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The Growth of Democracy in England:. 3-2-1. Three Things that really interest me (Facts) Two Things “I’d like to know more about” (Questions) One “Big Idea from today” (Theme or large concept). Constitutionalism: What’s My Question?. A social contract between the rulers and the ruled. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 2: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

3-2-1• Three Things that really

interest me (Facts)

• Two Things “I’d like to know more about” (Questions)

• One “Big Idea from today” (Theme or large concept)

Page 3: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Constitutionalism:

What’s My Question?

Page 4: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

A social contract

between the rulers

and the ruled.

Page 5: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

What is the

goal of

constitutionalism?

Page 6: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

William the Conqueror

(1066 – 1087)

Page 7: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 8: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

• Plantagenet Dynasty

• Established Common Law.

• Judicial decisions based on precedents.

Henry II (1154 - 1189)

Page 9: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

King John (1199 - 1216)• England’s

Worst King• Defeated in

Battle by French.

• Magna Carta, “Great Charter”.

Page 10: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

“No person shall . . . Be deprived of life, liberty, or property,

without due process of law and the sixth states. . . . The

accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an

impartial jury.”

Page 11: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

"Model Parliament”

1295

Page 12: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

• Model Parliament.Model Parliament.• King cannot tax King cannot tax

anyone without the anyone without the consent of the consent of the Parliament.Parliament.

• Parliament began Parliament began to include the to include the middle class middle class (House of Lords (House of Lords and Commons.)and Commons.)

• ““Controls the Controls the Power of the Power of the Purse.Purse.

Page 13: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Tudor Dynasty

Page 14: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Henry VII

(1485-1509)

Page 15: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Henry VIII (1509 - 1547)

Page 16: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 17: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Edward VI(1547 – 1552)

Page 18: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Lady Jane Grey“The Nine Days Queen”

Page 19: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Mary I “Bloody Mary”

(1153 – 1558)

Page 20: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Elizabeth I(1558 – 1608)

Page 21: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Troubles with Mary Queen of Scots

• Married to the heir of the French crown.

• Alliance between French and Scots.

• Abdicated in 1567.• Executed by Elizabeth in 1587.

Page 22: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Conflict with Spain

• Originated from trading interests.

• Revolt of the Netherlands.

• England’s commercial interests.

• 1588 assembled the Armada

Page 23: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

• Act of Supremacy

• Passed Act of Uniformity in 1559

• 39 Articles

Elizabethan Church

Page 24: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

3-2-1• Three Things that really

interest me (Facts)

• Two Things “I’d like to know more about” (Questions)

• One “Big Idea from today” (Theme or large concept)

Page 25: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

England begins to lay the foundations for a constitutional,

parliamentary system.

Page 26: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

A conception of sovereignty rooted in law and lodged in the hands of an assembly that represented the

community.

Page 27: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Tudor Legacy• Tudor monarchs needed the

parliament to combat the church and the Spanish threat.

• Both agreed that parliament makes laws and issues taxes, the monarchy guides policy.

Page 28: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Objectives• Identify the fundamental

friction between the monarchy and the parliament

• Analyze the events that led to the supremacy of constitutionalism.

Page 29: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

James I (1603 - 1625)• Son of Mary Queen of

Scots.

• Sought peace with Spain.

• Toleration of Catholic minority.

• Union of England and Scotland.

Page 30: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

James’ Poor Leadership:

• Believed in a strong monarchy

• Crown and Parliament clashed over money, religion, and policy.

• Parliament wanted to purify Anglicanism

• Too friendly with Catholic Spain.

Page 31: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 32: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Argument of Ship Money:

• Medieval custom, coastal towns provide ships in time of war.

• Charles I wished to maintain a navy in time of peace

• John Hampden lost his case in court.

Page 33: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Charles I’s Reign• Difficulty getting funds from

Parliament led to the Petition of Rights (1628)–Define the rights of Parliament as

inalienable and condemned arbitrary arrest, martial law, and taxes imposed without Parliaments consent.

Page 34: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Charles I and Parliament Clash:

• Charles dissolves Parliament in 1629 - 1640.

• Devised new methods of taxation that did not require parliament.

