The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 The Monarchs

  • Slides: 21
Download presentation
The Monarchs of Europe Section 1

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1

The Monarchs of Europe Click the icon to play Listen to History audio. Click

The Monarchs of Europe Click the icon to play Listen to History audio. Click the icon below to connect to the Interactive Maps. Section 1

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 The Power of Spain Main Idea Spain experienced

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 The Power of Spain Main Idea Spain experienced a golden age during the 1500 s, but economic problems and military struggles decreased Spanish power by the 1600 s. Reading Focus • What challenges did King Charles I face when he became Emperor Charles V? • What were some artistic achievements of Spain’s golden age? • How did Spain rise and then decline under Philip II?

The Monarchs of Europe Absolute Monarchy • King Charles I of Spain • Inexperienced,

The Monarchs of Europe Absolute Monarchy • King Charles I of Spain • Inexperienced, but a member of the powerful Hapsburg family, prepared to rule as absolute monarch • Absolute monarch was a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult with nobles, common people or their representatives • Absolute monarchs believed they ruled by divine right of God and must not be challenged Section 1

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Charles V and the Empire When Charles became

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Charles V and the Empire When Charles became king of Spain, he inherited the Low Countries of Belgium and the Netherlands, along with colonies in the Americas. Emperor Charles V Enemies Everywhere • 1519, throne of Holy Roman Empire became vacant • Position elective; Charles borrowed money to buy votes • Became Holy Roman Emperor Charles V with holdings so vast ‘the sun never set” over it • Faced enemies on all sides • Ottoman Turks, French, rebellious German princes • Also fought for religious control over Europe • Wanted Europe to be Roman Catholic • Growing Protestant movement threatened influence

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Confrontation • 1521, Charles confronted Protestant leader Martin

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Confrontation • 1521, Charles confronted Protestant leader Martin Luther directly • In spite of Charles’ efforts, Protestants gained influence • Rebellions against Catholic rulers spread • After years of warfare, Charles V had to sign Peace of Augsburg • Agreement gave each German prince right to decide if his state would be Catholic or Protestant • Charles’ vision of a Catholic Europe never became reality • Constant warfare also brought Charles to brink of bankruptcy

The Monarchs of Europe Success in Americas Charles V more successful in Americas than

The Monarchs of Europe Success in Americas Charles V more successful in Americas than Europe • During reign, Spanish explorers claimed much of Americas for Spain • Silver and gold flowed from American colonies • Brought Spain fabulous wealth Section 1

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe • • Relinquished Thrones Frustrated by failures in

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe • • Relinquished Thrones Frustrated by failures in Europe 1556, Charles V gave up thrones Decided to divide large empire Split between his brother and his son Dividing the Empire Imposing Their Will • Brother took over Hapsburg holdings in Austria • Son, Philip II ruled Netherlands, Spain, Sicily, Spain’s colonies • Charles V moved to monastery, dream of unified empire unfulfilled

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Draw Conclusions In what ways was Charles V

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Draw Conclusions In what ways was Charles V successful as an emperor? In what ways was he unsuccessful? Answer(s): Successful—exploration of the Americas, which brought fabulous wealth to Spain Unsuccessful—did not maintain religious control over Europe; constant wars brought financial problems

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Artistic Achievements • From 1550 to 1650, Spanish

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Artistic Achievements • From 1550 to 1650, Spanish golden age of artistic achievement • Became known as the Golden Century Art • One of most prominent painters, Greek Domenicos Theotocopoulos • Became known as El Greco; style famous for elongated figures • Much work religious, reflected Spain’s central role in Counter. Reformation Court Painter • Another Spanish painter, Diego Velázquez • Created masterpieces portraying people of all social classes with great dignity • Velázquez had privilege of being the court painter

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Art El Greco. The Resurrection Diego Valezquez— Pope

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Art El Greco. The Resurrection Diego Valezquez— Pope Innocent X

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Literature Writers Cervantes • Spanish golden age also

