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Download World History The Middle Ages / The Rise of Europe
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The period between 500 to 1450 is known as the Middle Ages because it came between the fall of Rome and the start of the modern era The early Middle Ages was a period from 5001000 when Europe stopped advancing Trade slowed, towns emptied, leaning stopped Slowly a new civilization emerged called medieval or Latin for middle age. A blend of Greco-Roman, Germanic and Christian traditions Because Roman roads linked distant European territories classical ideas, Latin language and Christianity spread throughout Europe Europe is the second smallest in land area of the 7 continents It lies on the western end of Eurasia From 500-1000 Europe was considered frontier land or a sparsely populated underdeveloped area on the outskirts of a civilization › Resources would include 1. Dense forests 2. Rich earth for growing crops 3. Underground minerals 4. Seas for food or transportation 5. Large rivers for trade 6. Mountain streams good for water wheels Germanic tribes who migrated across Europe were farmers/herders who lived in small communities governed by unwritten customs They elected kings to led them into war They had warrior nobles who swore loyalty to the king in exchange for weapons and loot Between 400-700 the Franks emerged as the strongest of the many kingdoms kingdom In 486, Clovis, king of the Franks, conquered Gaul and rule according to Frankish traditions He converted to Christianity thus earning their support but also gained a powerful ally in the The religion of Islam appears in Arabia in 622 and a huge powerful empire would be created Muslims or believers in Islam, created a large empire stunning European Christians when Muslim armies overran up into North Africa and Spain When Muslims crossed into France Charles “The Hammer” Martel rallied Frankish warriors and defeated the Muslims at the Battle of Tours To Europeans it was a sign that God was on their side European Christians felt the Muslims were a threat and treated them with hostility even though Europeans would learn much from them since their learning had exceeded their own. Around 800, W. Europe was united by the grandson of Charles Martel, Charlemagne or Charles The Great He enjoyed battles He united much of the old Roman Empire His empire reached across France, Germany, and part of Italy and reunited much of the old Roman empire In 800, Pope Leo III called on Charlemagne for help fighting rebellious nobles in Rome The pope showed his gratitude by placing a crown on Charlemagne’s head and proclaiming him Emperor Of the Romans The enormous significance of this ceremony was: A Christian pope had crowned a German king successor to the Roman emperors This revived the idea of a united Christian community It laid the ground for power struggles between future Roman Catholic popes and German emperors It outraged the Byzantine emperor in Constantinople who saw himself as the sole Roman ruler Helped widen the split between the eastern and western Christian worlds Charlemagne tried to exercise control of his lands and create a united Christian Europe He worked closely with the church Spread Christianity to the conquered peoples He appointed powerful nobles to rule local regions To keep these provincial rulers under control by sending missi dominici or officials to check on roads, listen to grievances, and see that justice was done Charlemagne wanted to make his court a second Rome He revived Latin Learning He developed a curriculum or formal course of study Alcuin’s system would become the educational model for medieval Europe After Charlemagne died in 814 his empire The Treaty of Verdun: divided Charlemagnes empire Charles the Bald: took the western part (France) Louis the German: took the eastern portion (Germany) Lothair: who becomes the Holy Roman Emperor, took land in the middle from North Sea southward to Italy He extended Christian civilization into northern Europe He further blended the German, Roman, and Christian traditions He set up a strong efficient government He set an example to later medieval rulers on how to strengthen their own kingdoms Muslim forces still pose threat to Europe as did the Magyars and Vikings The Vikings were from Scandinavia and looted and burned communities along the coasts and rivers of Europe http://www.history.com/t opics/exploration/vikingshistory/videos/bet-youdidnt-know-vikings Ceremonies between nobles and lesser lords, exchanging vows of loyalty and service are a common scene and were a part of a new political and social system that governed medieval life In the face of invasions kings and emperor’s were too weak to maintain law and order and people needed protection A new system evolved known as Feudalism Feudalism was a loosely organized system of rule in which powerful local lords divided their landholdings among lesser lords in exchange for service and loyalty to a greater lord The relationship between lords and vassals was established by custom and traditions and by an exchange of pledges known as the feudal contract A lord granted his vassal a fief or a estate