1. Ancient i. Greece and Rome Rome = civilized world Barbarians = outskirts Western Roman Empire = roots of Western civilization ii. First Barbarian Invasions - 400s Wanted a piece of the pie Due to the influx of the Barbarians Roman Culture De-civilized Later, the Barbarians converted to Catholicism. iii. Soup set stage for Middle Ages... Greek civilization Rome civilization Catholic Church (greatest power in M.A.s) Barbarians 2. Medieval (Middle Ages) Battle of Hastings: William the Conqueror conquered England/GB in 1066 i. Dark Ages Roman leprosy - could not protect borders Momentarily held by commissioning barbarians rise of Franks under Clovis rise of Muslims defeated in Europe France - Battle of Tours (Charles Martel, 732) Spain - Reconquista (until 1492) = longest war in history ii. Blip (Charlemagne, 800) = Carolingian Empire (another name for the later Frankish Empire) King of Franks, Emperor of Romans literacy doubled from 1% 2% fear decreases then Charlemagne died, grandsons split empire (Treaty of Verdun, 843) iii. Second Barbarian Invasions - 800s Vikings - From the North Magyars- east Slavs - east Muslims - From the South iv. Feudalism - 900s-1300s Feudalism: division of land and loyalty amongst kings and nobles where kings were weak and nobles were strong; politics driven by FEAR nobles = vassals land = fiefs Oath of Fealty = declaration of loyalty sworn by a vassal to a lord Manorialism: production for protection when there is no $$ and land is the main source of wealth; economics prayers = clergy fighters = nobles workers = peasants and serfs v. Crusades - 1095-1291 (1st Crusade to Fall of Acre) Christendom: Europe united as one under Catholic faith religious, political, intellectual center of Europe spread of Catholic faith: i. quest - followed sword when Clovis and Charlemagne conquered new lands ii. missionaries 1. St. Patrick Irish 2. St. Benedict Roman 3. St. Boniface German barbarians Western Christian military effort to regain Holy Land from Seljuk Turks (Muslim) = 1095-1291 called by Pope Urban II Causes Turkish attacks on Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire which lasted until 1453; Eastern Orthodox Church had split in 1054) Turkish violence toward Christian pilgrims Christian desire to regain Holy Land Motives Deus vult! = God wills it glory adventure personal gain Significant Events 1st = gains most of land, but gradually they lose it anyways; only successful Crusade 4th = captured Constantinople Reflection of Medieval World Power of Church Religious devotion warlike nature of people Major effects improved technology increased currency/trade use (remember Jolly Rancher activity) rise of city-states feudalism declines worldly view vi. High Middle Ages from country/manors towns agricultural advances i. 3 field system ii. plough iii. Horsepower money and guilds economy i. serfs buy freedom ii. kings pay armies, grow stronger than nobles guilds i. maintain monopoly** no competition ii. apprenticeships iii. provide medical care, unemployment relief iv. sponsor banquets, plays, etc. education and literature Aristotle-influenced St. Thomas Aquinas - greatest Catholic theologian, master of scholasticism Dante Aligheri- The Divine Comedy, Inferno Chaucer - Canterbury Tales origins of strong monarchs and nation-states that will eventually challenge power of nobles and Church 3. Modern (Renaissance, 1400s) = Re-birth of civilization @ end of Middle Ages
Unit Two: Renaissance and Reformation Part I: Renaissance = Rebirth of Classical and Catholic civilization (Greek, Roman) 1. Origins and Spread a. Italian city-states ideal conditions 1. trade w/outside world cultural diffusion 2. Controlled Mediterranean trade routes 3. wealth, currency Mercantilism/Monopoly(jacked up prices of goods) patrons 1. Pope 2. wealthy families (Medicis, Florence) 3. Church = glue 2. Character a. Misconceptions - not total break from Middle Ages. Rather, gradual process. b. What it is reaping of Middle Ages seeds redirection of thought from God man isms 1. humanism = focus on human values, capacities, achievements, emotions, etc. + emphasis on classical (i.e. Greek and Roman) culture + human