* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download PPT Lecture 12 The Byzantine Empire and Western
Post-classical history wikipedia , lookup
High Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
Early Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
Late Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
State church of the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup
Christianity in the 13th century wikipedia , lookup
Patrimonium Sancti Petri wikipedia , lookup
Carolingian Empire wikipedia , lookup
History of Christianity during the Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
The Byzantine Empire and Western Europe to 1000 AD Honorius (r. 394-423 AD) Honorius (r. 394-423 AD) • A weak child emperor • Reign torn by palace intrigues • Franks, Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Vandals and others invade • 410 AD: Sack of Rome by Visigoths – Legions Abandon Rome Huns and Collapse • 440s-50s: Atilla the Hun drives other tribes into Empire • 454 AD: Chalons-Sur-Marne: Romans ally with Visigoths and Franks to defeat Atilla • 455 AD: Vandals sack Rome • Last years a string of military coups and dictators • 476 AD: Romulus Augustus is deposed 476 AD The Byzantine Empire (395-1453 AD) Early Byzantium • Arcadius (395-408 AD): Beginning of a return to civilian authority in East • Rise of Byzantium – East had more money; fewer barbarians – Isaurians provide footmen – Leo I (457-474): First crowned by Patriarch of Constantinople – Empire stabilizes Justinian I (527-565 AD) Justinian I (527-565 AD) • Height of Byzantine Power • Sought Reconquest of Western Empire – “Africa”, Italy, Spain – But also fought the Sassanids ans Slavs – Imperial Overreach • Empire of over 1500 cities – Constantinople: 350,000 – Governors rule Imperial Cities Europe at Death of Justinian Justinian and the Law • “One Empire, One God, One Religion” • He creates the Code of Justinian, combining ancient and modern law (“Corpus Juris Civilis”, “Body of Civil Law”) – Codex Justinianus, the Digesta or Pandectae, the Institutiones, and the Novellae – Set future of Empire and influenced many later codes Byzantine Caesaropapism • Emperor controlled religious belief and secular law • Second Council of Constantinople (553 AD) recognizes his authority • Protects Monks and their property • Suppresses Heretics – The Monophysite Heresy: Jesus is all divine; mortal side is merely an illusion. Common in Syria, Palestine, Egypt Foreign Threats • Avars, Slavs, and Bulgars in Europe (6th7th century AD) • Heraclius (610-41) – Reorganizes Roman Military • Themata system: military units gain land under a strategos in return for military service • Allows defeat of the Sassanids – 630 AD: Retaking of Jerusalem Islamic Onslaught • • • • 632 AD: Wars with Moslems begin 636 AD: Battle of Yarmuk Palestine, Egypt, Syria lost Leo III (717-40 AD): Regains lost ground – Tax reform and end of serfdom – New Laws – Empire enters a stable state 700 AD 800 AD The Macedonian Dynasty (9th11th centuries AD) • • • • Silver age of Byzantium Cities grew; prosperity spreads Educaiton and learning Flourishes Empire is smaller than Justinian but better organized and well defensible 1000 AD Basil "the Bulgar-Slayer" II (reigned 976–1025 AD) Basil "the Bulgar-Slayer" II (reigned 976–1025 AD) • Allies to Kievan Rus; his sister marries King of Kiev • Russians help suppress a landowner revolt • 6000 Russians = Varangian Guard • Basil Attacks the Bulgars – Battle of Kleidon (1014 AD) – Blinds 99 of every 100 prisoners of 15,000 Manzikert (1071 AD) • Emperor Romanos Diogenes is defeated by Seljuq Turks • By 1081, all of ‘Anatolia’ (Modern Turkey) is ruled by Turks • This leads to calling of the Crusades 1100 AD Heresies • Nestorians – Jesus is two persons, one mortal and one divine, not a unified being – Most popular in Iraq • Monophysites – Christ is entirely divine; his apparent humanity is an illusion – Popular in Syria, Palestine, and Egypt Icons "Christ is the icon of the invisible God" (Col. 2:7) Iconclasm • Leo III (717-40 AD) banned the use of religious images--Icons • Struggle of the Iconoclasts (“IconBreakers”, Anti-Icon) and Iconophiles (“Icon Lovers”, Pro-Icon) ensues • Michael III (842-867) ends it with Iconophile victory • Iconoclasts believed Icons were idolatry • Iconophiles argued they were aids to faith Divergence from Catholicism • Reliance on Imperial Authority and Church Councils • The Patriarchs are main figures (Constantinople, Jerusalem, Antioch, Alexandria) • Priests, but not Bishops, could marry • Church services in local languages • No belief in Purgatory 1054 Schism • Patriarch of Constantinople and Pope excommunicate each other until 1965 – Disputes over who is the boss – Disputes over the ‘filioque clause’--Does the Holy Spirit derive from the Father alone (orthodoxy) or the Father and the Son (Catholic) – Liturgical disputes – Claims of Jurisdiction Islamic Impact • Byaznatium loses much land; culture shifts north and west • Europe will give Greek Ideas to Moslems, who then work with