AP euro midterm #1-10
Maria Theresa (Austria) (1740-1789)
Consolidation of Habsburg lands, guarantee of soldier and taxes at all times, broke local diets, laws against abuse of serfs, never actually abolished it, education for kids, secular colleges, less church influence (was also pretty racist though)
Pugachev's rebellion 1773
Pugachev pretends to be Peter the 3rd, gathers a bunch of peasants and promises the, radical reforms like equal rights, no more serfdom, no more taxes or forced military. After he is caught and killed, Catherine the Great represses all the peasants in order to keep the nobility on her side.
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
a financial genius; applied a central principle that that the wealth and economy of France should serve the state; applied mercantilism
tzar (czar)
emperor of Russia
Emile
emphasized the importance of education but thought it was restricted
St.Petersburg
russian city built by Peter the Great in the early 18th century as a Westernized European capital; became Russia's foremost cultural city
crime & punishment
torture was used, lower class people were subject to worse treatment, England set criminals to the New World as indentured servants
Prussia
"Not a state that possesses an army, but an army that possesses at state" describes which European state
d'Holbach
"education should teach princes to be princes and the poor to work hard"
laissez-faire
"let the people do as they choose", no government interference in economy
Centralization in Scotland
1745, British ruled highlands, set up law courts in lowlands, collected taxes for Great Britain, chiefs lost jurisdiction
American Revolution
1773- Peace of Paris- Britain recognizes American independence Had a big impact on western civilization because it showed justification for rebellion, natural rights, democracy, written constitutions and bills of rights, federalism, enlightenment ideals and social contracts, US becomes a model country for advanced thinkers
Absolutism
A system of government in which a monarch holds complete power over the state and his or her subjects. It was most prevalent in the 17th century and emerged in response to decades of religious warfare. It is best exemplified by Louis XIV (r.1643-1715) of France.
Enlightened Despotism
Absolute monarch, justify rule by usefulness to the state, not by divine right. They attempt to improve society through religious toleration, eliminating feudal priviliges, and reforming education. They reject traditional laws (eliminate torture, legal equality). They centralize the government and create a powerful state through improved taxation and limited aristocracy. The ruler is the "sevant of the state"
Regulating Act of 1773
All British establishments in India are now under a single governor general
Bishop Jacques Bossuet
Bishop and tutor to the heir to the French throne; supported absolutism through divine right
In India
British power used to be spread out, but was eventually consolidated under one Governor General who acted as a monarch in India (under the British rule), courts were set up, parliament supervised
Cardinal Armand Richelieu
Chief minister to Louis XIII of France. He worked to establish absolute rule by weakening the nobles and Huguenots and employing intendants.
Eastern Question
Competition between the European Great Powers because of the instability of the Ottoman Empire
Maupeou parlements
Created by Maupeou, judges get salaries, can't reject government edicts, purely judicial
British Reform
Enlightenment contributes to this, demands for liberty and equality, rights, written constitutions, NO PRIVILEGES AT BIRTH, elected government. Middle class movement
Henry IV
First Bourbon king of France, ruled 1589-1610, and converted to Catholicism from Calvinism to bring peace after the French Civil War. He passed the Edict of Nantes and was also assassinated in 1610.
Warren Hastings
First Governor General of India, main creator of British supremacy in India
Camerialism
Form of mercantilism, Central Europe, reduce guilds, 1775 tariff union
1st Partition of Poland (1772)
Fred organizes the split up of Poland among Austria, Prussia, and Russia.
Maupeou
French chancellor, created new "Maupeou" parlaments. Wanted to make judicial procedure more uniform.
Turgot
French head of ministry, surprised guilds and built up freedom for grain commerce wanted to abolish corvee and replace with a tax on everyone, favored legal toleration of protestants
Racine
French playwright; tragedian who based his works on Greek and Roman themes
Montesquieu
French, wrote "Spirit of the Laws" which identified 3 forms of power, was a fan of John Locke, wanted government (especially aristocracy) reform
Bach
German, Lutheran, used music to worship (most of his work was written for Church)
Handel
German, work was more secular than Bach, wrote for English court and the public, studied in Italy, wrote "The Messiah"
Brandenburg-Prussia
Group of German territories, ruled by the Hohenzollern family, that became one of Europe's most powerful states in the seventeenth century
John Wilkes
Hated George 3, arrested for writing about how much he hated George 3, became a parliament hero, re elected three times, created the Supporters of he Bill of Rights in 1769- wanted parliamentary reform
Louis XIV, the Sun King
He ruled from 1643-1715, the longest reign in French history. He constructed Versailles, believed in divine right of kings, engaged in many wars, and established absolutism in France.
