A | B |
absolutism | system of government with no limits on the power of the government |
constitutionalism | system of government that limits the power of government through laws, traditions, customs, and formal documents |
Bourbon dynasty | ruled France in 1600's and 1700's |
Louis XIV | absolute ruler of France |
Fronde | uprising of nobles in France opposed to absoute rule |
parlements | courts in France run by nobles around country |
Versailles | palace built by Louis XIV to control nobles |
bureaucracy | government agencies |
intendants | French government officials who implemented royal policies |
Prussia | German state with capital at Berlin |
Hohenzollern dynasty | ruled Prussia |
Junkers | Prussian nobles |
serfs | unfree peasants |
Frederick William the Great Elector | Prussian ruler who established strong state |
Habsburg dynasty | ruled Austria |
Romanov dynasty | ruled Russia |
Stuart dynasty | ruled England during 1600's |
James I | first Stuart ruler, believed in divine right |
Charles I | English ruler executed in English Civil War |
English Civil War | conflict in England between king and Parliament |
ship money | taxes on coastal cities that were applied to inland cities by Charles I |
Parliament | House of Commons, House of Lords |
Cavaliers | nobles who supported Charles I in Civil War |
Roundheads | Puritan/Parliamentary forces who opposed Charles I in Civil War |
Oliver Cromwell | led New Model Army in Civil War, became dictator of England |
Charles II | restoration king of England after Cromwell |
James II | King of England expelled after Glorious Revolution |
Glorious Revolution | 1688 bloodless revolt that overthrew James II |
William and Mary | became rulers of England after Glorious Revolution |
English Bill of Rights | secured power of Parliament after Glorious Revolution |
Huguenots | French Calvinists |
Revocation of Edict of Nantes | Louis XIV's action to force religoius uniformity |
divine right theory | idea that God put rulers on throne |
social contract theory | idea that governments are established by agreements between rulers and ruled |
Hobbes | wrote Leviathan, argued for absolutism |
Locke | wrote Two Treatises on government, argued for constitutionalism |
Peter the Great | Russian tsar (emperor) who westernized and modernized Russia to make it a European focused country |
Colbert | French economic minister under Louis XIV, promoted mercantilism |
mercantilism | economic policy that promoted tariffs, subsidies, and colonies |
Amsterdam | financial capital of Europe in 1600's |