History Outline Essay, Research Paper
Mrs. S Chris Johnson
History 10-H November 14, 1999
History Outline
A world of Progress and Reason
Enlightenment grew out of the scientific revolution of the 1500?s and 1600?s
Joseph Preistly and Antoine Lavoisier built framework for modern chemistry
Edward Jenner developed a vaccine against smallpox
Natural Laws ? Laws that govern human nature
Two views of the social contract
Thomas Hobbes and John Locke made ideas key to the Enlightenment
Thomas Hobbes put ideas into his book, Leviathan
He argued that people were naturally cruel, greedy, and selfish
Thought life in a ?state of nature? would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short
Hobbes supported the Stuart kings in struggle against parliament
John Locke optimistic view of nature
Thought people were basically reasonable and moral
Believed that all people had Natural Rights ? rights that belonged to all humans from birth
Theses rights included: right to life, liberty, and property
Wrote Two Treatises of Government
It said that people formed governments to protect their natural rights
He rejected absolute monarchy
Also believed that people had the right to overthrow the government
Montesquieu?s spirit of the laws
1700?s France saw a flowering of enlightenment
early and influential thinker was Baron de Montesquieu
he studied the governments of Europe
often gave sharp criticism of absolute monarchy
wrote, The Spirit of the Laws
discussed governments throughout history and complimented England?s monarchy
his ideas of separation of powers and checks and balances in government were written into the constitution of the United States
The world of the Philosophes
Philosophes? which means ? lovers of wisdom?
Most famous Philosophes was Francois-Marie Arouet who later took the name of Voltaire
His outspoken attacks offended the government and the catholic church
He was imprisoned and exiled
Encyclopedia written by Denis Diderot
Took 25 years to write the 28 volumes
The purpose was to change the general way of thinking
Included articles by leading thinkers of the day including Montesquieu and Voltaire
Denounced slavery, praised freedom of expression, and argued education for all
French government thought the book was an attack on public morals
20,000 copies were printed
Rousseau: A controversial figure
Most controversial Philosophe was Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Believed people in ?natural state? were basically good
Thought natural innocence was corrupted by the evils of society
Set forth his ideas on government and society in The Social Contract
Thought the individual should be subordinate to the community
Hatred of political and economic oppression woven through out his works
Helped fan the flames of revolt in centuries to come
Limited Natural Rights for Women
Women did have natural rights
These rights were limited to the home and family
Notion that women were by nature inferior to men
Germaine deStael in France and Catherine Macauly and Mary Wollstonecraft in England argued that women had been excluded from the social contract itself
Wollenstonecraft best known British female critic
Accepted that a woman?s first duty was to be a good mother
Felt that a woman should be able to decide what is in her own interest and should not be completely dependent on her husband
She published, Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Called for same education for girls and boys
Argued only education can give women the tools to participate equally with men in public life
New Economic thinking
Physiocrats ? looked for Natural Laws to define a rational economic system
Laissez faire ? allowed businesses to operate with little or no government interference
Claimed that real wealth came from making the land more productive
Extractive industries such as agriculture, mining, and logging produced new wealth
Physiocrats supported free trade and wanted to lift all tariffs
Adam Smith a British economist admired the physiocrats
He argued that Free market ? natural forces of supply and demand, should be allowed to operate and regulate business
A strong supporter of Laissez faire
Believed that the marketplace was better off with out any government regulation
However he did believe that the government had a duty to protect society, administer justice, and provide public works
His ideas gained increasing influenced as the Industrial Revolution spread across Europe
The challenge of new ideas
The ideas of the enlightenment spread quickly through many levels of society
Coffeehouses were often where people met to discuss new ideas
Europeans had accepted without question a society based on divine right rule, a strict class system and a belief in heavenly reward for earthly suffering
In the Age of Reason such ideas seemed unscientific and irrational
Government and church authorities felt they had a sacred duty to defend the old order
They waged a war of censorship, banning and burning books and imprisoning writers
Writers like Montesquieu, Voltaire, and Rousseau sometimes disguised their ideas in works of fiction
Salons
Salons ? informal social gatherings
Originated in 1600?s
Noblewomen started the idea by inviting a few friends over to their homes for poetry readings
Only the most witty, intelligent, and well-read people were invited to salons
By 1700?s some middle class women began holding salons
Gave middle class citizens the ability to meet with the nobility on an equal footing to discuss and spread enlightenment ideas.
