Review of European Middle Ages
... Reform efforts conducted by the Church during the Age of Faith include: Enforcement of Church laws against simony (bishops selling positions in the clergy) and the marriage of priests Development of canon law on various matters (marriage, divorce, inheritance) Development of a group of advisors for ...
... Reform efforts conducted by the Church during the Age of Faith include: Enforcement of Church laws against simony (bishops selling positions in the clergy) and the marriage of priests Development of canon law on various matters (marriage, divorce, inheritance) Development of a group of advisors for ...
Document
... Little by little the peasants pushed back the bounds of the wild, but they still feared nature. A slight change in the weather before harvest time could be a disaster. Prayers were said for rain, since drought, which brought famine in its wake, was seen as punishment from God. People were fearful an ...
... Little by little the peasants pushed back the bounds of the wild, but they still feared nature. A slight change in the weather before harvest time could be a disaster. Prayers were said for rain, since drought, which brought famine in its wake, was seen as punishment from God. People were fearful an ...
The Vikings
... Knights—mounted horsemen and skilled __________________ who pledged to defend their lord’s lands in exchange for fiefs As the lord’s vassal, a knight’s main obligation was to ______________________________, typically 40 days of combat a year Knights were expected to display ___________________ in ba ...
... Knights—mounted horsemen and skilled __________________ who pledged to defend their lord’s lands in exchange for fiefs As the lord’s vassal, a knight’s main obligation was to ______________________________, typically 40 days of combat a year Knights were expected to display ___________________ in ba ...
Chapter 1 PP - WordPress.com
... movements of the planets Saturn, Jupiter and Mars. Other people thought that the plague was a punishment sent by God. Others believed that it was caused by the devil or magic. Others believed that burning incense would purify the air and keep the plague away. Still others blamed cultural or ethnic g ...
... movements of the planets Saturn, Jupiter and Mars. Other people thought that the plague was a punishment sent by God. Others believed that it was caused by the devil or magic. Others believed that burning incense would purify the air and keep the plague away. Still others blamed cultural or ethnic g ...
Chapter 7 – The Rise of Europe
... 7. If you went against canon law why could you be excommunicated? 8. How was the Jewish community viewed at this time? Why were they discriminated against? Lesson 4 Vocab: charter ...
... 7. If you went against canon law why could you be excommunicated? 8. How was the Jewish community viewed at this time? Why were they discriminated against? Lesson 4 Vocab: charter ...
The Black Death - Coach b social studies
... Many doctors believed that bad smells could drive out the plague. As a result, some of the treatment for the disease included dung and urine, as well as other ingredients that were more likely to spread disease than to cure it. ...
... Many doctors believed that bad smells could drive out the plague. As a result, some of the treatment for the disease included dung and urine, as well as other ingredients that were more likely to spread disease than to cure it. ...
HistorySage - Kenston Local Schools
... a. Views about the universe were largely influenced by the ancient ideas of Aristotle b. The geocentric view held that the earth was the center of a static, motionless universe c. Science was essentially a branch of theology B. Causes of the Scientific Revolution 1. Medieval universities provided th ...
... a. Views about the universe were largely influenced by the ancient ideas of Aristotle b. The geocentric view held that the earth was the center of a static, motionless universe c. Science was essentially a branch of theology B. Causes of the Scientific Revolution 1. Medieval universities provided th ...
Exploration Background The resurgence of trade following the
... a homemade telescope. Although he was able to prove Copernicus correct, his work was rejected by the Church and he was forced to recant (take back) or face execution. ...
... a homemade telescope. Although he was able to prove Copernicus correct, his work was rejected by the Church and he was forced to recant (take back) or face execution. ...
Name: Date: ______ Global 9 Period: ______ Global 9: Final Exam
... c. Alexander the Great- spread Greek (Hellenistic) culture to all of the areas that he conquered. d. Mountainous topography caused Greece to form many independent city-states instead of one large empire. The two most famous city-states were: i. Athens: 1. First democracy (people have a say in their ...
... c. Alexander the Great- spread Greek (Hellenistic) culture to all of the areas that he conquered. d. Mountainous topography caused Greece to form many independent city-states instead of one large empire. The two most famous city-states were: i. Athens: 1. First democracy (people have a say in their ...
From the Middle Ages to Heliocentrism
... worked in mechanics but geometry was his main love. Received the usual elementary education of reading, writing and arithmetic at his father’s house. From 1467 to 1477 he was an apprentice learning painting, sculpture and acquiring technical and mechanical skills; accepted into the painters’ guild i ...
... worked in mechanics but geometry was his main love. Received the usual elementary education of reading, writing and arithmetic at his father’s house. From 1467 to 1477 he was an apprentice learning painting, sculpture and acquiring technical and mechanical skills; accepted into the painters’ guild i ...
the western contribution to world history
... died in 323 B.C., despite being an astute tactician, unwittingly became the first apostle of multiculturalism and demonstrated the ethnocultural dangers of empire-building. After conquering Persia, in an apparent effort to consolidate his rule, Alexander married a Persian princess, dressed as a Pers ...
... died in 323 B.C., despite being an astute tactician, unwittingly became the first apostle of multiculturalism and demonstrated the ethnocultural dangers of empire-building. After conquering Persia, in an apparent effort to consolidate his rule, Alexander married a Persian princess, dressed as a Pers ...
Document
... Little by little the peasants pushed back the bounds of the wild, but they still feared nature. A slight change in the weather before harvest time could be a disaster. Prayers were said for rain, since drought, which brought famine in its wake, was seen as punishment from God. People were fearful an ...
... Little by little the peasants pushed back the bounds of the wild, but they still feared nature. A slight change in the weather before harvest time could be a disaster. Prayers were said for rain, since drought, which brought famine in its wake, was seen as punishment from God. People were fearful an ...
2-The Development of Feudalism in Western Europe
... In theory, only men were part of the feudal relationship between lord and vassal. However, it was quite common in the Middle Ages for noblewomen to hold fiefs and inherit land. Except for fighting, these women had all the duties that lords had. They ran their estates, sat as judges in manor courts, ...
... In theory, only men were part of the feudal relationship between lord and vassal. However, it was quite common in the Middle Ages for noblewomen to hold fiefs and inherit land. Except for fighting, these women had all the duties that lords had. They ran their estates, sat as judges in manor courts, ...
European science in the Middle Ages
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.