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Literature Writers Cervantes • Spanish golden age also produced fine writers • Most famous work, Don Quixote de la Mancha • Greatest was Miguel de Cervantes • About man caught between medieval, modern worlds Colonial Writers Church Criticism • Writers in Spain’s colonies produced works of merit • Church officials criticized Sister Juana for some of her ideas • Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz wrote poetry, prose, plays • She believed women had right to education

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Summarize What were some achievements of Spain’s Golden

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Summarize What were some achievements of Spain’s Golden Century? Answer(s): paintings by El Greco and Velásquez, writings by Miguel de Cervantes and Juana Ines de la Cruz

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Spain under Philip II • Spain at peak

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Spain under Philip II • Spain at peak of grandeur with reign of Philip II • One reason—stream of gold and silver from colonies in Americas • With wealth came power—but gold could not solve Spain’s problems Religion and Revolt • King Philip II devout Catholic • Saw himself as leader of Counter. Reformation • Marriage to Queen Mary I of England chance to spread Catholicism in Territories • Mary died before having heir to return England to Catholic faith • Philip also wanted to secure position of Catholicism in European territories Revolt in the Low Countries • Philip’s faith clashed with Calvinist Protestantism of northern Low Country provinces • 1560 s, bloody revolt began

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Dutch Revolt Dutch refused to declare allegiance to

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Dutch Revolt Dutch refused to declare allegiance to Philip • To punish the Dutch Philip sent army under command of Duke of Alba who set up a court to try rebels – Known locally as Court of Blood – Tortured, executed thousands suspected of being rebels – Cruelties made situation worse; rebellion broke out anew • Revolt dragged on for decades • 1609, truce reached • Seven northern provinces formed the independent nation of the Netherlands • Southern provinces remained in Spanish hands

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Spain and English Aid to Dutch • Dutch

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Spain and English Aid to Dutch • Dutch revolt deepened another rivalry, between Spain, England • As fellow Protestants, England sent aid to Dutch rebels • England’s assistance to Dutch infuriated Philip Attacks on Spanish Ships • Philip also worried about English attacks on his ships • England’s Queen Elizabeth I allowed ship captains to attack Spanish treasure ships, steal gold, silver for England Invasion Planned • King Philip II wanted to stop England from raiding ships, return England to Catholic Church • Decided to invade England

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Philip’s Armada • Philip ordered navy to assemble

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe Philip’s Armada • Philip ordered navy to assemble great fleet, the Spanish Armada • Totaled about 130 ships, 20, 000 soldiers, sailors • 1588, invincible fleet sailed into English channel • Queen Elizabeth I rallied troops and prepared for attack Naval Battles Armada Not Invincible • Spanish packed ships with soldiers for land invasion • English aimed eight fire ships at remaining ships of Armada • Also planned to be joined by Spanish forces in Netherlands • Spanish ships fled in panic, disarray • Faced fierce naval battles that severely damaged fleet • As damaged ships made way home, several were wrecked

The Monarchs of Europe Spanish Armada Section 1

The Monarchs of Europe Spanish Armada Section 1

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe An Empire in Decline • The defeat of

Section 1 The Monarchs of Europe An Empire in Decline • The defeat of the Armada was not the end for Spain, which recovered from the loss but England remained Protestant, defiant, and undefeated. Internal Problems Colonies Join the Battle • Spain’s real problems internal • Philip II’s government centralized • He trusted no one • Government action practically came to standstill • Philip spent wealth from Americas on constant warfare • Borrowed money often; went bankrupt four times • Prices driven up, inflation • Spain did not develop industries Relying on traditional agricultural economy, Spain’s economy lagged behind that of other countries. Spain declined as a major power.

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Recall What events that caused problems for Spain

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 Recall What events that caused problems for Spain and the decline of the Empire? Answer(s): revolt in the Netherlands; defeat of the Spanish Armada, native revolts in the New World, poor economic planning

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 The Impact of Spain’s Golden Century Click above

The Monarchs of Europe Section 1 The Impact of Spain’s Golden Century Click above to play the video.