English Constitutional Monarchy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

English Constitutional Monarchy

Description:

English Constitutional Monarchy By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley H. S. Chappaqua, NY Adapted by: Mr. Reiner Kolodinski ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:238
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: MsS88
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: English Constitutional Monarchy


1
EnglishConstitutionalMonarchy
By Ms. Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley H. S.
Chappaqua, NY Adapted by Mr. Reiner Kolodinski
2
The Stuart Monarchy
3
James I r. 1603-1625 House of Stuart
Mary, Q of Scots son James Is speech to the
House of Commons I am surprised that my
ancestors should ever be permitted such an
institution to come into existence. I am a
stranger, and found it here when I arrived, so
that I am obliged to put up with what I cannot
get rid of! Attitude Divine Right!! Star
Chamber courts used no Parliamentary courts
4
James I r. 1603-1625
  • Strong Anglican
  • Anti-Puritan
  • Separatists leave EnglandPlymouth Pilgrims
  • Anti-Parliament
  • Customs Duties imposed () to avoid Parliament
  • Catholic alliances
  • Jamestown, VA
  • Anti-tobacco

5
Ship Money Assessments, 1636per square mile
  • What could account for the differences in
    assessments (duties / taxes) for the different
    regions of the country?

6
King James Bible, 1611 Sponsored the publication
of this English version of the Bible Royal
Influences
7
Charles I r. 1625-1649
  • Anti-Parliament
  • Tariffs, duties, taxes and quartering troops
  • Petition of Right
  • Parliament must approve taxes
  • No quartering troops
  • No imprisonment without just cause

8
The Petition of Rights, 1628 Nicknamed The
Stuart Magna Carta
Original Magna Carta issued 1215 Against royal
abuse of power Contract between King
Nobles Limited the power of the King Guaranteed
Rights Jury, Due Process Required Parliaments
consent on taxes
9
Charles I by Van Dyck (1633)
The Many Faces of Charles I
10
Thomas WentworthEarl of Stafford
  • Hired by Charles I to raise money for the crown
  • Centralized government
  • Sought new revenue sources
  • Enforced and extended laws
  • Angered Parliament and the people

11
  • Forced religious conformity in Britain
  • Book of Common Prayer
  • Puritans Presbyterians protested
  • Scots rebelled reqd
  • Short Parliament
  • Power of the Purse
  • Parliament seeks cooperation
  • Charles dissolves Parliament

Archbishop William Laud
12
The Long Parliament 1640-1660
  • Charles I called on Parliament for military
    operation funding vs. Scots in rebellion
  • Parliament religiously politically divided
  • Parliament suspended royal decrees
  • Laud Wentworth impeached AND executed by
    Parliament
  • Parliament invaded by Charles I then passes
    Military Ordinance gtgt civil war!

13
Allegiance of Members of the Long
Parliament (1640-1660)
14
Civil War (1621-1649)
Royalists(Cavaliers)
Parliamentarians(Roundheads)
  • House of Lords
  • N W England
  • Aristocracy
  • Large landowners
  • Church officials
  • More rural, less prosperous
  • House of Commons
  • S E England
  • Puritans
  • Merchants
  • Townspeople
  • More urban , more prosperous

15
Oliver Cromwell 1599-1658The Interregnum
Period 1649-1660
  • Roundheads prevail in Civil War
  • Thomas Hobbes Leviathan
  • Oliver Cromwell establishes a Puritan Republic
    aka Commonwealth (1649-1653)
  • Abolished House of Lords, monarchy official
    church
  • Executed Charles I publicly
  • Conquered Scotland Ireland BRUTAL TACTICS
    used
  • Disbanded Parliament 1653

16
Oliver Cromwell 1599-1658The Interregnum
Period 1649-1660
  • The Protectorate (1654-60) dictatorship
  • Cromwell is Lord Protector
  • Strict Puritan rule
  • Prohibited theatre, dance, alcohol, etc.
  • Limited rights
  • Religious conformity
  • Ended 1658 _at_ Cromwells death

