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European Expansion and Religious Wars

European Expansion and Religious Wars. References: A History of the Modern World by Palmer and Colton A History of Western Society by McKay, Hill, and Buckler A History of Western Society: Study Guide by Schmiechen. European Expansion and Religious Wars. Politics, Religion, and War.

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European Expansion and Religious Wars

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  1. European Expansion and Religious Wars

  2. References:A History of the Modern World by Palmer and ColtonA History of Western Society by McKay, Hill, and BucklerA History of Western Society: Study Guide by Schmiechen

  3. European Expansion and Religious Wars Politics, Religion, and War

  4. European Expansion and Religious Wars The Origins of Difficulties in France (1515-1559)

  5. European Expansion and Religious Wars • By 1500, France was recovering from plague and disorder, and the nobility began to lose power.

  6. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The French kings, such as Francis I and Henry II, • continued the policies of centralization • were great patrons of Renaissance art, • but spent more money than they raised.

  7. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The wars between France and Emperor Charles V - the Habsburg-Valois wars - were also costly.

  8. European Expansion and Religious Wars To raise money, Francis sold public offices and signed the Concordat of Bologna (1516) in which he recognized the supremacy of the papacy in return for the right to appoint French bishops.

  9. European Expansion and Religious Wars • This settlement • established Catholicism as the state religion in France. • also perpetuated corruption within the French church.

  10. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The corruption made Calvinism attractive to Christians eager for reform: some clergy and members of the middle and artisan classes.

  11. European Expansion and Religious Wars Religious Riots and Civil War in France (1559-1589)

  12. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The French nobility, many of them Calvinist, attempted to regain power over a series of weak monarchs.

  13. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre of Calvinists in 1572 led to the War of the Three Henrys, a damaging conflict for secular power.

  14. European Expansion and Religious Wars • King Henry IV's Edict of Nantes (1598) saved France from further civil war by allowing Protestants to worship.

  15. European Expansion and Religious Wars The Netherlands under Charles V

  16. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Low Countries were part of the Habsburg empire and enjoyed commercial success and relative autonomy.

  17. European Expansion and Religious Wars • In 1556, Charles V abdicated and divided his empire between his brother, Ferdinand, and his son, King Philip II of Spain.

  18. European Expansion and Religious Wars The Revolt of the Netherlands (1556-1587)

  19. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Calvinism took deep root among the merchants and financiers.

  20. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Regent Margaret attempted to destroy Protestantism by establishing the Inquisition in the Netherlands.

  21. European Expansion and Religious Wars • She also raised taxes, causing those who opposed the repression of Calvinism to unite with those who opposed the taxes.

  22. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Popular support for Protestantism led to the destruction of many Catholic churches.

  23. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Duke of Alva and his Spanish troops were sent by Philip II to crush the disturbances in the Low Countries.

  24. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Alva's brutal actions only inflamed the religious war which raged from 1568 to 1578.

  25. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Low Countries were finally split into • the Spanish Netherlands in the south, under the control of the Spanish Habsburgs, and • the independent United Provinces of the Netherlands in the north.

  26. “The Netherlands”

  27. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The north was Protestant and ruled by the commercial aristocracy. • The south was Catholic and ruled by the landed nobility.

  28. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Elizabeth I of England supported the northern, or Protestant, cause as a safeguard against Spain attacking England. • The wars in the Low Countries had badly hurt the English economy.

  29. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Elizabeth I • She had her rival and heir Mary, Queen of Scots, beheaded when Mary was implicated in a plot to assassinate Elizabeth

  30. European Expansion and Religious Wars Philip II and the Spanish Armada

  31. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Phillip II had supported Mary Queen of Scotland's plot to kill Elizabeth of England and planned an invasion of England.

  32. European Expansion and Religious Wars • He wanted to keep England in the Catholic fold. • He believed he would never conquer the Dutch unless he defeated England first.

