Kensington Palace

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    architecture, such as the Palace of Versailles. Louis XIV was responsible for creating the lavish complex that was filled with Baroque interiors and surrounded by French and English gardens. In its later years, it was further renovated for other kings then given to the Republic for public use. Through its elaborate ornamentation and massive scale, the Palace of Versailles represents the glory of the Sun King and expresses the power of the French monarchy. The Palace of Versailles was built in

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    During the 17th and 18th centuries, many so-called nation-states were maturing after a long period of wars. As these nation-states matured, they needed to plan and decide on their governments accordingly. European nation-states mainly took two different routes: absolutism and constitutionalism. The first, absolutism, was characterized by three things: strong monarchies, unlimited power, and efficient rule. Two notorious examples of absolutism in Europe were in France and Austria. In Austria, the

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    The scene in the middle of the page is arranged according to rules of visual hierarchy intended to picture Charles’s superior status as the Carolingian ruler. The king is the dominant figure in the composition. He sits on a jeweled throne high up under the baldachin’s dome, while all other figures stand, and he rests his feet on a podium of variegated stone. He is located on the miniature’s central vertical axis, an axis emphasized by the symmetrical disposition of the armed guards, the two personifications

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    1605. In the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, the Roman Catholics from London made a plan in order to blow up the House of Lords which held King James the First. “The plotters rented a cellar extending under the palace, and Fawkes planted 36 (some

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    The Glass Palace Amitav Ghosh explores different storytelling forms and complicates the picture of pre- and postcolonial South Asian identity in his fourth novel The Glass Palace1. His ambitious epic tells “the stories of a cast of characters, royal working – clogs, and bourgeois Indians, Bengalis, and Burmese – as they grapple with their sense of place and self while violent historical events reshape twentieth century Burma and India2”. Amitav Ghosh’s The Glass Palace is an evocation of

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    Louis failed to do that, he was self centered, and needed to have everything. All through his reign, he needed complete control of everything. No matter how much he had, it was never enough. Then, he so desired to have the biggest, most beautiful palace that he used tax money and ultimately caused his kingdom to be plunged into poverty and indirectly caused the French Revolution. He foolishly used the wealth of France for to satisfy his own desires and caused so much destruction. Despite that absolute

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    Absolute monarchy is the notion that the monarch rules will unlimited power, only omitted by divine law or natural law. During the seventeenth century, absolutism was ineffective in England, while it flourished in France. Comparatively, causes of its decline in England were similar to those of its former rise in France. These being; raging war(s), nobility power, religious tensions, and need for money. Whereas, the two countries were also different in respect of how each country’s monarch went about

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    to build the palace of Versailles. The palace of Versailles is is a grand palace that was once a small hunting lodge. Louis turned it into a grand palace with vast gardens, and thousands of rooms. Each space emulates the Baroque style in its furnishings and ornamental decoration. Nothing on the grounds was left to nature. Each plant was kept neat and immaculate. One way that he showed his power as absolute monarch was his ability to eat tropical fruits in the dead of winter. The palace of Versailles

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    My monarch, King Louis XIV, deserves the title of most absolute monarch more than any monarch because of his many superior accomplishments. King Louis was the catalyst for economic growth in France during his 72 year reign. With the help of Jean Baptiste Colbert, he was able to make France self-sufficient. France was able to make anything it needed, which kept more money in their economy. He supported the economy even more by giving French companies tax benefits while putting tariffs on any imported

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    Political 1) Louis XIV was the French ruler that took the view of absolutism to the extreme by justifying absolute power and treating treason like blasphemy. This monarch would become the most famous example of absolutism in the kingdom of France, which became the most imitated regime in Europe under his rule. 2) Frederick William I was relentless Prussian ruler that was in pursuit of a strengthened absolutism at home and Europe-wide influence abroad. In fact, he disdained court life, dismissed

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