Download - Central & Eastern European Absolutism- Part II

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Page 1: Central & Eastern European Absolutism- Part II

Central & Eastern European Absolutism- Part II

• Austria• Prussia • Russia

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Austria

• THIRTY YEARS’ WAR – Lost ability to

compete with Western Europe

– Instead aimed internally and at Bohemia and Hungary

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Austria• Versus Ottomans

– Ottoman private property • Sultan • system of rule• No Suleiman (see pic) • Bureaucracy???

– Christian slaves– Not smart ones became Janissaries

– Thrived on Christian tribute• Religiously tolerant • Often kinder rulers than Christian

emperors – Butted heads with Habsburgs (and

Russians)

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The Golden Age of the Ottomans

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“Golden Horn”

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The Ottoman Capital -- Constantinople

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The Fall of Constantinople: 1453

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Europeans vs. Turks

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The End of the Byzantine Empire

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Hagia Sophia

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Hagia Sophia - interior

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Illuminated Qur’an Page

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Janissaries

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Battle of Lepanto (1571)

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Austria

• Versus Bohemia – Bohemia fell during Thirty Years’ War

• Protestant nobility crushed and replaced

• Versus Hungary– Conquered by Habsburgs but never fully pacified – Surviving nobility were highly influenced by

Protestantism – Revolt against Habsburgs under Prince Rakoczy

failed but gained significant independence– Helped in revolts by Ottomans

• Charles VI and the Pragmatic Sanction

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Charles VI (r. 1711-1740)

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Prussia

• Blown apart by Thirty Years War… must face East • Geographical limitations

– ‘sandbox of Europe’ – No natural physical barriers

• Military is used to build the state • Junkers

– Landowning Prussian nobility– Given status as head of military and complete

domination of their serfs in exchange for loss of real political power

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Prussia & the Austrian Empire: 1721-72

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Prussia

• Great Elector– Why called this?– His goal- to weaken the local estates (regional parliaments)

and build absolutism – War during his reign (against Sweden and Poland and in

response to raids by the Tartars) allowed Great Elector to subjugate the Prussian Estates

• The nobles were forced to choose security over independence

– Bureaucracy and standing army basically the same thing • For example, soldier’s collected taxes

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Prussia • The Soldiers’ King

– Solidified absolutism – Military nut

• Lived a rigidly militaristic life

– Built incredible army… • Tall soldiers• Prussia- 12th largest

population, but 4th largest army

– Exemplified hard work and living simply

– Sparta of the North – Never ‘spent’ his soldiers

Frederick William I

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King Frederick I of Prussia (r.1701-1713)

The Soldier’s King

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Russia • European or not?

– Yes – Geography, ethnicity, and desire– But…

• Mongol Invasion – Mongol Legacy on the Tsars

» Absoluter and terribler power (similar to Ottoman) » Missed the Renaissance - remain medieval/feudal

– Rise of Muscovite Russians » Best suck-ups to Mongolians

• Ivans kicked out the Khans • Newly independent Russians saw themselves as the ‘Third

Rome’• Fall of Byzantine Empire (Constantinople) to Ottomans• Religion – Eastern Orthodox • Caesar- tsar

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The Mongols Invade The Mongols Invade RussiaRussia

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Early RussiaEarly Russia

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Early Byzantine Early Byzantine Influences:Influences:

Orthodox ChristianityOrthodox Christianity

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Early Byzantine Early Byzantine Influences:Influences:

Orthodox ChristianityOrthodox Christianity

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Ivan the Great Ivan the Great (r. 1462-1505)(r. 1462-1505)

Ivan III Tearing the Great Khan’s Letter Ivan III Tearing the Great Khan’s Letter Requesting More Tribute in 1480.Requesting More Tribute in 1480.

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Russia • Taming of the Boyars by the Ivans

– Khan-like• Tsar had enormous land-holdings

– Service nobility • Got land, had to serve in army relatively weak

– Ivan the Terrible• Used ‘secret police’ to crush peasants further • Nobles, in turn, ruthlessly oppressed their own peasants• Even merchants were bound to their cities

– Cossacks • Repeated uprisings

– Tsars almost literally owned everything in Russia • Romanov line

– Because of peasant revolts, the Romanovs restored some rights to nobles, to unify with them against the peasants

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Russian Russian BoyarsBoyars

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Russia • Peter the Great

– Militaristic – Great Northern War – Promotion by ability – Complete domination of the nobility – Desire for a warm water port

• fight with Ottomans- Black Sea • Fight with Swedes- Baltic• This is a recurring theme for Russia

– Westernization, but mainly for military gain • Grand Tour• Europeans brought in to train Russians • Beard Law

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Peter the Great Peter the Great (r. 1682-(r. 1682-1725) 1725)

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Russia & Sweden After the Russia & Sweden After the Great Northern WarGreat Northern War

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Mimicry of French Absolutism

• Royal Cities – St. Petersburg

• Window to the West • Built from scratch at great cost to nobility and peasants…

evidence of absolutism • Evidence of military victories

– Broad straight avenues radiating out from the center • Palaces Like Versailles

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Schönbrunn Palace

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Versailles

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Schönbrunn Palace

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Baroque► 1600 – 1750.

► From a Portuguese word “barocca”, meaning “a pearl of irregular shape.”

► Implies strangeness, irregularity, and extravagance.

► The more dramatic, the better!

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Baroque

• Emotional • Appeals to the commoner • Grew out of the Catholic Reformation • Used by Absolutists

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St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican

City

by Gialorenzo

Bernini

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Church of Santiago de Compostella, Spain

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Church of Veltenberg Altar, Germany

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“The Assumption of the Virgin Mary”

Egid Quirim Asam, 1692-1750

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Altar of Mercy, Germany, 1764

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“David and Goliath” by Caravaggio

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“St. Bonaventure on His Deathbed”

Francisco de Zurbarán, 1629

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“Battle of the Amazons”Peter Paul Reubens

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Baroque Furniture