid the foundations of empire, while in France the demands of warfare, combined with bad harvests, caused famines of unprecedented scope. In Prussia the militarization of society produced a population that, disciplined at all levels, achieved impressive growth, but of genuine civil instructions. In parts of Prussia and Austria, as well as the whole of Russia, the peasantry fell into serfdom, a process that had severe consequences for social and economic development; in contrast, the development of a free labor market in 1707, helped to crate and aggressively commercial economy. At the same time, however, the state’s achievements mad it the target of demands by aristocrats striving to exercise its power, merchants seeking its protection and favor, workers demanding support for their living standards, and peasants in search of relief from taxes and traditional obligations. World History Dateline for the French Revolution From: Davey/Margadant Liberal Phase: 1789 June 17 Creation of a National Assembly June 20 Oath of the Tennis Court July 12 Necker Dismissed July 14 Fall of the Bastille Aug. 4 End of the Old Regime Aug. 28 The Declaration of Rights of Man 1791 June Louis XVI and the Flight to Varennes July The Civil Constitution of the Clergy October Elections to Legislative Assembly under new Constitution 1792 April France declares war on Austria: Prussia joins Austria Aug. 10 Crowd attacks Tuilleries Palace: Declaration of Republic Plebian/Democratic Phase 1792 Sept. Elections to National Assembly January February Spring June 2 Summer & Fall Louis XVI guillotined France declares war of England, Holland, Spain revolt of Vendée ( western France ) fall of Girondins under crowd pressure. Mountain takes over Total War: France under domination of Committe of Public safety which is headed by Danton; Dechristianization and the Cult of Reason; Reign of Terror begins - Philippe Egalité executed; Holy Roman Empire declares war on France Danton leaves Paris 1793 Winter 1794 March Héberists guillotined April Dantonists guillotined June Robespierre in complete control, "Feast of the Supreme Being" July 27 Ninth of Thermidor - Robespierre and St. Just fall and are executed Thermidorian Reaction/ Dismantaling the Terror 1795 Bread riots and White Terror in Paris - Third French Constitution brings in the Directory Napoleon saves directory from a coup; appointed commander in chief - Italy Enlightened Despotism? 1799 Napoleon wins a coup and becomes first consul in a national plebiscite 1801 Concordat with Pope signed 1804 Napoleon crowned Emperor 1805 Napoleon crowned king of Italy; French lose major sea battle Trafalgar to England; defeat Austria at Austerltiz 1806 Continental System formed; Joseph Bonaparte king of Naples, Louis Napoleon king of Holand; Confederation of Rhine formed 1810 Napoleon's zenith; marries archduchess of Austria (Marie Louise) 1812 Napoleon's disastrous Russian invasion 1813 Napoleon defeated at the 'Battle of Nations' 1814 Napoleon exiled to Elba 1815 Napoleon returns to France - 100 days begin; Napoleon loses Battle of Waterloo