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tians e, and IC bev- spread nstituity for ) took ior, To )lished s. several stiture, a-nee), of the church soften ointing 1as lay noble's ight to grant a bishop or an abbot a fief and to make 'im a vassal. The church did object, however, to mgs and nobles naming bishops and abbots, Church leaders firmly believed that only a church member tould grant spiritual authority to another member of the church. In the case of a bishop, a ring and a ~rosier, or staff, symbolized this authority. A king or lord who granted a new bishop his fiefs often insisted on giving him his ring and crosier as well. Worldly lives' of the clergy. Some members of the clergy lived in luxury. People criticized them because they seemed more interested in wealth than in holy living. Simony. In feudal times, people could pay to assume high positions in the church, a practice called simony. The purchaser expected to make money through his position, either from church income or by charging high fees for performing religious services. Heresy. The church did not permit anyone to question the basic principles, or doctrines, that were the foundation of the Christian religion. People who denied the truth of these principles or , preached unauthorized doctrines were considered heretics-unbelievers guilty of the unpardonable sin of heresy, which brought eternal damnation. Heresy threatened the church itself, as treason does a modern government. Attempts at church reform were made by many church leaders and lay rulers, who tried to solve church problems through various measures. Two religious groups, or orders, established in the 1200s dedicated themselves to reform. They were the Franciscans, founded by Saint Francis of Assisi in 1209, and the Dominicans, founded by Saint Dominic in 1216. Members of these religious orders, known as friars, lived and preached among the people instead of secluding themselves in monasteries as members of most other religious orders did. In the mid-1200s the church ordered the Dominicans to seek out heretics and to eliminate heresy. During this search, known as.' the Inquisition, anyone suspected of heresy could be tried in secret and tortured in order to force a confession. Heretics who confessed that they had done wrong were required to perform penarrce. The Inquisition condemned heretics who did not confess and turned them over to the civil government to be punished, sometimes by burning at the stake. The church thought that these severe penalties were necessary to prevent the spread of heresy throughout Christendom. Section 3 Review 1. Define sacraments, monasticism, abbot, canon law, interdict, tithe, simony, Inquisition 2. Identify curia, cardinals, Saint Benedict, Saint Patrick 3. Summarizing Ideas List the positions in the church hierarchy and briefly describe the duties of each position. 4. Interpreting Ideas How did the church affect political, economic, and social life in the Middle Ages? 5. Evaluating Ideas (a) What four major problems faced the church during the Middle Ages? (b) How do you think each problem hurt the power and status of the church? \'i;,S;;q~I~.'{.',..-:.. [nglilnd andftan€lf' «t t>: Focus Questions • What contributions did the Anglo-Saxons and the Normans make to England? • How did Parliament and common law develop in England? • How were the Capetian kings able to increase their power? In Europe before the A.D. 1000s, kings and lords often struggled for power in a kind of feudal tug of war. Some great lords were as powerful as the kings themselves and served them only when it was convenient. However, a number of kings were able to impose their will on their subjects. From this struggle gradually emerged such kingdoms as England and France, where the king's authority grew stronger than that of the lords. Anglo-Saxon England Around A.D. 450, not long after the last Roman legions left Britain, several Germanic tribes invaded the island. Although they first came as raiders, they soon began to settle. Two of these tribes, the Angles and the Saxons, became so powerful that we refer ,to their descendants as Anglo-Saxons even today. The THE RISE OF THE MIDDLE AGES 1239 name England means '~land of the Angles," and refers to the eastern island of the British Isles, except for Scotland in the north and Wales in the west. The Anglo-Saxons in Britain formed several small independent kingdoms. Later these kingdoms combined into three important ones: (1) Northumbria, in what is now southern Scotland and northern England; (2) Mercia, in central England; and (3) Wessex, in southern England. In time the Anglo-Saxons divided these kingdoms into governmental districts called shires. Officials known as shire-reeves (which became the word sheriffs) governed these districts. Alfred the Great. By the early 800s the Wessex kings controlled practically all of