C. 15 def-wor (Ab) Flashcards
supreme power or authority; the authority of a state to govern itself or another state.
Sovereignty
a political theory that absolute power should be vested in one or more rulers
Absolutism
doctrine that a government’s authority is determined by a body of laws or constitution
Constitutionalism
based on the idea that a nation’s wealth and power were best served by increasing exports and reducing imports
Mercantilism
the relation of a strong state toward a weaker state or territory that it protects and partly controls. a state or territory so protected. the office or position, or the term of office, of a protector.
Protectorate
member of the landowning aristocracy of Prussia and eastern Germany,
Junkers
reign was important in French history not just because it lasted so long but because he was a strong-willed ruler who was determined to make his subjects obey him and to make his kingdom the predominant power in Europe.
Louis XIV (Bourbon)
Considered an accomplished manager, he was responsible for developing trade, industry and the merchant navy, modernizing Paris, and backing new advances in the sciences. Made Mercantilism
Jean-Baptiste Colbert
proclaimed himself King of Great Britain. His reign produced the first Anglo-Scottish union (though this was not full political union) which helped to form the background to the formal union of 1707.
James I (Stuart)
Crowned jointly in 1689, Protestant monarchs that oversaw important moves towards parliamentary democracy. They also transformed Hampton Court and Kensington Palaces.
William and Mary (Stuart)
an English philosopher, scientist, and historian best known for his political philosophy, especially as articulated in his masterpiece Leviathan (1651)
Thomas Hobbes
second Prussian king, who transformed his country from a second-rate power into the efficient and prosperous state that his son and successor, Frederick II the Great, made a major military power
Frederick William I (Hohenzollern)
the most important ruler of the age of Enlightened Absolutism and one of the most famous Habsburgs. She took over the reins of government on the death of her father Charles VI and implemented numerous enduring reforms.
Maria Theresa (Habsburg)
used terror to centralize the Russian state, and his disastrous involvement in the Livonian War nearly bankrupted his newly established empire. He also promoted the Orthodox Church and oriented Russian foreign policy toward Europe.
Ivan IV (the terrible) (Rurik)
established educational reform, championing the arts, and extending Russia’s borders in the largest territorial gain since Ivan the Terrible
Catherine the Great (Romanov)