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English Civil War / The Glorious
           Revolution
    By holy_rat (who ain’t religious)
Problems begin
• Charles I of England inherits the throne from his
  father James I in 1625
• Charles was not well-liked when he inherited the
  throne in 1625
• He believed in something called the Divine Right
  of Kings, which scared Parliament
• He also knew that England needed money, and as
  a result, he raised the taxes on the upper
  class, without Parliament’s consent
• He also asked Parliament for loans to try to issue
  reforms
(cont’d)
• Parliament would not grant money unless
  Charles would sign the Petition of Right—this
  basically took power away from the monarchs
• Charles I dismissed the Parliament and does
  not call it back into session for 11 years
• Because of a rebellion in Scotland, Charles
  needs money
The Long Parliament (1640-1653)
•   Parliament called into session
•   Hanged some of the king’s advisors
•   Abolished the Court of Star Chamber
•   Enforced Habeas Corpus—right to a trial
•   King needed permission to collect money
(cont’d)
• King could not dissolve Parliament
• Tried to limit some of the absolute power of
  the monarch
• Parliament was required to meet at least
  every 3 years
• Purpose was to keep them active in the
  government
British Civil War (1642-1649)
• Supporters of the king:   • Supporters of the
   – Stuarts                  Parliament:
   – Cavaliers                 – Puritans
   – Wanted strong             – Roundheads > Puritans
     monarchy                    who support the House
                                 of Commons
                               – Wanted a strong
                                 representative assembly
1649 Charles I surrendered
• Rump Parliament – small group of
  independents ruled
• House of Commons
• Condemned Charles I to death
• 1649 Charles I was beheaded
• Monarchy and House of Lords were abolished
• Commonwealth is declared
• Government was to be a republic with elected
  officials
Oliver Cromwell (1653-1658)
• Military dictator, who focused on non-
  Puritans—alter, this would cause
  repercussions for the Puritans, which would
  cause many of them to flock to America
• What were positives and negatives?
(cont’d)
• Didn’t want title of King
• Took title Lord Protector
• Crushed rebellions in Scotland and Ireland—
  killed priests and members of the Catholic
  clergy
• When he dies his son Richard becomes Lord
  Protector
• Was not competent so Cavaliers began to plot
  for the return of the monarchy
Charles I’s son, Charles, had escaped
                to France
• Charles was the legal heir to the throne
• This now left England without a monarch
• Meaning, they were wide to open fill
Many Englishmen remained loyal to
              the king
• There was talk that perhaps the country
  would be better off with a monarchy after all
• They began to realize that without a
  monarch, there was a possibility of another
  military dictatorship
The Restoration
• English people tired of dictatorship
• Charles was welcomed back to England as
  King if he:
  – Permitted religious tolerance
  – Lived up to the Petition of Right
  – Forgets about the divine right of kings
• 1600 the monarchy was restored in England
  with Charles II
• Charles II worked closely with the Parliament
Parliament splits
• James II, (brother of Charles), will take over
• Problem > rulers must be Protestant according
  to law
• James is Catholic
• Tories- backed a strong hereditary king
• Whigs- backed a strong parliament
• Charles II dies in 1685
Glorious Revolution
• James II takes over
• Believes in the divine right of kings
• James II has two daughters:
  – Mary
  – Anne
• James II’s wife dies and he marries again
James II marries a Catholic
• Protestant leadership hates her
• They have a son > heir to the throne
• Problem > he is part-Catholic and they want
  only Protestant king on throne
• James II must end
Catholic vs. Protestant
• Both Whigs and Tories agreed that James II
  must abdicate his throne
• They invited Mary to come and take the
  throne
• Royal family and Protestant!
• Mary had married William of Orange
  (Netherlands)
James II is forced to flee from the
                 country.
