Western Civilization.p

(Jacob Rumans) #1

CHAPTER OUTLINE


I. Introduction

II. The Structures of Government: Monarchy
A. The Evolution of Government: Parliaments,
Ministers, and Cabinets

III. The Rise of Parliamentary Government in
Hanoverian England
A. Britain and the Struggles of Empire

IV. The Vulnerable Monarchy of Bourbon France
A. The French Financial Crisis and the
Resurgent Aristocracy

V. The Habsburg Empire in the Age of Maria
Theresa
A. The Habsburg Monarchy and the
Enlightened Despotism of Joseph II

VI. The Army, the Bureaucracy, and the Rise of
Hohenzollern Prussia
A. The Prussian Monarchy of Frederick the
Great

VII. Catherine the Great and Despotism in
Romanov Russia

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CHAPTER 19


THE POLITICAL EVOLUTION OF THE OLD


REGIME, 1715–89


T


his chapter examines European politics dur-
ing the last age of monarchical domination.
Several varieties of monarchy emerged
during the late seventeenth century—from
limited monarchies, restricted by constitutions, parlia-
ments, or aristocracies, to autocratic monarchies, with
few restraints on despotic powers. In most of them,
royal advisers slowly became cabinets of ministers led
by a prime minister; in some, parliaments began to gain
control over the cabinet system.
A prominent example of the latter was England un-
der the Hanoverian kings, a monarchy severely limited
by the strength of Parliament and the restrictions of the
unwritten constitution. Under the first prime minister,
Sir Robert Walpole, a cabinet system controlled by
Parliament had emerged by the 1730s. In France,
the Bourbon monarchy weakened after the death of
Louis XIV, whose successor faced a resurgence of
aristocratic power based upon control of the high
courts or parlements.The costs of war and an inadequate
system of taxation produced a financial crisis that
helped precipitate the French Revolution.
Autocratic Prussia, meanwhile, emerged as a great
power in the eighteenth century owing to the strength
of its army. Frederick the Great tried to balance despo-
tism and militarism with ideas of enlightened reform.
Austria, however, is a better illustration of enlightened
despotism, partly in the reign of Maria Theresa,
but chiefly under Joseph II, the most advanced of
eighteenth-century autocrats. Chapter 19 concludes
with a discussion of Russia, where the monarch had
despotic power and few restraints. Catherine II pre-
served autocracy in Russia by enlisting the support
of powerful aristocrats.

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