File
... strong and lasting empire. It spread from India, to parts of North Africa, and into southern Spain. Conversions were forced and the religion spread. • Muslim forces began by defeating the Persians an sacking Jerusalem in 638. When Jerusalem fell, both the East and the West went into shock. • This pr ...
... strong and lasting empire. It spread from India, to parts of North Africa, and into southern Spain. Conversions were forced and the religion spread. • Muslim forces began by defeating the Persians an sacking Jerusalem in 638. When Jerusalem fell, both the East and the West went into shock. • This pr ...
Europe in the Middle Ages - The Liberty Common School
... Beginning about 200 AD, nomadic, warlike tribes began moving into western Europe, attacking the western Roman Empire: Rome sacked by Visigoths in 410 AD. The Huns: Attila the Hun People settling in old Roman Empire including Vandals, Franks, Angles and Saxons. The "Middle Ages" are generally d ...
... Beginning about 200 AD, nomadic, warlike tribes began moving into western Europe, attacking the western Roman Empire: Rome sacked by Visigoths in 410 AD. The Huns: Attila the Hun People settling in old Roman Empire including Vandals, Franks, Angles and Saxons. The "Middle Ages" are generally d ...
The Middle Ages
... his four sons. This followed a pattern that would be repeated during the following centuries and meant that the Frankish kingdom was only united during short periods. The Merovingian kings were however very belligerent and many of them died before they had any sons, which prevented the kingdom from ...
... his four sons. This followed a pattern that would be repeated during the following centuries and meant that the Frankish kingdom was only united during short periods. The Merovingian kings were however very belligerent and many of them died before they had any sons, which prevented the kingdom from ...
Middle Ages - anthonybyers
... • During his reign his empire included part of Spain, Italy, North Africa, Asia Minor, Palestine, Syria ...
... • During his reign his empire included part of Spain, Italy, North Africa, Asia Minor, Palestine, Syria ...
Improving Writing Exercise [Monarchy, Exam 1]
... Constantine. He converted to Christianity after he had a vision that told him the only way he could save his empire was through Christianity. b) Under Byzantine emperors religion & politics intertwined. After Constantine’s conversion in 312, Christians came to power in the Roman imperial government. ...
... Constantine. He converted to Christianity after he had a vision that told him the only way he could save his empire was through Christianity. b) Under Byzantine emperors religion & politics intertwined. After Constantine’s conversion in 312, Christians came to power in the Roman imperial government. ...
The Middle Ages
... • Law, medicine, or theology • Theology (the study of religion) – Scholasticism-tried to reconcile faith & reason – Works of Greek philosophers with religion ...
... • Law, medicine, or theology • Theology (the study of religion) – Scholasticism-tried to reconcile faith & reason – Works of Greek philosophers with religion ...
Class Notes Chapter 6 lesson 1 The Early Middle Ages I
... B. In the early 400’s, the Angles and Saxons invaded Britain from Denmark and Germany and became the Anglo-Saxons. The Celts who had been living in Britain fled west and north (into Wales, Scotland and, Ireland) C. The Franks were a Germanic people living in what is today France. Clovis was the kin ...
... B. In the early 400’s, the Angles and Saxons invaded Britain from Denmark and Germany and became the Anglo-Saxons. The Celts who had been living in Britain fled west and north (into Wales, Scotland and, Ireland) C. The Franks were a Germanic people living in what is today France. Clovis was the kin ...
13.1 Rise of the Franks-teacher version
... Think back to the reasons the Roman Empire fell. Write down these reasons below. -Germanic invasion, weak leadership, capital moved to Constantinople, economic weaknesses Vocabulary to define and identify while you read: Middle Ages-medieval period, time period between the classical period and the ...
... Think back to the reasons the Roman Empire fell. Write down these reasons below. -Germanic invasion, weak leadership, capital moved to Constantinople, economic weaknesses Vocabulary to define and identify while you read: Middle Ages-medieval period, time period between the classical period and the ...
Final Exam Study Guideanswers1-3
... 5. Who united most of Western Europe into an Empire after the fall of Rome? Charlemagne united most of Western Europe for the first time since the Roman Empire. His rule spurred the Carolingian Renaissance, a period of cultural and intellectual activity within the Catholic Church. Both the French an ...
... 5. Who united most of Western Europe into an Empire after the fall of Rome? Charlemagne united most of Western Europe for the first time since the Roman Empire. His rule spurred the Carolingian Renaissance, a period of cultural and intellectual activity within the Catholic Church. Both the French an ...
Western Europe / Japan Post Classical 600-1450
... 900 year period beginning with the decline of the Roman Empire until the 14th century C.E. ...
... 900 year period beginning with the decline of the Roman Empire until the 14th century C.E. ...
condotta.
... c. It was politically fragmented, but its population remained relatively steady, with German invaders replacing Romans who died in several epidemics. d. It was politically fragmented and largely rural. ...
... c. It was politically fragmented, but its population remained relatively steady, with German invaders replacing Romans who died in several epidemics. d. It was politically fragmented and largely rural. ...
