Economic factors are included in terms of the growth and effect of international trade and the concept of mercantilism, as well as the wars caused by the desire to control such trade. The expansion of the slave economy in North America, and how economic relations with the settlers negatively affected the Native Americans is also highlighted.
Religion continues to be a major issue as the Roman Catholic Church tries to regain its former power through the Counter-Reformation. Much of what Europe knew came through Jesuit missionaries in India, China and Japan so they elucidate the history of those three areas. The emergence of religious controversies and the emergence of new religions are included, especially in the new British colonies in America. The effect of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, which protected Protestants in France, and how it contributed to the growth of fear for the balance of power in Europe as well as its effect in South Africa are also included.
Intellectual and scientific changes are integrated into the story. Contributions of such individuals as Descartes, Spinoza, Hobbes, and Locke are explicated as is the work of Galileo, Brahe, Keppler, Newton, Boyle, Hooke, Liebniz, Leewenhoek, Halley, and Wren. Included is the establishment of Mercenne's philosophic club in Paris and the establishment of the Royal Society in London. The expansion of the circulation of treatises and new ideas, regardless of national borders, is an important part of the story as is the development of newspapers to expand the knowledge of the increasingly literate and growing middle class.
The artistic contributions focus on the continuing influence of Italian artists and the emergence of the Dutch painters highlighting changes in subject matter and execution. The development of the opera by Lully, plays by Shakespeare, and the masque by Inigo Jones are also featured.
Social issues include the first attempt to end slavery, women's role in society, and the significance of class structure. The growth of poverty becomes extremely apparent in cities and is highlighted with the plague followed by the fire of London that destroyed homes and livelihoods. Also included is the recurrence of witchcraft and the incredible discrepancies in punishments for crimes committed. Class conflict is clearly illustrated after the English Civil War with the persecution of the Levellers who wanted a real democratic state that gave the vote to all males.
To make the learning of all of this history more enjoyable, comprehensible, and lasting, I have created a novel where, through conversations or correspondence, history unfolds. The story evolves around Elizabeth, James I's daughter, whose husband, Frederick of the Palatinate, accepts the Bohemian crown thus initiating the Thirty Years War. Her son, Rupert, was Charles's leading cavalier during the Civil War.
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