PPT-Absolutism and Revolution (1550–1850)
Author : lindy-dunigan | Published Date : 2019-02-03
Lesson 4 The Enlightenment Learning Objectives Describe how science led to the Enlightenment Explain the political philosophies of Hobbes Locke Voltaire Montesquieu
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Absolutism and Revolution (1550–1850): Transcript
Lesson 4 The Enlightenment Learning Objectives Describe how science led to the Enlightenment Explain the political philosophies of Hobbes Locke Voltaire Montesquieu and Rousseau Summarize the economic ideas of the physiocrats and Adam Smith. 1589-1715. Chapter 16. Chapter Overview. The 16. th. C thru the 18. th. C witnessed two contrary developments in western Eur: . Constitutional governments - Eng & Holland. Absolutist governments - France & Spain. NO NAME RUNS NO NAME RUNS NO NAME RUNS 1 1550 653 AARON BYRNES 25 1 KEVIN ANDREWS 1550 2 BOB ISHERWOOD 1270 416 ADAM CARTMEL 77 8 STEVE HUGHES 1329 3 RON SCHULTZ 1017 862 ADAM COUCHMAN 138 17 MARGARE ‘Politics drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture’. Stats: Jacques . benigne. . bossuet. French. 1627-1704. Family involved in Judiciary. Highly educated. Clergy member. Held office of bishop. The Age of Absolute Monarchs. LOUIS XIV and . IVAN the TERRIBLE. Absolutism. What?. It is an absolute leader.. A leader who has unlimited power.. These rulers do not share power with anyone.. There are no law making bodies:. authority. Divine Right: the doctrine that a monarch derives his or her power directly from God. Absolutism-Age of Kings. Weaken power of group that threatens . your. power the most . the nobles. : (Louis XIV of France). Despot. - a king or other ruler with absolute, unlimited power. An . Absolute Monarchy. . is . a king or queen who has unlimited power and seeks to control all aspects of society. . Jacques . BOSSUET. Thomas . HOBBES. John . LOCKE. Divine Right . ABSOLUTISM. Philosophical . ABSOLUTISM. Philosophical & Biblical . CONSTITUTIONALISM. Jacques . BOSSUET. Thomas . HOBBES. John . LOCKE. . Lesson 2 . Rise of Austria, Prussia, and Russia . Learning Objectives. Outline the causes and results of the Thirty Years’ War.. Understand how Austria and Prussia emerged as great powers.. Explain the steps Peter the Great took to modernize Russia.. 1589-1740. By: Andrew Bailey & Ryan Castro. Absolutism . Absolute kings regulated religious sects. And abolished liberties long held by certain areas, groups, provinces. . . Absolute rulers found that creation of a new State bureaucracies that directed economic life of the country in the interests of the king, was a way to raise revenue.. Absolutism Element : Examine absolutism through a comparison of the rules of Louis XIV, Tsar Peter the Great and Tokugawa Ieyasu . Vocabulary : absolutism, Louis XIV, Peter the Great, Tokugawa Ieyasu Absolutism Case studies Mark Knights What does absolutism signify? Unfettered royal power, usually monarchy by divine right The centralisation of decision-making The king as above the law The erosion of the rights of the people and their representative assemblies This Lecture could be found under Units-> Period Two-> Absolutism & Constitutionalism-> Power Points. Read Aloud. Go to website and open Background to Absolutism Reading. Absolutism. A form of government, usually within a monarchy, in which the ruler exercised absolute power over virtually all facets of his or her kingdom. l 15 5 aher r Ma 5 0 m Contents 1. System Description 3 Overview 3 Part Names 3 Operating Conditions 7 Start-up Procedure 7 Safety 9 Laser Safety 9 El (. 1750 – 1850). The industrial revolution . (1830 – 1880). Reform movements . (1850 – 1914). The road to modernism . (1890 – 1914). Revolution and the avande garde . (1915 – 1933). Luxury and power .
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