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Transcript
ROME HAS FALLEN!
And it won’t get up.
Topics
•
The Twilight of the Roman Empire
•
Constantinople
•
East vs West
•
The Retaking of the West
•
Barbarians at the Gate
•
Early Christianity
•
Attila The Hun
•
A Lamb amongst Lions
•
Goths, Goths, Goths
•
Mohammad
•
Rome is Sacked Again
•
The Rise of Islam
•
Romulus Augustus, The Last Emperor
•
The British Isles
•
The Franks
•
The Rise of the Anglo Saxon
Kingdoms
What were the Dark Ages?
•
Time period in Europe were there was no
real literature and recorded history.
•
Period of religious fanaticism, and
superstition, over science and reason.
•
No technological advancement
•
Oppression of the lower classes by the
top 1%
•
Extreme brutality with no checks and
balances
•
Fractured kingdoms and isolation
•
Erasing of antiquity
•
All of these statements are FALSE!!!!!!!!!!
400 C.E. The Twilight of Rome
•
By the year 400 western Rome had
been in a death spiral.
•
Corruption and in-fighting from the
ruling Patrician classes.
•
Empire had been divided into
sections.
•
The western Roman empire had not
had a strong leader for 100 years.
•
The city of Rome itself had become a
non-important backwater town.
What Led to the Fall of the West
•
Corruption from the governing classes
had weakened its infrastructure.
•
Conscripted and mercenary foreign
troops made up the bulk of its military.
•
Money was minted with worthless
metals.
•
Too many geographical divisions.
•
Wages and occupations had been frozen
so no up-ward growth.
•
Too many enemies were encroaching on
the frontiers.
•
The position of Emperor had been
usurped by bureaucracy.
The Eastern Roman Empire
•
330 Emperor Constantine established
eastern capital of Roman Empire.
•
City was quickly built and loaded with all
of the treasures of the old Rome.
•
Due to strategic placement the city
thrived.
•
Traditionally the strongest of the
Emperors would rule from
Constantinople.
•
Became more Greek than Latin.
•
By 400 the East began to distance itself
from the West.
The Barbarians
•
Officially a Barbarian was anyone who was not
“Roman”.
•
This was characterized by the Germanic and
Slavic people who lived beyond the Roman
frontier.
•
For centuries Roman armies had entered these
areas and attempted to conqueror and
Romanized them.
•
In 300 several successful campaigns had taken
Dacia and pacified the region north of the
Danube.
•
Due to instability in the government and
disinterested troops in the army these areas had
once again reverted.
•
By 400 a mass migration of eastern tribal people
threatened the integrity of the Roman frontier.
Goths, Goths, Goths
•
Tribal groups known as Goths and
Visigoths flood in through the weakened
Roman frontier.
•
Rome seeing its outer fringes are
threatened withdraw from Britain and
Gaul around 410.
•
The Franks invade and take over Gaul and
northern Hispania.
•
The western capital of Ravenna has been
under siege and attacked.
•
The Vandals have taken over Southern
Hispania and have invaded North Africa.
•
The true threat is on its way!
Attila The Hun
•
444, Attila gains sole power of the Huns
after he murders his brother Bleda.
•
Attila quickly moves the Huns west
triggering a mass migration of Goths.
•
446 Attila threatens Constantinople, who
agree to his terms of 2,100 lbs. of gold.
•
Attila moves west and ravages Gaul.
•
He suffers a setback at the battle of
Châlons.
•
Attila moves into Italy and destroys
Aquileia, and moves on Rome.
•
453 Attila dies from internal
hemorrhaging, his empire falls apart.
Rome is Sacked
•
After the death of Attila the Roman west
is done for.
•
Political instability and weak puppet
emperors can not stop the tide of
barbarians.
•
The Vandals take North Africa then move
into Italy.
•
455, The Vandals Sack Rome.
•
473,The Ostergoths move into Italy and
sack Rome.
•
The Roman Emperor flees from Ravenna.
Romulus Augustulus, The Last Emperor
•
Romulus Augustulus was placed on the
throne in 475.
