More on the reasons
1. As elsewhere in Europe, monarchs were trying at the time to make their rule "abolute" and to make themselves answerable to nobody. (They liked to say that they had been appointed by God and answered only to Him for their actions). In England, unlike elsewhere, the middle class and sections of the gentry resisted this successfully. First they resisted in Parliament and then in a civil war against the king (Charles I). The sources of the conflict go back to the reign of Charles's father, James I (reigned 1603-25). In 1649, after the Civil War, key elements of the parliamentary side put the king on trial for treason (on the grounds that he'd waged war against his own people) and the verdict was: Off with his head! In most of Continental Europe this was regarded as shocking beyond belief, as 'murdered majesty' and so on.
[Although the monarchy was restored in 1660, the power of the king was never the same again. When James II tried in 1685-88 to establish himself as an absolute monarch, William of Orange and his wife, Mary, were invited to take the throne. They did so an the basis of what was in effect as a contract between the king and Parliament. ('Bill of Rights', 1689). Some of the provisions were later adopted in the U.S. Bill of Rights, for example, the ban on cruel and unusual punishments). James II fled England in a panic in 1688.]
2. Monarchic abolutism was at the time closely associated with Roman Catholicism and with High Church Anglicanism, while the democratic forces in society tended to be Presbyterian or puritan or sectarian. One of the things that makes this period rather hard to follow is that many of the political arguments were presented in religious terms - which makes things rather complicated.
Aftermath
There are many subtle changes from the civil war also. We have a Royal Navy (which stayed loyal to the crown) but not a Royal army as each regiment followed their patron and took sides accordingly. Our language took on many new phrases still in use today such as being 'sent to Coventry' meaning to socially exclude someone. At the time Coventry was a devout Protestant town and housed a formidable jail which was used to hold Catholic insurgents. The Catholic Church lost all the authority and influence it still had over the state of England (though much was lost to King Henry VIII earlier). This also accounted for the consequent wars and troubles with Catholic France, Scotland and Ireland. France, aspiring to capture England and return it to Catholicism conived with Scotland and Ireland to attack from all sides. England, to survive, had to break this stranglehold and so it started its occupation of Ireland and sowed the seeds of Protestantism in Scotland.
The short term causes were:The partition of IrelandInternmentCivil Rights movement - NICRA
The short term causes is something i do not know and is exactly what i am looking for however i know what the long term causes are. Religion, Politics, Economy. Short term causes may have something to do with how Charles used his money; on his own clothes, favourites and his family rather than on his country
deficit (debt) estate general social injustice economic injustice american revolution i dnt noe if these r short term but they r definitly causes!
Short term is that it can be under our control. Long term might be that they start to develop some western habits.
Six short-term causes of World War I include the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, which acted as a catalyst for the conflict; the July Crisis, a series of diplomatic failures following the assassination; the mobilization of military forces by Austria-Hungary and Russia; the complex system of alliances that entangled multiple nations; nationalist tensions, particularly in the Balkans; and imperial rivalries, especially between Germany and Britain. These factors combined to create a volatile situation that escalated into a full-scale war.
The short answer would be religion and control...It was about who would run the country and what religion the country would be.
There were long term as well as short term causes of English Civil war. Difference in opinion between Charles and James, rule using Court of Star Chamber, demand of ship money and arguments over custom duties are some of the causes of the war.
Short term causes are what happened on the day long term is what happened in advance
The short term causes were:The partition of IrelandInternmentCivil Rights movement - NICRA
The American Civil Was had many causes, both short- and long-term. The most immediate short-term cause was the outbreak of fire upon Fort Sumter, the Union-held fortress at the mouth of the Confederate-occupied Charleston (South Carolina) harbor. Once this fort was fired upon and then taken by Southern troops, the Civil War had finally begun in earnest.
The short-term causes of the English Civil War included King Charles I's perceived overreach of power, particularly his attempts to govern without Parliament and his imposition of taxes without consent. Tensions escalated with the introduction of the Prayer Book in Scotland, leading to widespread unrest. The king's attempt to arrest five members of Parliament in January 1642 further ignited conflict, as it was seen as a direct assault on parliamentary authority. These actions fostered deep divisions between royalists and parliamentarians, ultimately leading to war.
gleneagles agreement- short term apartheid-long term
Long term causes are things that happen over time, and build up. Short term causes are things that happen just before a certain event and trigger causes are things that spark of an event.
Slavery was abolished.
diziness short term memory loss and stress can have a lot of different causes. the causes may be physical as well as phsycological causes. you can see or a medicine doctor. or a phsycologist.
no black people.
600,000 deaths, civil rights was not established, the kkk