AP EH CHAPTER 18 NOTES: the 18th Century--- European
States, International Wars, and Social Change
I. EUROPEAN STATES
A. Enlightened Absolutism
1. as had been the case since the Middle Ages in
Europe, politically, from 1715 to 1789,
continued the process of centralization in the
development of nation-states for efficient taxation
and building of armies
2. during the 18th Century, the idea of “Divine Right”
was gradually replaced by the more secular and
utilitarian argument of “enlightened absolutism”
(reinforced by praise of the philosophes)
3. enlightened political thought advanced the concept
of human natural rights including:
a. equality before the law
b. freedom of religious worship
c. freedom of speech and press
d. the right to assemble
e. the right to own property
f. right to pursue happiness
4. Philosophes had differing opinions on how these
natural rights were to be established and preserved
a. Montesquieu argued for constitutional guarantees
achieved by a separation of powers
b. Rousseau advocated a democratic society to preserve
these rights
c. Most philosophes agreed with Voltaire who believed
that only a strong monarch was capable of overcoming
vested interests and effecting the reforms society
needed
d. Philosophes believed that a ruler to be considered
enlightened must protect the above mentioned natural
rights and foster the arts, sciences, and education
e. a common abuse singled out by the philosophes as
impeding the development of enlightened political
rulership was the arbitrary behavior of rulers and
arbitrary enforcement of laws
B. The Atlantic Seaboard States
1. France: the long rule of Louis XV (1715-1774)
a. Louis XIV had left France with enlarged territories
but also an enormous debt, an unhappy populace, and a
five-year-old great-grandson as his successor
b. in the 18th Century, France experienced an economic
revival particularly under Cardinal Fleury, Louis XV’s
chief minister, while the movement of the
Enlightenment gained strength
c. when Fleury died in 1743, Louis decided to rule alone
1. Louis XV was weak and lazy as a ruler
2. His reign was primarily concerned with a ludicrous
attention to court intrigues
3. Ministers and mistresses soon began to influence
the king, control the affairs of state, and undermine
the prestige of the monarchy
4. Madame de Pompadour, the king’s mistress, exerted a great deal of influence over the king and often made
important government decisions and gave advice on
appointments and foreign policy
5. The loss of an empire in the Seven Years’ War,
accompanied by burdensome taxes, an ever-mounting public debt, more hungry people, and a court life at Versailles that remained frivolous and carefree,
forced even the king to realize just how unpopular his reign had become with the masses
d. Upon his death, he was succeeded by his even less
competent grandson, Louis XVI (1774-1792)
e. Louis XV and Louis XVI both resisted the reform
movement as the French aristocracy grew stronger
f. Neither Louis XVI nor his wife Marie Antoinette, a
spoiled Austrian princess, seemed to fathom the depths
of despair and discontent growing in France that would
lead to revolution
2. Great Britain: king and parliament
a. the success of the Glorious Revolution in England
had prevented absolutism without clearly inaugurating
constitutional monarchy
b. new dynasty was established in England in 1714
1. Queen Anne, the last of the Stuarts, died without
an heir
2. Crown offered to and accepted by the Protestant
rulers of the German state of Hanover
3. This established the Hanoverian dynasty
c. the 18th Century British political system was
characterized by a sharing of power between king and
Parliament, with Parliament gradually gaining the
upper hand
1. the king chose ministers responsible to himself who
set policy and guided Parliament
2. Parliament had the power to make laws, levy taxes,
pass the budget, and indirectly influence the king’s
ministers
a. landed aristocracy sat in House of Lords
b. landed gentry sat in House of Commons
c. both were landowners with similar economic
interests
d. because the aristocracy was divided by factional struggles based on family rivalries, the kings could take advantage of the divisions to win aristocratic supporters through patronage, awarding them titles,government posts, and positions in the church and household staff

e. what enabled the British system of political
patronage to work was the structure of parliamentary
elections
1. past history rather than population determined the
number of delegates from each borough
2. one borough with six people might get two
representatives, while new industrial centers like the
city of Manchester may have no representatives
3. the increasing influence of the king’s ministers
was a political development of 18th Century Great
Britain
f. since the ministers were responsible for exercising
the king’s patronage, who became his chief ministers
took on great political significance
g. Robert Walpole
1. served as prime minister from 1721 to 1742
2. relied on by both George I (1714-1727) and George
II (1727-1760) as their prime minister
3. pursued a peaceful foreign policy to avoid new land
taxes
h. William Pitt the Elder
1. served as prime minister from 1757 to 1761
