The Byzantine Empire - Hickory High School
... his kingdom. This desire stemmed from his own intellectual curiosity and from the need to educate Catholic clergy and government officials. His efforts led to an intellectual revival sometimes called the Carolingian Renaissance, or rebirth. This revival involved renewed interest in Latin culture and ...
... his kingdom. This desire stemmed from his own intellectual curiosity and from the need to educate Catholic clergy and government officials. His efforts led to an intellectual revival sometimes called the Carolingian Renaissance, or rebirth. This revival involved renewed interest in Latin culture and ...
1 - Net Start Class
... love between men and women more important; offset Church’s dim view of women Hindered women: Fostered unrealistic visions of women; encouraged a distant admiration of women instead of a respect for women’s abilities and ideas; valued unrequited love over relationships or marriage; applied to very fe ...
... love between men and women more important; offset Church’s dim view of women Hindered women: Fostered unrealistic visions of women; encouraged a distant admiration of women instead of a respect for women’s abilities and ideas; valued unrequited love over relationships or marriage; applied to very fe ...
KEY WORDS GLOBAL 9 ENGLISH WORD
... influenced by Judaism and Christianity Qu’ran (Koran) – holy book holy language – Arabic followers - Muslims ...
... influenced by Judaism and Christianity Qu’ran (Koran) – holy book holy language – Arabic followers - Muslims ...
300 - 1500
... Franks swept into Italy and defeated the raiders •Charles the Great became king of the Romans ...
... Franks swept into Italy and defeated the raiders •Charles the Great became king of the Romans ...
Western Christendom after the Fall of Rome
... independent pursuit of scientific subjects So, as change accelerated in the High Middle Ages, so too did a new way of looking at the world and this borrowing, adapting, and emphasis of rational thought in Western Europe would have profound repercussions for world history ...
... independent pursuit of scientific subjects So, as change accelerated in the High Middle Ages, so too did a new way of looking at the world and this borrowing, adapting, and emphasis of rational thought in Western Europe would have profound repercussions for world history ...
The Making of Medieval Europe
... (“messengers of the king”) to inspect their work. A patron of learning, he revived classical studies, preserved the Latin culture, and established monastic and palace schools. 2. Charlemagne’s reign represented the development of a “new” civilization. The pope, the spiritual leader of Western Christ ...
... (“messengers of the king”) to inspect their work. A patron of learning, he revived classical studies, preserved the Latin culture, and established monastic and palace schools. 2. Charlemagne’s reign represented the development of a “new” civilization. The pope, the spiritual leader of Western Christ ...
Ch 13 Middle Ages Textbook
... Empire. During this time of political chaos, the Church provided order and security. The Concept of Government Changes Along with shifting boundaries, the entire concept of government changed. Loyalty to public government and written law had unified Homan society. Family ties and personal loyalty, r ...
... Empire. During this time of political chaos, the Church provided order and security. The Concept of Government Changes Along with shifting boundaries, the entire concept of government changed. Loyalty to public government and written law had unified Homan society. Family ties and personal loyalty, r ...
Musical-technical terms: Responsorial singing
... Breve - a musical note having the time value of two semibreves or whole notes Semibreve- the equivalence of a whole note Minum- the equivalence of a half note Franconian notation- (franco of cologne) an idea which was to transform musical notation permanently: that the duration of any note should b ...
... Breve - a musical note having the time value of two semibreves or whole notes Semibreve- the equivalence of a whole note Minum- the equivalence of a half note Franconian notation- (franco of cologne) an idea which was to transform musical notation permanently: that the duration of any note should b ...
The Gothic High Middle Ages - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... church practice, sanctioned new religious orders, and played politics at the highest level. Enemies of the established order resisted what they deemed to be an increasingly repressive and misguided society. The thirteenth century was prosperous, urban, and intellectually vibrant, but there were sign ...
... church practice, sanctioned new religious orders, and played politics at the highest level. Enemies of the established order resisted what they deemed to be an increasingly repressive and misguided society. The thirteenth century was prosperous, urban, and intellectually vibrant, but there were sign ...
Chapter 7 - History 1101: Western Civilization I
... and provided one of the few avenues of social mobility. They also provided an essential service of copying, transmitting, and preserving texts and learning. – Monasteries and Politics: Nobles and kings often exerted influence over their local bishops and priests, which seemed to subsume spiritual li ...
... and provided one of the few avenues of social mobility. They also provided an essential service of copying, transmitting, and preserving texts and learning. – Monasteries and Politics: Nobles and kings often exerted influence over their local bishops and priests, which seemed to subsume spiritual li ...
Unit II: 600-1450 - Spokane Public Schools
... This time period should be considered the Dark Ages, not the Age of Faith. The Roman Catholic Church only became a powerful institution due to the lack of a centralized authority that could protect the people. The Truce of God in 1083 (Doc. 5) does display the influence of the Church but does more t ...
... This time period should be considered the Dark Ages, not the Age of Faith. The Roman Catholic Church only became a powerful institution due to the lack of a centralized authority that could protect the people. The Truce of God in 1083 (Doc. 5) does display the influence of the Church but does more t ...
Medieval Europe
... •With the fall of Rome, Europe had entered into a period of political, social, and economic decline. •Small kingdoms competed to control the lands once under Rome’s central authority •Among these kingdoms, were the Franks ...
... •With the fall of Rome, Europe had entered into a period of political, social, and economic decline. •Small kingdoms competed to control the lands once under Rome’s central authority •Among these kingdoms, were the Franks ...
History - Crusades and Byzantine
... That is the last point of significance in this era. Greek Byzantines had always felt culturally, politically, and even religiously superior to the West, whose kings and even clerics were the descendents of the barbarian tribes who wrecked the Roman society that Byzantium was preserving. For their pa ...
... That is the last point of significance in this era. Greek Byzantines had always felt culturally, politically, and even religiously superior to the West, whose kings and even clerics were the descendents of the barbarian tribes who wrecked the Roman society that Byzantium was preserving. For their pa ...
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.