Fiefs ranged from a few acres to hundreds of square miles and included the serfs living on it As part of the feudal contract, the lord promised to protect his vassal in return a certain amount of days of military service Everyone has a place in feudal society The Monarch Powerful lords ,dukes and counts and each one had Vassals can hold fiefs from more than one lord Knights: mounted warriors Serfs: peasants tied to the land For feudal nobles, warfare was a way of life battling each other constantly for power, many nobles trained from boyhood to become a knight or mounted warrior At the age of seven a boy became a page learning to ride, fight, keep up armor and weapons Then he becomes a squire Kneeling before an older knight the squire is declared a knight As battles decreased in the 1100’s tournaments or mock battles came into fashion https://www.youtube.com/wa tch?v=wh5tsGQ9KLQ Powerful lords fortified their homes to withstand attacks with a keeps or wooden towers, fences and moats They became gradually became larger and grander Wars often centered on seizing a castle that commanded strategic locations Noblewomen played active roles since their husbands or fathers were away fighting She supervised vassals, managed the household and performed necessary agricultural/medical tasks. Even going to war Some got into politics Women’s inheritances were severely restricted. Land usually went to eldest son she could get land as part of her dowry and her husband died Nobles children were sent friends or relatives for training In latter Middle Ages knights adopted a code of conduct called chivalry This required knights to be brave, loyal and true to their work and fight fairly Chivalry also dictated how warriors treated captured knights Chivalry placed women on a pedestal, calling for women to be protected and cherished At the heart of medieval economy was the manor or lord’s estate Most manors included villages and surrounding areas Peasants made up the majority of the population Most peasants on the manor were serf who were bound to the land, they were not slaves who could be bought and sold but they also could not leave the manor without the lord’s permission Peasants and their lords were tied together by mutual rights and obligations Peasants had to work the lords land Peasants paid the lord a fee when they married, inherited land, used the mill and dues at Christmas and Easter Since they had no money they paid with products such as grain, honey, eggs, or chickens In return for a life time of labor, peasants had the right to farm several acres for themselves They were entitled to the lord’s protection from Viking raids or feudal warfare While serfs could not leave the manor they also could not be forced off The manor was generally self-sufficient, meaning the peasants produced almost everything They had no schooling, no knowledge of the world outside The typical manor included a few dozen one room huts clustered close together in a village, Nearby, would be a water mill to grind grain A tiny church and the manor house The fields surrounding the village were divided into narrow strips, each family had strips of land so that they could share good and bad land Life was harsh and short working long hours from sunup to sundown + Late winter hunger was common Usually slept in a one room hut with the animals in the winter Disease took a heavy toll, few lived past age 35 Times to celebrate were, marriages, births, Christmas, Easter, and other festivals in the Christian calendar The Medieval Christian Church emerges as the most powerful force in Europe The Church’s teachings and practices shaped the lives of Christian Europeans During the Middle Ages the church’s most important achievement was to Christianize the diverse peoples of western Europe In 597, Pope Gregory I sent Augustine to convert the Anglo Saxons of England Later missionaries spread their faith Women also spread the faith with some marrying pagan kings and converting them to Christianity In the manor villages the priest of the parish or local region was usually the only contact people had with the Church The priest celebrated mass and by administering the sacraments or the sacred rites of the Church Christians believed that faith in Christ and good deeds would lead them to salvation or everlasting life with God Priest also preached the Gospels and teachings of the church, offered assistance to the sick and needy Everyday life: they married peasants and nobles, members and baptized children and buried the dead in sacred ground The church was a social center as well as a place of worship To support itself and its parishes, the Church required Christians to pay a tithe or tax equal to a tenth of their income Daily life revolved around the The Church taught that men and women were equal before God but on earth women were viewed as weak and easily led into sin, thus they needed the guidance of men The Church tried to protect women by fining men who injured their wives Both women and men withdrew from their worldly life to behind monasteries and convents walls devoting themselves to spiritual goals About 530 AD, a monk named Benedict organized the monastery of Monte Cassino Italy He