![Mar06 - HANDOUT - 02 Charlemagne](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/009309359_1-4300abefc3598429d651647ef44860ee-300x300.png)
Mar06 - HANDOUT - 02 Charlemagne
... encouragement of learning. Although he spoke Latin and understood Greek, he could not read or write. (Few people of that time had these skills.) To further education in his kingdom, he set up a school in Aachen for his family and other children of ability. The school attracted scholars from many lan ...
... encouragement of learning. Although he spoke Latin and understood Greek, he could not read or write. (Few people of that time had these skills.) To further education in his kingdom, he set up a school in Aachen for his family and other children of ability. The school attracted scholars from many lan ...
2nd Quarter
... of the crusades. - summarize the economic, geographic and social influences of African, trans-Saharan trade including education and the growth of cities. - examine and assess the effects of warfare on society during the middle ages. - explain how migration of people and movement of goods and ideas c ...
... of the crusades. - summarize the economic, geographic and social influences of African, trans-Saharan trade including education and the growth of cities. - examine and assess the effects of warfare on society during the middle ages. - explain how migration of people and movement of goods and ideas c ...
Three major religious groups all claimed Jerusalem in the land of
... the Bible and other Christian works. Monasteries had some of the few libraries or schools in this ...
... the Bible and other Christian works. Monasteries had some of the few libraries or schools in this ...
File - Ossett History
... 6 – ‘The Roman withdrawal from Britain was a turning point in medicine and public health’. Do you agree? Explain your answer. When the Romans left Britain, some areas of medicine and public health declined, some stayed the same and some improved. These will be discussed before an overall conclusion ...
... 6 – ‘The Roman withdrawal from Britain was a turning point in medicine and public health’. Do you agree? Explain your answer. When the Romans left Britain, some areas of medicine and public health declined, some stayed the same and some improved. These will be discussed before an overall conclusion ...
The Hellenistic Empire
... from beyond the Great Wall but also undermined from within by social, political, and economic discord. The pressure of domestic unrest coupled with the challenge of foreign invasion became a theme in the undulations of the dynastic cycle that was used to explain the transfer of the Mandate of Heaven ...
... from beyond the Great Wall but also undermined from within by social, political, and economic discord. The pressure of domestic unrest coupled with the challenge of foreign invasion became a theme in the undulations of the dynastic cycle that was used to explain the transfer of the Mandate of Heaven ...
Unit 1 – Middle Ages: 400s
... ____4. The Eastern Roman Empire that lasted until 1453 ____5. This came into greater usage after the Crusades, aiding trade ____6. This was the land and peasants on it that was given to a vassal ____7. Church dominated Byzantine Empire, split from Rome 1054 ____8. This institution had task of rootin ...
... ____4. The Eastern Roman Empire that lasted until 1453 ____5. This came into greater usage after the Crusades, aiding trade ____6. This was the land and peasants on it that was given to a vassal ____7. Church dominated Byzantine Empire, split from Rome 1054 ____8. This institution had task of rootin ...
Chapter 9: Feudal Europe Lesson 1 The Development
... • Charles Martel and son Pepin the Short became next Frankish kings • Charlemagne—Pepinʼs son—became ruler of Franks during late 700s - expanded territory; built European empire as great as ancient Rome - created highly organized empire, established new laws to keep order - employed landowner counts ...
... • Charles Martel and son Pepin the Short became next Frankish kings • Charlemagne—Pepinʼs son—became ruler of Franks during late 700s - expanded territory; built European empire as great as ancient Rome - created highly organized empire, established new laws to keep order - employed landowner counts ...
Road to Revolution - The Gospel Herald
... 3. Union of church and state as a papal strategy for political and ecclesiastical world domination ...
... 3. Union of church and state as a papal strategy for political and ecclesiastical world domination ...
THE EXCAVATIONS OF THE ROMAN THEATRE OF FLORENCE
... buildings, baths, theatre, amphitheatre, etc., had been transformed and adapted to the new needs of an impoverished and demographically reduced population. The theatre underwent the same transformations; part of the complex was used as a burial area, while the rest was subjected to heavy spoliation. ...
... buildings, baths, theatre, amphitheatre, etc., had been transformed and adapted to the new needs of an impoverished and demographically reduced population. The theatre underwent the same transformations; part of the complex was used as a burial area, while the rest was subjected to heavy spoliation. ...
Mrs
... Charlemagne and others later, does he appear to have been truly great, or merely a fairly competent figure among mediocre rivals? Would Charlemagne have been a role model to the later Middle Ages? Why or why not? 3. “A Muslim’s Description of the Rus”—Does Ibn Fadlan’s account seems accurate? Why or ...
... Charlemagne and others later, does he appear to have been truly great, or merely a fairly competent figure among mediocre rivals? Would Charlemagne have been a role model to the later Middle Ages? Why or why not? 3. “A Muslim’s Description of the Rus”—Does Ibn Fadlan’s account seems accurate? Why or ...
Objectives List PDF
... River Valley Civilizations (Nile, Euphrates, Hindus) Greek Civilization Roman Civilization Roman Civilization collapses/barbarian invasions Islam begins; Muslims invade much of what had been Roman Empire. Former Roman Empire now divided into Western Barbarian nations, Byzantine, and Islamic world. C ...
... River Valley Civilizations (Nile, Euphrates, Hindus) Greek Civilization Roman Civilization Roman Civilization collapses/barbarian invasions Islam begins; Muslims invade much of what had been Roman Empire. Former Roman Empire now divided into Western Barbarian nations, Byzantine, and Islamic world. C ...