• Began attacking Protestantism.

Page 35: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Long Parliament(1640 - 1653)

• Arch Bishop of Canterbury, William Laud.

• Attempted to force Anglican Book of Common Prayer on Presbyterian Scotland.

• Needed to call Parliament to raise an army.

Page 36: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 37: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Causes of the English Civil War

• Charles surrounded himself with Catholics

• Supporters of Parliament became known as supporters of Country; supporters of the monarchy were identified with the Court.

Page 38: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Puritan Revolution• Charles I attempts a coup 1642.

• Supporters of Parliament became known as Roundheads.

• Supporters of the king became known as cavaliers.

• Parliament eventually led by Oliver Cromwell.

Page 39: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 40: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Oliver Cromwell• Combining three existing

armies, Parliament created the New Model Army in 1645.

• Ruled as Lord Protector, through representative bodies devised by himself

• He mixed moral Puritanism and political dictatorship.

Page 41: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Puritan Republic• Pride’s Purge created a

Rump Parliament, with only 1/5 of it’s members

• Appointed a high court to try the king on high treason

• Charles I was executed in Whitehall on January 30, 1649

Page 42: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Puritan Republic

• Crushed Irish rebellion (1649)

• Act Settlement of 1652

• Cromwell defeated the Scots

• Cromwell ends Long Parliament

• Instrument of Government (1653)

• Military dictatorship

Page 43: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Navigation Acts: (1651 - 1673)

• By 1686, almost half of the English ships were trading with India or America.

• Aggressive foreign policy support commerce.

• The Navigation Acts, all goods transported in English ships.

Page 44: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Religious Dissenters:The Levellers:

• John Lilburne and the Levellers. political democrats.

• Universal manhood suffrage, equality of representation, a written constitution, and subordination of Parliament.

Page 45: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Quakers:• George Fox and the Quakers.

• Also known as the Society of Friends.

• Persecuted and imprisoned where many died.

Page 46: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Legacy of the English Revolution

Page 47: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Englishmen• Fear of to great a concentration

of power.

• Deepened respect for government by law.

• Reverence for Parliament.

• Distaste for strong standing armies.

Page 48: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 49: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Thomas Hobbes (1588 - 1679)

• The Leviathan becomes the greatest proponent of absolutism and unlimited sovereignty.

Page 50: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

• Without some authority to enforce law, society would disintegrate into a war with every man against every man.

• Social Contract: Society needs to obey the sovereign because the sovereign could maintain order.

• Sovereign of absolute power.

Page 51: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Restoration of the Monarchy:

Charles II

and

James II

Page 52: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Charles II (1661 - 1685)

• Pledged to observe the Magna Carta and Petition of Rights.

• Toleration and preference of Catholics.

Page 53: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Cavalier Parliament:(1661 - 1679)

• Parliament passes the Clarendon Code (1661). Excluded Roman Catholics from office.

• Test Act (1673)

• Charles attempts to establish royal prerogative in the Declaration of Indulgences.

Page 54: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Reign of Charles II• Charles II’s Treaty of Dover with

France’s Louis XIV pledges conversion to Catholicism (1670)

• Parliament passed the Habeas Corpus act (1679) Established legal rights of the individual

Page 55: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

James II (1685 - 1688)• Catholic heir.

• 1687 made Catholics eligible for office.

• Restore absolutism and Catholicism.

Page 56: The Growth of  Democracy in England:
Page 57: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Rise of William and Mary

• In December, James II flees England for France.

• William and Mary are invited to the throne.

• There was one condition, that they accept the Bill of Rights.

Page 58: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

The Bill of Rights: 1688• No law could be suspended

by the king.

• No taxes raised or army maintained except with parliamentary consent.

• No subject could be arrested or detained without legal process.

Page 59: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Opinions of John Locke (1632 - 1704)

• Believed in self-government.

• Rights to Life, Liberty, and Property.

• Government of mutual obligations to preserve these rights.

Page 60: The Growth of  Democracy in England:

Locke’s Legacy• Locke’s doctrine of possessive

individualism.• A society based on wealth, rather

than inherited privilege.• Inalienable natural rights, government

by consent, the right of revolution, and the sanctity of property.