1 Divine Right Absolutism
1 Divine Right Absolutism
1 Divine Right Absolutism
What
is
Absolutism?
Absolutism
,
or
Absolute
Monarchy,
is
a
situation
where
Kings
rule
with
total
au-
thority.
European
monarchs
claimed
to
rule
by
Divine
Right,
which
sug-
gested
that
God
had
placed
them
on
the
throne,
and
as
such,
they
were
responsible
only
to
God
not
to
nobles,
or
to
a
Church,
or
to
a
Parliament.
To
question
their
authority
was
to
question
God
himself.
Cer-
tainly,
there
was
no
separation
of
Church
and
State!
What
led
to
Absolutism?
The
era
of
absolutism
in
Europe
is
generally
considered
to
have
peaked
in
the
16th
and
17th
centuries.
(Although
several
Absolute
Monarchies
continued
through
the
18th
and
19th
centuries.)
The
Protestant
Reformation
had
quite
a
bit
to
do
with
the
rise
of
Absolute
Monarchs.
Following
the
Reformation
was
a
period
of
religious
warfare
that
plagued
much
of
Europe.
Many
people
looked
for
order
out
of
the
chaos,
and
national
monarchs
arose
to
create
that
order.
Also,
the
Reformation
weakened
the
two
most
powerful
political
structures
in
Europe:
the
Papacy
(ie.
The
Church)
and
the
Holy
Roman
Empire.
As
these
two
institutions
weakened,
regional
national
monarchs
took
advantage
and
strengthened
their
positions.
Additionally,
many
national
monarchs
seized
control
of
the
Church
and
all
its
lands
(whether
Catholic
or
Protestant)
in
their
kingdom.
Some
monarchs
made
themselves
head
of
the
Church
in
their
nation.
This
began
the
solidification
of
monarchical
power.
Divine Right vs. Mandate of Heaven People often like to draw a comparison to 16th & 17th century European absolutism and traditional Chinese dynastic rule. Both claim the source of their authority or power was supernatural, or heavenly, but they differ on their interpretation of the scope of that power. European monarchs tended to feel that their power was unlimited, and was not to be questioned. To question the monarch was to question God. The monarch was Gods representative on Earth, and thus, was responsible only to God. The Chinese looked at the Mandate as a grant of power that might be quite temporary. The Chinese people looked for signs to tell them that the dynasty had lost heavens mandate. The rulers had responsibilities to the people they ruled to keep them fed and safe. Europeans were not subject to the same restrictions.