Charlemagne`s Empire Collapses
... citizens massacred in process • Second Crusade: 1140’s, Muslims taking power back – French and German leaders try to push out Muslims (Absolute failure); ...
... citizens massacred in process • Second Crusade: 1140’s, Muslims taking power back – French and German leaders try to push out Muslims (Absolute failure); ...
Chapter 9 Byzantine Empire
... • Byzantine Empire experienced a decline of urbanism similar to Rome. • Middle class people moved out of cities and into rural areas. • Byzantine society was then characterized by a HUGE gap between wealth of aristocrats and poverty of peasants. ...
... • Byzantine Empire experienced a decline of urbanism similar to Rome. • Middle class people moved out of cities and into rural areas. • Byzantine society was then characterized by a HUGE gap between wealth of aristocrats and poverty of peasants. ...
AP World History Vocabulary Guide to Unit ONE (chapters 1-9)
... Direct democracy (Greece) Peloponnesian War Tragedy/comedy Greek philosophers Macedonia (Philip) Alexander the Great Hellenistic culture Euclid Archimedes Stoicism Epicureanism Roman Republic Patricians/Plebians Twelve tables (Roman law) Punic Wars/Hannibal Triumvirate Julius Caesar Augustus/Pax Rom ...
... Direct democracy (Greece) Peloponnesian War Tragedy/comedy Greek philosophers Macedonia (Philip) Alexander the Great Hellenistic culture Euclid Archimedes Stoicism Epicureanism Roman Republic Patricians/Plebians Twelve tables (Roman law) Punic Wars/Hannibal Triumvirate Julius Caesar Augustus/Pax Rom ...
middle ages review #1
... of the Roman Empire. With little organized resistance, Germanic invaders raided western European cities and monasteries. The Germanic people, or Franks who overran the Roman Empire were warriors, farmers, and herders. During the 400-700 CE, the Franks began to create an empire. During the late 700s, ...
... of the Roman Empire. With little organized resistance, Germanic invaders raided western European cities and monasteries. The Germanic people, or Franks who overran the Roman Empire were warriors, farmers, and herders. During the 400-700 CE, the Franks began to create an empire. During the late 700s, ...
Chapter 8
... a) As Church wealth and power grew, discipline weakened. b) Some clergy ignored their vows and lived in luxury. c) Some priests focused more on family than on Church duties ...
... a) As Church wealth and power grew, discipline weakened. b) Some clergy ignored their vows and lived in luxury. c) Some priests focused more on family than on Church duties ...
European Kingdoms and Feudalism (cont.)
... added land and expanded the power and income of the French monarchy. ...
... added land and expanded the power and income of the French monarchy. ...
APWH Chapter 10 Lecture - Cherokee County Schools
... strong national monarchy during the Middle Ages ...
... strong national monarchy during the Middle Ages ...
File - AP World History
... • They didn’t preserve Greek or Latin learning. • Mainly only church officials could read. • They had no common language (Romans had Latin) – Each tribe or region spoke a different language. ...
... • They didn’t preserve Greek or Latin learning. • Mainly only church officials could read. • They had no common language (Romans had Latin) – Each tribe or region spoke a different language. ...
chapter 12 student outline and vocab
... Charlemagne and others later, does he appear to have been truly great, or merely a fairly competent figure among mediocre rivals? Would Charlemagne have been a role model to the later Middle Ages? Why or why not? 3. “A Muslim’s Description of the Rus”—Does Ibn Fadlan’s account seems accurate? Why or ...
... Charlemagne and others later, does he appear to have been truly great, or merely a fairly competent figure among mediocre rivals? Would Charlemagne have been a role model to the later Middle Ages? Why or why not? 3. “A Muslim’s Description of the Rus”—Does Ibn Fadlan’s account seems accurate? Why or ...
The Middle Ages - Ms-Ball-NEHS
... • Ruled by a Chief who led a band or warriors loyal only to him – not some emperor they’d never seen ...
... • Ruled by a Chief who led a band or warriors loyal only to him – not some emperor they’d never seen ...
The Transformation of the West, 1450 - 1750
... As a result of his efforts, several other scientific thinkers (Kepler, Galileo) emerged and affirmed his theories while making sci-tech advances of their own…others like William Harvey and Andreas Vesalius explored the inner-workings of man and ...
... As a result of his efforts, several other scientific thinkers (Kepler, Galileo) emerged and affirmed his theories while making sci-tech advances of their own…others like William Harvey and Andreas Vesalius explored the inner-workings of man and ...
Unit 4 - Cloudfront.net
... • Both churches did not like icons, however, they were for people who could not read. ...
... • Both churches did not like icons, however, they were for people who could not read. ...
Migration Period
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Invasions_of_the_Roman_Empire_1.png?width=300)
The Migration Period, better known as the Barbarian Invasions also referred to as the Völkerwanderung (in German), was a period of intensified barbarian invasion in Europe, often defined from the period when it seriously impacted the Roman world, as running from about 376 to 800 AD during the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages. This period was marked by profound changes both within the Roman Empire and beyond its ""barbarian frontier"". The barbarians who came first were Germanic tribes such as the Goths, Vandals, Angles, Saxons, Lombards, Suebi, Frisii, Jutes and Franks; they were later pushed westwards by the Huns, Avars, Slavs, Bulgars and Alans.Later barbarian invasions (such as the Viking, Norman, Hungarian, Moorish, Turkic, and Mongol invasions) also had significant effects (especially in North Africa, the Iberian peninsula, Anatolia and Central and Eastern Europe); however, they are outside the scope of the Migration Period.