studies Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare) Utopia (Sir Thomas Moore) Machiavelli - The Prince Petrarch = first writer, father of Renaissance literature 2. secularism = focus on worldly as opposed to spiritual/religious School of Athens (Raphael) Architecture Renaissance style instead of Gothic (Brunelleschi - dome on cathedral which was not pointy) 3. naturalism = focus on nature Vesalius (skewed drawings) Da Vinci (Mona Lisa, Last Supper) heliocentrism (Copernicus + Galileo) sun is center important to know how the solar system is 4. realism = depiction of things as they really are, esp. in art Michelangelo i. Statue of David ii. Sistine Chapel iii. Pieta c. ideas spread by printing press Part II: Reformation 1. Pre-Reformation a. long term background i. DOUBT invalidates everything! ii. no more Christendom iii. 1 church 10,000 churches ? means that the protestant church branches off into other churches- Amish, Luther, etc. iv. Merchants hate paying taxes b. Babylonian Captivity = 7 French Popes in Avignon, France instead of Rome c. Great Schism = 3 Popes @ once Cardinals of Rome make a new Pope After both popes conflict, the cardinals create a German pope. 2. 1517: Things happening at the time a. Monarchs = envious of Church b. Nationalism replaces Christendom c. Renaissance era abused by Church leaders i. simony = buying, selling church offices ii. nepotism = give jobs to relatives iii. absenteeism = bail on job (being someplace else instead of their workplace) refers exclusively to church authorities iv. pluralism = bishop of multiple cities v. worldly lives = masters of 7 deadly sins d. Final straw (that broke the Camels back....remember the camel! (: ) i. Holy Roman Empire = 300-400 states ii. Man = Luther (monk, priest, scholar) iii. catalyst = sale of indulgences for St. Peters Basilica iv. action = 95 Theses + Printing Press v. reaction by the Church 1. Luther faces 41 counts of heresy (Pope Leo X) 2. State condemns to death (Holy Roman Emperor Charles V) 3. escapes to Saxony (Prince Frederick the Wise saves him) vi. 3 doctrines 1. Sola Fidei = faith alone 2. Sola Scriptura = Bible alone 3. priesthood of all believers = anyone can interpret Bible vii. results 1. Peace of Augsburg 1555, religion of ruler = religion of everyone in that state 2. 30 Years War (1618-1648, started by defenestration of Prague) kills of HRE population and ends w/Treaty of Westphalia, same as Peace of Augsburg 3. Calvinism a. man = John Calvin b. action = wrote the book The Institutes of the Christian Religion c. doctrines i. predestination ii. Elect called to Heaven iii. no dancing, gambling, dice, cards, staying up past 9:00 PM (curfew) iv. results 1. Scotland = Presbyterians 2. England = Puritans 3. France = Huguenots a. Edict of Nantes (repealed by Louis XIV)= religious toleration of Huguenots
4. executed in 1649 by the Rump Parliament Between the Kings = Interregnum 1. Cromwell = bloody ketchup-Interregnum a. Cromwell sets up a miltiary dictatorship, heavily promoting Puritan ideas. b. Commonwealth, rule by Parliament Stuarts Part II 2. Charles II a. Restoration of Merry Monarch b. limited monarch c. deathbed conversion of Catholic faith 3. James II a. Charles IIs brother b. shortened reign c. Catholic, but daughters were Anglican, so Parliament let him become king d. BUT 2nd wife had a son that was raised Catholic e. Parl. feared Catholic king f. Glorious Revolution 1688 deposed James (no bloodshed.) 4. William and Mary invited to throne 5. required to sign Bill of Rights Anglicanism a. man = Henry VIII, Defender of the Faith b. why? needed male heir i. sought annulment ii. Pope refused c. action: Act of Supremacy i. King is head of church ii. Henry gets his son. d. Other monarchs i. Edward VI = Anglican ii. Mary Tudor = Catholic, persecutes Protestants iii. Elizabeth I = Anglican iv. religious roller-coaster for English citizens 6. Reaction of Protest Revolt a. Popes Paul III and Pius V counterattack b. Council of Trent - reformed Catholic Church c. new society of priests = Jesuits, founded by Ignatius of Loyola: valued education d. some success winning back converts in France and HRE.