England. However, their rule was soon challenged by the ferocious raiders from the north, the Vikings. At first the Danes-as the Anglo-Saxons called the Vikings-met little resistance, and they quickly conquered much of England. Then, in 871, Alfred the Great came to the throne of Wessex, determined to drive the Danes from English soil. First he persuaded them to leave Wessex by paying them a huge tribute, or sum of money. He spent the next five years reorganizing his army and building a fleet of ships. In 876, when he felt that his forces were strong enough, he attacked the Danes. The war raged for a decade, and in 886 the Danes sued for peace. The peace treaty limited Danish settlement to northeast Mercia and much of Northumbria. In this region, called the Danelaw, the Danes could live under their own laws and govern themselves. Although best known as a warrior-king, Alfred the Great made many contributions to learning. An educated and scholarly man, he wanted his people to be educated also. To this end he established schools and invited the best scholars from Wales and continental Europe to teach in them. Alfred himself undertook the translation of certain books from Latin to AngloSaxon. At his command, too, scholars began a history of England from the earliest times. Work on tbis history, known as the Anglo-Saxon Chronic.le, continued for some 250 years after Alfred's death in 899. Danish rule. During the 900s Alfred's successors won back much of the remaining Danish-held laAd in England. At the same time, they unified the country, strengthened its government, and spread Christianity throughout the land. However, near the end of the century, England once again came under attack from the Danes. By 1013 they had conquered the whole country. In 10 16, under the rule of King Canute of Denmark, England became part of a large kingdom that included most of Scandinavia. Canute, who 240 I CHAPTER 10 ned-the translation of many '"d:philosophical texts. -_~n Chronicle, begun during Alfred's " s c:enturies of English history. spent much of his time in England, ruled wisely. Canute's sons, however, had neither his intelligence nor his skill, and they proved to be weak rulers. By 1042 the Danish line had died out, and the AngloSaxon nobles had chosen Edward the Confessor as their new king. The Norman Conquest Edward the Confessor's background-part AngloSaxon and part Norman--created problems upon his death. When he died childless in 1066, Duke William of Normandy, a distant relative, claimed the English throne. The Anglo-Saxon nobles refused to recognize William's claim and selected Edward's brother-in-law, Harold of Wessex, instead: In 1066 William gathered a fleet of ships and an: army of nobles and landed near Hastings, on the ~outheaStern coast of England. In the Battle of Hastings, the Norman horsemen defeated the determined Anglo-Saxon defenders. King Harold was shot through the eye with an arrow and died on the battlefield. The victorious William declared himself King William I of England. It took William, usually called William the Conqueror, several years to overcome Anglo-Saxon resistance ·entirely. It took many more years for the Norman conquerors to overcome the hatred of the defeated Anglo-Saxons. The Anglo-Saxons did not willingly adopt Norman ideas, customs, or language. Anglo-Saxon, a Germanic language, remained the language of the people. Norman French, a Romance language based on Latin, became the language of the nobles. As time went on, however, the culture of . England, including laws and customs, became as much Norman as Anglo-Saxon. feudalism in England William the Conqueror, who ruled from 1066 to 1087, brought feudalism from France to England. However, he carefully altered the system in England so that the king, rather than the nobles, held the authority. To weaken the lords and prevent them from uniting, William gave his followers fiefs scattered widely throughout England. William the Conqueror laid the foundation for a centralized government by requiring each feudal lord . to swear allegiance directly to him. Thus all feudal lords became vassals of the king. To determine the population and wealth of England, William sent out commissioners to gather information on everyone in the country. This information helped to determine his system of taxation. The survey became known as the Domesday Book (or Doomsday Book). so that he could keep careful accounts of the government's financial affairs. Henry II made great use of the traveling judges. He established definite circuits, or routes, on which the judges were to travel. Thus they became known as circuit judges, and they enforced the king's law throughout England. In the 1200s the 12-member jury developed in the court system. Juries decided civil cases, such as disputes over land, as well as criminal cases. Trial by jury replaced the old feudal procedures of