• 1688 William and Mary take the English
  throne
• Brought Dutch army but not necessary
  because James II had no support
• James II fled to France
• No bloodshed
Result of Glorious Revolution
• Power of king decreased and power of
  representative assembly increased
• Led to many changes in the government
English Thinkers
• John Locke:
   – Two treatises on government
   – Inspired Thomas Jefferson
   – Inspired Parliament to establish habeas corpus (right to a
     fair trial)
   – Said people had the right to choose their leaders and
     overthrow an unjust government
• Thomas Hobbes:
   – Stated people could choose their rulers but had to deal
     with their decision and could not overthrow an unjust
     ruler
   – Leviathan >
The Declaration of Rights / Toleration
      Act and Act of Settlement
• Declaration of Rights was read to William and
  Mary when they took the throne
• Formalized in 1689 and called it the English
  Bill of Rights
• Toleration Act was passed in 1689—granted
  limited religious rights to Dissenters
• Act of Settlement was passed in 1701 to keep
  Catholics off the throne
Stronger Parliament
• House of Lords
  – Hereditary nobles / higher clergy
• House of Commons
  – Landowning male gentry, wealthy merchants, and
    professionals could vote for them
• Between 1690-1740—new additions to the
  government
  – Cabinet and prime minister
Stronger England
• Act of Union—1707
• England and Scotland joined formally
  – Great Britain
• Purpose > strengthen England against France
• Scottish were against it initially
  – Abolished their parliament, but Scots could take
    seats in Great Britain’s Houses
Act of Union
• Was beneficial to both sides
• Encouraged commerce–brought wealth to
  both
• Glasgow > turned into a port city
• University in both Glasgow and Edinburgh
  developed in the 18th century
Act of Settlement problem
• If William III dies with no heir, Mary’s sister—Anne–
  would inherit the throne
• If Anne had no children, a Protestant grand-daughter of
  James I would inherit the throne
• William III died with no heir, so Anne took the throne
• Anne had 17 children but survived them all
• James I’s grand-daughter, Sophia, also died
• The throne went to Sophia’s son, George I of the
  Hanoverian Dynasty—became King George I of Great
  Britain
• George I and George II were both born in
  Germany
• Did not know how the British government
  worked
• Relied heavily on Sir Robert Walpole who was the
  chief minister until 1742
• Tried to work for peace
• Strengthened British economy
• Because they relied on him so heavily, they
  official post of prime minister came about
Constitutional Monarchy
• Between 1721-1742, Whigs controlled the
  government
• Under the Hanoverian monarchs, the prime
  minister was the head of the government
• This is a limited constitutional monarchy
• British constitution is made up of:
  – Magna Carta, the Petition of Right, Habeas
    Corpus, the Bill of Rights, the Act of
    Settlement, the Acts of Parliament

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English Civil War

  • 1. English Civil War / The Glorious Revolution By holy_rat (who ain’t religious)
  • 2. Problems begin • Charles I of England inherits the throne from his father James I in 1625 • Charles was not well-liked when he inherited the throne in 1625 • He believed in something called the Divine Right of Kings, which scared Parliament • He also knew that England needed money, and as a result, he raised the taxes on the upper class, without Parliament’s consent • He also asked Parliament for loans to try to issue reforms
  • 3. (cont’d) • Parliament would not grant money unless Charles would sign the Petition of Right—this basically took power away from the monarchs • Charles I dismissed the Parliament and does not call it back into session for 11 years • Because of a rebellion in Scotland, Charles needs money
  • 4. The Long Parliament (1640-1653) • Parliament called into session • Hanged some of the king’s advisors • Abolished the Court of Star Chamber • Enforced Habeas Corpus—right to a trial • King needed permission to collect money
  • 5. (cont’d) • King could not dissolve Parliament • Tried to limit some of the absolute power of the monarch • Parliament was required to meet at least every 3 years • Purpose was to keep them active in the government
  • 6. British Civil War (1642-1649) • Supporters of the king: • Supporters of the – Stuarts Parliament: – Cavaliers – Puritans – Wanted strong – Roundheads > Puritans monarchy who support the House of Commons – Wanted a strong representative assembly
  • 7. 1649 Charles I surrendered • Rump Parliament – small group of independents ruled • House of Commons • Condemned Charles I to death • 1649 Charles I was beheaded • Monarchy and House of Lords were abolished
  • 8. • Commonwealth is declared • Government was to be a republic with elected officials
  • 9. Oliver Cromwell (1653-1658) • Military dictator, who focused on non- Puritans—alter, this would cause repercussions for the Puritans, which would cause many of them to flock to America • What were positives and negatives?