2. furthered imperial ambitions by acquiring Canada
and India in the Seven Years’ War
3. despite his successes was removed from office by
King George III (1760-1820) and replaced by a
favorite of the king, Lord Bute
i. William Pitt the Younger
1. served as prime minister from 1783-1801
2. had the support of merchants, industrial classes,
the king who used patronage to get him the support of
the House of Commons
3. The Decline of the Dutch Republic
a. after its century in the sun, the Dutch Republic
suffered a decline in economic prosperity
b. both local and national politics were dominated by
the oligarchies that governed the towns
c. the House of Orange controlled the executive branch
d. aided by the Prussians the Orangists were able to
put down a democratic movement and keep the old system in tact

C. Absolutism in Central and Eastern Europe
1. Prussia: the army and the bureaucracy
a. A continuing trend throughout 18th Century Prussia
was the social and military dominance of the Junker
nobility
b. Two able Prussian kings in the 18th Century,
Frederick William I and Frederick II, further
developed the army and the bureaucracy that made up
the backbone of Prussian society
c. Frederick William I (1713-1740)
1. under his direction, Prussia became a highly
centralized European state
2. he promoted the evolution of Prussia’s highly
efficient civil bureaucracy by establishing the
General Directory
3. close, personal supervision of the bureaucracy
became a hallmark of his reign and Frederick II’s
4. under FW I, the rigid class stratification that had
emerged in the 17th Century persisted
a. The nobility or landed aristocracy, known as
Junkers, dominated Prussian society
1. they owned large estates with many serfs
2. they held a monopoly over the officer corps of the
Prussian army
3. Junker nobility became imbued with a sense of
service to the king (duty, obedience, sacrifice)
b. the middle class had only one opportunity for any
social prestige and that was by working within the
Prussian civil service
c. the majority of his important administrators came
from the middle class
d. peasants had few real legal rights and even needed
Junker permission to marry
e. peasants were born on their lords’ estates and
spent most of the rest of their lives there or in the
army
f. peasants made up the majority of the
non-commissioned soldiers, serving long tours of duty
and rigid conditions
g. Despite being 13th in population, Prussia’s army
was the 4th largest in Europe swelling from 45,000
to 83,000 men under FW I
d. Frederick II [Frederick the Great] (1740-1786)
1. was one the most cultured monarchs and superior
military leaders of the 18th Century
2. reformed the laws that governed the Prussian
territories
a. he established a single code of laws for his
territories that eliminated the use of torture except
in treason and murder cases
b. he granted limited freedom of speech and press
c. he allowed for complete religious toleration
d. left serfdom alone and reversed his father’s policy
of allowing commoners to rise to power in the
bureaucracy (reserved upper ranks of bureaucracy for
Junkers)
3. took a great interest in military affairs and he
enlarged the military to 200,000 men
4. used military to seize Silesia from Austria in the
War of Austrian Succession and part of Poland in the
Seven Years’ War which helped unite Brandenburg to the
rest of Prussia
5. his rule helped Prussia be considered as a great
power in the European community
2. The Austrian Empire of the Hapsburgs
a. despite Austria’s status as an 18th Century power,
its very nature as a sprawling empire composed of many
different nationalities, languages, religions, and
cultures, made it difficult to provide common laws and
a centralized administration for its people
b. Empress Maria Theresa (1740-1780)
1. staunchly Roman Catholic and conservative, she
turned a deaf ear to calls for reform by the
philosophes
2. in Austria and Bohemia, she reformed the
bureaucracy in attempt to consolidate royal authority
3. she also enlarged and modernized the military after
suffering stinging defeats at the hands of Frederick
the Great
4. allowed her son, Joseph II, to rule jointly with
her the last 15 years of her reign
c. Joseph II (1765-1780 with mom & 1780-1790 on his
own)
1. unlike his mother, he was open to the ideas of the
philosophes
2. in a sincere effort to reform his domains typical
of enlightened rulers, he issued 6,000 decrees and
11,000 new laws including:
a. abolishing serfdom
b. tried to give peasants hereditary rights to their
holdings
c. abandoned economic restraints by eliminating
internal trade barriers, ending monopolies, and
removing guild restrictions
d. established equality for all under the law
e. abrogated the death penalty
f. enforced complete religious toleration
3. his reforms left his subjects with their heads
spinning and in a general state of discontent due to
the drastic speed of his reforms

3. Russia under Catherine the Great
a. Peter the Great was followed by a series of six
successors who were made and unmade by the palace
guard
b. The last of these six was Peter III, whose German
wife Catherine learned Russian and won the favor of
the palace guard
c. Peter III was murdered by a faction of nobles and
Catherine II (the Great) emerged as the autocrat of