  33. European Expansion and Religious Wars • His plan was hurt by his ill health and fear of Turkish attack.

  34. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The destruction of the Spanish Armada of 1588 did not mean the end of the war, but it did prevent Philip from forcibly unifying western Europe.

  35. European Expansion and Religious Wars • In 1609, Philip III agreed to a truce, in effect, recognizing the independence of the United Provinces.

  36. European Expansion and Religious Wars The Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)

  37. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Defenestration of Prague, 1618The Thirty • The Origins of the Conflict • The Peace of Augsburg of 1555 had brought a temporary truce in the religious conflict in the German states. This settle-ment had recognized only Lutherans and Roman Catholics, but Calvinism had subsequently made gains in a number of states. The Calvinists began to demand recognition of their rights. The Thirty Years' War began, however, as a direct result of a conflict in the Hapsburg-ruled Kingdom of Bohemia. • The Bohemian Period (1618-1625) • In 1617, the Bohemian Diet elected Ferdinand of Styria as king of Bohemia. Ferdinand, a member of the Hapsburg family, became Holy Roman emperor two years later, as Ferdinand II (r. 1619-1637). He was an ardent supporter of the Catholic cause. • Ferdinand's election alarmed Bohemian Calvinists, who feared the loss of their religious rights. In May 1618, the Calvinist revolt began when the rebels threw two Catholic members of the Bohemian royal council from a window some seventy feet above the ground. Both councillors fell into a pile of manure, and suffered only minor injuries. This incident became known as the Defenestration of Prague. • Emperor Ferdinand II won the support of Maximilian I (1573-1651) of Bavaria, the leader of Catholic League. Troops of the Holy Roman Empire and Bavari commanded by Baron Tilly (1559-1632), invaded Bohemia. Tilly won a decisive victory over the forces of Fredreick V at the Battle of White Mountain, near Prague. Frederick fled to Holland. • Emperor Ferdinand II regained the Bohemian throne, Maximilian of Bavaria acquired the Palatinate. The Bohemian phase of the Thirty Years' War thus ended with a Hapsburg and Catholic victory. • The Danish Period (1625-1629) • The Danish period of the conflict began when King Christian IV (r. 1588-1648), the Lutheran ruler of Denmark supported the Protestants in 1625 against Ferdinand II. • King Christian was also the duke of Holstein and a prince of the Holy Roman Empire. • Ferdinand secured the assistance of Albrecht von Wallenstein (1583-1634), who raised an independent army of 50,000. The combined forces of Wallenstein and Tilly defeated Christian in 1626 and then occupied the duchy of Holstein. • Taking control of Prague, the rebels declared Ferdinand deposed and elected a new king, Frederick V (1596-1632), the elector of the Palatinate in western Germany and a Calvinist. The German Protestant Union, which Frederick headed, provided some aid to the Bohemian rebels. • The Treaty of Lubeck of 1629 restored Holstein to Christian IV, but the Danish king pledged not to intervene further in German affairs. The Danish period of the war, like the Bohemian period, thus ended with a Hapsburg and Catholic victory. • The Swedish Period (1630-1635) • The Catholic victories alarmed Protestants almost everywhere. The victories of the emperor endangered the independence of the German princes, while the French Bourbons were concerned about the growth of Hapsburg power. • The newProtestant leader became King Gustavus Adolphus (r. 1611-1632) of Sweden. In the summer of 1630, the