•
He is 16 and has no stomach to rule a
failing empire.
•
476, He will be dethroned by Odoacer,
the general of his German mercenaries.
•
Odoacer will take the title King of Italy,
ending the rule of the western Roman
Emperors.
•
What is left of the old western empire will
be divided up by the Franks, Goths, and
Vandals.
The East Carries on
•
After the fall of the West the Eastern
Roman Emperors will look to reclaim
what was lost.
•
They will have to deal with
marauding Huns, Persians, and Goths
which will hold them at bay.
•
527, Justinian comes to power.
•
530, Justinian’s armies defeat the
Persians opening the way to a
possible invasion of the West.
A Plan to Reunite the Empire
•
Justinian will send his trusted General
Belisarius to North Africa to retake the
“breadbasket” from the Vandals.
•
535, Belisarius will invade Sicily as a
spring board into Italy.
•
For the next 10 years Belisarius moves in
and out of Italy.
•
Even though he takes Rome several
times, Justinian will never hold all of the
West.
•
Plague, Riots, and outside threats halts
Justinian's ambitions of a unified Roman
Empire.
Good King Clovis
•
486, Frankish leader Clovis defeats his rivals
at Soissons, and unites the Franks under
him.
•
He consolidates his power and his province
is recognized by the Eastern Roman
Emperor.
•
496, Clovis is Baptized as a Catholic.
•
He will spend the rest of his life defeating
the Burgundians, Visigoths, Ostrogoth, and
Alemanni.
•
He will establish the Frankish Kingdom and
set its capital as Paris.
•
511, Clovis dies and his Kingdom is divided
equally by his four sons according to
Frankish custom.
The Merovingians
•
Clovis’s heirs will establish the
Merovingian dynasty in the area that
still bears their name, France.
•
They would divide the territory into
Austrasia, Neustria, and Burgundia.
•
The Merovingian monarchs are little
more than tribal leaders and they will
fight constantly with each other.
•
By 639 the Merovingian Kings will
become puppets to the their Comites
and Mayors.
Bad Brunhilda
•
Lived from 543 to 613
•
Visigoth Princess who married King Sigbert of
Austrasia.
•
Convinced husband to war with brother
Chilperic over death of Sister.
•
Sigbert is assassinated , so Brunhilda marries
Merovich, son of Chilperic.
•
Merovich commits suicide so Brunhilda seizes
throne Austrasia for herself.
•
During the next 30 years she started wars and
had ten Merovingian kings assassinated.
•
She was finally captured and was quartered for
her acts.
Comites, the Key to Administration
•
Merovingian kings were absolute rulers.
•
Like the latter Roman Emperors they
kept themselves apart from the
Administration of their Kingdoms.
•
To run the massive kingdom a new social
class called the comite was created.
•
They would do everything from
collecting taxes, to recruiting for the
army.
•
Over time the comites would increase
their power.
•
The most powerful comite would gain the
title major domus or Mayor of the Palace.
The Spread of Christianity
•
Since the first Century, Christianity had
risen.
•
In 400 it was the official religion of the
Empire, but the majority were still Pagan.
•
It had spread north and west by and had
gained major converts in several of the
Barbarian kingdoms.
•
By 900 it was the only religion in Western
Europe.
•
The Church would become the center
point to every Medieval town and village.
•
The Church would increase in power by
the selling of Indulgences and playing on
the fears of the afterlife.
Missionaries and Monasteries
•
By the 4th Century people began looking to
Christianity to help them escape the world and
dedicate themselves to God.
•
In 500 Benedict, from Umbria had formed
several Monastic communities of men who had
dedicated their whole existence to God.
•
Benedict seeing the nobility in this way of life
wrote The Rule in which he spelled out the
Monastic way of life.
•
The Benedictine order would be founded from
this principle.
•
Anchorites and Coenobites
•
These early monks would become the first
missionaries, traveling into the unknown and
establishing monasteries.
Anglo-Saxons Arrive
•
410, The Roman Emperor Honorius
abandons Britain.
