In deze les zitten 25 slides, met interactieve quizzen en tekstslides.
Onderdelen in deze les
AGE 8. The Time of Citizens and Steam Engines
6.3 The rise of the -isms
Slide 1 - Tekstslide
1815: The kingdom of Holland
1815: Napoleon defeated at Waterloo
Peace Conference In Vienna
The winner (UK) decides that The Netherlands must become a monarchy again: King Willem I
United Kingdom of the Netherlands, including Netherlands, Belgium and Luxemburg
Slide 2 - Tekstslide
What is the congress of Vienna and what was decided there?
Slide 3 - Open vraag
3. Which statement is true?
Statement I: After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, France became a republic again. Statement II: After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, many reforms of the French Revolution were reversed.
A
Statement I is true.
B
Statement I is false.
C
Both statements are true
D
Both statements are false
Slide 4 - Quizvraag
south
north
4. What were the differences between the southern and the northern provinces of the Netherlands?
focus on trade
catholic
French is spoken
protestant
Dutch is spoken
focus on industry
Slide 5 - Sleepvraag
Belgian Revolution
1830
The Belgians declare themselves independent from the Netherlands
This is the birth of Belgium
Slide 6 - Tekstslide
1840-1848:
King Willem II
Conservative: doesn't want change
Rules like an absolute monarch
Doesn't like democracy
Slide 7 - Tekstslide
Revolution Year
1848
The "heirs of the French Revolution", the Liberals, come to the conclusion: "Everything is the same again as before the French Revolution!"
Everywhere there are kings on the European thrones again and despite 'a constitution' there is little democracy.
Slide 8 - Tekstslide
Kings all over Europe start to panic....
France becomes a republic again
In The Hague the king fears for his life
So, in 1848, King Willem II turns from a conservative into a liberal overnight.
Slide 9 - Tekstslide
5. In 1848 a new revolution broke out in several European capitals. Rioters demanded constitutional reform.
What does that mean?
A
Their country did not have a constitution but the rioters wanted one.
B
Their country had a constitution but it did not limit the king's power and give the people basic rights.
C
The people wanted to reform the constitution to give the monarch more power.
D
Their country had a constitution but it was based on Enlightenment ideas.
Slide 10 - Quizvraag
8. Put the events in the correct chronological order
King William I was succeeded by his son King William II.
William II stopped being a conservative.
France became a republic for the second time
Revolutions broke out all over Europe.
Belgium became independent.
Slide 11 - Sleepvraag
conservative
progressive
9. Drag the words left to the correct place in the table.
Which belong to conservative and which to progressive?
revolution
no change
new way of thinking
constitutional reforms
the old ways
Slide 12 - Sleepvraag
Consequences
The leader of the Dutch Liberals: Johan Rudolf Thorbecke makes a new constitution:
King is inviolable (onschendbaar)
Ministers are responsible for the actions of the government (also: for the actions of the king)
Slide 13 - Tekstslide
before
after
11. Read the statements (left) and choose whether the statement describes the situation before or after the constitutional reform of Thorbecke.
The king made all the laws, parliament could give advice.
Tweede Kamer is directly chosen by the electorate.
The king had no real power anymore.
All the financial affairs were decided by the king.
Ministers became responsible for carrying out the laws.
Slide 14 - Sleepvraag
France becomes a republic again
In The Hague the king fears for his life
So, in 1848, King Willem II turns from a conservative into a liberal overnight.
liberals & socialists: main differences:
LIBERALS:
NO government influence in the economy.
success is your own responsibility (take care of yourself)
SOCIALISTS:
Government must influence the economy (social laws)
the weak should not be left to take care for themselves.
Slide 15 - Tekstslide
12. Which statement is true?
Statement I: Socialists believe that the weak in society should take care of themselves. Statement II: Liberals believe that competition is bad for the economy.
A
Statement I is true.
B
Statement I is false.
C
Both statements are true
D
Both statements are false
Slide 16 - Quizvraag
13. Which idea is NOT favoured by liberals?
A
Trias Politica
B
journalists can write what
they want
C
the government must strictly control the economy.
D
religion plays no role in the government.
Slide 17 - Quizvraag
15a. Liberals want freedom foremost, but also equality. How would a liberal look at these statements?
Statement I: everybody is equal under the law Statement II: wealth should be divided equally
A
Statement I is true.
B
Statement I is false.
C
Both statements are true
D
Both statements are false
Slide 18 - Quizvraag
15b. How would a socialist look at these same statements?
Statement I: everybody is equal under the law Statement II: wealth should be divided equally
A
Statement I is true.
B
Statement I is false.
C
Both statements are true
D
Both statements are false
Slide 19 - Quizvraag
liberalism
socialism
16. Drag the words left to the correct place.
No economic restrictions from government
Redistribute wealth
Poor people
Protection by the government
Rich people
freedom of opinion
Slide 20 - Sleepvraag
France becomes a republic again
In The Hague the king fears for his life
So, in 1848, King Willem II turns from a conservative into a liberal overnight.
confessionalism
the country should be ruled from a religious viewpoint
confessionalists were Christians, but they were split up between:
protestants
catholics
the opposite of confessional is secular (= not based on religion)
Slide 21 - Tekstslide
France becomes a republic again
In The Hague the king fears for his life
So, in 1848, King Willem II turns from a conservative into a liberal overnight.
feminism
men and women are equal, and so they should have the same rights, such as the right to vote.
Slide 22 - Tekstslide
Trias Politica, three powers:
legislative
executive
judicial
who?
who?
who?
what they do:
what they do:
what they do:
carry out the laws
parliament
judges
punish those who break the law
make the laws
government
Slide 23 - Sleepvraag
The three political philosophies you learned about in this lesson still exist today. In which political party do we see which philosophy?