Central European Monarchs
Central European Monarchs
Central European Monarchs
Bicol University
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
Daraga, Albay
CENTRAL
EUROPEAN
MONARCHS CLASH
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CENTRAL EUROPEAN MONARCHS CLASH
What is this lesson about?
For a brief while, the German rulers appeared to have settled their religious
differences through the Peace of Augsburg (1555). They had agreed that the faith of
each prince would determine the religion of his subjects. Churches in Germany could
be either Lutheran or Catholic, but not Calvinist. The peace was short-lived—soon to
be replaced by a long war. After the Peace of Augsburg, the Catholic and Lutheran
princes of Germany watched each other suspiciously.
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Let’s Read!
THE THIRTY YEAR’S WAR
Both the Lutheran and the Catholic princes tried to gain followers. In
addition, both sides felt threatened by Calvinism, which was spreading in
Germany and gaining many followers. As tension mounted, the Lutherans joined
together in the Protestant Union in 1608. The following year, the Catholic princes
formed the Catholic League. Now, it would take only a spark to set off a war
That spark came in 1618. The future Holy Roman emperor, Ferdinand II,
was head of the Hapsburg family. As such, he ruled the Czech kingdom of
Bohemia. The Protestants in Bohemia did not trust Ferdinand, who was a
foreigner and a Catholic. When he closed some Protestant churches, the
Protestants revolted. Ferdinand sent an army into Bohemia to crush the revolt.
Several German Protestant princes took this chance to challenge their Catholic
emperor.
Thus began the Thirty Years’ War, a conflict over religion and territory and
for power among European ruling families. The war can be divided into two main
phases: the phase of Hapsburg triumphs and the phase of Hapsburg defeats.
Hapsburg Triumphs
The Thirty Years’ War lasted from 1618 to 1648. During the first 12 years,
Hapsburg armies from Austria and Spain crushed the troops hired by the
Protestant princes. They succeeded in putting down the Czech uprising. They
also defeated the German Protestants who had supported the Czechs.
Ferdinand II paid his army of 125,000 men by allowing them to plunder, or rob,
German villages. This huge army destroyed everything in its path.
Hapsburg Defeat
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The Protestant Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden and his disciplined army of
23,000 shifted the tide of war in 1630. They drove the Hapsburg� armies out of
northern Germany. However, Gustavus Adolphus was killed in battle in 1632.
Peace of Westphalia
The war did great damage to Germany. Its population dropped from 20
million to about 16 million. Both trade and agriculture were disrupted, and
Germany’s economy was ruined. Germany had a long, difficult recovery from this
devastation. That is a major reason it did not become a unified state until the
1800s.
The Peace of Westphalia (1648) ended the war. The treaty had these
important consequences:
The treaty thus abandoned the idea of a Catholic empire that would rule most
of Europe. It recognized Europe as a group of equal, independent states. This
marked the beginning of the modern state system and was the most important
result of the Thirty Years’ War.
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STATES FROM CENTRAL EUROPE
One reason for this is that the economy of central Europe developed
differently from that of western Europe. During the late Middle Ages, serfs in
western Europe slowly won freedom and moved to towns. There, they joined
middle-class townspeople, who gained economic power because of the
commercial revolution and the development of capitalism.
The landowning nobles in central Europe not only held down the serfs but
also blocked the development of strong kings. For example, the Polish nobility
elected the Polish king and sharply limited his power. They allowed the king little
income, no law courts, and no standing army. As a result, there was not a strong
ruler who could form a unified state.
The two empires of central Europe were also weak. Although Suleyman
the Magnificent had conquered Hungary and threatened Vienna in 1529, the
Ottoman Empire could not take its European conquest any farther. From then on,
the Ottoman Empire declined from its peak of power.
In addition, the Holy Roman Empire was seriously weakened by the Thirty
Years’ War. No longer able to command the obedience of the German states, the
Holy Roman Empire had no real power. These old, weakened empires and
kingdoms left a power vacuum in central Europe. In the late 1600s, two German-
speaking families decided to try to fill this vacuum by becoming absolute rulers
themselves.
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Thirty Years’ War, they reconquered Bohemia. The Hapsburgs wiped out
Protestantism there and created a new Czech nobility that pledged loyalty to
them. Second, after the war, the Hapsburg ruler centralized the government and
created a standing army. Third, by 1699, the Hapsburgs had retaken Hungary
from the Ottoman Empire.
Like Austria, Prussia rose to power in the late 1600s. Like the Hapsburgs
of Austria, Prussia’s ruling family, the Hohenzollerns, also had ambitions. Those
ambitions threatened to upset central Europe’s delicate balance of power.
To protect their lands, the Great Elector and his descendants moved
toward absolute monarchy. They created a standing army, the best in Europe.
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They built it to a force of 80,000 men. To pay for the army, they introduced
permanent taxation. Beginning with the Great Elector’s son, they called
themselves kings. They also weakened the representative assemblies of their
territories.
In 1740, Maria Theresa succeeded her father, just five months after
Frederick II became king of Prussia. Frederick wanted the Austrian land of
Silesia, which bordered Prussia. Silesia produced iron ore, textiles, and food
products. Frederick underestimated Maria Theresa’s strength. He assumed that
because she was a woman, she would not be forceful enough to defend her
lands. In 1740, he sent his army to occupy Silesia, beginning the War of the
Austrian Succession.
Even though Maria Theresa had recently given birth, she journeyed to
Hungary. There she held her infant in her arms as she asked the Hungarian
nobles for aid. Even though the nobles resented their Hapsburg rulers, they
pledged to give Maria Theresa an army. Great Britain also joined Austria to fight
its longtime enemy France, which was Prussia’s ally. Although Maria Theresa did
stop Prussia’s aggression, she lost Silesia in the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in
1748. With the acquisition of Silesia, Prussia became a major European power.
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The Seven Year’s War
Maria Theresa decided that the French kings were no longer Austria’s
chief enemies. She made an alliance with them. The result was a diplomatic
revolution. When Frederick heard of her actions, he signed a treaty with Britain—
Austria’s former ally. Now, Austria, France, Russia, and others were allied
against Britain and Prussia. Not only had Austria and Prussia switched allies, but
for the first time, Russia was playing a role in European affairs.
It was a different story on other continents. Both France and Britain had
colonies in North America and the West Indies. Both were competing
economically in India. The British emerged as the real victors in the Seven Years’
War. France lost its colonies in North America, and Britain gained sole economic
domination of India. This set the stage for further British expansion in India in the
1800s, as you will see in Chapter 27.
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How Much Have You Learned?
To find out more how much you have learned from this lesson, try and answer the
question below. Write your answer on the space provided.
1. What leads to the Thirty Year’s War?
3. What steps did the Austrian Hapsburgs take toward becoming absolute monarchs?
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Let’s Apply What You’ve Learned
Essay
1. How did the Peace of Westphalia lay the foundations of modern Europe?
2. Why did Maria Theresa make an alliance with the French King s, Austria’s chief
enemies?
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Suggested Readings and Websites
References:
https://www.slideshare.net/Mrleeclass/21-3-central-european-monarchs-clash
https://www.abss.k12.nc.us/cms/lib/NC01001905/Centricity/Domain/2830/Central%20European%
20Monarchs%20Class.pdf
https://portolabutlerhs.edliotest.com/books/Modern_World_History_Unit_2.pdf
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