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The Wars of Religion: Causes, Nature, and Results

This lecture discusses the complex Wars of Religion between 1560s and 1648 in Europe, focusing on the causes, nature, and end results of these wars. Key topics include the role of Philip II, the Spanish Wars of Religion, the Dutch Revolt, the French Wars of Religion, and the defeat of the Spanish Armada.

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The Wars of Religion: Causes, Nature, and Results

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  1. TheWars of Religion(1560s-1648) APEURO Lecture 2C Mrs. Kray Some slides taken from Ms. Susan M. Pojer

  2. The Wars of Religion are complex. Keep your eye on: (1) the causes, (2) nature, and (3) end results of the wars

  3. Philip II: Defender of Catholicism

  4. Empire of Charles V

  5. Charles V Abdicates, 1556

  6. Empire of Philip II

  7. The Escorial, 1563-1584 Philip’s royal palace. Also contained the monastery of St. Lawrence as a residence for Jeromite monks and a tomb for his Habsburg ancestors.

  8. Spanish Wars of Religion: Revolt in the Netherlands(1566-1587)

  9. The Netherlands • 17 provinces of the Netherlands possessed historical liberties: • Self-governing, make own laws, collect own taxes • Charles’ loyalty to the Flemings checked the spread of Lutheranism

  10. Causes of the Dutch Revolt • By 1560 strong, militant minority of Calvinists in most Netherland cities • Particularly strong among middle and working classes • Lutheranism was not a threat to Spanish rule, but Calvinism was • Lutheranism taught respect for powers that be • Calvinism encouraged opposition to “illegal” civil authorities • 1559  Philip ordered Protestantism wiped out

  11. Archduchess Margaret of Austria • Regent of the Netherlands, 1559-1567 • Philip’s Sister • Ignatius Loyola was her confessor • Pushed Philip’s order  Inquisition • Raised taxes b/c needed $$$to run gov’t • united opposition to the government’s fiscal policy with opposition to the government’s repression of Calvinism

  12. Dutch Revolt Begins, 1566 Fanatical Calvinists, primarily from the poorest classes, embarked on a rampage of destruction. Aimed at religious images, not people. Known as iconoclast revolt.

  13. Prince William of Orange “William the Silent”

  14. Duke of Alva, 1507-1582 • Sent by Philip to pacify the Low Countries • Inquisition + “Council of Blood” • March 3, 1568  1500 men executed • Margaret so sickened she resigned her regency • 1568-78  Civil War raged • All 17 provinces demand end to Spanish Rule

  15. Union of Utrecht, 1581 • Alexander Farnese, duke of Parma, crushed the revolt in the South • Spanish Netherlands (modern-day Belgium) • 7 Northern provinces led by Holland declared independence • United Provinces • Ask England for assistance

  16. England Gets Involved • Sent 250,000 pounds and 2,000 troops • Why help? • English economy being hurt • Netherlands = England’s chief wool market • Murder of William the Silent eliminated check on Farnese advance • Collapse of Antwerp seemed to signal a Catholic sweep of the Netherlands • Feared next step would be invasion of England Elizabeth I, r. 1558-1603

  17. Philip’s English Problem • Frustrated Elizabeth I was supporting the Dutch rebels • English pirates harassed Spanish galleons loaded w/New World treasures • Sir Francis Drake • Philip backed Mary, Queen of Scots plots against Elizabeth • Elizabeth executed Mary • Pope Sixtus V promised Philip 1 million ducats if he invaded England

  18. Philip Builds his Spanish Armada Philip’s fleet of more than 130 ships for the invasion of England

  19. The Armada Defeated, 1588 • One of the decisive battles in world history • Spain began long period of political and economic decline • Spanish defeat also prevented Philip from re-imposing religious unity on western Europe by force • Dutch entered a “golden age” of prosperity and artistic creativity • England’s power increased

  20. French Wars of Religions: Civil War in France (1562-1598)

  21. Protestant Churches in France (late 16th c) • French monarchy remained loyal to Rome • Concordat of Bologne, 1516 • Despite this, Calvinism spread • By 1560s -- 10% of the population Huguenots • Especially popular in urban areas and with the nobles • 40% of nobles = Huguenots • Way to express unhappiness with Valois monarchy • This growth was a threat to monarchy b/c these nobles held important gov’t & military positions

  22. The Valois Family:The Beginning of the End • Henri II was the last powerful Valois • Three weak sons followed: • Francis II • Charles IX • Henri III • Catherine de Medici controlled the sons: • Was mother to the boys • Played both sides in the civil war • Developed a reputation for cruelty Catherine de Medici

  23. The French Civil War, 1572-1598 • There were two sides: • Guise family led ultra-Catholics in North • Backed by Pope and Philip II of Spain • Bourbonfamily led Huguenots in South • Fighting for the royal inheritance • Monarchy & Catherine de Medici caught in the middle • Catherine supported the Guises in 1st phase. • St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre • August 24, 1572 • Wedding of the king’s sister, Margaret of Valois, to the protestant Henry of Navarre • 20,000 Huguenots were killed • Henri of Navarre, a Bourbon, converted to Catholicism and survived

  24. St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre

  25. French Civil Wars: War of the Three Henries Henry of Guise Henry III Henry of Navarre • Henry of Guise took the city of Paris • This threatened Valois power • Henry III allied w/Henry of Navarre • Henries invited Guise to the palace on the pretext of compromise  Guise assassinated • Fanatical monk kills Henry III in reprisal

