European History
AP European History
Unit 3: Absolutism and Constitutionalism
Absolutism
State Building
Different Levels of Sovereignty
Challenges to Order
English Civil War
Glorious Revolution
Agricultural Revolution
Commercial Revolution
Mercantilism
Consumer Culture
Slave Trade
Dutch Golden Age
Balance of Power
The Wars of King Louis XIV
Military Revolution
Gustavus Adolphus
The Habsburgs
Absolutist Approaches to Power
Divine Rights
Russian Absolutism
French Absolutism
Serfdom
Constitutionalism
10th
Scottish monarch who ruled England from 1603 to 1625
Commissioned the King James Bible, a new translation of the Bible into English
Known for his belief in the divine right of kings and his efforts to centralize power
Encouraged colonization of North America, leading to the founding of Jamestown in Virginia
King of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 1625 to 1649
His reign was marked by conflicts with Parliament, which led to the English Civil War
He was eventually captured, tried for treason, and executed in 1649
English Commonwealth leader (1649-1658)
Puritan commander in Civil War
Executed King Charles I
Created Puritan republic in England
Known for strict morals and religious zeal