•
Britain breaks down into many tribal
kingdoms.
•
To defend themselves from
marauding Picts, The kings of Britain
invite Saxon and Anglo Mercenaries.
•
Mons Badonicus, the combined
Anglo-Saxon force overthrow the
tribal kings of Britain.
•
Arthurian Legend is born from battle.
The Kingdoms of Britain
•
By the late 6th Century the Saxon
kingdoms are established.
•
East, Anglia, Mercia, Wessex,
Northumbria, Kent, Essex, and Sussex.
•
The Picts to the north and the Welch to
the west remained unconquered.
•
These tribal kingdoms would war and
feud with each other.
•
Sometimes the kingdoms would split and
unify with Mercia being the strongest.
•
This state of ebb and flux would exist
until unification under Alfred I in the late
9th Century.
Trial by Ordeal: Medieval Justice
•
Under the Saxons England would establish
the Feudal system of government.
•
By the end of the 6th Century most of the
Saxon kings were Christianized.
•
One hold over to the Saxon system would
be their justice system.
•
Courts would establish guilt or innocence
based on the number who would take oath.
•
If unable to pay the punishment trial by
ordeal would be assessed.
•
These ordeals would include:
Tied and thrown into water.
Carrying red hot iron.
Immersing your hand in boiling water.
Beowulf
•
Saxons loved long-form poetry.
•
The oldest and famous was Beowulf
•
The epic poem traces the adventures
of a Swedish born king named
Beowulf who slays the monster
Grendel plaguing a Saxon king.
•
Years later Beowulf will then die at
the hands of the offspring of
Grendel's mother and himself.
•
The 1,200 year old poem is one of the
greatest surviving examples of
culture.
Muhammad the Prophet
•
Born 570 orphaned when he was 8 he
lived with Bedouin traders for most of his
young life.
•
In 595 he would marry a wealthy widow
named Khadija.
•
He would pray alone in the mountains
and was visited in 610 by the Angel
Gabriel, who recited the Quran to him.
•
The foundation of the new religion was
Islam which means Submission to Allah.
•
Those who submit were known as
Muslim.
Submission
•
Throughout his life Muhammad would preach
revelations as they were granted to him.
•
This would come into opposition of those who
ruled Mecca.
•
Muhammad would then lead the tribal followers
against Mecca and conquer them and the other
Bedouins of Arabia by the end of his life in 632.
•
Quickly his followers and their converts would
spread out and beat back the Persians and
Byzantines.
•
In these newly conquered areas all would be
required to submit.
•
In 20 years the Muslims had conquered an area
as large as the old Roman Empire.
Umayyad Caliphate
•
The rulers of the new state would be
known as caliphs or successor.
•
Initially the Caliphs were chosen from the
companions of Muhammad.
•
In 644 a wealthy aristocrat named
'Uthman would establish the Umayyad
caliphate.
•
Many Muslims would believe Ali the sonin-law of Muhammad should be caliph.
•
Islam would become divided by the Sunni
the followers of 'Uthman and the Shi’a
the followers of Ali.
Tarik-Ibn-Ziyad
•
674-678 Muslim armies would besiege
Constantinople.
•
By 709 Muslim armies under the
Umayyad had broken the Vandal and
Visigoth rulers of North Africa.
•
These armies were led by a
charismatic leader named Tarik-IbnZiyad.
•
710 Tarik would plan for Muslim
armies to cross the Mediterranean
and invade the Christian west.
Eyeing Tarik’s Mountain
•
First Tarik would need to establish a
launch point for his invasion.
•
He would eye a large rock on the
southern end of the continent he would
name Jabal Tariq “Tarik’s Mountain”
known today as Gibraltar.
•
Quickly Tarik’s Berber forces would
overwhelm the Visigoth rulers in
Hispania.
•
The majority of Hispania would now fall
under the control of the Umayyad and be
renamed Al Andalus.
•
Muslim forces would move rapidly north
and would not be stopped until 732 by
the “Hammer.”