  26. War of the Three Henries • Henri of Navarre defeated Catholic League & becomes Henry IV of France. • Effects of Civil War: • France was left divided by religion • Royal power had weakened • Valois family now replaced by Bourbons CatholicLeague CIVILWAR ProtestantUnion

  27. Triumphal Entry of Henry IV Into Paris – Peter Paul Reubens

  28. Henry IV of France, r. 1589-1610 • Ended Spanish interference in France • Converted to Catholicism: • Example of a politique – interests of the state come before religion • “Paris is worth a mass.” • Did this to compromise and make peace • Fighting for the royal inheritance • Passed Edict of Nantes in 1598: • Granted religious rights to Huguenots • Did not grant religious freedom for all

  29. German Wars of Religion: TheThirty Years War (1618-1648)

  30. Characteristics of the Thirty Years War • The Holy Roman Empire was the battleground. • In the beginning it was the Catholics vs. the Protestants. • By the end it was Habsburg power that was threatened. German States 1618-1648

  31. Holy Roman Empire: Late 16th c • Peace of Augsburg provided uneasy truce • Problems: • Calvinists not mentioned in settlement • Lutherans violating the peace by acquiring German bishoprics • Jesuits reconverting several Lutheran princes • Two armed camps • Protestant Union, 1608 • Catholic League, 1609 • Each determined to prevent religious/territorial advance of the other

  32. The Bohemian Phase: 1618-1622 • Ferdinand II inherited Bohemia. • The Bohemians hated him. • Ferdinand refused to tolerate Protestants. • Defenestration of Prague May, 1618 • Bohemia named a new king, Frederick V of Palatine. Protestants hurled two of Ferdinand’s officials from a castle window in Prague. They were saved by a pile of soft horse manure or angels depending on which side you were on.

  33. The Bohemian Phase Cont. • Characterized as a civil war in Bohemia between the Catholic League led by Ferdinand and the Protestant Union led by Fredrick. • Catholics win • Ferdinand II becomes Holy Roman Emperor & was victorious. • Frederick V borrowed an army from Bavaria. • Frederick lost his lands in the fighting. • But rebellion in Bohemia inspired others.

  34. Bohemian Phase

  35. The Danish Phase: 1625-1629 • Ferdinand II tried to crush Protestantism in HRE • Christian IV of Denmark entered the conflict to support Protestant cause & gain terrtory • Ferdinand II used Albrecht von Wallenstein for the army. • Wallenstein defeated Protestants in north. • Edict of Restitution (1629): • Restored to Catholics all lands lost since 1552. • Deprived all Protestants, except Lutherans, of their religious and political rights. • Ferdinand on the verge of centralizing power • German princes feared Ferdinand  he fired Wallenstein in effort to calm them. Albrechtvon Wallenstein

  36. Danish Phase

  37. The Swedish Phase: 1630-1635 • France & Sweden now get involved. • Both want to stop Habsburg power. • Sweden led the charge. • France provided support. • GustavusAdolphusinvaded the HRE • Ferdinand II brought back Wallenstein. • Swedish advance was stopped. • German princes still feared Ferdinand II. • Wallenstein assassinated to appease them and b/c he’s negotiating independently w/Swedes • Ferdinand revoked Edict of Restitution & signed Peace of Prague w/German states in 1635 Gustavus Adolphus

  38. Swedish Phase

  39. The French Phase: 1635-1648 • France & Sweden switched roles b/c GustavusAdolphus died • All countries in Europe now participated. • Most destructive phase of the war • German towns decimated. • Agriculture collapsed  famine resulted. • 8 million dead  1/3 of the population [from 21 million in 1618 to 13.5 million in 1648] • Caused massive inflation. • Trade was crippled throughout Europe. Loss of German Lives in 30 Years’ War

  40. The Peace of Westphalia (1648) • Hundred of diplomats representing the German states, France, Sweden, Spain, the Dutch and the pope met in Westphalia

  41. The Peace of Westphalia (1648) • Over 300 German states received the right to conduct diplomacy and make treaties • Really no longer under the control of the Holy Roman Emperor • Rulers were to decide the religious faith in their territories • Calvinism was recognized as an acceptable faith • Independence of the Dutch Republic and neutrality of Switzerland were formally recognized • France annexed part of German-speaking Alsace • Sweden received additional territory around the Baltic • Brandenberg gained important territories along the Baltic and Central Germany • Pope’s objections largely ignored • Underscored growing degree of secularization taking place

  42. Europe 1688-1700

  43. Impact of Peace of Westphalia • No one is happy • Many Protestants felt betrayed. • The pope denounced it. • Only merit  it ended the fighting in a war that became intolerable! • For the next few centuries, this war was blamed for everything that went wrong in Central Europe.

  44. Long-Term Effects of 30 Years War • Germany devastatedt • 30% of population lost • Commercial growth damaged • Germany was politically fragmented for years to come • New nations rose to prominence • HRE done as a major player in European affairs • France emerged as the strongest power in Europe • Spain’s long decline began • Other new emerging powers: Sweden, Prussia, & Dutch Republic • Each nation has sovereignty over its own religious affairs • No religious unity for Europe • Military revolution in Europe • Gunpowder, mounted foot-soldier played a major role • Tactics became more flexible • Gov’t became larger and more centralized to deal with the increasing costs and complexity of war

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