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4 min read•june 18, 2024
Jillian Holbrook
Jillian Holbrook
The Peace of Westphalia, signed in 1648, developed Westphalian sovereignty, meaning that each state had sovereignty over itself concerning religion. As the Catholic Church was the only influence holding the Holy Roman Empire together, the limitation of sovereignty opened a gap for Prussia's rise to power. Each German state could choose the religion they wanted to institute, and many selected the Protestant faith, namely Lutheranism, to remove the political grip of the Catholic Church entirely.
Throughout the 19th century, Prussia became a leading Eastern European state.
Napoleon is a more controversial enlightened leader but exhibits many of the same qualities as other enlightened despots. Napoleon’s domestic reforms after the French Revolution modeled the ideas of the Revolution—less Church authority, less burdensome taxes for the third estate, and natural rights. However, it came under the dictatorial rule of a leader obsessed with controlling the continent of Europe and keeping his people happy enough to take that control.
Napoleon combined over 300 French law codes to produce the Napoleonic Code in 1804, which instituted a citizen army, fewer taxes, popular sovereignty, abolition of hereditary privileges, and freedom of religion. He also started a series of wars against other European nations in an effort to conquer or control them, providing ultimate power to France. His costly invasion of Russia during the reign of Alexander I ultimately led to his downfall and defeat at Waterloo against the British.
Many historians say these reforms were to better the lives of Austrian citizens while also bolstering the economy, showing signs of domestic strength after the fall of the Holy Roman Empire, and evidencing Maria Theresa's ability to lead as the sole female Habsburg. (PS- one of her eleven daughters was Marie Antoinette of France!)
He also sought to establish religious toleration and diminish the political role of the Catholic Church and ordered any monastery not engaged in educational or hospital work to close. However, criticisms of Joseph II state that many of his reforms were only instituted to heavily tax the previously untaxed, force many subjects into military service, and diminish the power of the Church to grow his own authority.
He also developed an officer corps that he managed. He disbanded most of his court, repopulated and settled Eastern European lands formerly destroyed by a plague, freed serfs, placed heavy taxes on the wealthy, and abolished hereditary privileges. Additionally, he instituted primary education for all Prussians.
Like many leaders before her, Catherine was dependent on the aristocracy to support her as monarch. She planned to abolish serfdom, but with 95% of Russia’s economy being agriculture, the move would be very unpopular among the aristocrats. She even took it a step further and imposed serfdom on Ukrainians, who had otherwise remained free.
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