AP Euro - Religious Wars
1598
Edict of Nantes
Brueghal
Flemish Renaissance painter and print-maker, known for landscape and peasant scenes
Huguenots
French Protestants (Calvinists)
Henry IV of Navarre
French king that comes to power after the death of Henry III, converts to Catholicism for good of nation but issues the Edict of Nantes, well-liked, personable, lowers poor taxes
Escorial
Huge palace of Philip II in Spain, represented the wealth of Spain, looked like a monastery, connected to religious empire
Mary, Queen of Scots
Leader of the Scottish land, installs Catholic ideas but is disliked and is eventually exiled to France, returns to England, but upon trying to assassinate Elizabeth I, is executed, stirs pot of Catholic countries
Revolt of the Netherlands
Long wars against Spain that eventually earn the Netherlands their independence
1555
Peace of Augsburg
1618-48
30 Years War
1571
Battle of Lepanto
Wallenstein
Bohemian military leader and politician, allegiance to Ferdinand II, but will be paid money as a mercenary leader, assassinated by Ferdinand when seen as disloyal
Prince of Conde
Bourbon leader of the Protestants, allies with Coligny, killed after the Guise assassination
Theodore Beza
Calvinist who increased the power of Protestantism in France and convinced Catherine de Medici to allow initial toleration of Calvinism
St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre
Catherine de Medicis supports, fears Coligny's power, assassinated, kill 20k other Protestant, sparks protests, 1572
Bernini
Catholic artist, known for extremely baroque art, grandiose style, sculptor
Rubens
Catholic baroque artists
Spanish Fury
During the revolt of the Netherlands, mercenaries of the Spanish overrun the streets, mindlessly kill tons of people
Rembrandt
Dutch Mennonite painter, restrained, not baroque
Vermeer
Dutch painter, domestic interior scenes, middle class life
William of Orange
Powerful leader of Netherlands independence opposed the central gov't, politique Calvinist
Defenestration of Prague
Protestant nobility in Bohemia throw advisers to the HRE out the window in protest to reforms, big mess
Elizabeth I
Queen of England, believes in a middle road between Catholic and Protestant England, just vague enough to not be disliked, great foreign policies, liked in the country, good diplomat, Act of Supremacy + Uniformity
John Knox
Scottish reformer, lays the groundwork for Protestant resistance, hatred of Mary Queen of Scots for her Catholic policies, resist the political domination of Catholics
1588
Spanish Armada Defeated
Philip II
Spanish king who comes to power of the highly Christian country with an incredibly Protestant rebellious region in empire, bad foreign policy, but strong bureaucracy and army, bad economy (inflation)
Cardinal Granvelle
Spanish official put in place in Netherlands to employ ecclesiastical reforms and centralize the government under Spain
El Greco
Spanish painter during Spanish Renaissance, dramatic and expressionistic styles
Battle of Lepanto
Spanish win control of seas over Ottoman Turks, 1571
Cervantes
Spanish writer, novelist, playwright, Don Quixote, influences the Spanish language
1572
St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre
Treaty of Westphalia
Treaty that ends the 30 Years War, recognized Calvinism, replaces Augsburg, gives electorship to Bavaria, independence of Swiss/Dutch, continued division/fragmentation
Politique
a leader who puts the interests of the nation in front of personal religious ideals
Edict of Nantes
act made by Henry IV that granted toleration to the Huguenots and allowed fortification of cities, worship in towns, participation in gov't, and assembly
Defeat of Spanish Armada
after execution of Mary Queen of Scots by Elizabeth I, Spain angered by the Protestantism, England defeats the Armada, 1588
Pacification of Ghent
after the Spanish Fury, Catholic and Protestant Netherlands unit against the Spanish
Montmorency-Chatillons
family in France that ruled and had sympathies with the Huguenots, used Coligny as the ruler
Baroque art and music
grandiose and three-dimensional, prominent in Catholicism, succeeds mannerism
Congregationalists
group of more extreme Puritans in England that wanted to become autonomous, saw no need for government
Golden Age of Spain
increased art, literature, architecture in Catholic Spain, flourish culture
Duke of Alba
incredibly strict militaristic leader of Netherlands, comes in after Granevelle is ousted, horrible persecution
Mary I
known for her horrible toleration policies, bad foreign policy, persecutes the Protestants, marries Philip II, executed
Coligny
leader of the Montmorency-Chatillons, assassinated in St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, powerful combination of religion and military ideas
Titian
most versatile of all Italian Renaissance painters, vivid colors, father of mannerism
Dutch School of Art
painters of the baroque era in the Netherlands
"one king, one church, one law"
power of absolute monarch and the idea that all three were connected and central to power
Guise
powerful French family during civil wars in France, side with Catholics, gain much power and control of gov't, then lose it with Henry of Navarre
Bourbon
powerful French family, side with the Huguenots, eventually come to power
Catherine de Medici
queen mother of France, attempts to keep power at all costs, often flip flops between sides (Catholic Guise and Protestant), eventually ends up playing into death of Coligny, initially tolerates religion
Francis II
successor after death of French king, ruled for by Catherine de Medici, marries Mary I
Edward VI
tries to make Lady Jane Grey ruler of the English instead of Mary I, Protestant country
Cuius regio, eius religio
whose realm, his religion, connects to Peace of Augsburg/Westphalia