states Flashcards

1
Q

What does Religious toleration mean?

A

Defend rights to worship, not to interfere, defended by 1689 john Locke. There is no jurisdiction over conscious, only in civil matters.

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2
Q

What is an act of toleration?

A

Refers to freedom of worship for majority of protestant worships 1688-9.

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3
Q

When was the Glorious Revolution?

A

1688-89.

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4
Q

What is religious toleration associated with?

A

State government, unfolds as secularisation occurs.

Guaranteed existent of parliament and monarchy

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5
Q

When was the revocation of edict of Nantes in France?

A

1685

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6
Q

Was Toleration common under Louis?

A

Toleration not the general trend within the period under absolutist King louis.

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7
Q

What was the duty of Medieval monarchies?

A

They were sacralised authority. Their duty was to uphold the true religion

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8
Q

What is meant by royal touch? Why was this symbolic?

A

The belief that the touch of king can heal a disfiguring disease.

Kings could be canonised, make saints like louis.

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9
Q

What role did the Reformation have on attitudes to the King and his gifts?

A

Reformation complicates it, brings religious divisions and religious responsibilities of secular authorities.

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10
Q

What did the 16th c reformation bring?

A

Religious disunity.

Protestant magistrates gained authority over nation/ territorial churches.

The confessional states emerged and so did the ideal of religious uniformity. This led to religious persecution.

16-17th the secular authority responded by trying to uphold distinctive confession.

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11
Q

What did these Confessional states maintain?

A

Religious unity within territory, united under a particular religion.

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12
Q

Why was there religious unity?

A

People’s salvation was at stake. Their souls needed to be saved in order to prevent eternal damnation

To persecute can be construed as an act of charity.

These beliefs go back to medieval church which was associated between religious dissent and disorder.

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13
Q

Confessionalization contributed to what?

A

To the development of the state, shared of religion encouraged shared identity, community of beliefs that can be defined against others, like heretics etc.

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14
Q

What toleration good?

A

Used as a dirty word, negative situation to endure reluctantly.

Some states surprising religious pluralism, toleration did exist in 16thc but spoken in negative sense.

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15
Q

What is powerful in Poland?

A

Poland’s nobility is very power, crown difficult to impose faith on nobility.

1573 declaration of Warsaw – setting ground rules to monarchy, nobles keep peace among selves so nothing descended into religious anarchy. Social interests transcend religious divisions.

Sigismund III (Holy Roman Emperor) was a zealous catholic and cranked up the pressure. Rewarding conversion.

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16
Q

What about centralising states?

A

Centralising states win over local nobles by incorporating them.

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17
Q

When did the Swedes invade?

A

1665-60 invasion by Sweden ‘the deluge’, protestant associated with foreignness, Catholicism seen as true religion.

18
Q

What could the Habsburgs empire not hope to accomplish?

A

Can’t hope to enforce Catholic over all territories.

Peace of Augsburg, 1555, temporary settlement within the Holy Roman Empire of the religious conflict arising from the Reformation. (Cuius regio, eius religio – whose realm, his religion).

19
Q

When was the Thirty years’ war?

A

1618-48

It involved the re-catholicization. Dragonnades was a response (a form of persecution directed by Louis XIV against French Protestants).

20
Q

What peaks in the 17thc Austria?

A

Witch hunting and there is a growing concern to enforce uniformity and religious practise. (later in Poland)

21
Q

Who issued the Edict of Nantes?

A

Henri IV - legal existence for Huguenots with limits, brings violent stage of religious warfare to end.

The King sought to rebuild the authority lost in religious wars, the presence of religious diversity is an obstacle they want to transcend.

22
Q

When was the Edict revoked?

A

1685 by Louis XIV.

France is exception, louis vision of kingship is tolerant of religious superstition among catholic subjects.

23
Q

What was decriminalised in France?

A

Witchcraft in 1682.

This reflected long concerns to rationalise rule and the population to make sure local officers aren’t pursuing own vendettas but Louis’.

24
Q

When is Catholicism outlawed in the Netherlands?

A

1576 Catholicism is formally outlawed and Calvinism is established as official religion.

The public church is the only church supported by the state and actively promoted.

There is never a sense that everyone belongs this church though.

Cath is practised behind closed doors.

25
Q

Does the Dutch state try to enforce religious uniformity?

A

Dutch state never tries to enforce religious uniformity.

This was fitting for commercial republic, dominated by bourgeoisie merchants

State power is desacralized.

Becomes rich through trade.
Identity prosperity with high level of popularisation, religious tolerance, loads bring skills. Possible to have healthy strong nation that not religiously uniformed but not universal.

26
Q

What is meant by Liberty of conscience?

A

Rests on idea that conscience is internally linked with god. God is inside you judging actions, to force anyone to go against conscience is to go against gods will.

This was a positive, fundamental Christian religious idea.

27
Q

Can Liberty of conscience be used to justify all actions?

A

Divinely inspired conscience never intending to create broad toleration for all types of behaviour.

Those under sway of Satan/ ignore conscience (atheists) are not allowed this privilege.

28
Q

What was Millenarianism?

A

Cromwell’s re-admission of Jews 1655

Refers to prophecies in bible, 1000 years’ rule of Christ of earth, these prophecies include the idea that Jews convert to Christianity. It does not imagine endless multi faith society but heading towards unity, the lack of sense of diversity is seen as good thing.

Once conscience set free, follow them. God will lead them to the truth, unity will be restored by God.

29
Q

What does Enlightenment despotism refer to?

A

Sponsor enlightenment philosophy. interests in balancing ideas to enhance power, enhance human reason and run world under rational manner.

Rather than strengthen hands of the monarchy they do the opposite.

30
Q

What happened in Prussia 1671?

A

The readmission of Jews to Brandenburg

They were under personal protection, beneficent of absolutist ruler extending personal protection to them, but it was under clear conditions, not allowed synagogues only meet in private houses.

31
Q

Who grants wider religious toleration in Prussia?

A

Frederick due to expansion of Prussia 17409 -86, by being keen on tolerance increase immigration by encouraging migrants, sees rules in largely secular terms.

Sponsor of pietists in educational reform, desire to moulds subjects into efficient, rational population.

32
Q

What happened to the Jesuits 1773?

A

In 1773, they were suppressed across the worldby Pope Clement XIV.

Reaction against Jesuits order throughout catholic EU, Jesuits expelled from most parts of catholic EU but pope under pressure to suppress this order.

33
Q

What was the idea of unity linked to?

A

obedience.

34
Q

When did Joseph pass the toleration edict

A

1781.

35
Q

What was the Edict of toleration 1781?

A

For the Jews of lower Austria, no longer need to wear clothes that mark them out, separate them as others.
This was a part of assimilation, make them more German.

36
Q

What is the limit of religious toleration?

A

Religious prejudice.

37
Q

What was this an age of?

A

Ebbing belief

38
Q

Toleration is a…?

A

Religious ideal by enlightenment philosophy.

39
Q

How did the expression of religion change?

A

A change in people expressed their piety - A privatisation piety, religion interiorised, internalised.

New notions of politeness, fitting behaviour in public, being excessive about religion is associated with incivility

40
Q

What was the intended impact?

A

Intend to maintain orthodox Christianity by long term of rational nature of religion robs it of emotional hold it has over people.

41
Q

Is the church still dominate?

A

New forms of sociability compete with church and institution affiliation also competes.

42
Q

Is there improvement?

A

Dominion over nature; secular use of state power

Contractual understanding of social relation on political power rather than divine will
American declaration of independence 1776

But countervailing tenancies: rural/urban divide, catholic and protestant religion revivals, churches continue to be powerful institutions.