Voting 002

The Development of Liberalism

  • Period: 507 BCE to 307 BCE

    Ancient Greek Democracy

    • A form of direct democracy that all male citizens have to take part in government but not women and slaves. It had 3 institutions:
    • Ekklesia: wrote laws and dictated foreign policy
    • Boule: representatives from the ten Athenian tribes
    • Ikasteria: the popular courts It formed the foundation of classical liberalism by putting the structure of government in place & implementing constitutional limits on them. It also granted the individuals, though not all, their rights in government
  • Period: Jun 15, 1215 to Jun 15, 1215

    Magna Carta

    • a 13th-century document
    • placed limits on royal authority, & elucidated that the monarch wasn’t above the law
    • Most of the 63 clauses deal with administration of justice, & the detail of feudal rights & customs
    It laid the fundamental rights for subjects of the king, including freedom from unlawful imprisonment. it was an important factor in the development of the rule of law.
  • Period: 1350 to 1550

    The Renaissance

    Renaissance means ‘rebirth’ in French.
    Features of the Renaissance:
    • Revival of Classical scholarship & values.
    • Advocated evidence based thinking
    • Decline of feudal system
    • Growth of commerce
    It contributed to development of classical liberalism as it encouraged rational thinking, rule of law, individual rights & freedoms & economic freedom by declining feudal system, encouraging commerce
  • Period: 1450 to

    Haudenosaunee Confederacy

    • made up of 5 nations, intended to unite the nations and create a peaceful means of decision making
    • Each nation maintains it own council & deals with its own internal affairs but allows the Grand Council to deal with issues affecting the nations within the confederacy
    • Produced Great Law of Peace
    • the oldest, participatory democracy and is believed to be a model for the American Constitution. It set the constitutional limits of each council member and the Grand Council
  • Period: 1517 to

    The Protestant Reformation

    • schism from Catholic Church started by Martin Luther
    • ended @ end of Thirty Years' War with Peace of Westphalia
    • Pope had no clout over purgatory & Catholic doctrine of saints' merits wasn't in the Bible
    • made doctrinal changes e.g. total reliance on Scripture & faith in Jesus, not works: only way to be saved
    It put constitutional limits on pope and catholic church and enacted law which was the principals of the classical liberalism re: constitutional limits on government and rule of law.
  • Period: to

    Enlightenment

    • The Age of Reason (acceptance of the power of human reason)
    • The worth of the individual
    • Natural and inalienable rights
    • Democratic values
    • Authority rests with the people, not the ruler
  • Period: to

    The Industrial Revolution

    • The power of the market(economic freedom)
    • Individual reward for individual initiative(Self-intrerest)
    • Freedom to pursue personal wealth(individual rights & freedoms)
    • Individual responsibility for success or failure(competition)
    • Progress, inventiveness, innovation, efficiency(Private property)
  • Period: to

    The American Revolution

    • The American Patriots rejected the authority of the British Parliament to tax them as they lacked representation in Parliament(individual rights & freedoms)
    • They won independence from Great Britain, becoming U.S.A.(protection of civil liberties)
    • They defeated the British in the American Revolutionary War in alliance with France & others(constitutional limits on government)
  • Period: to

    Changes to class system

    • Result of Industrial Revolution
    • A new class of factory owners, bankers, retailers & professionals arose(economic freedom)
    • the aristocratic classes lost entitlement(Rule of law)
    • farmers moved to cities to work in factories(self-intrerest)
    • women gained entitlement(Individual rights & freedoms)
  • Period: to

    The French Revolution

    • partially carried forward by Napoleon during the later expansion of the French Empire(Self-intrerest)
    • overthrew the monarchy, established a republic, experienced violent periods of political turmoil(protection of civil liberties)
    • ended in a dictatorship under Napoleon that rapidly brought many of its principles to Western Europe and beyond(Self-intrerest)