drew up a set of rules to regulate monastic life was used by monasteries and convents across Europe Under Benedictine Rule, monks and nuns took three vows 1. Obedience to the abbot or abess 2. Poverty 3. Chastity or purity Monks singing chant: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBwh1OXw6uI Monasteries & convents provided basic services for people such as hospitals and schools They gave food and lodging to travelers, especially to Christian pilgrims Some monks and nuns became missionaries St. Patrick: a monk who set up the Irish Church The Church honored many missionaries by declaring them Monasteries and convents also performed a vital role in preserving the writings of the ancient world, often copying ancient works as a form of labor Many manuscripts remained unread for centuries Venerable Beebe wrote the earliest known history of England and introduced the use of AD and BC Educated monks and nuns kept learning alive by ISAWABUNDANCEONTHETABLE Although women could not become priest they could enter convents It was a place where strong minded women could escape the limits of society. But as time goes by the Church will put more restrictions on nuns, many could needlework, make banners and teach The pope was the spiritual leader of the Roman Catholic Church As a representative of Christ on earth the pope claimed papal supremacy or authority over all secular rulers Bishops and archbishops were usually nobles Church officials were closely linked to secular rulers because churchmen were often the only educated people, The Church developed it’s own body of laws know as Cannon Law Canon laws applied to religious teachings, the clergy, marriages and morals Anyone disobeying canon law could be Heretic This meant you could not receive the sacraments or a Christian burial A powerful noble who opposed the church could face The Church tried to use its great authority to end feudal warfare by declaring periods of truce or temporary peace known as Peace of God It demanded that all fighting stop between Friday and Sunday and on religious holidays. It may have contributed to a decline in the 1100 The very success of the medieval Church brought problems, As the Church’s wealth and power grew more corrupt Some monks and nuns ignored their vows Some clergy lived in luxury Priests could marry and some treated priesthood as a family inheritance Throughout the Middle Ages there were calls for reforms in the church In the early 900’s Abbot Berno of Cluny monastery set out to end abuses and revived Benedictine Rule These reforms swept across Western Europe He declared that he would no longer allow nobles to interfere in monastery affairs In 1073, Pope Gregory VII extended the Cluniac reforms to the entire church to the entire church Over the centuries other reform movements battled corruption and worldliness 1200’s Francis of Assisi set up an order of Friars who did not live in isolated monasteries but traveled around Europe’s preaching to the poor The Franciscan order he set up preached poverty. Humility and love of God Dominic, a Spanish priest set up the Dominican order whose chief goal was to combat heresy by teaching official Roman Catholic beliefs Women joined this reform movement by creating new religious groups, most only accepted well born women whose families gave a dowry or gift Jewish communities existed across Europe and in Spain The Muslims who conquered Spain in 711 were tolerant of both Jews and Christians Muslim Spain became the center of Jewish culture and scholarship Jewish farmers migrated to other parts of Western Europe and would be know as “German Jews” For centuries Christians and Jews lived side by side in relative peace German kings gave educated Jews positions at court but taxed them heavily Late 1100’s Christian persecution of Jews increased with many church leaders charging that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus As the church grew more powerful it issued orders forbidding Jews to own land or practice most occupations yet turned to them as financial advisors and physicians Anti-Semitism or prejudice against Jews worsened, with many Christians blaming Jews for disasters or illness they could not understand Jews were barred from other professions so rulers turned to them as financial advisers and physicians In response to growing persecution, many Jews migrated to Eastern Europe There the rulers welcomed their skills and knowledge and Jewish communities would thrived in Eastern Europe until modern times The appearance of new towns was a symbol of Europe’s economic recovery This revival, which lasted from about 1000 to 1300, is called the High Middle Ages In 1000 Europe’s economic recovery was underway It began in the countryside where peasants adapted new farming technologies making fields more By the 800’s, peasants were using iron plows that could carve deeper New harnesses so they could use horses rather than oxen which would be faster and produce more food Windmills were used where there were no fast moving streams and would be used to grind the peasants grain into flour Feudal lords pushed peasants to clear forests, drain swamps and reclaim wasteland for farming and grazing Peasants