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The Middle Ages
... some 4,500 Saxons • Forced Saxons to convert to Christianity, declared that anyone who didn’t get baptized or follow other Christian traditions be put to death • HARSH! ...
... some 4,500 Saxons • Forced Saxons to convert to Christianity, declared that anyone who didn’t get baptized or follow other Christian traditions be put to death • HARSH! ...
From the Ashes of Empire
... The Roman church was still based in Rome. Was a split in Europe between the Roman Catholic Church and the Arian church ...
... The Roman church was still based in Rome. Was a split in Europe between the Roman Catholic Church and the Arian church ...
DATE: SEMESTER REVIEW Multiple Choice Identify
... B) the Crusades made Europe less safe, so rural people D) they wanted charters granting religious freedom. banded together for protection. 49. Why were many of the written works created during the Early Middle Ages religious texts? A) Most people did not enjoy reading epics or C) Few people outside ...
... B) the Crusades made Europe less safe, so rural people D) they wanted charters granting religious freedom. banded together for protection. 49. Why were many of the written works created during the Early Middle Ages religious texts? A) Most people did not enjoy reading epics or C) Few people outside ...
The Rise of Medieval Europe
... castle was built? How did the rise of Medieval (Middle Age) Europe get its start? ...
... castle was built? How did the rise of Medieval (Middle Age) Europe get its start? ...
The Rise of Europe Powerpoint
... Abbot Berno of Cluny revived the Benedictine Rule, under which monks and nuns took vows of obedience, poverty, and chastity. Pope Gregory VII outlawed marriage for priests and prohibited simony, the selling of Church offices. Frances of Assisi set up the Franciscan order to teach poverty, humility, ...
... Abbot Berno of Cluny revived the Benedictine Rule, under which monks and nuns took vows of obedience, poverty, and chastity. Pope Gregory VII outlawed marriage for priests and prohibited simony, the selling of Church offices. Frances of Assisi set up the Franciscan order to teach poverty, humility, ...
TheFirstCrusadeandtheCrusadorStates1073
... Figure 1.2 The three orders of medieval society: from left to right, the cleric, the knight and the peasant. For a person born into the peasantry, there was no way out. The harshness of the daily grind was punctuated by the Christian calendar of saints’ days and feasts, which lightened the peasants’ ...
... Figure 1.2 The three orders of medieval society: from left to right, the cleric, the knight and the peasant. For a person born into the peasantry, there was no way out. The harshness of the daily grind was punctuated by the Christian calendar of saints’ days and feasts, which lightened the peasants’ ...
The Middle Ages - Class Notes For Mr. Pantano
... The Church also accepted gifts of all kinds from people who wanted special favors or wanted to be certain of a place in heaven. These gifts included land, flocks, crops, and even serfs. This allowed the Church to become very powerful, and it often used this power to influence kings to do as it wante ...
... The Church also accepted gifts of all kinds from people who wanted special favors or wanted to be certain of a place in heaven. These gifts included land, flocks, crops, and even serfs. This allowed the Church to become very powerful, and it often used this power to influence kings to do as it wante ...
Middle Ages PPT
... • It required them to be brave, loyal, and true to their word, as well as to fight fairly and protect the weak. • In theory, chivalry put women on a pedestal. Troubadours sang about brave knights and their devotion to their loves. ...
... • It required them to be brave, loyal, and true to their word, as well as to fight fairly and protect the weak. • In theory, chivalry put women on a pedestal. Troubadours sang about brave knights and their devotion to their loves. ...
Unit 8 Lesson 3 The Rise of the Franks
... Clovis? Converted to Christianity and became one of the strongest kingdoms in Europe - compare – in what way was the empire of the Franks under Charlemagne like the Roman Empire? Covered much of the same territory ...
... Clovis? Converted to Christianity and became one of the strongest kingdoms in Europe - compare – in what way was the empire of the Franks under Charlemagne like the Roman Empire? Covered much of the same territory ...
Chapter 4: The Ancient Greeks Lesson 1: Poets and Heroes Lesson
... knights, nobles, and the king have? 193/194 C. What are the three stages of training to become a knight? Why were knights important in medieval society? powerpoint D. How did new farming methods benefit Europe in the Middle Ages? 196 E. Why was there a population explosion in the High Middle Ages? 1 ...
... knights, nobles, and the king have? 193/194 C. What are the three stages of training to become a knight? Why were knights important in medieval society? powerpoint D. How did new farming methods benefit Europe in the Middle Ages? 196 E. Why was there a population explosion in the High Middle Ages? 1 ...
CHAPTER 10 The West in Crisis: The Later Middle Ages, 1300 – 1450
... They swept across Asia and even into Russia and Hungary. They maintained peace and order, thereby permitting a revival of trans-Eurasian trade. ...
... They swept across Asia and even into Russia and Hungary. They maintained peace and order, thereby permitting a revival of trans-Eurasian trade. ...
European science in the Middle Ages
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European science in the Middle Ages comprised the study of nature, mathematics and natural philosophy in medieval Europe. Following the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the decline in knowledge of Greek, Christian Western Europe was cut off from an important source of ancient learning. Although a range of Christian clerics and scholars from Isidore and Bede to Buridan and Oresme maintained the spirit of rational inquiry, during the Early Middle Ages Western Europe would see a period of scientific decline. However, by the time of the High Middle Ages, the West had rallied and was on its way to once more taking the lead in scientific discovery (see Scientific Revolution).According to Pierre Duhem, who founded the academic study of medieval science as a critique of the Enlightenment-positivist theory of a 17th-century anti-Aristotelian and anticlerical scientific revolution, the various conceptual origins of that alleged revolution lay in the 12th to 14th centuries, in the works of churchmen such as Aquinas and Buridan.In the context of this article, ""Western Europe"" refers to the European cultures bound together by the Roman Catholic Church and the Latin language.