ordeal and combat to determine guilt or innocence. In his efforts to increase royal authority, Henry II sought to hold trials of certain members of the clergy in the royal courts afrer the parties had been judged in the church courts. The archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, refused to allow a second trial in the royal court. Becket and King Henry, once the best of friends, became bitter enemies. Four of the king's knights, thinking that they were doing the king a great favor, murdered the archbishop in his cathedral. Henry II denied any part in the assassination of Thomas Becket. Faced with papal excommunication, however, he was forced to abandon further attempts to reduce the power of the church. Thomas Becket became a saint, and his shrine in Canterbury became a very popular destination for pilgrims . The last years of Henry II's reign were troubled. His sons conspired against him. His marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine was stormy. Because he had received lands in France as part of Eleanor's dowry, England became further embroiled in wars in France. Nevertheless, Henry II helped consolidate the powers of the crown over the feudal lords. Later kings built upon his governmental and judicial institutions. Reforms Under William's Successors One of William the Conqueror's sons, Henry I, ruled King John and Magna Carta One son of Henry II, King John, is famous for bringing from 1100 to 1135. He made the central government more efficient by setting up a new department called on a revolt among the nobles of the realm. This revolt .occurred when King John forced them to pay taxes that the exchequer to handle the kingdom's finances. they considered unjust. On June 15, 1215, the English Henry's other important contribution was to the legal system. He wanted to weaken the feudal lords by hav-' nobles forced John to accept a document known as Magna Carta (Latin for "great charter"), which proing cases tried in the king's courts rather than in feudal courts. He sent out traveling judges to hold court ' tetted the liberties of the nobles. Some provisions of Magna Carta, however, dealt with the rights of sessions throughout the country. England's ordinary people. These provisions have come Henry II, who reigned from 1154 to 1189, further to be considered the most important parts of the docuincreased royal authority. He allowed nobles to pay him a fee instead of doing military service for him; ment. King John made several promises. He agreed not to collect any new or special tax without the consent of then he used the money to hire mercenaries. In this the Great Council, which was a body of important way he had an army that was loyal to him rather than nobles and church leaders who advised the king. He to the nobles. Henry also reorganized the exchequer THE RISE OF THE MIDDLE AGES [241 promised not to take property without paying for it, and he agreed not to sell, refuse, or delay justice. The king also promised to grant any accused person a trial by a jury of his peers, or equals. Magna Carta meant that the king was not above the law-the king had to obey the law just as his subjects did, or they would be free to rebel against him. Although the charter was not considered significant at the time, later political thinkers regarded many of its clauses as important precedents. Today Magna Carta is considered one of the world's great documents, spelling out the basic principles of limited government and the rule of the law. Parliament and Common Law In the century that followed the signing of Magna Carta, the two most important developments in English history were the evolution of Parliament and the growth of common law. Parliament. In the 1260s, nobles revolted against King Henry III. The leader of the nobles, Simon de Montfort, ruled England for several months. He hoped to get greater support for the nobles' cause by broadening representation in the Great Council. In 1265 de Montfort summoned representatives of the middle class to meet with the higher nobles and clergy in the Great Council. There were four knights ~~ ,~ ';Becket WaS made a saint. Many churches, sculptures, and stories were '_·'C' 2421 CHAPTER 10 Crrics -4~¥ ~......;;.. ",":,/'.t. . ~ <~ ,"1 gna in and inst de He ! by n June of 1215, King John rode to meet his angry nobles at Runnymede, a wide meadow on the banks of the Thames River. No one present on that day could have guessed that the .nobles' demands, written in the form of the document we now call Magna Carta, would later become the cornerstone of constitutional government and representative democracy. The original purpose of Magna Carta was to limit the powers of the king. Most of its 63 clauses 'were designed to protect the feudal rights of the nobles; eventually, English legislative and judicial decisions extended these rights. Magna Carta included such concepts