Date post: | 25-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | jacob-golden |
View: | 217 times |
Download: | 3 times |
The Age of Democratic Revolutions
Unit 5
England
Popular Tudors followed by StuartsJames I and Charles I unpopular Divine right Friendship with Catholic Spain Ruled without Parliament Imprisoned people without trial
England cont
Parliament issues the Petition of RightCannot levy taxes without Parliament’s consentCan’t imprison people without a specific charge (habeas corpus)Could not quarter (house) troops in private homes without consent
English Civil War
Conflict between Stuarts and Parliament (dominated by Puritans)Charles I beheadedParliament winsOliver Cromwell rules England Dictatorship Puritan intolerance of Anglicanism Severe Puritan moral code
English Civil War cont.
Cromwell dies, Stuarts rule again“Restoration” of the Stuart monarchyCharles II new king but makes reforms Pledges to observe Magna Carta and
Petition of Right Habeas Corpus Act – no arrest without
court order Must be charged, can have bail
English Civil War cont.
James II antagonizes Parliament againThe Glorious RevolutionParliament offers the crown to William and MaryBloodless revolution – restores peace to EnglandBill of Rights passedToleration Act passed
English Civil War Summary
James ICharles I English Civil War Cromwell (Parliament) rules
Charles IIJames IIA “James” sandwich William and Mary – Glorious Revolution
Democratic Revolutions
Earlier democratic reforms in England with the Glorious RevolutionDemocratic traditions long part of English history Magna Carta - 1215 Jury System Parliament Common Law Petition of Right
American Revolution
Neglected colonies for 150 yearsMercantilism – favorable trade for GBFrench and Indian War (7 Year’s War) – GB v. France for control of N. AmericaEngland wins N. America from the French – new restrictions and taxes to pay for the warFirst Continental Congress - Colonial defiance and resistance – demonstrations, boycotts, protests, committees, Boston Tea PartyColonies had all been separate so didn’t automatically unite against British
American Revolution cont.
April 1775, Lexington & Concord – First shots (“heard around the world”)2nd Continental Congress:George Washington in commandDeclaration of Independence (1776) by Thomas Jefferson – based on Enlightenment ideas of Locke, Rousseau, etc.1781 - Americans defeat British (Cornwallis surrenders to Washington) win independence
American Revolution cont.
Articles of Confederation – first government (weak, couldn’t tax, raise and army, regulate trade, etc.) Why?Philadelphia – went to revise ArticlesNew government entirely – Constitution Separation of powers
Legislative – makes laws Executive – enforces laws Judicial – interprets laws
American Revolution cont.
Checks and balances – each branch limits the others (veto, appointments, controlling $)Bicameral – 2 house legislature Senate – 2 per state House of Representatives – based on
population
American Revolution cont.
Not approved until Bill of Rights addedFirst 10 amendments to the Constitution 1 – speech, press, religion, assembly,
petition 2 – bear arms 3 – no quartering of troops 4 – no unreasonable searches & seizures
Amendments cont.
5 – Rights of the accused Grand jury, no double jeopardy, no self-
incrimination, can’t take property without compensation
6 – Rights of the accused Speedy and public trial, impartial jury,
informed of the charges, confront witnesses, lawyer
7 – Jury trial in civil suit (over $20)8 – No unreasonable fine, punishment, bailOnly 27 total amendments in over 200 years!
The French Revolution – Political and Social Upheaval
1% - Clergy2% - Nobility
97% - Everyone
Else
Doctors, Lawyers, Merchants, (Bourgeoisie)
Peasants, Serfs, etc.
The French Revolution
Fundamental causes – Abuses of the Old RegimeKing Louis XVI ruled by divine rightMinisters selected by favoritism, not abilityCensored press and speechLettres de cachet – imprisoned enemies indefinitely w/out charge, trial, bailPeople had no voice in government
Causes cont.