Unit Three: Rise of Nation-States and Royal Absolutism 1. Spain a. ruling family = Hapsburgs b. notable leaders = Ferdinand and Isabella c. religion = Catholicism d. expansion = to Portugal, Netherlands, Africa, India, New World e. expansion b/c looking for trade routes, wealth f. obstacles = inflation, guilds, religious intolerance 2. England a. ruling family = Tudors i. Henry VII ii. Henry VIII iii. Elizabeth I b. Stuarts = other ruling family = Scottish i. James I ii. Charles I iii. see Unit 4, Part I c. religion = Anglicanism d. expansion = to Maryland (Catholics), Massachusetts Bay Colony (Puritans) e. obstacles i. tradition ii. Magna Carta 1215 iii. Parliament f. overcoming obstacles i. Divine Right of Kings king = God ii. raised $ w/o Parliament (we dont need Parliament!) iii. dumped Catholic Church (Henry VIII) iv. buy off nobles with land from Catholic monasteries
3. France a. religion = Catholicism b. royal family = Bourbons i. Henry IV (of Navarre) 1. Edict of Nantes 2. Catholics = Huguenots in power 3. disregarded Estates-General 4. assassinated 1610 ii. Louis XIII 1. supervised by mom (Marie de Medici), Cardinal Richelieu a. destroyed castles b. took away jobs (intendants) c. took away Huguenots rights d. last meeting of Estates-General until 1789 e. refined culture 2. Louis XIV = Sun King (LEtat Cest Moi) a. Cardinal Mazarin b. built palace @ Versailles c. REVOKED Edict of Nantes d. War of Spanish Succession to suppress power 3. Louis XV a. expelled Jesuits from France b. After me, the deluge (Aprme moi, le deluge) 4. Louis XVI a. Humpty Dumpty had a big fall! b. executed at the Guillotine in 1793 (see French Revolution) 4. Holy Roman Empire a. no strong central power after Charles V (Charles I in Spain, since Hapsburgs ruled both) b. lead by Holy Roman Emperor c. 30 Years War leaves weak, disunited empire; i. devastation of land, of population killed ii. Treaty of Westphalia several religions iii. thank you for everything, Richelieu! d. compete for power i. South = Austria = Catholic = Hapsburgs ii. North = Prussia = Lutheran = Hohenzollerns 1. nobles = Junkers 2. strong military 5. Russia a. great leaders i. Ivan III (Great) - kicks out Mongols ii. Ivan IV (Terrible) b. royal family = Romanovs i. Peter the Great ii. Catherine the Great c. expansion to West (window = Baltic Sea), esp. b/c of Peter the Great d. strong monarchs. i. increasing control of nobles (Boyars), church ii. enslavement of serfs under Catherine
Unit Four: Revolution Part I: England - Double Chuckburger on James
- Stuarts Part I 5. James I a. unified thrones of England and Scotland b. proclaimed Divine Right of Kings i. money problems ii. Parliament controls purse strings iii. sold nobility iv. successors would pay! 6. Charles I a. Parl. refuses to give $$ except on yearly basis i. forces to call Parl. every year ii. could not disregard Parl. like James I had b. Petition of Right 1628 i. Parl. forces Charles I to sign for money ii. but, he immediately ignores it. c. War looms w/Scotland and later w/Ireland i. Short Parl = 3 weeks ii. Long Parliament 1. Charles needs money 2. Parl. demands 19 Propositions Parl has supreme power in England 3. Charles says no, both prepare for war d. English Civil War i. Charles vs. Parliament (led by Cromwell) ii. Charles surrenders in 1647 e. i. Parliament every 3 years ii. nothing w/o Parliaments consent f. then Parliament takes control of everything, monarchy has little power g. 1701 Act of Settlement declares Catholics ineligible to become king (after James II died) h. 1707 Act of Union unifies governments of England + Scotland Great Britain Part II: France 1. Enlightenment a. seeing the light and throwing off darkness of authority (monarchy, Church, tradition) - use REASON alone! b. individual rights of life, liberty, and property c. liberty = do as one wishes as long as it does not interfere w/ rights of another d. govt exists to protect peoples rights; overthrow if it fails. e. key philosophers: 1. Thomas Hobbes = Leviathan i. man = cruel + selfish + greedy ii. therefore life = nasty + brutish + short iii. leads to chaos iv. therefore must adopt Social Contract and govt has absolute power 2. John Locke = Two Treatises of Government =Social Contract: govt exists to protect rights of people a. life b. liberty c. property 3. Baron de Montesquieu = Spirit of Laws = separation of powers 4. Voltaire = Candide = freedom = kill the Church 5. Jean Jacques Rousseau = everyone born free, but govt messes everything up. i. individual freedom ii. civilization corrupts peoples natural goodness iii. general will = direct democracy f. Note that the Enlightenment directly impacted America in Declaration of Independence, Constitution, etc. 2. French Revolution a. contributing factors: 1. Enlightenment ideas 2. Freemasons, Jacobins 3. Heavy taxes 4. Versailles palace 5. American revolution 6. Starvation, inflation 7. Madame Deficit (Marie Antoinette) 8. Weak Louis XVI 9. Unfair representation in govt b. Stages: 1. Normal (political goals achieved) 1789-92 i. May 5, Estates-General convenes ii. June 17, Natl Assembly formed from 3rd