Charlemagne and the Franks
... Effects of the Fall of Rome • Germanic tribes took over Roman lands. • Hundreds of little kingdoms took the place of the Western Roman Empire in Europe. • Initially, there was no system for collecting taxes. • Kingdoms were always at war with one another. • People lost interest in learning. ...
... Effects of the Fall of Rome • Germanic tribes took over Roman lands. • Hundreds of little kingdoms took the place of the Western Roman Empire in Europe. • Initially, there was no system for collecting taxes. • Kingdoms were always at war with one another. • People lost interest in learning. ...
Unit 4 Test Review- World History
... 15. What was the Battle of Tours and why was it important? What famous Frankish leader helped defeat the Muslims in the battle? Kick out the Muslim Invasion from W. Europe. Charles Martel 16. Why did the feudal system exist in Western Europe? No govt. to protect them ...
... 15. What was the Battle of Tours and why was it important? What famous Frankish leader helped defeat the Muslims in the battle? Kick out the Muslim Invasion from W. Europe. Charles Martel 16. Why did the feudal system exist in Western Europe? No govt. to protect them ...
Developments in Europe During the Middle Ages
... 1000 C.E., the Catholic Church emerged as a unifying institution with great religious, political, and economic power. The time period is sometimes referred to as the "Age of Faith" because the church was so central to life in Europe. The power of the church was promoted by an unlikely Germanic group ...
... 1000 C.E., the Catholic Church emerged as a unifying institution with great religious, political, and economic power. The time period is sometimes referred to as the "Age of Faith" because the church was so central to life in Europe. The power of the church was promoted by an unlikely Germanic group ...
Byzantine Empire
... • Huge harbor and guarded on three sides by water • Linked Europe and Asia with trade routes • Europe’s busiest marketplace for centuries ...
... • Huge harbor and guarded on three sides by water • Linked Europe and Asia with trade routes • Europe’s busiest marketplace for centuries ...
Middle Ages
... • By mid 800’s it began to divide and collapse – Charlemagne's successors fought amongst themselves – By 870 the middle kingdom divided between eastern and western kingdom – Invasions of different people hindered the empire • Muslims from Africa invaded the Mediterranean coast • Slavs from the east ...
... • By mid 800’s it began to divide and collapse – Charlemagne's successors fought amongst themselves – By 870 the middle kingdom divided between eastern and western kingdom – Invasions of different people hindered the empire • Muslims from Africa invaded the Mediterranean coast • Slavs from the east ...
Chapter 17
... Poland, and the Czech lands and received an imperial crown from Pope John XII in 962. While the resulting Holy Roman Empire had the potential to restore unity, its incessant battles with the papacy left the empire internally divided and externally weak. The church versus state controversy, highlight ...
... Poland, and the Czech lands and received an imperial crown from Pope John XII in 962. While the resulting Holy Roman Empire had the potential to restore unity, its incessant battles with the papacy left the empire internally divided and externally weak. The church versus state controversy, highlight ...
Chapter 17
... Poland, and the Czech lands and received an imperial crown from Pope John XII in 962. While the resulting Holy Roman Empire had the potential to restore unity, its incessant battles with the papacy left the empire internally divided and externally weak. The church versus state controversy, highlight ...
... Poland, and the Czech lands and received an imperial crown from Pope John XII in 962. While the resulting Holy Roman Empire had the potential to restore unity, its incessant battles with the papacy left the empire internally divided and externally weak. The church versus state controversy, highlight ...
Bellwork Jan 12, 2015
... – When he died, a general became caliph and made the position hereditary for his family, creating the Umayyad dynasty » Moved the capital from Medina to Damascus » The Shi’ites would only accept descendents of Muhammad’s son-in-law » Sunnis accepted Umayyads as true rulers » = This division exists t ...
... – When he died, a general became caliph and made the position hereditary for his family, creating the Umayyad dynasty » Moved the capital from Medina to Damascus » The Shi’ites would only accept descendents of Muhammad’s son-in-law » Sunnis accepted Umayyads as true rulers » = This division exists t ...
Early Middle Ages
The Early Middle Ages or Early Medieval Period was the period of European history lasting from the 5th century to the 10th century. The Early Middle Ages followed the decline of the Western Roman Empire and preceded the High Middle Ages (c. 1001–1300). The period saw a continuation of trends begun during late classical antiquity, including population decline, especially in urban centres, a decline of trade, and increased immigration. The period has been labelled the ""Dark Ages"", a characterization highlighting the relative scarcity of literary and cultural output from this time, especially in Northwestern Europe. However, the Eastern Roman Empire, or Byzantine Empire, continued to survive, and in the 7th century the Islamic caliphates conquered swaths of formerly Roman territory.Many of these trends were reversed later in the period. In 800 the title of emperor was revived in Western Europe by Charlemagne, whose Carolingian Empire greatly affected later European social structure and history. Europe experienced a return to systematic agriculture in the form of the feudal system, which introduced such innovations as three-field planting and the heavy plow. Barbarian migration stabilized in much of Europe, although the north was greatly affected by the Viking expansion.