Swedes moved into Germany. Later in the year, France and Sweden signed an alliance, and France entered the war against the Hapsburgs. • The Thirty Years' War had begun primarily as a German conflict over religious issues. The conflict now became a wider European war, fought mainly over political issues, as Catholic France and Protestant Sweden joined forces against the Catholic Hapsburgs. • During the early stages of the conflict, the Swedes won several notable victories. Tilly, the imperial commander, fell in battle in 1632. • Emperor Ferdinand II called on Wallenstein to form a new army. In November 1632, at the Battle ofLutzen, the Swedes defeated Wallenstein, but Gustavus Adolphus was killed in the fighting. • When Wallenstein entered into secret negotiations with Sweden and France, he was assassinated a few days later. The emperor's army decisively defeated the Swedes at Nordlingen in southern Germany. • The Treaty of Prague • The deaths of both Gustavus Adolphus and Wallenstein, together with the exhaustion of both the Holy Roman emperor and the German Protestant princes, brought an end to the Swedish period of the war. The Treaty of Prague, 1635 generally strengthened the Hapsburgs and weakened the power of the German princes. • The French Period (1635- 1648) • The settlement reached in the Treaty of Prague was wrecked by the French decision to intervene directly in the war. Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642), the chief minister of King Louis XIII (r. 161~1643) of France wanted to weaken the power of the Hapsburgs and take the province of Alsace from the Holy Roman Empire. In addition, Richelieu was plotting against Spain and its Hapsburg king, Philip IV (r. 1621-1665). • Both in Germany and in the Franco-Spanish conflict, the fortunes of war fluctuated. For a time, the forces of the Holy Roman emperor, aided by King Maximilian of Bavaria and other Catholic princes, more than held their own against the Swedes and German Protestants. France's success against Spain, enabled the French to send larger forces into Germany. This helped tip the balance in favor of the emperor's foes. • Emperor Ferdinand II died in 1637 and was succeeded by his son, Ferdinand III (r. 1637-1657). Peace negotiations began in 1641, but made little progress until the death of Cardinal Richelieu in 1642 and the French occupation of Bavaria in 1646. • The Peace of Westphalia (1648) • The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 ended the Thirty Years' War. Sweden acquired western Pomerania, Eastern Pomerania was assigned to Brandenburg. France annexed part of Alsace and some nearby territory. • The settlement formally recognized the independence of the Dutch Republic and Switzerland and granted the German states the right to make treaties and alliances, thereby further weakening the authority of the Holy Roman emperor. • In religious affairs, the Peace of Westphalia expanded the Peace of Augsburg to include Calvinists, as well as Catholics and Lutherans. • The Peace of Westphalia ended the Holy Roman emperor's hope of restoring both his own power and the Catholic faith throughout the empire. The empire was now fragmented into a number of virtually independent states. • The end of the Thirty Years' War left Hapsburg Spain isolated. • The French war against Spain continued until 1659, when the Treaty of the Pyrenees awarded France part of the Spanish Netherlands and some territory in northern Spain. King Philip IV of Spain agreed to the marriage of his daughter Maria Theresa to King Louis XIV (r. 1643-1715) of France. • Together, the Peace of Westphalia and the Treaty of the Pyrenees established France as the predominant power on the European continent.