as church freedom, trial by jury, and "due process of law"-the orderly, consistent working of law. Over the centuries, Magna Carta gradually increased in importance as later kings reaffirmed l s of and zhts i from each shire and two burgesses, or citizens, from each of several towns. De Montfort was killed in battle and the nobles' revolt was crushed, but the precedent of including knights and burgesses in the Great Council had been set. In time this representative body came to be called Parliament. It was eventually divided into two parts, or houses. The upper house consisted of nobles and clergy and was called the House of Lords. The lower house was made up of knights and burgesses and was called the House of Commons. Within a few years, this was the accepted form of representation, as it is in England today. The early Parliament did not have the power ,to pass laws, 'but it did have the important right of refusing to agree to new and special taxes. As the cost of running the central government increased, new taxes were necessary, and Parliament's approval became vital. Over the years Parliament used this power to its advantage. Common law. One of England's greatest monarchs was Edward I, who ruled from 1272 to 1307. Edward divided the king's court into three branches. The Court of the Exchequer kept financial accounts and tried tax cases. The Court of Common Pleas tried cases between private citizens. The Court of the its principles. Eventually it became a symbol of the fight against oppression. Magna Carta forms part of the British Constitution, and the ideas that origi~ nated in Magna Carta can be found in the Constitution of the United States. King's Bench heard cases that concerned the king or the government. Each of the three royal courts handed down many verdicts. These decisions became the basis for future decisions made in the king's courts and in the circuit courts. This type of law, based on judges' decisions rather than on a code of statutes like Roman law, is known as common law. It was given this name because it was common to all the people of England. Common law forms the basis for the present-day legal systems in the United States and in England. Rise of the Capetian Kings in France French kings were also engaged in struggles with their nobles during these centuries. When the last Carolingian king of France died in 987, an assembly of nobles chose Hugh Capet, a French noble, as king. Capet and his descendants, called the Capetians, ruled for more than 300 years. As king, Hugh Capet ruled only a small region around Paris which was called the lle-de-France (eel·duh·FRAHNS). lie is the French word for "island," and this region was indeed an island of royal authority in the midst of feudal lands. Even in the lle-deFrance, the king's v~ssals resisted his authority. The rest of what is now France was divided into provinces THE RISE OF THE MIDOLE AGES 1243 !, -- - .·lbtr.~rcfwtt:tQf.frlln~-e,1035_~13~ •. ~~------~~~~----rr. • Learning • Azimuthal Equal-Area French royal domain from Mapa -RegIOn Projection Tile French royal domain grew outward from the Ile-de-France . What lands did the English possess in France in 13287 ruled by feudal lords. (See map on page 244.) The Capetians set out to unite these provinces and to develop a strong central government. The history of the Capetian kings demonstrates the feudal struggle for power. Strong kings increased royal lands and authority. Weak kings allowed nobles to regain power. Later Capetian kings added to the royal lands and strengthened the central government. The growth of royal territory. Kings sometimes married the daughters of great feudal lords to add to the royal lands. In this way, they gained fiefs that were often included in the daughters' dowries. Kings also increased their royal territory by claiming the lands of noble families that died out. .,» After 1066, when William of Normandy conquered England, the territorial problems of the Capetians became even more complicated. For centuries the English kings had owned vast territories in France. Strong Capetians watched for a chance to regain these lands. The shrewd Philip II, also called Philip Augustus, king of France from 1179 to 1223, seized much Englishowned land in France. By 1328, when the last Capetian 2441 CHAPTER 10 king died, the only major English landholdings in France were parts of the provinces of Aquitaine and Gascony. (See map on this page.) Strengthening the central government To maintain a strong government, the Capetians sought out loyal, well-trained officials. They could not rely on the nobility. In addition, the Capetians extended the jurisdiction of their courts. The Parlement of Paris became a supreme court, hearing appeals from all parts of the kingdom. The Capetian Philip the Fair, who ruled from 1285 to 1314, was able to gain control over the clergy, thereby strengthening his own power. Early in his reign Philip imposed a tax on the clergy. When the pope at the time, Boniface VIII, opposed him, Philip had Boniface arrested, and the pope died soon afterward. Philip was able to influence the election of the next pope, Clement V. Philip also convened the Estates General in 1302. The Estates General was a representative body that was drawn from the three major classes of French society of the time: clergy, nobility, and commoners. Convening the Estates ·. . ·.