CH1 sec. 1.4.2. Absolutism: divine kings

Bricks hm 2 TTO
CH1. The age of regents and rulers
The Golden Age
sec. 1.4.2. Absolutism: divine kings
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GeschiedenisMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 2

This lesson contains 12 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

Bricks hm 2 TTO
CH1. The age of regents and rulers
The Golden Age
sec. 1.4.2. Absolutism: divine kings

Slide 1 - Slide

Learning objectives
4) I can explain two ways in which Louis XIV tried to gain more power.
5) I can describe two ways in which Louis XIV tried to diminish the power of the nobility.
6) I can explain that the way in which the Republic was adminstered was different from most European countries in the 17th century.
7) I can explain that religious politics in the Republic were different from most European countries in the 17th century.

Slide 2 - Slide

Slide 3 - Video

Absolute power
Louis XIV of France
  • Ruled from 1643 to 1715 (!).
  • First king with absolute power.
  • Small group of ministers (only gave advice, took no decisions).
  • Known as the Sun King because he was the center of power ("everything revolved around him").
  • Kept the nobility at his court at Versailles busy with rules and rituals.

Slide 4 - Slide

Absolute power
Louis XIV increased his power in two ways:


  • Divine right of kings ('droit divine'). King had been given power from God. Decisions of the king were decisions of God.
  • Took measures to reduce the power of the nobility.

Slide 5 - Slide

Absolute power
Measures against the nobility:


  • Appointed civil servants (= ambtenaren) to assist with administration. More loyal than nobility. Less dependent on nobles for government.
  • Also raised his own army of well-trained and armed soldiers. Less dependent on nobles for army.

Slide 6 - Slide

Differences between the Republic and most European countries in the 17th century.
Administration/ government:
  • Ruled by rich citizens, not by a king.
  • No central government. The seven provinces decided about their own laws, jurisdiction and taxes.

Religion
  • Tolerance = different ideas and opinions were allowed. Not all religions were equal though. Calvinists had more rights.

Slide 7 - Slide

What does not match Louis XIV?
A
Palace of Versailles
B
was advised by the nobility
C
Sun king
D
ruled for 72 years

Slide 8 - Quiz

By appointing civil servants and using mercenary armies, Louis XIV became less dependent on the nobility.
A
true
B
false

Slide 9 - Quiz

How did Louis XIV attempt to increase his power?
A
appointing civil servants
B
divine right of kings
C
raised his own army
D
all answers are correct

Slide 10 - Quiz

Learning objectives
4) I can explain two ways in which Louis XIV tried to gain more power.
5) I can describe two ways in which Louis XIV tried to diminish the power of the nobility.
6) I can explain that the way in which the Republic was adminstered was different from most European countries in the 17th century.
7) I can explain that religious politics in the Republic were different from most European countries in the 17th century.

Slide 11 - Slide

Get to work
What? See whiteboard.
How? Alone 
Help? Ask neighbour. Can't figure it out? Ask teacher. 
Time? Until the end of the lesson. 
Done? Learn terms and dates. Ask teacher. 

Slide 12 - Slide