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Transcript
Middle Ages
World History
 Era of relative peace and stability
 Population growth
 Cultural developments in education and art
 Kings, nobles, and the Church shared power
 Developed tax systems and government offices
 Supported towns and middle class for power
 Feudal and manor systems
The Feudal System
Lords
(Kings and Nobles)
 Rulers needed an easier


Land
Loyalty
Vassals
(Nobles and Knights)


way to govern and
defend kingdoms
Decentralized military
and political structure
Powerful lords divided
their land among lesser
lords or vassals
Exact practices and
duties of vassals varied
from region to region
Feudal contract 
nobles gave land to
vassals in exchange for
loyalty and military aid
The Feudal Order
King
Duke
Count
Knight
Knight
Count
Knight
Knight
Duke
Count
Knight
Knight
Duke
Count
Knight
Knight
Count
Knight
Knight
Knight
Count
Knight
Knight
Count
Knight
Knight
The Manor
System
 The lord’s estate was called a manor
 It included the manor house (castle), peasant villages, and the








surrounding farmland, pastureland, and forest
Peasants were serfs and tied to the land; they couldn’t leave without
permission
Peasants worked land for the lord in addition to their own small fields
Lords gave protection to serfs from raids and warfare
Village church
Manors were self-sufficient  peasants produced everything they
needed such as food, clothing, tools, and homes
Trade was not necessary
Nobles and families lived in relative luxury
Peasants lived a hard and short life
Power of the Church
 Pope was spiritual leader  God’s
representative  infallible
 Papal supremacy  authority over
kings
 Church officials also had secular jobs
 Law and Ecclesiastical courts
 Excommunication and the interdict
 The popes and the Roman Catholic
Church became very wealthy
The Middle Class
 Wealthiest cities were in





Italy and Flanders
Merchants, traders, and
artisans formed new
social class in these
urban centers
Some political and
economic power
Created professional
guilds  weavers,
bakers, blacksmiths,
etc.
Regulated quality, work
hours, and prices
Cared for widows and
orphans
Holy Roman Emperors
 Holy Roman Empire
consisted of what is
now Germany,
eastern France, the
Netherlands, Czech
Republic,
Switzerland, Austria,
and northern Italy
 Emperors were
considered “Kings of
Germany” and
elected by seven
nobles and bishops
 Crowned by Popes
 Emperors had many
powerful vassals






Northern Italian cities relatively independent
Frederick I (HRE) tried to control Italy  led invasion
Pope and city-states united and defeated Frederick
Frederick II raised in Italy and preferred Sicily to Germany
Clashed with Papal and Italian interests
German nobles grew more powerful  Holy Roman Empire
patchwork of feudal states
 1300s and 1400s filled with disease, conflict, and war
 Black Death destroyed population and normal life
 Babylonian Captivity split Church and weakened its
authority over European rulers and society
 Hundred Years’ War consumed lives and money from
all over Europe
 Bubonic Plague
 Worldwide epidemic





1347 – 1353
Fleas and rats carried
bacteria
1/4 - 1/3 of European
population died
Wrath of God?
Economy suffered 
manorialism crumbled
Revolts by commoners
over economic trouble
Babylonian Captivity
and the Great Schism
 Pope Clement V moved papacy to
Avignon, France (Babylonian Captivity)
 Symbolized greed and corruption
 Reformers in Rome elected another Pope
(Great Schism)
 1417 - Papacy returned solely to Rome
 Moral authority of the Church is
weakened  Wycliffe and Hus
Hundred Years’ War 1337 - 1453
 Edward III of England


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claimed French throne
Longbow  Sluys, Crecy,
Poitiers, and Agincourt
English on brink of total
victory  Henry V of
England died in 1422
Joan of Arc leads French
armies  turns the tide
Captured by English and
burned at stake
1453 - English held only
the port of Calais on the
English Channel
Effects of Hundred Years’ War
 French monarchs





expanded power
Nationalism
English nobles
gained power  War
of the Roses
End of castles and
armored knights
Feudalism was now
outdated and
inefficient
Ottoman Turks
conquered the
Byzantine Empire
and captured
Constantinople
End of the Middle Ages
 Population had





started the recovery
from Black Death
Increased trade and
manufacturing
Churches and
universities became
wealthier
Nation-states
Struggles for
dominance and
hegemony
Rebirth of the
classic civilization of
Greece and Rome