Book No.48 (History)

Book Name Western Civilisation: Their History and Their Culture (Edward Mcnall)

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1. ECONOMIC, RELIGIOUS, AND POLITICAL TESTS

2. A HALF CENTURY OF RELIGIOUS WARS

3. YEARS OF TREMBLING

4. QUESTS FOR LIGHT OUT OF DARKNESS

5. LITERATURE AND THE ARTS

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LANGUAGE

A Century of Crisis for Early-Modern Europe (1560-1660)

Chapter – 15

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Harshit Sharma

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Table of Contents
  • On the night before St. Bartholomew’s Day in August 1572, Catherine de Medici, the Catholic queen mother of France, authorized the ambush of French Protestant leaders in Paris.
  • Protestants attending a wedding were stabbed in bed or thrown from windows during the night.
  • After the targeted Protestants were eliminated, Parisian Catholics took the opportunity to kill indiscriminately, targeting Protestants and others.
  • By morning, the River Seine was clogged with corpses, and bodies hung from gibbets, marking the event known as the Massacre of St. Bartholomew’s Day.
  • This massacre was not an isolated event; religious mayhem and violence between Protestants and Catholics recurred throughout Europe from 1560 to 1660.
  • Religious riots were often accompanied by economic hardships and prolonged wars, creating a century of crisis for European civilization.
  • The early-modern period (1560-1660) resembled the late Middle Ages, but it was less uniform in nature and extent.
  • Economic issues included price inflation (1560-1600), which disproportionately affected the poor, and a period of economic stagnation with regional exceptions.
  • The main theme of political history during this period was intense warfare, but causes of war varied greatly by time and place, with some regions experiencing intervals of peace.
  • The period from 1560 to 1660 is described as Western Europe’s “iron century”, marked by enormous turbulenceand severe trials.

ECONOMIC, RELIGIOUS, AND POLITICAL TESTS

  • For nearly a century before 1560, most of the West experienced steady economic growth, and the discovery of the New World promised greater prosperity.
  • By 1560, signs of economic and political troubles began to emerge, leading to storms of crisis.
  • The great price inflation was unprecedented, with significant increases in grain prices in Flanders, Paris, and England from 1550 to 1600.
  • This period of inflation is called the “price revolution”, as it had never been seen before.
  • Two major explanations for the inflation are demographic growth and the influx of bullion from Spanish America.
    • Europe’s population grew from 50 million in 1450 to 90 million by 1600, increasing demand for food and driving up prices.
    • The influx of silver from Mexico and Bolivia after 1560 significantly increased the money supply, further fueling inflation.
  • Entrepreneurs and landlords profited from inflation, while laboring people suffered as wages rose more slowly than prices.
  • Higher prices for food staples disproportionately impacted the poor, leading to starvation during disasters like wars or poor harvests.
  • The economic stagnation after 1600, following the price revolution, saw limited growth across Europe, with regions like Holland bucking the trend.
  • Rich people generally maintained their wealth, but poor people saw no improvements, and their conditions worsened due to destructive wars and high taxes.
  • Wars during this time, driven by religious rivalries, were inevitable. Catholics and Protestants viewed each other as enemies of the faith and fought to eliminate the other.
  • Religious uniformity was enforced by states, believing that the government would fail if religious diversity persisted.
  • Civil wars often broke out, with both sides believing victory was only possible through extermination of the other.
  • Provincial and constitutional grievances also played a role in the turmoil. Many territories had been annexed by larger states, leading to resentment over absentee rule.
  • Governments trying to enforce financial and religious policies sought to eliminate provincial autonomy, provoking rebellions.
  • These rebellions often had patriotic, economic, or religious motivations, contributing to the turbulence of the period between 1560 and 1660.

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