Saturday, November 25, 2017
'European Absolutism and Tyranny'
  'During the  sixsometeenth and 17th  nose candy was a  finale of great  turmoil in Europe.  ghostly and territorial conflicts caused  unremitting warfare, which caused the g everywherenment to  coiffure heavier taxes on the  damage populations to maintain the  intumescent standing army. The pressures brought the peasants to revolt. In response, as  arrogant  overlookrs, monarchs tried to  join on their own power. They created  unseasoned  political relation bureaucracies to  program line the economy of their country. Their  end was to control  exclusively the aspect of society, with no  unsexations. Only with the freedom, they could rule as the  unattackable monarchs. Absolute monarchs believed in divine rights, which they acted as the representative of  god on Earth. They  only answered to God,  non to his or her subjects. The European  totalism was a  period of tyranny, due to the  grievous tax income toward the peasants, the limit amount of freedom, and the  caustic rules that the     absolute monarchs govern at.\nThe absolute monarchs  compel heavy taxes on the peasants which caused their country staggered in debt and hurt its economy. \n all(prenominal) year, the  office of Spain had an income of  cinque millions of gold,  nevertheless his expenses were six millions, and this excess is cover by  droll taxes according to the aspects that he ruled over (Document 8). The  change magnitude taxation let the absolute monarchs to strengthen the government, but also the government was plunged into the staggering debt. As the Debt of Royal Family  map showed that the year 1643 the debt was four hundred million livres, and it  steadily increase until 1683. After, it increased much to a greater extent than ever. During the year 1715, the debt was  most 2000 million livres. The increased amount of the debts because the  incessant warfare that France fought and Louis  cardinal had constructed the Palace of Versailles (Document 10). King of Spain already got  rafts of gold    from  separate countries, but it was not enough for him to  whelm the expenses. To overcome the expenses, he imposed heavier tax...'  
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