  • 10. (cont’d) • Didn’t want title of King • Took title Lord Protector • Crushed rebellions in Scotland and Ireland— killed priests and members of the Catholic clergy • When he dies his son Richard becomes Lord Protector • Was not competent so Cavaliers began to plot for the return of the monarchy
  • 11. Charles I’s son, Charles, had escaped to France • Charles was the legal heir to the throne • This now left England without a monarch • Meaning, they were wide to open fill
  • 12. Many Englishmen remained loyal to the king • There was talk that perhaps the country would be better off with a monarchy after all • They began to realize that without a monarch, there was a possibility of another military dictatorship
  • 13. The Restoration • English people tired of dictatorship • Charles was welcomed back to England as King if he: – Permitted religious tolerance – Lived up to the Petition of Right – Forgets about the divine right of kings • 1600 the monarchy was restored in England with Charles II • Charles II worked closely with the Parliament
  • 14. Parliament splits • James II, (brother of Charles), will take over • Problem > rulers must be Protestant according to law • James is Catholic • Tories- backed a strong hereditary king • Whigs- backed a strong parliament • Charles II dies in 1685
  • 15. Glorious Revolution • James II takes over • Believes in the divine right of kings • James II has two daughters: – Mary – Anne • James II’s wife dies and he marries again
  • 16. James II marries a Catholic • Protestant leadership hates her • They have a son > heir to the throne • Problem > he is part-Catholic and they want only Protestant king on throne • James II must end
  • 17. Catholic vs. Protestant • Both Whigs and Tories agreed that James II must abdicate his throne • They invited Mary to come and take the throne • Royal family and Protestant! • Mary had married William of Orange (Netherlands)
  • 18. James II is forced to flee from the country. • 1688 William and Mary take the English throne • Brought Dutch army but not necessary because James II had no support • James II fled to France • No bloodshed
  • 19. Result of Glorious Revolution • Power of king decreased and power of representative assembly increased • Led to many changes in the government
  • 20. English Thinkers • John Locke: – Two treatises on government – Inspired Thomas Jefferson – Inspired Parliament to establish habeas corpus (right to a fair trial) – Said people had the right to choose their leaders and overthrow an unjust government • Thomas Hobbes: – Stated people could choose their rulers but had to deal with their decision and could not overthrow an unjust ruler – Leviathan >
  • 21. The Declaration of Rights / Toleration Act and Act of Settlement • Declaration of Rights was read to William and Mary when they took the throne • Formalized in 1689 and called it the English Bill of Rights • Toleration Act was passed in 1689—granted limited religious rights to Dissenters • Act of Settlement was passed in 1701 to keep Catholics off the throne
  • 22. Stronger Parliament • House of Lords – Hereditary nobles / higher clergy • House of Commons – Landowning male gentry, wealthy merchants, and professionals could vote for them • Between 1690-1740—new additions to the government – Cabinet and prime minister
  • 23. Stronger England • Act of Union—1707 • England and Scotland joined formally – Great Britain • Purpose > strengthen England against France • Scottish were against it initially – Abolished their parliament, but Scots could take seats in Great Britain’s Houses
  • 24. Act of Union • Was beneficial to both sides • Encouraged commerce–brought wealth to both • Glasgow > turned into a port city • University in both Glasgow and Edinburgh developed in the 18th century
  • 25. Act of Settlement problem • If William III dies with no heir, Mary’s sister—Anne– would inherit the throne • If Anne had no children, a Protestant grand-daughter of James I would inherit the throne • William III died with no heir, so Anne took the throne • Anne had 17 children but survived them all • James I’s grand-daughter, Sophia, also died • The throne went to Sophia’s son, George I of the Hanoverian Dynasty—became King George I of Great Britain
  • 26. • George I and George II were both born in Germany • Did not know how the British government worked • Relied heavily on Sir Robert Walpole who was the chief minister until 1742 • Tried to work for peace • Strengthened British economy • Because they relied on him so heavily, they official post of prime minister came about
  • 27. Constitutional Monarchy • Between 1721-1742, Whigs controlled the government • Under the Hanoverian monarchs, the prime minister was the head of the government • This is a limited constitutional monarchy • British constitution is made up of: – Magna Carta, the Petition of Right, Habeas Corpus, the Bill of Rights, the Act of Settlement, the Acts of Parliament