AP European History Word Scramble

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
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Term Definition
Louis XIVConvinced his people he ruled by divine right and even possessed magical qualities. As a result he gained huge sums of money to entertain him and his court.
AbsolutismOne model of state building where one ruler claimed sole and uncontestable control.
ConstitutionalismA system in which the ruler had to share power the parliaments made up of elected representatives.
The Fronde 1648-1653A series of revolts against Louis XIV which posed an unprecedented threat to the French crown.
Cardinal MazarinHe acted in the place of Louis XIV when he was young and took constitutional power away from the parlements and caused a number of revolts to take place.
The Sun KingLouis called himself the _____ _____, after the Greek God Apollo, to increase his prestige.
The marquise de MaintenonLouis XIV mistress whom he secretly married after his wife’s death.
JansenistsCatholics whose doctrines and practices resembled some aspects of Protestantism.
Revoking of the Edict of NantesIn 1685 Louis XIV revoked the ______ of _______and eliminated all the Calvinist’s rights.
Bureaucracy+ A network of state officials carrying out orders according to a regular and routine line of authority. Louis XIV relied on them to represent his will in each region.
MercantilismGovernments must intervene to increase national wealth by whatever means possible.
Jean Baptiste-ColbertA minister in Louis’s bureaucracy, he began the new economic doctrine of mercantilism.
Frederick IThe leader of Bradenburg-Prussia, he succeeded in bringing all of the German states into one absolutist state and convinced the Emperor to grant him the title “King in Prussia.”
Old BelieversA group who fought against the state-run church and protested the integration of Russian worship with Byzantine tradition.
Jan SobieskiKing of Poland-Lithuania, he tried to bring the country together by fighting the Turks, but could not stop the countries descent to powerlessness.
Charles IKing of England, he tried to exert his power over parliament and sent the country into a civil war. It pitted Puritans against Catholics and gave birth to democratic political and religious movements.
Petition of RightThe English Parliament forced Charles I to agree to not levy taxes without its consent.
Oliver CromwellThe Puritans united under him to create the New Model Army and defeated the Cavaliers at Naseby in 1645.
LevellersMade up of disgruntled soldiers, they wanted to level social distinctions by allowing common people to participate in Parliament. Charles rejected the Their demands.
Rump ParliamentA parliament without Presbyterians, it tried Charles I and killed him. It then abolished the monarchy and House of Lords, and set up a Puritan state with Cromwell at its head.
Lord ProtectorCromwell abolished the Rump Parliament and made himself ____ _____ as was regarded very highly in the eyes of English. He died in 1660, which brought the return of the Monarchy.
Charles II came into power and promised “a liberty to tender consciences” in an attempt to extend religious toleration. He brought back Anglican beliefs in England.
RestorationBrought back fear of French absolutism that was not unfounded, as Charles II was negotiating to work with Louis XIV. He also removed laws against Catholics and Protestant dissenters with his “Declaration of Indulgences.”
James IICame into power after Charles II and was pro-Catholic and absolutist.
William and MaryThe Dutch rulers who gained the throne by invading England and defeating James II’ Catholic movement.
Bill of RightsPassed by Parliament in which William and Mary agreed not to raise a standing army or raise taxes without Parliament’s consent.
Glorious RevolutionIt was the victory of constitutionalism in England over absolutism in the rest of Europe with the agreement for Parliament to share power with the Monarchs.
Thomas HobbesAn English philosopher whose famous 1648 book Leviathan set the agenda for nearly all subsequent Western political philosophy.
LeviathanThomas Hobbes famous book that argued for a social contract and rule by a sovereign. Chaos or war could only be avoided by a strong central government. This is one of the first books on the Social Contract Theory.
John LockeAn English Philosopher who argued a government could only be legitimate if it received the consent of the governed through a social contract and protected the natural rights of life, liberty, and estate. If such consent was not given, argued _______,
Tabula RasaA theory that individual human beings are born with no innate or built-in mental content, in a word, "blank", and that their entire resource of knowledge is built up gradually from their experiences and sensory perceptions of the outside world.
Sir Isaac NewtonResponsible for modern day calculus and improved upon heliocentrism.
Principia MathematicaThe book Newton wrote describing the three laws of motion by which everything in the universe is governed.
John MiltonEnglish Puritan poet who published Areopagitica, describing the freedoms of the press. He also published Paradise Lost.
ClassicismReflected the ideals of the art of antiquity and did not reflect the emotion of Baroque. It was the style of French painters, and focused paintings on the individual by putting them at the intersection of converging, symmetrical, and straight lines.
RembrandtA Dutch artist who painted ordinary people and made regular activities seem precious and beautiful.
MoliereWrote comedies of manners that revealed much about new aristocratic behaviour and manners.
TartuffeOne of the most famous French playwrights of all time, he criticized religious hypocrites and had to be banned.