3 distinct classes - EstatesFirst – clergySecond – nobilityThird – the rest (bourgeoisie – bankers, manufacturers, professionals, city workers, peasants – made up 97-98% of the population!)1st and 2nd estates owned most land, power, held best jobs, exempt from most taxes
Causes cont.
Enlightenment ideas spread new views on gov’t. power & authority (Am. Rev. also)Bourgeoisie knew about EnlightenmentLouis XVI spent vast sums of money on Versailles, helping Americans in RevolutionInflation, poor harvests, unemploymentWeak king who failed to act Forced to call Estates General (legislature) 1st had 300 representatives 2nd had 300 representatives 3rd had 600 representatives
Causes & RevolutionHad not been called for 175 years!Voted by Estate not by numbers so vote was always 2 to 1Third Estate brings cahiers – grievances to the kingThe Revolution begins – liberte’, egalite’, fraternite’ Third Estate declares themselves a National
Assembly; locked out of meeting hall Tennis Court Oath – pledged not to disband
until a constitution was written – Why?
Revolution
Bastille is destroyed (7/14/89) – hated symbol of the Old Regime (French ind. day)Great Fear sweeps countryside; uprisingsNational Assembly abolishes special privilegesDeclaration of the Rights of Man (from England and American history)Church lands broken up and sold to peasantsAbolished Church tithes, guaranteed freedom of religionConstitution of 1791 – Legislative Assembly would pass laws (Constitutional Monarchy)
Revolution cont.
Emigres (nobles who had fled France)Sans-culottes (shopkeepers/wage-earners who wanted more voice in gov.)All struggled to influence politics; led to violenceCoalition and war against France: Austria, GB, Holland, Spain, PrussiaThose monarchs feared revolution in their countriesNational Convention (new gov) 1792 – Monarchy abolished & Republic declared
Revolution – The Terror
Girondists (moderates) vs. Jacobins (radicals)Louis XVI is tried for treason, executed by guillotine (along with Marie Antoinette)Robespierre emerges - Committee of Public Safety (Jacobins)Reign of Terror - all enemies crushed; mass executions by guillotine; lost supportReaction: Convention executes Robespierre New Constitution – Directory created (moderate)
Robespierre
The Guillotine
Napoleon Bonaparte
Coup d’etat – swift overthrow of government1804 - Declared himself Emperor NapoleonConcordat w/ Church; recognizes Catholicism as majority religion; regains Church favorCentralized local government under his authority; local officials answered to him; more efficient
Napoleon
Accomplishments
*Economic reforms: revamped tax collection, price controls, encouraged industryFurthered public education**Napoleonic Code – legal code that included certain civil rights (jury, etc.) religious toleration, promotion based on meritWomen lose rightsPublic works (roads, bridges, etc.)
Napoleon’s Downfall - Wars
Fought wars against neighboring countriesTrafalgar – French are defeated by British navy (under Lord Horatio Nelson, mortally wounded)Continental System – attempt to prevent British trade with Europe (blockade); hurt FranceSells Louisiana Territory to U.S. ($15 million)Invaded Russia – Russians retreated, French lines too far extended, Russians destroyed and burned everything “scorched earth.”
Continental System - blockade
Napoleon cont.
French forced to retreat; lost ¾ of his armyDefeated and exiled to island of ElbaEscapes and launches “100 Days” trying to retake powerNations eventually unite and defeat him at Waterloo (Belgium) Exiled to St. Helena where he died
Congress of Vienna
Meetings to restore peace and stabilityRussia, Prussia, Austria, GB, FranceDominated by Klemens von Metternich (Austria)Create a balance of power so no one was a threatRestore royal families to the throne Legitimacy – restore “legit” monarchs
Limit the power of FranceConcert of Europe – would defend each other to stop spread of revolutions
Other Revolutions
Haiti – Toussaint L’OvertureLatin America – Successful Revolutions Venezuela Columbia Uruguay Paraguay Chile Chile Peru