Chapter 7:Crisis and Absolutism in Europe
1550-1715
7.1 – Europe in Crisis: The Wars of Religion
• The French Wars of Religion (1560)
By 1560, Calvinism and Catholicism had become highly militant –
aggressive in trying to win converts and in eliminating each others
authority.
The French Wars of Religion (Civil War) was fought between the
Huguenots and Catholics.
French Wars of Religion
Huguenots• French protestants
influenced by Calvin• Included was the house of
Bourbon (minority) but made up 40-50% of the nobility
Catholics• Make up the majority of the
population• Party – the ultra-Catholics –
strongly opposed the Huguenots
• Could recruit and pay for large armies
Henry of Navarre• The war goes on for thirty years.
• In 1589, Henry of Navarre (House of
Bourbon) succeeded to the throne
and took the name Henry IV.
• Henry realizes that a Protestant
would never be accepted as king;
therefore he converts to Catholicism
and fighting comes to an end.
The Edict of Nantes
To solve this religious problem,
Henry issued the Edict of Nantes.
The Edict of Nantes recognizes
Catholicism as the official religion
of France but allow Huguenots the
right to worship and the right to
enjoy all political privileges.
King Phillip II of Spain –“…the most Catholic king.”
Phillip II, cont’d.
• The greatest supporter of militant Catholicism in the sixteenth century
• First major goal – to consolidate the lands inherited from his father, Charles V.
• Those lands included Spain, the Netherlands, and possessions in Italy and the Americas.
• To strengthen his control, Philip insisted on strict conformity to Catholicism and strong monarchical authority.
Militant Catholicism
• Spain saw itself as “…a nation of people chosen by God to save Catholic
Christianity from the Protestant heretics.”
• Calvinist nobles began to destroy statues in Catholic churches in 1566,
angry about the loss of their privileges under Phillip’s attempt to crush
Calvinism in the Netherlands.
• Phillip sent 10,000 troops to crush this rebellion and resistance continued
under the leadership of William the Silent of Orange until 1609.
• After the truce, the northern provinces began to call themselves the
United Provinces of the Netherlands and became the core of the modern
Dutch state.
Queen Elizabeth I –“…the virgin Queen.”
Elizabeth I, cont’d.
• Ascended the throne in 1558 and became the leader of the Protestant nations of Europe.
• Repealed the laws favoring Catholics and allowed religious tolerance, BUT the Church of England remained moderately Protestant and kept most people satisfied.
• Moderate in foreign policy; feared that war would be disastrous for England and for her own rule. Tried to keep France and Spain from becoming too powerful by supporting whichever was the weaker nation.
Phillip II’s invasion of England
• Had toyed with the idea of invading England for years
to overthrow Protestantism and restore Catholicism.
• Advisors convinced him that the English would rise
against Elizabeth when the Spaniards arrived.
• In 1588 – Phillip orders the invasion of England by
the Spanish Armada - a fleet of warships.
Spanish Armada
• Phillip II’s fleet that set sail had neither the ships nor
the manpower he had planned to send and the English
had more advanced weaponry.
• To break up the large number of ships in the English
channel, the English sent eight burning ships into
Spanish formation to break them apart at midnight on
July 29. The Spanish retreated north towards Scotland.
Spanish Armada
Defeat of the Spanish ArmadaWhy did Phillip II send out his fleet knowing he did not have enough ships or manpower?
Why did the Spanish takea northern route back to Spain?
What happened to thoseships when they sailed around the coast of Ireland?
Defeat and aftermath
• “…it is well known that we fight in God’s cause…But unless God helps us by a miracle, the English, who have faster and handier ships than ours, and many more long-range guns…will…stand aloof and knock us to pieces with their guns, without our being able to do them any serious hurt.” – Spanish fleet officer
• Phillip’s reign ends in 1598 – the treasury was bankrupt from fighting wars, the government was inefficient, the armed forces were outdated. Result: power in England shifts to England and France.
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