The Salon in the Rue Saint Honore
Inspired from previous visits to Salons Madame Geoffrin eventually set up her own salon in the house on Rue Saint Honore
She entertained poets and philosophers, artists and musicians
On Mondays Geoffrin welcomed artists and musicians
Wednesdays, philosophers and poets came for discussion
Madame donated large sums of money to help support the Encyclopedia
Visiting monarchs paid their respects at what came to be called the ?kingdom? of Rue Saint Honore
Catherine 2nd of Russia and Maria Theresa of Austria often visited
Enlightened Despots
Some monarchs did accept enlightenment ideas
They became Enlightened Despots ? absolute rulers who used their power to bring about social and political change
Frederick the Great King of Prussia from 1740 ? 1786 saw himself as the ?the first servant of the state? with a duty to work for the common good
He admired Voltaire tolerated religious differences welcoming victims of religious persecution
His reforms were directed mainly at making the Prussian government more efficient
Simplified laws
Catherine the Great exchanged letters with Voltaire and Diderot
Made limited reforms in law and government
Spoke out against serfdom
Allied herself with the Russian nobles
Joseph 2nd Hapsburg emperor student of enlightenment
Tried to improve the lives of peasants
Chose talented middle class officials rather than nobles to head departments and impose a range of political and legal reforms
Granted toleration to Protestant?s and Jews in his Catholic empire
He also ended censorship
Abolished serfdom
The Arts and Literature
Grand, complex style of art known as Baroque
Baroque paintings were huge, colorful, and full of excitement
They glorified historic battles or the lives of saints
By 1700?s Rococo style was invented
Rococo art was personal, refined, elegant, and charming
Furniture and tapestries featured delicate shells and flower decorations
Also included European versions of Chinese art
Painters showed noble subjects in charming rural settings, surrounded by happy servants and pets
Ballets and operas- plays set to music- were performed at royal courts
Opera houses sprang up from Italy to England to amuse the paying public
Johann Sebastian Bach wrote complex and beautiful religious works for organ and choirs
George Frederick Handel wrote Water Music and other pieces for King George I
His most celebrated work Messiah combines both instruments and choir
Wolgang Amadeus Mozart was only 6 yr. old when he hit it big
Although he was an instant celebrity he died in poverty at the age of 35
Daniel Defoe wrote Robinson Crusoe
Samuel Richardson wrote Pamela
Lives of the Majority
Villages in Western Europe were relatively more prosperous than those in Eastern Europe
In the west serfdom had largely disappeared
Peasants worked their own patches of land
Others were tenants of large land owners
In Eastern Europe serfdom was firmly rooted
Peasants bound to the land owed labor services to their lords and could be bought and sold with land
In France, peasants still had to provide free labor
In England, country squires had the right to hunt foxes across the plowed and planted fields of their tenants
Global Expansion
England?s location made it well placed to control trade during the Renaissance
In the 1700?s Britain was generally on the winning side in European conflicts
Treaty of Utrecht ? France was forced to give Britain Nova Scotia and Newfoundland
England gained an monopoly in the slave trade in south America
Slave trade brought enormous wealth to British merchants
1763 Treaty of Paris ? ended the seven years war. Gave Britain all of French Canada
British east India company pushed the French out of India
Britain had no large standing army instead it had a powerful navy
England followed mercantilist policies
1707 Act of Union ? united Scotland and England in the United Kingdom of Great Britain
United kingdom also included Wales
England had controlled Ireland since the 1100?s
Gave Protestant settlers title to Irish catholic lands
Growth of Constitutional Government
Three new political institutions arose in Britain: Political parties, the Cabinet, and the office of the prime minister
Government whose power is defined and limited by law ? Constitutional Government
British constitution is made up of all acts of parliament over the centuries
Includes: Magna Carta, and bill of rights
Two political parties emerged: Whigs and Tories
Whigs ? backed liberal policies, reflected urban business interests, and supported religious toleration for Protestants. Whigs dominated the parliament in the 1700?s
Tories – conservative landed aristocrats, sought to preserve old traditions, supported broad royal powers and a dominant Anglican church
The two parties represented cliques among the rich powerful men
Votes were often pooled to advance their common interests
A handful of parliamentary advisors set policies they were called the cabinet
Leader of the majority party in parliament and in time the chief official of the British government ? Prime Minister
Robert Walpole considered Britain?s first Prime Minister
Politics and society
A government in which the ruling power belongs to a few people ? Oligarchy
Highest nobles held seats in the house of lords
Wealthy landowners controlled elections in house of commons
The right to vote was limited to few male property owners
Majority of society made a meager living from the land
Landless families faced a harsh and desperate existence
Middle class included successful merchants and manufactures
George the 3rd tried to regain the crown?s powers to no avail many of his policies on America led to the American revolution
The 13 English colonies
By 1750 a string of 13 prosperous colonies stretched along the eastern coast of North America
Part of Britain?s growing empire
Busy centers of commerce
1600?s parliament had passed the Navigation Acts to regulate colonial trade and manufacturing
colonies were home to diverse religions and ethnic groups
Growing Discontent
George III and his ministers thought that the colonists should help pay for the French Indian war. Britain began to enforce the long-neglected laws regulating colonial trade and parliament passed new laws to raise taxes from the colonies
Colonists protested with, ?no taxation without representation?
They believed since they had no say on parliament that they shouldn?t be taxed
1770 British soldiers opened fire on a protesting crowd killing 5
called the Boston Massacre
1773, a handful of colonists staged the Boston tea party throwing cargo of British tea of the ships and into the harbor to protest the new taxes on tea
By April 1775 the crisis exploded into a war
Colonial leaders met in a Continental Congress to decide what actions to take
Congress setup a continental army with George Washington in command
Following year the congress voted for independence and had Thomas Jefferson draft the Declaration of Independence
The Declaration claimed that people had the right ?to alter or abolish? unjust government
on July 4,1776 American leaders adopted the Declaration
The American Revolution
American cause looked bleak
British held New York and Philadelphia, rebels controlled the country side.
American trimuph over the British in Battle of Saratoga
Convinced the French to join the Americans against it?s old rival, Britain
Netherlands and spain soon added their support
Washington forced the surrender of a British army at Yorktown
Two years later American, British , and French negotiators signed the Treaty of Paris
In it Britain recognized the independence of The United States of America
It also accepted the new nation?s western frontier as the Mississippi river
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