AP EUROPEAN HISTORY Name: Class: Fall Final STUDY GUIDE
... 2. Read through the text within the Key Concept, highlighting vocabulary terms. 3. If you are unsure of the meaning/significance of a vocabulary term, circle the term, then use one the of the bullet points following the confusing text to provide a definition and information to help you give the term ...
... 2. Read through the text within the Key Concept, highlighting vocabulary terms. 3. If you are unsure of the meaning/significance of a vocabulary term, circle the term, then use one the of the bullet points following the confusing text to provide a definition and information to help you give the term ...
The Middle Ages I > Introduction - Franceschini
... called the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages lasted for about one thousand years. Sometimes the Middle Ages is called the Medieval Period. But what made the Middle Ages different from the time of the Romans? Rome and its government held Europe together for centuries. When Rome collapsed, so did the gover ...
... called the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages lasted for about one thousand years. Sometimes the Middle Ages is called the Medieval Period. But what made the Middle Ages different from the time of the Romans? Rome and its government held Europe together for centuries. When Rome collapsed, so did the gover ...
European Middle Ages, 500–1200
... Papal Power Expands Under Gregory I In 590, Gregory I, also called Gregory the Great, becomes pope Under Gregory, Church becomes secular—a political power Pope’s palace becomes center of Roman government Uses Church money to raise armies, care for poor, negotiate treaties Establishes a Chr ...
... Papal Power Expands Under Gregory I In 590, Gregory I, also called Gregory the Great, becomes pope Under Gregory, Church becomes secular—a political power Pope’s palace becomes center of Roman government Uses Church money to raise armies, care for poor, negotiate treaties Establishes a Chr ...
No Slide Title
... extremely deadly disease • Begins in Asia; spreads to Italy and other countries over trade routes • About one-third of Europe’s population dies in the epidemic ...
... extremely deadly disease • Begins in Asia; spreads to Italy and other countries over trade routes • About one-third of Europe’s population dies in the epidemic ...
European Middle Ages
... In the years of upheaval between 400 and 600, small Germanic kingdoms replaced Roman provinces. The borders of those kingdoms changed constantly with the fortunes of war. The Church was an institution that survived the fall of the Roman Empire. During this time of political chaos, the Church provide ...
... In the years of upheaval between 400 and 600, small Germanic kingdoms replaced Roman provinces. The borders of those kingdoms changed constantly with the fortunes of war. The Church was an institution that survived the fall of the Roman Empire. During this time of political chaos, the Church provide ...
File - World History With Ms. McCurley
... overwhelming mass of the third estate. The third estate was made up of all of the following: peasants, artisans, and merchants. To maintain the family, parents carefully ...
... overwhelming mass of the third estate. The third estate was made up of all of the following: peasants, artisans, and merchants. To maintain the family, parents carefully ...
World History Study Guide Test 1
... B. Wheel of Dharma C. Circle of Life D. Circle of Dharma 125. Who unified northern India and created the first empire in India? A. Asoka B. Kalidasa C. Chandragupta D. Chandragupta II 126. What was the name of the first empire in India? A. Gupta Empire B. Mauryan Empire C. Abbasid Empire D. Vedic Em ...
... B. Wheel of Dharma C. Circle of Life D. Circle of Dharma 125. Who unified northern India and created the first empire in India? A. Asoka B. Kalidasa C. Chandragupta D. Chandragupta II 126. What was the name of the first empire in India? A. Gupta Empire B. Mauryan Empire C. Abbasid Empire D. Vedic Em ...
Western Civilization from Prehistory to 1650
... Asiatic nomads, the Magyars, struck from the east. Christian Europe had to fight for its life against these plundering and murdering raiders, who did far more damage to life and property than the Germanic invaders of the 5th century. ...
... Asiatic nomads, the Magyars, struck from the east. Christian Europe had to fight for its life against these plundering and murdering raiders, who did far more damage to life and property than the Germanic invaders of the 5th century. ...
Royal Power Grows
... trickery, diplomacy, and war, he gained control of Englishruled lands in Normandy, Anjou, and elsewhere. He then began to take over southern France. When he sent his knights to help the pope suppress a heretical group called the Albigensians (al buh jen see unz) in the south, he was able to add this ...
... trickery, diplomacy, and war, he gained control of Englishruled lands in Normandy, Anjou, and elsewhere. He then began to take over southern France. When he sent his knights to help the pope suppress a heretical group called the Albigensians (al buh jen see unz) in the south, he was able to add this ...
