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Transcript
RAP
From your vocabulary, place these people in the
correct order in Medieval Society from the most
powerful to the least powerful.
Serf
Monarch
http://www.castles-abbeys.co.uk/various-pictures3.html
Lord
Vassal (Knight)
The Middle Ages
SOL WHI.9
http://www.castles-abbeys.co.uk/various-pictures3.html
500 – 1500 A.D. Period of history known as the MIDDLE AGES.
Europe in Middle Ages
476 A.D. Western
Roman Empire
collapses due to
Germanic invasions.
Roman Empire
•Large territory
unified under one
government
•Led by an emperor
•Large cities, money
economy, literate
society, etc.
•Small Germanic kingdoms;
boundaries constantly
changed
•Money scarce; trade
disrupted by invasions;
cities faded; illiterate
society
•People entered into
agreements with land
owning lords who provided
them with protection in
exchange for work.
Foundations of medieval society
• Classical heritage of Rome
• Christian beliefs
• Customs of Germanic tribes
Feudalism begins
Invasions shattered Roman protection over the Empire.
The decline of Roman influence in Western Europe left
people with little protection against invasion, so they
entered into feudal agreements with land-holding lords
who promised them protection.
Invasions by the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, & Vikings
Vikings
Magyars
Feudal society during the Middle Ages
• Fief – land worked by the peasants
• Vassals – “landlords”; swore allegiance to
the king; could serve as a knight
• Serfs – peasants that worked the land
• Feudal obligations
Manorial system during the Middle Ages
• Rigid class structure
• Self-sufficient manors
Chapter 13, Section 2—Feudalism in Europe
1) Explain the mutual obligations
of the feudal system.
In exchange for military and other services, a lord
granted land to a vassal
2) Explain why the feudal system
often resulted in complicated
alliances.
The same noble might be a vassal to several different
lords
3) Describe feudal social classes.
3 Groups: the fighters, the religious peeps, & workers
*usually inherited*
4) Explain the mutual obligations
between lord and serfs under
the manor system.
Serfs worked to receive housing, land, & protection
(performed any & all tasks necessary for the upkeep
of the estate…aka, the manor)
5) Explain why the serfs rarely
had to leave the manor.
They made everything they needed
Manors were self-sufficient
6) Explain why the serfs accepted
their economic hardships.
People accepted their “lot” in life
They believed it was what God had decreed for their
lives
Life on the Manor
Daily Life on the Manor
Influence of the
Roman Catholic Church
during the Middle Ages
• The Roman Catholic Church grew in importance
after Roman authority declined. It became the
unifying force in western Europe.
• The Pope anointed the Holy Roman Emperors.
• Missionaries carried Christianity to Germanic tribes.
• The Church served the social, political, and religious
needs of the people.
St. Peter’s Basilica
Vatican City, Italy
Built 326 A. D.
Current basilica was
built starting in 1506
Influence of the Church
• Roman authority declined, while Church
authority grew
• Monasteries preserved Greco-Roman cultural
achievements
• Missionaries carried Christianity and Latin alphabet
to Germanic tribes
• Pope anointed Charlemagne as Holy Roman
Emperor in 800 A. D.
• Parish priests served religious and social needs of
the people
Age of Charlemagne
Frankish kings used military power to expand their territory.
• Franks emerged as a force in Western Europe
• Charles I, Charles the Great = Charlemagne
• Pope crowned the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
The alliance between Frankish kings and the church
reestablished Roman culture in Western Europe.
•
•
•
•
Power of the Church was established in political life
Roman culture was revived
Most of Western Europe was included in the new empire
Churches, roads, and schools were built to unite the empire
Charlemagne
• Born grandson of Charles
Martel, son of Pepin the Short
• Ruled from 771 - 814 A.D.
• Spread Christianity while
reuniting western Europe
• Crowned by Pope Leo III
Christmas Day 800 A. D.
• Died at age 70
Charlemagne’s Empire
Invasions by the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, & Vikings
Invasions by Angles, Saxons, Magyars, and Vikings disrupted the
social, economic, and political order of Europe.
Areas of Settlement
• Angles and Saxons from continental Europe to England
•Vikings from Scandinavia to Russia
•Magyars from Central Asia to Hungary
•Huns from Central Asia to the Danube River area
•Hun–gary= Huns + Ma(gyars)
Invasions by the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, & Vikings
Vikings
Magyars
Influence of the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, & Vikings
• Manors with castles provided protection from invaders
• Invasions disrupted trade, towns declined, and the
feudal system was strengthened