Title: Montesquieu
1Montesquieu
2Biography
- Montesquieu was a French political thinker. He
lived during the Enlightenment, the period that
people started asking why. By that time, England
met the Glorious Revolution. James II of England
was overthrow by the parliament to form the
Kingdom of Great Britain. In 1715 the Sun King,
Louis XIV died. He was inherited by mostly weak
and feeble kings. These transformations greatly
impacted Montesquieu. He referred to them
repeatedly in his work.
3Important works
- He was extremely support the theory of
separation of powers. -
- He coined Checks and
Balances. - He wrote The Spirit of the Laws.
4The separation of powers
judicial
executive
legislative
courts
president
parliament and congress
5Checks and balances
This system was built so that no branch of
government could become too powerful.
Checks mean each branch responsible for monitor
others.
Balances mean ability of each branch to use it
power to limits others power.
6literature
His first success publication is Persian
Letters. It referred to the senselessness of
contemporary society. It brought him famous. His
master work is The Spirit of the Laws. It
referred to political theory. He suggested that
the governing power should be dividing to three
branches. At first, it was published anonymously.
The Spirit of the Laws had highly influence. He
gained great acceptance in Europe, especially
Britain, except in France. The Roman Catholic
Church banned Montesquieus works.
7- Montesquieu was famous in British as a champion
of British liberty, Montesquieu remained a
powerful influence on many of the American
founders, most remarkably, James Madison of
Virginia, the "Father of the Constitution."
Montesquieu's belief that "government should be
set up so that no man need be afraid of another"
influenced Madison and others to form the
government that use the theory of separation of
power.
8- Nowadays, no democratic system is absolute
separation of powers or an absolute no separation
of powers. Constitutions with separation of
powers is found worldwide, particularly in
America, which is the first system that mix
constitutions with separation of powers.
Separation of powers systems is almost always
presidential except for Switzerland, which run by
a seven-man executive branch of state called the
Federal Council.