In Ireland
Ireland didn't want to be a part of the U.K.- wanted independence (sided with France to try and kick England out) didn't work, Act of Union in 1801 made Ireland a part of the U.K.
Jews in Europe
Jews were despised and marginalized, they lived mostly in Eastern Europe (poland), massacred in "pogroms"
Cardinal Jules Mazarin
Louis XIV's powerful chief minister.
Parliament reform
People wanted to fix the corruption, infrequent elections, "rotation boroughs", buying seats, and unequal representation in parliament
Joseph 2 of Austria (1780-1790)
More impatient for reform than Maria, more aggressive policy. Abolished serfdom, equality of taxation, equal punishment for equal crimes, religious toleration, freedom of the press, more government influence in the church, modern bureaucracy, hospitals, national language, "revolutionary emperor"
Polish Reform
Movement to get rid of Liberum Veto and other government elements that were dumb and outdated, some nationalist revival after the first Partition , but little strength. 1788, Stanislaw led the reformers, created a new constitution and made polish rule hereditary- trying to be the Jacobins from France, Catherine the Great didn't like this, so she fought them
Febronianism
Movement within the Roman Catholic Church in Germany to nationalize Catholicism and restrict papacy powers
France
NOT ENLIGHTENED!! Financial problems, class divisions and tension, problems with raising revenue
Great Westernizer
Nickname for Peter the Great
Sun King
Nickname of Louis XIV
Noble of the Sword
Nobles who earned their titles through servitude to the King
Noble of the Robe
Nobles who purchased their titles were known as
Tory
Not really a party anymore, everything is just Whig factions. England isn't two party yet
Regulating Act of 1784
Now an India office in Britain, the Governor General acts like a monarch in India
Edmund Burke
Parliament shouldn't vote for what their constituents want, vote for their own conscience, believer in conservatism
2nd Partition of Poland (1793)
Partitioned between Russia and Prussia, Russia forces Poland to accept an alliance and Russia is given control of foreign affairs and troops
Limits of Enlightened Despotism
Problems actually getting reform, privilege (you can't say that all other privilege is bad and not acknowledge that it was privilege that got the enlightened despots the throne- hereditary)
3rd Partition of Poland (1795)
Prussia and Russia organize, Austria gets land to protect the balance of power so it isn't skewed in Russia's direction, Poland is gone
L'etat C'est Moi
Quote by Louis XIV, "I am the state"
Peter the Great
Romanov ruler of Russia from 1682-1725. He brought Western European ideas to Russia, improved the Russian army, archieved control of the Orthodox Church, dominated the nobility, and transformed Russia into a major world power.
Ivan IV
Romanov ruler of Russia known as the Terrible. HIs rule of intimidation lasted from 1547-1584
Habsburgs
Ruling family of Austria
Hohenzollerns
Ruling family of Prussia during the 18th c.
Romanovs
Russian imperial dynasty that strengthened absolutism in Russia. Ruled from 1613-1917, when the Revolution forced Nicholas II's abdication.
Catherine the Great of Russia (1762-1796)
Second period of great change in Russia, aggressive foreign policy, always looking to expand (Poland partitions, seaports on the Black Sea) , brought the enlightenment to Russian nobility, legislative commission (did nothing), some religious toleration, codification, subdivides gubernii, repression of serfs
The Fronde
Series of French Civil Wars between 1648 and 1653 during the early reign of Louis XIV, perhaps influencing his style of rule later in life.
