1 / 28

British Civil War

Rise of Parliament. British Civil War. 1640s – Civil War in Britain Fought between Calvinist Protestants and Church of England. Background To War. This civil war was a movement of Liberalism and Representative institutions. 1603 – Queen Elizabeth dies Parliament becomes restless

dani
Download Presentation

British Civil War

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rise of Parliament British Civil War

  2. 1640s – Civil War in Britain • Fought between Calvinist Protestants and Church of England

  3. Background To War • This civil war was a movement of Liberalism and Representative institutions

  4. 1603 – Queen Elizabeth dies • Parliament becomes restless • James I, then Charles I become king • Parliament doesn’t trust him-Catholic

  5. Parliament wont’ give them adequate revenue to accomplish their goals

  6. Why they didn’t like Charles • -he supported church hierarchy • Knew king would make laws and solve cases at his own discretion • They were all property owners and feared he would raise taxes • He was an absolutist

  7. Deadlock • Parliament in England concentrated • One for the whole country , represented by landed interest in both houses • 1629 – deadlock • Charles wants to expand navy, needs money, tries to raise it without parliamentary consent

  8. He wanted to do whatever he wanted – absolutist • Ship Money Dispute • Political classes don’t accept unlimited King • Scots rebel in 1637 – Edinburgh

  9. Charles summons parliament to quash rebellion NO • Dissolved parliament, the same men elected again • Long Parliament 20 years • Passed its own demands

  10. Emergence of Cromwell • Oliver Cromwell comes to the foreground in Parliament • Most powerful person in parliament • He argues that Charles cannot be trusted, and must be executed • Parliament hesitates

  11. ‘Prides Purge’ – weeds out most of long parliament • Left a rump of 50 • Charles sentenced to death in 1649

  12. England declared a republic – Cromwell governed • He subdues Ireland and Scotland by force • 1000s of Catholics killed, women and children, and priests • Cromwell had difficulty governing – had to use military law • Ruled as Lord Protector

  13. He dies in 1658 – 2 years later Royalty restored – Charles II • Legacy of Cromwell – nightmare- had to rule by force

  14. The Triumph of Parliament • Restoration 1660-68 • Parliament gets power back • Abolished feudal land payments to king, establishes private property • Land owning class become a propertied aristocracy • Parliament enacts taxation instead of feudal dues • Gives power to parliament

  15. They consolidated religion • Dissenters forbidden from governing bodies

  16. Test Act 1673 • All officeholders must take communion from church of England • Make it impossible for Catholics to serve in government

  17. James (Brother) next in line to be king • He’s Catholic • Parliament moves to keep James from throne • Whigs • Supporters Tories

  18. Revolution of 1688 • James II becomes King in 1685 • Acted as if there was no Test Act • Appoints many Catholics • Promotes religious toleration • Made laws on his own will

  19. Tories and Whigs join forces • 1688 James has a son, baptized Catholic • Both Parties abandon James • Offer the throne to his daughter Mary • Protestant • Husband of William of Orange • He has support of both parties James flees

  20. Constitutional forces and Anglican protestants win • 1689 – Parliament enacts a bill of rights • No law suspended by King • No tax or army without parl. Consent • William III accepted – legal contract

  21. Act of Settlement 1701 • No Catholic could be King

  22. Glorious Revolution • 1688 Becomes known as the Glorious Revolution • -establishes control of parliamentary government • -rule of law • -right of rebellion against tyranny • -Overthrow of James II limited • John Locke

More Related