also adopted the three field system :where one field would be planted with grain, the second with peas or beans and the third would be unplanted or fallow All these improvements let farmers produce more food and with more food available With the population increasing, more goods were needed and wanted With the population increasing, more goods were needed and wanted At first, traders and their customers did business at local trade fairs with took place each year near navigable rivers or where busy trade routes met People from surrounding villages, towns and castled came to trade fairs Peasants traded farm goods and animals but not luxury items and enjoyed the atmosphere The peasants had no money to buy the luxury goods that the nobles could Traders formed merchant companies that traveled in armed caravans for safety Trade fairs closed in autumn when weather began to turn bad merchants settled would wait out winter months near a castle or town with a bishop’s palace which in turn attracted artisans to sell to the merchants Slowly small centers of trade and crafts turned into cities Merchants who set up new towns would ask the local lord for a Charter or written document setting out the rights and privileges of the town In return merchants paid the or a large sum of money or fees or both Although charters did vary they almost always granted towns people the right to choose their own leaders and control their own affairs As trade revived and towns reappeared Merchants needed money so they borrowed money from money lenders In time their need for capital or money for investment To meet the changing economy, Europeans developed new ways of doing business Partnerships: a group of merchants pooled their funds to finance a large scale venture too costly for any individual Merchants also developed a system of insurance to reduce business risks for a small fee an underwriter would insure the merchant’s shipment so if it was lost or destroyed the underwriter paid the merchant most of its value. If the good arrived safely the merchant lost only the insurance payment Bills of Exchange was when a merchant deposited money with a banker in his home city and the banker issued a bill of exchange for cash in a distant city so the merchant could travel without carrying gold coins which were easily stolen As the economy changed so did society Money undermined serfdom Lords needed money to buy fine goods, as a result many peasants began selling farm products to towns people By 1300, most peasants in Western Europe were either tenant formers who paid rent for their land or hired for labor In towns, the old social order of nobles, clergy and peasants had changed, by 1000 there was a new class called the middle class that was made up of merchants, traders and artisans Nobles & clergy despised the new middle class because they were a disruptive and beyond their control During the Middle Ages the Church forbade Christians to lend money at interest As a result many Jews, who were barred from other professions became money lenders In medieval towns, merchants and artisans formed associations known as Guilds Merchant guilds dominated town life, passing laws and levying taxes, and how town money would be spent In time artisan guilds resent the powerful merchants and they organized Guild members cooperated to protect their own economic interest To prevent competition they limited membership No one but guild members could work in any trade Guild members made rules to protect the quality of their goods, regulate hours of labor and set prices. Guilds also provided social services like operating hospitals, schools and looked after the needs of their members To become a guild member meant many years of hard work At the age of seven or eight a child might become an apprentice or trainee to a guild member was not paid but given bed and board Journeymen or salaried workers did not always become guild members and were paid low wages Master Craftsman or full guild member Women worked in dozens of crafts A woman often engaged in the same trade as her father or husband Medieval towns and cities were surrounded by high walls and as the city grew, space within the walls filled to overflowing with many living outside the walls To keep up with the constant growth every few years the city might rebuild the walls further and further out A typical medieval city was a jumble of narrow streets with tall houses and large cathedrals Even rich towns had no garbage collection or sewer system. Waste was just flung into the streets so they we Trade put new ideas as well as money into circulation New riches revised the social structure New forces were at work in politics Europeans would come into contact with civilizations much more advanced than themselves From these lands came products, ideas and technologies that would transform Europe re filthy smelly, noisy and crowded 1. An estate granted to a vassal 2. A peasant bound to the lords land 3. Code of conduct adopted by knights 4. Frankish king who converted to Christianity 5. Ruler who led at the Battle of Tours________ 6. Ruler who created an empire in Europe 7. Fierce raiders from Scandinavia 8. A boy training for knighthood