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Chapter 17 Flashcards

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121778718Absolute MonarchyConcept of government developed during rise of nation-states in western Europe during the 17th century; featured monarchs who passed laws without parliaments, appointed professionalized armies and bureaucracies, established state churches, imposed state economic policies. (p. 379)0
121778719Adam SmithEstablished liberal economics (Wealth of Nations, 1776); argued that government should avoid regulation of economy in favor of the operation of market forces. (p. 382)1
121778720Catholic ReformationRestatement of Catholic beliefs in response to Protestant Reformation (16th century); established councils that revived Catholic doctrine and refuted Protestant beliefs. (p. 372)2
121778721CervantesWrote new classics for Spain. (p. 371)3
121778722EnlightenmentIntellectual movement centered in France during the 18th century; featured scientific advance, application of scientific methods to study of human society; belief that rational laws could describe social behavior. (p. 382)4
121778724Johannes GutenbergIntroduced movable type to Western Europe in 15th century;i credited with greatly expanded availability of printed books and pamphlets. (p. 371)5
121778726DeismConcept of God current during the Scientific Revolution; role of divinity was to set natural laws in motion, not to regulate once process was begun. (p. 377)6
121778727Marianne EhrmannUsed her journal to suggest men might be partly blame for women's lowly position. (p. 384)7
121778728MercantilismEconomic theory that stressed governments' promotion of limitation of imports from other nations and internal economies in order to improve tax revenues; popular during 17th and 18th centuries in Europe. (p. 356)8
121778729Niccolo Machiavelli(1469-1527) Author of The Prince (16th century); emphasized realistic discussions of how to seize and maintain power; one of most influential authors of Italian Renaissance. (p. 371)9
121778730Parliamentary MonarchyOriginated in England and Holland, in 17th century, with kings partially checked by significant legislative powers in parliaments. (p. 380)10
121778731Scientific RevolutionCulminated in 17th century; period of empirical advances associated with the development of wider theoretical generalizations; resulted in change in traditional beliefs of Middle Ages. (p. 376)11
121778732Thirty Years WarWar within the Holy Roman Empire between German Protestants and their allies (Sweden, Denmark, France) and the emperor and his ally, Spain; ended in 1648 after great destruction with Treaty of Westphalia. (p. 373)12
121778733Louis XIV(1638-1715) French monarch of the late 17th century who personified absolute monarchy. (p. 379)13
121778734Mary Wollstonecraft(1759-1797) Enlightenment feminist thinker in England; argued that new political right should extend to women. (p. 384)14
121778735Jean CalvinFrench Protestant (16th century) who stressed doctrine of predestination; established center of his group at Swiss canton of Geneva; encouraged ideas of wider public education; Calvinism spread from Switzerland to northern Europe and North America. (p. 372)15
121778736JesuitsA new religious order founded during the Catholic Reformation; active in politics, education, and missionary work; sponsored missions to South America, North America, and Asia. (p. 372)16
12177873795 ThesesPropositions; nailed to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg. (p. 372)17
121778738Denis DiderotMultifaceted leader of the French Enlightenment; traveled foreign courts as advisor and visiting intellectual; wrote widely on philosophy, mathematics, and psychology of deaf-mute sand also tried his hand at literature. (p. 383-384)18
121778739William ShakespeareRenaissance writer in England; mixed classical with earthiness; created a new set of classics. (p. 371)19
121778740Martin Luther(1483-1546) German monk; initiated Protestant Reformation in 1517 by nailing 95 theses to door of Wittenberg church; emphasized primacy of faith over works stressed in Catholic church; accepted state control of church. (p. 372)20
121778743Encylopaedia BritannicaLeading writers and compilations of scientific and philosophical findings. (p. 384)21
121778744Glorious RevolutionEnglish overthrow of James II in 1688; resulted in affirmation of parliament as having basic sovereignty over the king. (p. 379)22
121778745HumanismFocus on humankind as center of intellectual and artistic endeavor; method of sturdy that emphasized the superiority of classical forms over medieval styles, in particular the study of ancient languages.23
121778746Frederick the GreatPrussian king of the 18th century; attempted to introduce Enlightenment reforms into Germany; built on military and bureaucratic foundations of his predecessors; introduced freedom of religion; increased state control of economy. (p. 382)24
121778747Witchcraft PersicutionReflected resentment against the poor, uncertainties about religious truth; resulted in the death of over 100,000 Europeans between 1590 and 1650; particularly common in Protestant areas. (p. 376)25
121778748Treaty of WestphaliaEnded Thirty Years War in 1648; granted right to individual and rights of possession to individual rulers within the Holy Roman Empire to choose their own religion-either Protestant or Catholic. (p. 373)26
121778750RabelaisRenaissance writer in France; mixed classical themes with earthiness. (p. 371)27
121778751PredestinationPrior determination of those who will be saved. (p. 372)28
121778752Edict of NantesGrant of tolerance to Protestants in France in 1598; granted only after lengthy civil war between Catholic and Protestant factions. (p. 373)29
121778754Catherine the GreatGerman-born Russian tsarina in the 18th century; ruled after assassination of her husband; gave appearance of enlightened rule; accepted Western cultural influence; maintained nobility as service aristocracy by granting them new power over peasantry. (p. 395)30
121778755ProtestantismGeneral wave of dissent against Catholic church; generally held to have begun with Martin Luther's attack on Catholic beliefs in 1517; included many varieties of religious belief. (p. 372)31
121778756Isaac Newton(1643-17270 English scientist; author of Principia; drew together astromical and physical observations and wider theories into a neat framework of natural laws; established principles of motion; defined forces of gravity. (p. 377)32
121778760Northern ReniassanceCultural and intellectual movement of northern Europe; began later than Italian Renaissance c. 1450; centered in France, Low Countries, England, and Germany; featured greater emphasis on religion than Italian Renaissance. (p. 371)33
121778762René DescartesEstablished importance of skeptical review of all received wisdom (17th century); argued that human reason could then develop laws that would explain the fundamental workings of nature. (p. 377)34
121778763CopernicusPolish monk and astronomer (16th century); disapproved Hellenistic belief that the earth was the center of the universe. (p. 376)35

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