  38. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Defenestration of Prague, 1618The Thirty Years' Wars 1618-1648 • The Origins of the Conflict • The Peace of Augsburg of 1555 had brought a temporary truce in the religious connict in the German states. This settle-ment had recognized only Lutherans and Roman Catholics, but Cal-vinism had subsequently made gains in a number of states. The Calvinists began to demand recognition of their rights. The Thirty Years' War began, however, as a direct result of a conflict in the Hapsburg-ruled Kingdom of Bohemia. • The Bohemian Period (1618-1625) • In 1617, the Bohemian Diet elected Ferdinand of Styria as king of Bohemia. Ferdinand, a member of the Hapsburg family, became Holy Roman emperor two years later, as Ferdinand II (r. 1619-1637). He was an ardent supporter of the Catholic cause. • Ferdinand's election alarmed Bohemian Calvinists, who feared the loss of their religious rights. In May 1618, the Calvinist revolt began when the rebels threw two Catholic members of the Bohemian royal council from a window some seventy feet above the ground. Both councillors fell into a pile of manure, and suffered only minor injuries. This incident became known as the Defenestration of Prague. • Emperor Ferdinand II won the support of Maximilian I (1573-1651) of Bavaria, the leader of Catholic League. Troops of the Holy Roman Empire and Bavari commanded by Baron Tilly (1559-1632), invaded Bohemia. Tilly won a decisive victory over the forces of Fredreick V at the Battle of White Mountain, near Prague. Frederick fled to Holland. • Emperor Ferdinand II regained the Bohemian throne, Maximilian of Bavaria acquired the Palatinate. The Bohemian phase of the Thirty Years' War thus ended with a Hapsburg and Catholic victory. • The Danish Period (1625-1629) • The Danish period of the conflict began when King Christian IV (r. 1588-1648), the Lutheran ruler of Denmark supported the Protestants in 1625 against Ferdinand II. • King Christian was also the duke of Holstein and a prince of the Holy Roman Empire. • Ferdinand secured the assistance of Albrecht von Wallenstein (1583-1634), who raised an independent army of 50,000. The combined forces of Wallenstein and Tilly defeated Christian in 1626 and then occupied the duchy of Holstein. • Taking control of Prague, the rebels declared Ferdinand deposed and elected a new king, Frederick V (1596-1632), the elector of the Palatinate in western Germany and a Calvinist. The German Protestant Union, which Frederick headed, provided some aid to the Bohemian rebels. • The Treaty of Lubeck of 1629 restored Holstein to Christian IV, but the Danish king pledged not to intervene further in German affairs. The Danish period of the war, like the Bohemian period, thus ended with a Hapsburg and Catholic victory. • The Swedish Period (1630-1635) • The Catholic victories alarmed Protestants almost everywhere. The victories of the emperor endangered the independence of the German princes, while the French Bourbons were concerned about the growth of Hapsburg power. • The newProtestant leader became King Gustavus Adolphus (r. 1611-1632) of Sweden. In the summer of 1630, the Swedes moved into Germany. Later in the year, France and Sweden signed an alliance, and France entered the war against the Hapsburgs. • The Thirty Years' War had begun primarily as a German conflict over religious issues. The conflict now became a wider European war, fought mainly over political issues, as Catholic France and Protestant Sweden joined forces against the Catholic Hapsburgs. • During the early stages of the conflict, the Swedes won several notable victories. Tilly, the imperial commander, fell in battle in 1632. • Emperor Ferdinand II called on Wallenstein to form a new army. In November 1632, at the Battle ofLutzen, the Swedes defeated Wallenstein, but Gustavus Adolphus was killed in the fighting. • When Wallenstein entered into secret negotiations with Sweden and France, he was assassinated a few days later. The emperor's army decisively defeated the Swedes at Nordlingen in southern Germany. • The Treaty of Prague • The deaths of both Gustavus Adolphus and Wallenstein, together with the exhaustion of both the Holy Roman emperor and the German Protestant princes, brought an end to the Swedish period of the war. The Treaty of Prague, 1635 generally strengthened the Hapsburgs and weakened the power of the German princes. • The French Period (1635- 1648) • The settlement reached in the Treaty of Prague was wrecked by the French decision to intervene directly in the war. Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642), the chief minister of King Louis XIII (r. 161~1643) of France wanted to weaken the power of the Hapsburgs and take the province of Alsace from the Holy Roman Empire. In addition, Richelieu was plotting against Spain and its Hapsburg king, Philip IV (r. 1621-1665). • Both in Germany and in the Franco-Spanish conflict, the fortunes of war fluctuated. For a time, the forces of the Holy Roman emperor, aided by King Maximilian of Bavaria and other Catholic princes, more than held their own against the Swedes and German Protestants. France's success against Spain, enabled the French to send larger forces into Germany. This helped tip the balance in favor of the emperor's foes. • Emperor Ferdinand II died in 1637 and was succeeded by his son, Ferdinand III (r. 1637-1657). Peace negotiations began in 1641, but made little progress until the death of Cardinal Richelieu in 1642 and the French occupation of Bavaria in 1646. • The Peace of Westphalia (1648) • The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 ended the Thirty Years' War. Sweden acquired western Pomerania, Eastern Pomerania was assigned to Brandenburg. France annexed part of Alsace and some nearby territory. • The settlement formally recognized the independence of the Dutch Republic and Switzerland and granted the German states the right to make treaties and alliances, thereby further weakening the authority of the Holy Roman emperor. • In religious affairs, the Peace of Westphalia expanded the Peace of Augsburg to include Calvinists, as well as Catholics and Lutherans. • The Peace of Westphalia ended the Holy Roman emperor's hope of restoring both his own power and the Catholic faith throughout the empire. The empire was now fragmented into a number of virtually independent states. • The end of the Thirty Years' War left Hapsburg Spain isolated. • The French war against Spain continued until 1659, when the Treaty of the Pyrenees awarded France part of the Spanish Netherlands and some territory in northern Spain. King Philip IV of Spain agreed to the marriage of his daughter Maria Theresa to King Louis XIV (r. 1643-1715) of France. • Together, the Peace of Westphalia and the Treaty of the Pyrenees established France as the predominant power on the European continent.