·lf1e-.GrOWib~of franc-a, 1035.=-1328 ,. - . _ :.;.- . .' ..""'!IIr-----,-,-,""",---,-,~--"" , '. 'OT ~':'F • French royal domain i.earning from Mapa +'Reglon CHAPTER l?O o 1(JO 260 I 3?O Mile, Azimuthal Equal-AIea 360 Kilometers Projection Tile French royal domain grew outward from the Ile-de-France. Wh~t lands did the English poss~ss in France in 13287 ruled by feudal lords. (See map on page 244.) The Capetians set out to unite these provinces and to develop a strong central government. The history of the Capetian kings demonstrates the feudal struggle for power. Strong kings increased royal lands and authority. Weak kings allowed nobles to regain power. Later Capetian kings added to the royal lands and strengthened the central government. The growth of royal territory. Kings sometimes married the daughters of great feudal lords to add to the royal lands. In this way, they gained fiefs that were often included in the daughters' dowries. Kings also increased their royal territory by claiming the lands of noble families that died out. ..• After 1066, when William of Normandy conquered England, the territorial problems of the Capetians became even more complicated. For centuries the English kings had owned vast territories in France. Strong Capetians watched for a chance to regain these lands. The shrewd Philip II, also called Philip Augustus, king of France ftom 1179 to 1223, seized much Englishowned land in France. By 1328, when the last Capetian 2441 o 10 king died, the only major English landholdings in France were parts of the provinces of Aquitaine and Gascony. (See map on this page.) Strengthening the central government To maintain a strong government, the Capetians sought out loyal, well-trained officials. They could not rely on the nobility. In addition, the Capetians extended the jurisdiction of their courts. The Parlement of Paris became a supreme court, hearing appeals from all parts of the kingdom. The Capetian Philip the Fair, who ruled ftom 1285 to 1314, was able to gain control over the clergy, thereby strengthening his own power. Early in his reign Philip imposed a tax on the clergy. When the pope at the time, Boniface VIII, opposed him, Philip had Boniface arrested, and the pope died soon afterward. Philip was able to influence the election of the next pope, Clement V. Philip also convened the Estates General in 1302. The Estates General was a representative body that was drawn from the three major classes of French society of the time: clergy, nobility, and commoners. Convening the Estates eneral helped Philip to gain the support of the people in his conflict with the church. By the early 1300s, the power of the king was greater than that of the nobles in France. However, the three sons of Philip IV died without a male heir, and in 1328 the long line of the Capetians ended. "'(m~'l;iiJfii_i~~;~\V(i'(:~;:~H;1\"(;'\ 6l»rmany andftaly Section 4 Review 1. Define shires, Magna Carta, common law 2. Identify Alfred the Great, Edward the Confessor, William the Conqueror, Thomas Becket, Simon de Montfort 3. Locate and Explain the Significance Hastings, Canterbury, Ile-de-France, Aquitaine Focus Questions • How did German rulers threaten the power of the medieval popes? • How did the Concordat of Worms propose to divide power between popes and emperors? • Why is Pope Innocent III considered one of the church's greatest political leaders? 4. Summarizing Ideas Summarize the contributions that the Anglo-Saxons made to England. and Normans 5. Explaining Ideas Explain how the following developed in England: (a) Parliament, (b) common law. 6. Analyzing Ideas How does the rise of the Capetian kings in France illustrate the feudal struggle for power? How were the Capetians able to add to their power? Although people throughout Europe recognized the spiritual authority of the church, many conflicts arose over the church's temporal authority, or its role in worldly affairs. The greatest threat to the power of the medieval popes came from the German rulers of the revived Holy Roman Empire. The Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne's empire had included part of Italy, but after Charlemagne's death in 814, Italy fell into a "":~.6IinXU crowned Otto emperor 11 days ,~Hj!V;~igned a treaty regulating the .. .i~between emperor and pope. This 'l',.':~h~1 :.',. • mperor Olto's crown . ....•.. THE RISE OF THE MIDDLE AGES 1245