| Question | Answer |
| a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult witih the nobles, common people or their representatives. | Absolute monarch |
| the belief that a ruler's authority comes directly from God | Divine right |
| King of Spain; Holy Roman Emperor from 1519 to 1558; his opposition to the Protestant Reformation embroiled Spain in a series of wars throughout his reign. | Charles V |
| An agreement between states in the Holy Roman Empire that gave each German prince the right to decide whether his state would be Catholic or Protestant. | Peace Of Augusburg |
| King of Spain (1556-1598),Naples from (554-1598), and Portugal (1580-1598); he led Roman Catholic efforts to recover parts of Europe from Protestantism. He was defeated by England and the Netherlands. | Philip II |
| a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult witih the nobles, common people or their representatives. | Absolute monarch |
| the belief that a ruler's authority comes directly from God | Divine right |
| King of Spain; Holy Roman Emperor from 1519 to 1558; his opposition to the Protestant Reformation embroiled Spain in a series of wars throughout his reign. | Charles V |
| An agreement between states in the Holy Roman Empire that gave each German prince the right to decide whether his state would be Catholic or Protestant. | Peace Of Augusburg |
| King of Spain (1556-1598),Naples from (554-1598), and Portugal (1580-1598); he led Roman Catholic efforts to recover parts of Europe from Protestantism. He was defeated by England and the Netherlands. | Philip II |
| a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult witih the nobles, common people or their representatives. | Absolute monarch |
| the belief that a ruler's authority comes directly from God | Divine right |
| King of Spain; Holy Roman Emperor from 1519 to 1558; his opposition to the Protestant Reformation embroiled Spain in a series of wars throughout his reign. | Charles V |
| An agreement between states in the Holy Roman Empire that gave each German prince the right to decide whether his state would be Catholic or Protestant. | Peace Of Augusburg |
| King of Spain (1556-1598),Naples from (554-1598), and Portugal (1580-1598); he led Roman Catholic efforts to recover parts of Europe from Protestantism. He was defeated by England and the Netherlands. | Philip II |
| Huguenot |
| Greek painter in Spain; Chiefly religious in nature, his works express the spirit of the Counter, or Catholic, Reformation. | El Greco |
| Greek painter in Spain; Chiefly religious in nature, his works express the spirit of the Counter, or Catholic, Reformation. | Diego Velazques |
| Miguel de Cervantes |
| Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz |
| Spanish Armada |
| Huguenot |
| Sait Bartholomew's Day |
| Massacre |
| Henry IV |
| Edict of Nates |
| a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult witih the nobles, common people or their representatives. | Absolute monarch |
| the belief that a ruler's authority comes directly from God | Divine right |
| King of Spain; Holy Roman Emperor from 1519 to 1558; his opposition to the Protestant Reformation embroiled Spain in a series of wars throughout his reign. | Charles V |
| An agreement between states in the Holy Roman Empire that gave each German prince the right to decide whether his state would be Catholic or Protestant. | Peace Of Augusburg |
| King of Spain (1556-1598),Naples from (554-1598), and Portugal (1580-1598); he led Roman Catholic efforts to recover parts of Europe from Protestantism. He was defeated by England and the Netherlands. | Philip II |
| Greek painter in Spain; Chiefly religious in nature, his works express the spirit of the Counter, or Catholic, Reformation. | El Greco |
| Spanish painter who was the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV. He was an individualistic artist of the contemporary Baroque period, important as a portrait artist. | Diego Velazques |
| Was the Greatest Spanish Writer. His MOst famous work was the Don Quixote de la Mancha. | Miguel de Cervantes |
| A Mexican nun who wrote poetry, prose, and plays. Church officials criticized Sister Juana for some of her ideas, for example, her belief that women had a right to education. | Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz |
| A great fleet (130 ships and 20,000 men) assembled by Spain in 1558 for an invasion of England. | Spanish Armada |
| A French Protestant. | Huguenot |
| August 24, 1572; a massacre of 6,000 to 8,000 Huguenots in Paris authorized by King Charles IX and his mother Catherine de Medici. | Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre |
| King of France from 1589 to 1610; he issued the Edict of Nates (1598), which permitted Protestant worship, in order to restore peace to France. | Henry IV |
| A declaration of French King Henry IV in which he promised that Protestants could live peacefully in France and were free to establish houses of worship in selected French cities. | Edict of Nantes |
| King of France from 1610 to 1643; a relatively weak ruler; he let Cardinal Richelieu, his chief minister; hold great sway during his reign. | Louis XIII |
| Cardinal Richelieu |
| Louis XIV |
| War of the Spanish Succession |
| Treaty of Utrecht |
| Puritans |
| Charles I |
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| |
| |
| |
| |
| Royalists |
| Oliver Cromwell |
| Commonwealth |
| Restoration |
| Restoration |
| Charles II |
| William and Mary |
| William and Mary |
| Glorious Revolution |
| Glorious Revolution |
| Glorious Revolution |
| Constitutional monarchy |
| Boyars |
| Boyars |
| Czar |
| Czar |
| Ivan IV |
| Ivan IV |
| Peter the Great |
| westernization |
| westernization |
| westernization |
| Treaty of Westphalia |
| Catherine the Great |
| Thirty Year's War |
| Treaty of Westphalia |
| Maria Theresa |
| Frederick the Great |
| a ruler whose power was not limited by having to consult witih the nobles, common people or their representatives. | Absolute monarch |
| the belief that a ruler's authority comes directly from God | Divine right |
| King of Spain; Holy Roman Emperor from 1519 to 1558; his opposition to the Protestant Reformation embroiled Spain in a series of wars throughout his reign. | Charles V |
| An agreement between states in the Holy Roman Empire that gave each German prince the right to decide whether his state would be Catholic or Protestant. | Peace Of Augusburg |
| King of Spain (1556-1598),Naples from (554-1598), and Portugal (1580-1598); he led Roman Catholic efforts to recover parts of Europe from Protestantism. He was defeated by England and the Netherlands. | Philip II |
| Greek painter in Spain; Chiefly religious in nature, his works express the spirit of the Counter, or Catholic, Reformation. | El Greco |
| Spanish painter who was the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV. He was an individualistic artist of the contemporary Baroque period, important as a portrait artist. | Diego Velazques |
| Miguel de Cervantes |
| Sister Juana Ines de la Cruz |
| Spanish Armada |
| Huguenot |
| Sait Bartholomew's Day |
| Massacre |
| Henry IV |
| Edict of Nates |
| Louis XIII |
| Cardinal Richelieu |
| Louis XIV |
| War of the Spanish Succession |
| Treaty of Utrecht |
| Puritans |
| Charles I |
| Royalists |
| Oliver Cromwell |
| Commonwealth |
| Restoration |
| Charles II |
| William and Mary |
| Glorious Revolution |
| Constitutional monarchy |
| Boyars |
| Czar |
| Ivan IV |
| Peter the Great |
| westernization |
| Catherine the Great |
| Thirty Year's War |
| Treaty of Westphalia |
| Maria Theresa |
| Frederick the Great |