all the Russians
d. Catherine II (1762-1796)
1. She was an intelligent woman who was familiar with
the works of the philosophes (corresponded directly
with Diderot and Voltaire)
2. her attempt at enlightened legal reforms was called
the Instruction (1767)
a. in this document, she questions the institution of
serfdom, torture, and capital punishment and even
advocated the principle of the equality of all people
in the eyes of the law
b. which accomplished nothing due to heavy opposition
and were soon forgotten
3. her subsequent policies had the effect of
strengthening the landholding class at the expense of
all others, especially the serfs
a. divided Russia into 50 provinces, each was
subdivided into districts whose ruling officials were
chosen by the nobility
b. Charter of Nobility (1785) granted the nobility the
right to trial by peers, exemption from personal
taxation, and an exemption from corporal punishment

4. Her policy favoring the landed nobility led to even
worse conditions for the Russian peasantry
a. in 1767, serfs were forbidden to appeal to the
state against their masters
b. attempted to impose restrictions upon free peasants
in the border districts of the Russian Empire
c. led to a full-scale revolt which was made worse by
the Cossacks, a fierce warrior people that Russia
wanted to absorb into the empire, backing the revolt
d. Emelyan Pugachev was the Cossack leader in the
revolt
e. His rebellion spread across southern Russia from
the Volga River to the Ural Mountains
f. Peasants who were encouraged by Pugachev to seize
their landlords’ estates killed 1500 estate owners
and their families
g. Government forces eventually rallied and captured
Pugachev who was put to death effectively ending the
rebellion
h. Pugachev is noted in Russian history for causing
greater repression of the peasantry due to his
unsuccessful rebellion
5. Catherine proved a worthy successor to Peter the
Great by expanding Russia’s territory westward and
southward
a. in the south, she followed a successful policy of
expansion against the Turks
1. Russia defeated the Turks on the battlefield
2. the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji in 1774 ended the
fighting and did the following:
a. gave Russia some territories along the Black Sea
from the Turks
b. granted Russia the privilege of protecting Greek
Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire
c. gave Russia the right to sail in Turkish waters
b. in the west, Russia used three separate partitions
of Poland to seize 50% of all Polish lands
4. The Destruction of Poland
a. the dismemberment of Poland in the 18th Century
showed the necessity of a strong, centralized monarchy
to defend a state in that period
b. Austria, Prussia, and Russia carved Poland out of
existence in a period from 1772 to 1795
c. To maintain the balance of power in central and
eastern Europe, the three great powers cynically
agreed to the acquisition of roughly equal territories
at Poland’s expense (30% of its area and 50% of its
population was lost in 1772)
d. Poland under the leadership of General Thaddeus
Kosciuszko attempted to rebel against its foreign
captors which ended badly for the Poles with the
partition of 1795 which carved up the remainder of
Poland between the big three
D. The Mediterranean World
1. at the beginning of the 18th Century, Spain
experienced a change in dynasties from the Hapsburgs
to the Bourbons
2. Bourbon rule under Philip V (1700-1746) temporarily
rejuvenated Spain due to his various reforms which
unified Spanish territories under one set of laws, one
language, one French-style administrative body
3. Since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 had taken the
Italian territories and Netherlands away from Spain,
the Spanish now had fewer administrative problems and
less drain on its already overtaxed economic resources
4. In the second half of the 18th Century, the
Catholic church was brought under control when Charles
III of Spain banished the Jesuits and circumscribed
the activities of the Inquisition
5. The landed aristocracy of Spain still wielded great
power during this era
6. Portugal under the guidance of the Marquis of
Pombal reverses its own decline briefly by checking
the power of the church and nobility, but resumes its
fall after Pombal’s fall from power
7. After Utrecht, Austria replaced Spain as the
dominant power in Italy
E. The Scandinavian States
1. in the 17th Century, Sweden had become the dominant
power in northern Europe, but after the Battle of
Potlava in 1709, Swedish power declined rapidly
2. the death of powerful King Charles XII in 1718
helped lead to the subjugation of the Swedish monarchy
to the nobility for the next fifty years
3. the division of the nobility into pro-French and
pro-Russian factions allowed King Gustavus III
(1771-1792) to reassert the power of the monarchy
4. he proved to be one of the most enlightened rulers
of his era by instituting laissez-faire economic
policies and establishing freedom of religion, speech,
and press as well as instituting a new code of justice
that eliminated the use of torture
5. he was eventually assassinated by elements of the
nobility but his reforms couldn't be completely undone
F. Enlightened Absolutism Revisited
