Political Protest, Reforms, and Revolution 1450 to 1750 - AP World History: Modern

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Question

Select the primary motivation behind the English Parliament’s withdrawal of support from King James II and its instigation of the Glorious Revolution.

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Answer

After King Charles II died in 1685, his brother James II became the new King of England. Immediately, Parliament was put on the defensive both because of James’s public support for English Catholics and his own recent public conversion to Catholicism. When Parliament refused to repeal the discriminatory Test Act, James dissolved the legislative body and appointed his own Catholic officials instead. The situation took another dire turn when James issued the 1687 Declaration of Indulgence, repealing the Test Act and allowing religious toleration, which was followed by the imprisonment of several oppositional Anglican clergy. It seemed that Parliament’s worst fears about their King and Catholics were coming true. The final straw came on June 20th, 1688, when James’s wife (who was also Catholic) gave birth to a baby boy. This sent Parliament into panic-mode – there was now a Catholic male heir to the English throne, who seemed poised to create a Catholic ruling dynasty in England. The frightened Parliament decided it had only one option to maintain its Anglican hold on the country: James would have to be removed from power and replaced with a Protestant ruler. In a bold and unprecedented move, Parliament wrote to William III of Orange, the current leader of the United Province of the Netherlands and a devout Protestant, and invited him to assemble his army, invade England, and evict James from the throne! This event, which succeeded, came to be known as the Glorious Revolution.

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