Chapter 13 Test B DO NOT WRITE ON TEST Completion Complete
... b. Otto the Great d. King Harold 80. After Charlemagne’s death, which of the following occurred? a. France divided into several small states. b. Germany divided into several small states. c. The Papal States became an independent kingdom. d. Western Europe was split into five parts. 81. The church’s ...
... b. Otto the Great d. King Harold 80. After Charlemagne’s death, which of the following occurred? a. France divided into several small states. b. Germany divided into several small states. c. The Papal States became an independent kingdom. d. Western Europe was split into five parts. 81. The church’s ...
Year 7 Knowledge Organisers 2016
... 1 Society, Status and Life in the Medieval Village 1.1 Most people were peasants, who had very few rights and who lived in villages called ‘manors’. Life for an average peasant was hard and work was back-breaking. 1.2 The Feudal System is the name for a power structure where people held land in retu ...
... 1 Society, Status and Life in the Medieval Village 1.1 Most people were peasants, who had very few rights and who lived in villages called ‘manors’. Life for an average peasant was hard and work was back-breaking. 1.2 The Feudal System is the name for a power structure where people held land in retu ...
European Middle Ages and Bizantium
... was a disease that resembled what we now know as the bubonic plague. This horrifying illness hit Constantinople in the later years of Justinian’s reign. The plague probably arrived from India on ships infested with rats. Historians estimate that in 542, the worst year of the plague, 10,000 people we ...
... was a disease that resembled what we now know as the bubonic plague. This horrifying illness hit Constantinople in the later years of Justinian’s reign. The plague probably arrived from India on ships infested with rats. Historians estimate that in 542, the worst year of the plague, 10,000 people we ...
Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks Lesson 1: Poets and Heroes Lesson
... G. What were the main causes of the wars between Greece and Persia? 73/74 H. What was the significance of the following events of the Greco-Persian wars: Ionian revolt against Persia, Darius’s attack on Athens in revenge, Persian defeat at Marathon, Greek city-states preparation for another invasion ...
... G. What were the main causes of the wars between Greece and Persia? 73/74 H. What was the significance of the following events of the Greco-Persian wars: Ionian revolt against Persia, Darius’s attack on Athens in revenge, Persian defeat at Marathon, Greek city-states preparation for another invasion ...
The Byzantine Empire - Hickory High School
... and Italy until the Ostrogoths, another Germanic tribe, took control of Italy in the fifth century. By 500, the Western Roman Empire had been replaced by a number of states ruled by German kings. The merging of Romans and Germans took different forms in the various Germanic kingdoms. Both the kingdo ...
... and Italy until the Ostrogoths, another Germanic tribe, took control of Italy in the fifth century. By 500, the Western Roman Empire had been replaced by a number of states ruled by German kings. The merging of Romans and Germans took different forms in the various Germanic kingdoms. Both the kingdo ...
Black Death of Europe
... Traveling caravans brought the plague to Caffa, on the Black Sea, in 1346. The plague reached Europe in October of 1347 when Genoese merchants brought it from Caffa to the island of Sicily, off the coast of Southern Italy. ...
... Traveling caravans brought the plague to Caffa, on the Black Sea, in 1346. The plague reached Europe in October of 1347 when Genoese merchants brought it from Caffa to the island of Sicily, off the coast of Southern Italy. ...
1. Act of Supremacy: Have you ever wondered by England has its
... 11. Northwest Passage: The Northwest Passage was a mythical route that would take explorers directly from the Atlantic Ocean to Asia and allow them to trade for luxury goods that Asia produced. The search for the Northwest Passage was one of the main driving forces behind the Age of Exploration as c ...
... 11. Northwest Passage: The Northwest Passage was a mythical route that would take explorers directly from the Atlantic Ocean to Asia and allow them to trade for luxury goods that Asia produced. The search for the Northwest Passage was one of the main driving forces behind the Age of Exploration as c ...
`Europe was created by history.` Margaret Thatcher
... Charles the Bald, paid them off. Unfortunately for him, and the terrified people of his kingdom, the raids continued. Charles ordered every settlement to prepare itself with defences, fortifications and troops but it was to no avail and, when 40,000 Vikings laid siege to Paris itself, Charles was fo ...
... Charles the Bald, paid them off. Unfortunately for him, and the terrified people of his kingdom, the raids continued. Charles ordered every settlement to prepare itself with defences, fortifications and troops but it was to no avail and, when 40,000 Vikings laid siege to Paris itself, Charles was fo ...
