1 / 21

England’s Rulers

England’s Rulers. Parliament’s Impact. I. Monarchs Defy Parliament. Elizabeth died in 1603 and left a huge debt and no heir. James I. James I becomes King of England while also ruling Scotland – 1603 James’ Troubles with Parliament Fought over money

keegan
Download Presentation

England’s Rulers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. England’s Rulers Parliament’s Impact

  2. I. Monarchs Defy Parliament • Elizabeth died in 1603 and left a huge debt and no heir

  3. James I • James I becomes King of England while also ruling Scotland – 1603 • James’ Troubles with Parliament • Fought over money • Made Puritan members upset because he was Catholic • Parliament wanted James to “purify” the English church of Catholic ways – James refused

  4. Charles I • James dies 1625 • Charles I, James’ son, now king of England • He needed money for wars with Spain and France • He calls Parliament to session • Refuse to give him money until he signs the “Petition of Right”

  5. Charles I

  6. Petition of Right • No imprisonment with out due cause • Can not house soldiers without Parliament’s permission • No new taxes without Parliaments consent • No martial law in peacetime

  7. Charles I • Signs Petition but quickly ignores • Significance of Petition • Established the idea that the law was greater than the power of the king • This goes against the idea of Absolutism • 1629 he dissolves Parliament and raises money by taxing the people

  8. II. English Civil War • Charles offends Puritans by holding on to Catholic traditions in English church • Also wants England and Scotland under one idea of the Bible • Scots threaten to revolt and invade England • Charles calls Parliament into session and sees and opportunity for revenge

  9. War Topples a King • Parliament leaders revolt – mobs attack Charles who runs to northern England where there are people who will be loyal to him

  10. English Civil War 1642 - 1649 • Supporters of Charles I were called Royalist, or Cavaliers • Supporters of Parliament were the Puritans but were called Roundheads (because of their short round bowl haircuts)

  11. English Civil War Rivales Royalist, or Cavaliers Roundheads

  12. Oliver Cromwell • 1645 – Puritans were led by Oliver Cromwell defeated the Cavaliers and held Charles II prisoner • He was sentenced to death • *This was the first time a sitting king had been faced with trial and execution • (this was another blow to absolutism)

  13. Cromwell’s Rule • He abolished the monarchy • Established a Republican form of government • Drafted the 1st Constitution of any European State • He eventually becomes a Dictator

  14. Oliver Cromwell’s Impact on England Puritan Ideas: Abolished activities such as theater, Sports, and Dancing Religious Toleration for Christians, Jews, but not Catholics

  15. Restoration • Cromwell died in 1658 • Parliament restored • Charles I son, Charles II, rules and restores the English monarchy – this began the Restoration

  16. Habeas Corpus • This allowed any prisoner the right to obtain a document ordering they be brought before a judge to hear the charges against them • A monarch could no longer put someone in jail for opposing him • No longer people could be held without trials

  17. Charles II to James II • Charles II dies, his brother James II is the new King and is Catholic • Whigs opposed James as ruler • Torrierssupported James as ruler • (these parties were England’s first political party)

  18. Glorious Revolution • James oldest daughter, Mary, was Protestant • Mary and her husband, William, were invited to overthrow James “for the sake of Protestantism” • James fled – this led to a bloodless revolution • William and Mary are now the rulers of England

  19. Limits placed on the Monarch • William and Mary established a Constitutional Monarchy – this limited the ruler’s power • Bill of Rights – 1689 – Rulers could not: • Suspend Parliament Laws • No taxes without Parliament’s consent • Freedom of Speech in Parliament • Citizens able to petition king about concerns

  20. Cabinet System Develops • Parliament and monarchy must agree for government to run – if not government at a standstill • A cabinet was developed • Represented the party majority in Parliament – they lead the Cabinet • Leader of the majority was called the Prime Minister • The English leader today is called the Prime Minister

More Related