350 Chapter 19
The Structures of Government:
Monarchy
The basic political characteristic of the Old Regime
was—as it had been for more than one thousand
years—monarchical government. In the strictest sense,
monarchy meant the rule of a single person who held
sovereignty (supreme power) over a state. The power
of monarchs was frequently challenged by the nobility,
disputed by provinces, or attacked in open rebellions.
But the concept of monarchy was almost universally ac-
cepted at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Even
the skeptical intellectuals of that era still supported it,
and only a few small states, such as the city-state of
Genoa in northern Italy, sustained governments with-
out monarchs, usually called republics.
The forms of monarchy varied significantly: from
absolute monarchy (in which the monarch claimed un-
restricted powers) to limited monarchy (in which clear
legal limits were placed on royal sovereignty, to the
benefit of the propertied classes). Absolutism remained
the predominant form of European monarchy. Most
monarchs wanted such power and aspired to emulate
the absolute monarchs of the seventeenth century, King
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden and especially King
Louis XIV of France, the exemplars of the era called the
age of absolutism. The theory of absolute monarchy
held that rulers received sovereignty directly from God.
They governed by divine right, representing within
their realm the sovereignty of God over all things. This
idea rested on the exegesis of such biblical statements
as “No authority exists unless it comes from God.”
Churches taught obedience to the monarch as a reli-
gious duty: God had given sovereignty, and “No one
but God can judge the king.” Resisting a monarch was
to attack God’s order. An anonymous poem of the eigh-
teenth century entitled “The Vicar of Bray” summarized
the alliance of throne and altar in a succinct rhyme:
Medite
rranean
Sea
PoR.
Ebro
DouroR. R.
SeineR
.
Danube
R.
DonetsR
.
Dnieste
rR.
Black Sea
Atlantic
Ocean
North
Sea
Balearic Islands
Corsica
KINGDOM
OF SARDINIA
Sicily
Crete Cyprus
PORTUGAL
SPAIN
KINGDOM
OF THE
TWO SICILIES
PAPAL
STATES
ALGERIA
OTTOMAN EMPIRE
ANATOLIA
Kingdom
IRELAND of Prussia
SCOTLAND
ENGLAND
NORWAY
SWEDEN FINLAND
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
FRANCE
SWITZERLAND
LORRAINE
BRANDENBURG-
PRUSSIA
HOLY
ROMAN
EMPIRE
SILESIA
HUNGARY
BANAT
BOSNIA
SERBIA BULGARIA
MONTENEGRO
BESSARABIA
UKRAINE
VOLHYNIA
LITTLE POLAND
POLAND
LITHUANIA
KINGDOM OF
DENMARK–NORWAY
DUTCH
REPUBLIC
DENMARK
Barcelona
Seville
Cadiz
Lisbon
Madrid
Avignon
Marseilles
Genoa Florence
Rome
Naples
Venice
Bordeaux
Constantinople
Frankfurt
Plymouth LondonBrussels Cologne
Dublin
Edinburgh
Hamburg
Nantes
Paris
Stockholm St. Petersburg
Orleans
Prague
Vienna
Trieste
Buda
Bucharest
Warsaw
Vina
Moscow
Kiev
Bal
tic
Se
a
STYRIA
Alp
s
Mts.
Pyren
eesMts.
Carpathian
Mts
.
CRIMEA
Rhine
Elbe
R
R.
0 250 500 Miles
0 250 500 750 Kilometers
Habsburg dominions
Kingdom of Prussia
Boundary of the Holy
Roman Empire
MAP 19.1
Europe in 1763