1. almost every European ruler in the second half of
the 18th Century attempted some enlightened reforms
2. few rulers felt compelled to make the state an
experimental lab for a set of political principles
(Joseph II probably the only one who did)
3. Enlightened absolutism during this time could never
overcome the political and social realities

II. WARS AND DIPLOMACY
A. Diplomacy
1. the philosophes had denounced war as a foolish
waste of life and resources in stupid quarrels of no
value to humankind
2. rulers paid little attention to these comments and
continued their costly struggles
3. Speaking of politics in the supposedly enlightened
age, Frederick II of Prussia remarked: “The
fundamental rule of government is the principle of
extending their territories”
4. because international relations were based on
considerations of power, the 18th Century concept of a
“balance of power” was predicated on how to
counterbalance the power of one state by another to
prevent any one power from dominating the others
5. the diplomacy of the 18th Century still focused
primarily on dynastic interests or the desire of
ruling families to provide for their dependents and
extend their dynastic holdings
6. international rivalry and the continuing
centralization of the European states were closely
related
B. The War of Austrian Succession (1740-1748)
1. unable to produce a male heir to the Austrian
throne, the Hapsburg emperor Charles VI (1711-1740)
feared the consequences of the succession of his daughter Maria Theresa so much that he spent much of his reign negotiating the Pragmatic Sanction by which different European powers agreed to recognize his daughter as his legal heir
2. after Charles VI’s death, the Pragmatic Sanction
was conveniently pushed aside by several European
powers
a. Frederick II and Prussia invaded Austrian Silesia
b. France invaded the Austrian Netherlands
c. Bavaria seized other Hapsburg lands
3. Maria Theresa found an ally in Great Britain who
wanted to stop France’s growing dominance on the
continent
4. Fighting broke out not only in Europe but also
India and North America between the combatants
5. By 1748, all parties were exhausted and agreed to
stop fighting
6. The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle promised the return
of all lands to their original owners except for
Silesia which Prussia refused to return. (this angered
the Austrians to no end)
C. The Seven Years’ War (1756-1763)
1. In 1756, the Diplomatic Revolution led to new
alliances being formed due to new political realities
in Europe
2. France, Austria, and Russia formed alliance against
Prussia and Great Britain which led to the Seven
Years’ War
3. On the continent, Prussia under the brilliant
leadership of Frederick the Great took on the armies
of France, Austria, and Russia simultaneously and held
their own for some time even scoring a great victory
at the Battle of Rossbach in Saxony (1757)
a. Over time the Prussians were worn down and on the
verge of total defeat when Czarina Elizabeth of Russia
died
b. Her son, Peter III was a great admirer of Frederick
II took her place and quickly withdrew his forces from
the Prussian territory and the war
c. The Russian withdrawal guaranteed a stalemate and
led to a desire for peace
d. The Treaty of Hubertusburg (1763) ended fighting in
Europe and returned all occupied territories with the
provision that Silesia would be recognized by Austria
as a Prussian territory
4. Outside of Europe, France and Great Britain fought
the Seven Years’ War in India and North America
a. In India, the British under Robert Clive ultimately
defeated the French and forced their withdrawal
(Treaty of Paris – 1763)
b. In North America, despite the fact that the French
had a superior army to that of the British, military
success was predicated on both armies receiving naval
support
1. the defeat of the French fleets in major naval
battles in 1759 gave the British an advantage since
the French could no longer easily reinforce their
garrisons
2. a series of British victories soon followed as the
British won at Fort Louisbourg and Duquesne in 1758
and later seized Montreal, the Great Lakes area, and
the Ohio Valley from the French
3. Treaty of Paris (1763) ended the fighting
a. France gave all Canadian holdings and lands east of
the Mississippi River to the British and the Louisiana
Territory to the Spanish
b. The Spanish turned over Florida to the British
c. Made Britain the world’s greatest colonial power
D. European Armies and Warfare
1. the professional standing army became a standard
feature of 18th Century Europe; 1740-1780 marked a
period of military expansion displayed by:
a. France’s army grew from 190,000 to 300,000 troops
b. Prussia’s army grew from 83,000 to 200,000 troops
c. Austria’s army grew from 108,000 to 282,000 troops
d. Russia’s army grew from 130,000 to 290,000 troops
e. Out of the great powers, only Great Britain did not
possess a standing army as it still relied on
mercenaries and its superior navy (174 warships with
80,000 sailors)
2. Since generals were extremely reluctant to risk the
destruction of their armies during the 18th Century,
European warfare during this time was characterized by
limited objectives and elaborate maneuvers rather than
direct confrontation