estate = 1st act of French Revolution iii. June 20 = Tennis Court Oath b/c 3rd estate was locked out iv. July 14 = Storming of Bastille = 1st act of violence v. August 1789 = Great Fear = nobles come, peasants, kill, so nobles flee (emigres) vi. 5 major accomplishments: a. abolished nobility b. Declaration of Rights of Man (DORM) - August 26, 1789 c. more fair taxes d. civil constitution of clergy = state controls church e. Constitution of 1791 limited monarchy 2. Radical = 1792-94 i. August 10, 1792 King deposed ii. September Massacre = sans-culottes iii. Natl Convention formed a. Left = Radical = Jacobins led by Robespierre b. Middle = Middle c. Right = Girond = Conservatives iv. Committee of Public Safety = 12 man dictatorship v. major goal = protect the revolution and everything that happened in the 1st stage by throwing it all out the window. a. threats: Austria, Prussia, Great Britain, Spain, etc. b. other threats: monarchy (executed Jan 21, 1793), church (outlawed), conservatives (Reign of Terror by Committee of Public Safety, ends with death of Robespierre on July 28, 1794) 3. Boring = 1795-1799 = Directory i. great military success ii. many problems @ home iii. call Napoleon Bonaparte iv. military and Napoleon overthrew the government in coup detat 4. Napoleon = 1799-1815 i. first consul in the Consulate ii. astonishing military success until 1812 iii. effects of success: a. spreads Enlightenment ideas b. inspires nationalism iv. failed in the end a. Trafalgar 1805 and Continental System vs. GB both failed b. Invasion of Russia in 1812 was a fail; retreated with 10,000 men only. c. abdicated (gave up) his throne in 1814, went to Elba d. there was a period of 100 Days between when he returned to France to his final defeat e. Battle of Waterloo, 1815 = final i 5. Conclusion: i. limited constitutional monarchy ii. Louis XVIII restored (the missing Louis was Louis XVIs son, who was killed during the revolution) iii. Bourbons restored to throne.
Unit 5 19th Century Europe 1. Age of Napoleon - stomps out Old Order, introduces twin-headed beast a. nationalism b. liberalism 2. Age of Metternich - brings back Old Order = reaction to Napoleon a. Congress of Vienna = Metternichs masterpiece i. compensation 1. redrawing borders from Napoleonic Wars 2. victors gain land, losers lose land ii. balance of power (punish France) iii. legitimacy 1. attempt to restore Old Order and silence revolutionary ideas 2. restored monarchies b. Post Vienna i. balance of power peace and order successful 1. Austria dominates politics 2. alliances = UN of 19th century a. Quadruple = Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, Russia, France b. Holy = Austria, Prussia, Russia, later all ii. stamp out twin-headed beast fail c. cracks i. 1820s revolutions in New World + Balkans ii. 1830 overthrow of Charles X of France iii. 1848 Liberal Revolutions all over Europe starting in France - almost replay of French Revolution 3. Age of Bismarck = nationalism leads to formation of unified Italy and Germany a. people i. William, King of Prussia ii. Bismarck, Prime Minister b. Bismarck the Man = Conservative, authoritarian, nationalist c. goal = Germany unified under Prussia d. Obstacles i. Austria dominates HRE ii. France is petrified of German unification iii. Southern Catholic states oppose b/c North is Lutheran e. how to make Germany strong under Prussia i. realpolitik = do whatever it takes = realism = Machiavelli :) ii. blood + iron = military warfare f. principles in action i. 3 wars = means to unify Germany 1. 1864 Denmark 2. 1866 Austria 3. 1870-71 France 4. industrial and military buildup 5. Kulturkampf = culture war to rid Catholic influence = fail
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION - STUDY ON YOUR OWN
Unit 6 World War I 1. Metternichs pressure cooker- tried to cap nationalism, it will fail in an explosion. 2. Building Up Remember for the test MAIN a. Tension from Prussia leads other countries to build enormous militaries, Militarism b. Nationalism- A sense of National Superiority. i. Balkans will be shattered ii. Alsace-Loraine - France still is brooding over this loss. c. Many empires begin to have border disputes, Imperialism. d. Alliances - Backing of countries to the point of gang wars (Big Mac Fight) Triple Alliance= Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy (<1914) Triple Entente= Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy (after 1914), USA (after 1917) 3. Explosion a. Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand is killed in Sarajevo by a Black Hand Member. b. Serbia takes the fall and Germany backs Austria-Hungary, Russia back Serbia, etc. c. Cataclysmic war ensues. Trench Warfare is brutal and fatal. 4. Effects of WWI -> a. America becomes a Global Player b. almost every government east of France become totalitarian c. Ultimately Germany sparks WWII due to the Treaty of Versailles.- Hitler, Mein Kampf, etc. more Nationalism
Joseph Silverman v. National Labor Relations Board and Samuel M. Kaynard, Director, National Labor Relations Board Regional Office No. 29, 543 F.2d 428, 2d Cir. (1976)