  39. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Protestant Bohemian revolt over religious freedom led to war in Germany.

  40. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Bohemian phase (1618-1625) • characterized by civil war in Bohemia between the Catholic League and the Protestant Union.

  41. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Bohemians fought for religious liberty and independence from Habsburg rule, but lost. • Ferdinand II wiped out Protestantism in Bohemia.

  42. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Danish phase of the war (1625-1629) led to further Catholic victory.

  43. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The Swedish phase of the war (1630-1635) ended the Habsburg plan to unite Germany.

  44. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The French phase (1635-1648) ended with a destroyed Germany and an independent Netherlands.

  45. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The "Peace of Westphalia" recognized the independent authority of the German princes.

  46. European Expansion and Religious Wars • The treaties allowed France to intervene at will in German affairs. • They also denied the pope the right to participate in German religious affairs.

  47. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Germany after the Thirty Years' War • The war was economically disastrous for Germany. • The war led to agricultural depression in Germany which in turn encouraged a return to serfdom for many peasants.

  48. European Expansion and Religious Wars Discovery, Reconnaissance, and Expansion (1450-1650)

  49. European Expansion and Religious Wars • Overseas exploration and conquest • The outward expansion of Europe began with the Viking voyages, and then the Crusades, but the presence of the Ottoman Turks in the East frightened the Europeans and forced their attention westward. • Political centralization in Spain, France, and England prepared the way for expansion. • The Portuguese, under the leadership of Prince Henry the Navigator, pushed south from North Africa. • By 1500 Portugal controlled the flow of gold to Europe. • Diaz, da Gama, and Cabral established trading routes to India. • The Portuguese gained control of the Indian trade by overpowering Muslim forts in India. • Technological stimuli to exploration • The development of the cannon aided European expansion. • New sailing and navigational developments, such as the caravel ship, the magnetic compass, and the astrolabe, also aided the expansion. • The explorers' motives • The desire to Christianize the Muslims and pagan peoples played a central role in European expansion. • Limited economic and political opportunity for upper-class men in Spain led to emigration. • Government encouragement was also important. • Renaissance curiosity caused people to seek out new worlds. • Spices were another important incentive. • The economic motive-the quest for material profit-was the basic reason for European exploration and expansion. • The problem of Christopher Columbus • Until recently most historians agreed with Morison that Columbus was a great hero who carried Christian civilization to the new world. • Now historians note that he enslaved and killed Indians and that he did not discover a new continent; others claim that he destroyed an earthly paradise. • In reality, Columbus was a deeply religious man; he saw a link between the expulsion of the Moors and his task as Christian missionary. • But his principal object was to find a direct route to Asia. • When it was clear that he had not found great new spice markets, he turned to setting up a government in the islands. • Thus he paved the way for Spanish imperial administration.

  50. “The Caravel”

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