them and pass them back later. – Cordoba, Spain: Where Islam, Judaism, and Christianity Meet and Mingle Islamic Gifts to Europe • Europe gains – – – – – field irrigation, leather tanning, silk refining, the 'Arabic Numerals' Greek traditions of mathematics, philosophy, medicine, and astronomy. Western Christianity • Church replaces Empire – Church is best educated and strongest unifying force in West Europe • Rise of Monasticism – Emerges from Hermit Culture after Martyrdom ends – Basil the Great (321-379 AD) invents Monasticism • Monks must serve others Benedict of Nursia (480-547 AD) • Founds Western Monks • Abbot is head of Monastery • Simplicity, Poverty, Hard Work, Prayer and Study • Self-Sufficiency Irish Monasticism • Finnian of Clonard • Linked to Clans • Abbots from Clan Leading Family • Studied and preserved Latin Texts • Missionaries to Western Europe • Clashed with Pope later Papal Primacy • No Kings strong enough to rule Church as Byzantines did • Patriarch / Bishop of Rome rises to prominence as ‘Pope’ – Pope Damasus I (366-384) claimed primacy as heir of Saint Peter, first Bishop of Rome – Pope Leo I (440-61) -- First Among Bishops – Pope Gelasius I (492-6) -- Pope > King The Merovingian Dynasty (481 751 AD) • By 509, Clovis (481-511) rules most of modern France • At height, they rule Modern France, Belgium, Netherlands, Western Germany • Comes--Counts. Governors of provinces; become hereditary • Central authority declines • Kings become puppets of their majordomos--The Mayors of the Palace The Carolingians • 639: Pepin I becomes Mayor of the Palace • Charles Martel (714-741 AD) -- Defeats Moslems at Tours, Creates a Feudal Army • Frankish Church and Carolingians ally • 751: Pope approves Carolingian Coup; Pepin III crowned King (751-768) • 755: Conquest of Lombards; creation of Papal States Charlemagne (Charles the Great, 768-814 AD) Charlemagne (Charles the Great, 768-814 AD) Charlemagne (Charles the Great, 768-814 AD) • • • • • A Mighty Conqueror Builds Aachen as capital on Rhine Christmas Day, 800: “Roman Emperor” Huge and Imposing, Friendly and Energetic Married 5 times, Many Children Problems of Government • Counts / Comes still largely independent • Missi Dominici struggled to oversee them • Lack of Money = no independent Bureaucracy • Land grants for service made officials too independent Alcuin of York (735-804 AD) • English Monk • Theologian and Poet • Director of Palace School for Charlemagne The Carolingian School • Intended to train scholars and imperial officials • Creators of the Carolingian Miniscule – – – – – Basis of Modern Western Script Rounded, uniform letters Spaces between words and Capital letters 7000 surviving manuscripts Made basis of modern typefaces by 15th century printers Medieval Economy • The Manor--Tracts of Land with Attached Peasants and a Lord – – – – Desmene--Lord’s land (25-33%) Common Lands Strip Fields Worked Together Manors are payment to knights for military service – Peasants are ‘bound to the land’, owing traditional services and a rent to the lord A Manor • 3 sets of fields; 2 in use, one lies fallow • Moldboard Plows now used • Land divided into strips, interspersed Religion and Clergy • Clergy Leaders from noble class • Average priest is poorly literate peasant who can barely recite the liturgy • Common folk know little theology, but Church shapes life through rituals--Baptism, Confirmation, Communion, Confession, Marriage, Funerals Collapse of the Carolingians • Growth of power of lords; decline of Kings • Louis the Pious (814-840): Too Many Sons – – – – First Wife: Lothar, Pepin, Louis Wife 2: Charles After his death, everyone butchers each other Pepin dies; Lothar, Louis, Charles each take a chunk in Treaty of Verdun The Divided Empire Vikings, Magyars, and Muslims • 9th-11th century: Vikings from the North • 9th-10th Century: Magyars from the East • 9th-11th Century: Moslems from Southeast and South • Only Decentralized forces easily respond to block raids, so Lords grow in power; Kings decline Feudalism • Responds to three problems: – Decentralized Military Response to 9th-11th century invasions – Necessity to pay servants with land, which then became hereditary – Rise of a permanent warrior class of elites; decline of old warbands as many could not afford the best equipment (chainmail, warhorse, sword and lance) Feudal Structure • Peasants pledged fealty to Knights and Lords for protection, giving service in agriculture • Knights pledged to Lords • Lords pledged to Kings • Service paid at each level with land (a fief) • Boss = Lord, Servant = Vassal • Fief is virtually a miniature kingdom Vassalage • In return for land, you owe fixed military service (traditionally 40 days) • Large grants require you to bring multiple knights • Scutage--Tax paid to evade service • Lord protects Vassal from other lords; aids in court • Later, Money Fiefs emerge as economy grows Church Lands • Church owes service to king and lords for land • This poses problems about who appoints Church leaders • Pope vs. King struggle will ensue