17
New Model Army Soldiers Catechism
  • Puritan Rule or else
  • Atrocities vs. Irish Catholics
  • Military rule martial law
  • Limited Freedoms

18
The Public Beheading of Charles I
  • Why is this execution so significant?

19
King Charles II r. 1660-1685 The Restoration
Period
  • Had charm, poise, political skills.
  • Restored the theaters, reopened the pubs and
    brothels closed during the Cromwells
    Protectorate Era
  • Favored religious toleration.
  • Secret Catholic sympathies.
  • Avoided fathers mistakes

20
King Charles II r. 1660-1685
  • 1661 ? Cavalier Parliament Royalists
  • Disbanded the Puritan army.
  • Pardoned most Puritan rebels.
  • Restored the authority of the Church of England.
  • 1662 ? Clarendon Code Act of Uniformity
  • Anglican religious conformity All had to use
    the Anglican Book of Common Prayer.
  • Forbade non-conformists to worship publicly,
    teach their faith, or attend English
    universities Catholics, Presbyterians, Jews

21
King Charles II r. 1660-1685
  • American Restoration Colonies Carolinas
  • 1673 Test Act
  • Parliament excluded all but Anglicans from
    civilian and military positionsPuritan
    Radicals / Catholic Traitors
  • 1679 Habeas Corpus Act
  • Any unjustly imprisoned persons could obtain a
    writ of habeas corpus govt. must explain why
    imprisoned.

22
Charles IIs Foreign Policy
1665 1667 Second Anglo-Dutch War
  • Uses Louis XIV as ideal ally against the Dutch
    Catholic sympathies, to be made!
  • 1670 ? Treaty of Dover E F vs. Dutch
  • Declaration of Indulgence rescinds Clarendon Code

23
The Popish Plot 1678
  • Titus Oates swore Catholics were plotting to
    assassinate King Charles II
  • Parliament believedHysteria innocent RCs died
    plot proved to be a lie
  • Oates condemned humiliated

24
King James II r. 1685-1688
  • Bigoted convert to Catholicism
  • Lacked shrewdness or ability to compromise
  • Alienated even the Tories.
  • Provoked revolution by his attitude

25
King James II r. 1685-1688
  • Put Catholics into theHigh Command of both
    thearmy and navy.
  • Stationed standing army outside of London.
  • Surrounded himself with Catholic advisors
    attackedAnglican control of theuniversities.
  • Claimed the power to suspend or dispense with
    Acts of Parliament.
  • 1687 ? Declaration of Liberty of Conscience
  • He extended religious toleration to RCs without
    Parliaments approval or support.

26
The Glorious Revolution 1688
  • Whig Tory leaders offer the throne jointly to
    James IIs daughter Mary raised a Protestant
    her husband, William of Orange.
  • He was a vigorous enemy of Louis XIV.
  • He was seen as a champion of the Protestant cause.

27
English Bill of Rights 1689
  • Constitutional Monarchy
  • Settled all major issues between King
    Parliament.
  • Served as a model for the U.S. Bill of Rights.
  • Basis for the steady expansion of civil liberties
    of 18c and early 19c England.

28
English Bill of Rights 1689
  • Main provisions
  • The King could not suspend laws.
  • The King could not interfere with course of
    justice.
  • No taxes levied or standard army maintained in
    peacetime without Parliaments consent.
  • Freedom of speech in Parliament.
  • Sessions of Parliament would be held frequently.
  • Subjects had the right of bail, petition, and
    freedom from excessive fines and cruel and
    unusual punishment.
  • The monarch must be a Protestant.
  • Freedom from arbitrary arrest.
  • Censorship of the press was dropped.
  • Religious toleration.

29
Age of Walpole
  • House of Hanover (German) begins to rule
    England
  • Act of Settlement 1701 orderly shift in power if
    K/Q are childless
  • King George I becomes king 1714
  • Robert Walpole becomes PM
  • England flourished under his leadership in the
    1700s
  • Maintained peace, increased trade
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com