Episode 6: Charlemagne
... the Short and his wife, Bertha the Big Foot • Reclaimed parts of northeastern Spain from Muslims (Song of Roland) • Defeated Saxons and forced their conversion to Catholicism • Defeats Lombards in 774 • United Western Europe; established capital at Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) • Crowned Holy Roman Emper ...
... the Short and his wife, Bertha the Big Foot • Reclaimed parts of northeastern Spain from Muslims (Song of Roland) • Defeated Saxons and forced their conversion to Catholicism • Defeats Lombards in 774 • United Western Europe; established capital at Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) • Crowned Holy Roman Emper ...
Germanic Kingdoms Unite Under Charlemagne
... You’ll recall that when we last left the Roman Empire, it was in decline, spurred largely by the barbarian Germanic tribes that were invading the empire. • By the beginning of the sixth century, the damage was pretty much done and the western Roman Empire was ...
... You’ll recall that when we last left the Roman Empire, it was in decline, spurred largely by the barbarian Germanic tribes that were invading the empire. • By the beginning of the sixth century, the damage was pretty much done and the western Roman Empire was ...
Presentation
... who ran the government’s day to day affairs (while the kings feasted, hawked, etc.) ...
... who ran the government’s day to day affairs (while the kings feasted, hawked, etc.) ...
Part 1 -- Baptist History
... a. Ireland, Scotland, and England. The Gospel continued to thrive in the isles far from Roman influence. In 565, the Irish churches sent the missionary Columba to Scotland, where he started a Bible school. Another missionary, Columbanus, left Ireland in 589 and preached in France, Switzerland, and e ...
... a. Ireland, Scotland, and England. The Gospel continued to thrive in the isles far from Roman influence. In 565, the Irish churches sent the missionary Columba to Scotland, where he started a Bible school. Another missionary, Columbanus, left Ireland in 589 and preached in France, Switzerland, and e ...
No Slide Title
... Constantine and the divided Roman Empire 325 AD, Christianity was the recognized religion of the land. The Roman Empire adopted Christianity. 330 AD, Constantine unified the East and West portions of the Roman empire and expanded it into current-day Russia. He also moved the capitol of the empire f ...
... Constantine and the divided Roman Empire 325 AD, Christianity was the recognized religion of the land. The Roman Empire adopted Christianity. 330 AD, Constantine unified the East and West portions of the Roman empire and expanded it into current-day Russia. He also moved the capitol of the empire f ...
Late Middle Ages
The Late Middle Ages or Late Medieval Period was the period of European history generally comprising the 14th and 15th centuries (c. 1301–1500). The Late Middle Ages followed the High Middle Ages and preceded the onset of the early modern era (and, in much of Europe, the Renaissance).Around 1300, centuries of prosperity and growth in Europe came to a halt. A series of famines and plagues, such as the Great Famine of 1315–1317 and the Black Death, reduced the population to around half of what it was before the calamities. Along with depopulation came social unrest and endemic warfare. France and England experienced serious peasant uprisings: the Jacquerie, the Peasants' Revolt, as well as over a century of intermittent conflict in the Hundred Years' War. To add to the many problems of the period, the unity of the Catholic Church was shattered by the Western Schism. Collectively these events are sometimes called the Crisis of the Late Middle Ages.Despite these crises, the 14th century was also a time of great progress within the arts and sciences. Following a renewed interest in ancient Greek and Roman texts that took root in the High Middle Ages, the Italian Renaissance began. The absorption of Latin texts had started before the Renaissance of the 12th century through contact with Arabs during the Crusades, but the availability of important Greek texts accelerated with the capture of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks, when many Byzantine scholars had to seek refuge in the West, particularly Italy.Combined with this influx of classical ideas was the invention of printing which facilitated dissemination of the printed word and democratized learning. These two things would later lead to the Protestant Reformation. Toward the end of the period, an era of discovery began (Age of Discovery). The growth of the Ottoman Empire, culminating in the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, eroded the last remnants of the Byzantine Empire and cut off trading possibilities with the east. Europeans were forced to discover new trading routes, as was the case with Columbus’s travel to the Americas in 1492, and Vasco da Gama’s circumnavigation of India and Africa in 1498. Their discoveries strengthened the economy and power of European nations.The changes brought about by these developments have caused many scholars to see it as leading to the end of the Middle Ages, and the beginning of modern history and early modern Europe. However, the division will always be a somewhat artificial one for scholars, since ancient learning was never entirely absent from European society. As such there was developmental continuity between the ancient age (via classical antiquity) and the modern age. Some historians, particularly in Italy, prefer not to speak of late Middle Ages at all, but rather see the high period of the Middle Ages transitioning to the Renaissance and the modern era.