Window on the West
St. Petersburg was known as the ________
Leopold
Succeeded Joseph the Second, overturned most of his reforms, involved in the French Revolution because of his sister Marie Antoinette
Frederick the Great of Prussia (1762-1796)
Talked with philosophes (Voltaire) frequently, codified laws and improved administration, religious freedom, attracted immigrants to Prussia, created a stable society, had to rehabilitate Prussia after 7years war, promoted agriculture
Beard Tax
Tax imposed by Peter the Great opposed by the Orthodox Church, men had to be clean shaven
Junkers
Term meaning Prussian Noble
boyars
Term meaning Russian Noble
Immanuel Kant
defined the Enlightenment as "man leaving his self caused immaturity"
George 3
The "patriot king" wanted more influence of the monarchy, created the "kings friends", a faction that supported the king
Versailles
The opulent French palace built by Louis XIV just outside of Paris. It represented absolute power of his monarchy. He required all his important nobles to live there so he could control them.
education
education kept the rigid class system intact,more focus on the classics than on math
Thomas Hobbes
This Leviathan argued that life in the state of nature was "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" and that to avoid "the war of every man against every man", a ruler must be vested with the absolute power over his subjects
popularization of high culture
achieved through the publishing of targeted demographic magazines, also through cheap novels
Cesare Beccaria
against capital punishment, advocated for jail system, wrote "Essay on the Crimes and Punishment"
Rousseau
born in Geneva, moved to paris, "liberal arts hippie", often withdrew for solitude, wrote "Discourse on the Origins of Mankind" in which he advocated anarchy (primitive existence with no laws, no judges, and inequality), prioritized general good over individual success
Frederick William the Great Elector
built a standing army because Brandenburg-Prussia did not have any natural frontiers for defense
Church/State relations during the Enlightenment
catholic nations wanted more authority over the churches in their countries, Jesuits were expelled
economic liberalism
choices made by individuals, not corporate entities
intendants
commissioners for each of France's 32 districts appointed directly by the monarch
Diderot
condemned Christianity, wrote 28 volume "Encyclopedia"
Moliere
considered one of France's greatest playwrights, if not the greatest
cultural relativism
cultures aren't superior or inferior to one another, they just differ in culture and religion
Adam Smith
father of modern economics, wrote "Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations", scottish, created the 3 basic laws of economics
Mary Wollstonecraft
founder of modern European feminism, wrote "Vindication of the Right of Women", influenced daughter Mary Shelly (author of Frankenstein)
Adam Smith (beliefs)
free market economy, capitalism, thought government should manage country but stay out of economics
Francois Quesnay
french court physician who led the physiocrats
philosophes
intellectual reformers of the Enlightenment, came from nobility/ middle class, wanted freedom of speech
Voltaire
not an aristocrat, playwright & lawyer, wrote "Treatise on Toleration" which was pro religious-toleration, used the Calas Affair as an example
Toleration Patent of 1781
passed by Joseph II of Austria, granted non-Catholics equal rights
Edict of Fontainebleau
revoked the Edict of Nantes and provided for the destruction of Huguenot churches and schools that they fled to England, the United Provinces and the German states; this weaken French economy because many of them were skilled artisans
Deism
suggested that God created the universe but didn't directly control it, believed Jesus existed but didn't think he was divine
Divine Right
the belief that God has chosen a ruler to be the avatar or their faith through ruling
role of the Church in communities
the church was responsible for record keeping, charity for the poor, and primary education
parlements
the highest French legislature, consisting of the sovereign, the House of Lords, and the House of Commons
Pierre Bayle
thought organized and state religion was wrong, anti superstition, intolerance, and dogmatism, wrote "Historical and Critical Dictionary"
physiocrats
wanted to find economic "laws", beginning of modern economics. came to the conclusion that wealth was only acquired through land and increased through agriculture. thought self interest and laissez-faire government would help economy
Bernard de Fontenelle
wrote "Plurality of Words", a popularizer
David Hume
wrote "Treatise on Human Nature", scottish, pioneering social scientist, thought that passion, not reason, motivated actions
women in the enlightenment
women's natural value was questioned, thought to be weak, inferior, meant for the home. Rousseau thought women were meant to be mothers. Voltaire and Diderot had a more positive view of women
James Cook
wore "Cooks Travels" about Tahiti, Australia, and New Zealand, deemed the natives "noble savages"
Mary Astell
wrote "A Serious Proposal to the Ladies Some Reflections Upon Marriage", feminist, english, writer,