The Enlightened Monarchs Prussia…Frederick the Great Austria…Maria Theresa …Joseph II...

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The Enlightened Monarchs Prussia…Frederick the Great Austria…Maria Theresa …Joseph II Russia….Catherine the Great

Transcript of The Enlightened Monarchs Prussia…Frederick the Great Austria…Maria Theresa …Joseph II...

The Enlightened MonarchsPrussia…Frederick the GreatAustria…Maria Theresa

…Joseph IIRussia….Catherine the Great

The Enlightened Despots / Absolutists:

Philosophes don’t agree on politics Many thinkers concerned with political

reform and some politicians concerned with thinking

Most “Enlightened” (outside US) think reform better from above than below

Praise “benevolent absolutism” “Enlighten” the monarch!

Elbe-Trieste Line

Prussia: Frederick (II) the Great 1740-1786 Son of Frederick William I Rejects “military” for culture, poetry…

Rejects Calvinism --- tries atheism Imprisoned at 18 for trying to run away

So….maybe life as a leader isn’t so bad…

1740 invades Austria (War of Austrian Succession: breaks Austria’s Pragmatic Sanction!) Maria Theresa no match for Prussian army

Prussia: Frederick the Great – Warfare recap War of Austrian Succession 1740-1748 –

others join = European War 1742 Austria cedes Silesia to Prussia Prussian population doubles But…MT won’t give up so easily…

1756-1763 Seven Years’ War MT allies with France / Russia – vs. Prussia! Great Prussian army survives Peter III (Russia) gains throne and stops war b/c

he admires Frederick!! 1772 1st Partition of Poland – receives

territory between Prussia and Brandenburg - partitioning continues in 1793, 1795

Prussia: Frederick the Great – Enlightened???

“Of all states, from the smallest to the biggest, one can safely say that the fundamental rule of government is the principle of extending their territories…The passions of rulers have no other curb but the limits of their power. Those are the fixed laws of European politics to which every politician submits.”

“I must enlighten my people, cultivate their manners and morals, and make them as happy as human beings can be…”

Prussia: Frederick the Great –

“The first servant of the state” Promotes education

(Realschule/universal primary schools)) / Promotes free press = very little / no censorship!!

Legal Reform Abolishes torture (except for treason & murder) –

Judges impartial (single code of law established after his death)

Officials noted for honesty / hard work / efficiency Prussian Civil Service Commission values merit over

birthright Religious toleration (even for Catholics and

Jews) Reconstruction of agriculture / industry

But….then again…serfdom continues, privileges of nobility / Junkers still strong

Austria: Maria Theresa(b. 1717) 1740-1780

Charlie VI’s daughter *Pragmatic Sanction MT’s husband Francis Stephen I [of

Lorraine (1745-1765)] – Holy Roman Emperor

Son, Joseph II (1765-1790): co-regent with mother in Austria

But MT = “The Power” over 40 years (16 children – culture, morals, prayer) Joseph II, Leopold II, and Marie Antoinette! Motto: “Clemency and justice’

Austria: Maria Theresa, 1740-1780 1740 --- Austria is immediately invaded

War of Austrian Succession 1740-48• Loss of Silesia

Reforms• Church / State relations govt. controlled

• Devout Catholic – BUT limits Pope’s power in Austria• Administrative reforms – tax all (even nobles!)• Improve agriculture – reduce lords / begins to free

serfs!!! (but she proceeds cautiously) • Compulsory education!

• state supported public primary education for all male peasants, secondary education for selected students, and teacher training institutions

1756-1763 --- 7 Years’ War – no win

Austria: Maria Theresa, 1740-1780

Finally, Prussia & Austria unite with Russia against POLAND!!! (1770) 3 Partitions of Poland: 1772, 1793, & 1795

MT supports this????• “violation of every standard of sanctity and

justice”• But will be done, with or without her…so she joins

Poland disappears by 1795!!! (Poland gone until WWI!!!)

Austria: Joseph II 1780-1790 1765--- co-regent with MT 1780 – MT dies – leaves Joseph II a powerful

empire = classic enlightenment & utilitarianism

“the greatest good for the greatest number” institutes freedom of the press!

But…impatient radical, anticlerical “Josephinism” = state vs. Church / nobility; Church

ind. from Rome (modeled after Gallicanism) Edict of Tolerance, 1781

reformed legal system – more uniform laws; easier for peasants to own land

1781 grants personal liberty to serfs Military reorganized and laid foundation for

national army Economic reforms:

abolished many internal tariffs; encouraged road building; improved river transport; inspected farms & industrial areas; 1789 taxation of ALL properties

Leopold II (1790-1792) Grand duke of Tuscany (1765-1790); Holy

Roman Emperor (1790-92) – enlightened ruler

Repealed Joseph’s taxation laws & gave nobility back political and administrative power

Retained Joseph’s religious policies, and concern for peasant class

Reached peace agreements with Prussia (1790) and Ottoman Empire (1791)

Issued Declaration of Pillnitz, 1791 along w/ Prussia against the republican revolutionaries in France

RUSSIA: Remember Peter the Great (1682-1725) --- who loved England and opened up Russia to Westernization --- who made all men shave and wear “German clothes” when he returned from England?

Then there were the others…

Catherine I:1725-27 (Peter’s 2nd wife – he sent the 1st to a convent)

Peter II: 1727-30 (grandson of Peter)Anna: 1730-40 (dominated by advisors)Ivan VI: 1740-41 (overthrown)Elizabeth: 1741-62 (youngest daughter of

Peter the Great – golden age of aristocracy)Peter III: 1762 (mentally unfit: deposed and

killed-- -by his wife???)But finally…an “enlightened” monarch

appears…his wife…

Catherine II “the Great??”1762-1796

• Sophia Augusta Fredericka – a German princess• Did she kill Peter??????

• Unlike PG: love for West not merely pragmatic• An “enlightened despot” – cultured, learned Russian,

corresponded w/ Voltaire and Diderot• The philosophes loved her! BUT was she hoodwinking

them?• Art, architecture, literature, music, education

• Like PG: strong – ambitious – rebuilt roads and schools – aggressive foreign policy of expansion

• War with Ottomans, 1769 = 1771, access to Danube river and Crimea; 1774 Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainardji, 1783 annexation of Crimea = Warm Water PORT on BALTIC!!

• Partitioning of Poland, 1772, 1793, 1795

But then what happens???

Legislative Commission (summer 1767)– consultation…

Catherine realizes “Enlightenment philosophy” not practical – especially in Russia!

peasant class = completely bound/unfree class Pugachev’s Rebellion 1773: peasant (Cossack)

insurrection – Pugachev claims to be Tsar & declares peasants freed from military and tax obligations, comes with 100,000 men, rebellion over by 1774

1775 made “convenient friends with her nobles” Charter of Nobility, 1785 = gentry accepts government

and government gives full authority over rural masses to gentry

Economic reform: limit internal tariffs; expand urban middle class; increase agricultural exports

Limitations of Enlightened Despotism

authoritative action from above state more completely sovereign old, established systems and rights questioned

BUT... Joseph II incites revolt Catherine the Great & Frederick still repress the

masses Frederick abandons religion personally

Helps to trigger growing religious revival Aristocratic resurgence in all 3 countries