* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 9 - High Middle Ages - Goshen Central School District
Early Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
Wales in the Early Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
England in the High Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
England in the Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
History of Jerusalem during the Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
History of Christianity during the Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
Ancien Régime wikipedia , lookup
Late Middle Ages wikipedia , lookup
Christianity in the 13th century wikipedia , lookup
Economic expansion and change Agricultural revolution Increase in food production leads to a population growth A larger population needs more goods so trade increases Leads to Commercial Revolution • More trade requires new ways of doing business. • A middle class of merchants, traders and craftsmen grow. • Centers of trade = TOWNS, get bigger World History: Connection to Today Chapter 9: The High Middle Ages (1050–1450) Section 1: Growth of Royal Power in England and France Section 2: The Holy Roman Empire and the Church Section 3: Europeans Look Outward **The Crusades Section 4: Learning, Literature, and the Arts Section 5: A Time of Crisis Growth of Royal Power in England and France • During the Middle Ages, kings and strong nobles battled with the Roman Catholic Church for supreme power. Beginning in England and France, kings began to strengthen their central power, and restrict the Church. • The struggle grew especially fierce over lay investiture, or the power to name Bishops and other church officials within the country. This fighting later resulted in the foundation of nationstates, under many different political systems. Monarchs, Nobles, and the Church During feudal times, monarchs in Europe stood at the head of society but had limited power. Nobles and the Church had as much—or more—power than the monarchs. In order to expand their power, monarchs • set up royal courts • organized government bureaucracies • developed systems of taxation • built standing armies • strengthened ties with the middle class In this way, little by little over many centuries, these monarchs built the framework for modern-day nation states. Growth of ROYAL Power *identify important names, events/dates and actions England France Evolution of English Government 1066 Norman Conquest = William of Normandy defeats Anglo-Saxons at the Battle of Hastings. [VIDEO] 1086 Domesday Book = William I uses this survey as a basis for taxation. 1160s–1180s Common Law = Henry II lays foundation for English legal system. 1215 Magna Carta = John signs this document limiting royal power and extending rights to the people. 1295 Model Parliament = Edward I summons Parliament, which includes representatives of common people. Lost war – forced to give up English-held lands in France Battle over selecting Archbishop Pope excommunicates John; England becomes fief of papacy Pope Innocent III King John 1205-1215 French King English Nobles Heavy taxes anger nobles; Forces him to sign Magna Carta in 1215 The Magna Carta (1215) Contained two basic ideas that would shape government traditions in England: 1. Nobles had certain RIGHTS, especially LEGAL rights(over time, these rights would be extended to all English citizens) 2. Made clear that the monarch must obey the law. Development of Parliament (during the 1200’s) • 1295 – Edward I summoned Parliament to approve money for his wars in France. He had reps. of the “common” people (2 knights from each county & towns reps.) join the lords and clergy • This became known as the Model Parliament. It set up the framework of England’s legislature (House of Lords = nobles & high clergy; House of Commons = knights and middle-class citizens) • The important “POWER OF THE PURSE” or right to approve any new taxes was a powerful “check” or limit to the power of the king. Edward I and Parliament: On both sides of him are his vassals, the rulers of Scotland and Wales. Clergy sit on the left and lords sit on the right. Royal Lands in France, 987-1328 Successful Monarchs in France Monarchs in France did not rule over a unified kingdom. However, under strong Capetian kings, such as Philip II and Louis IX, they slowly increased royal power. Philip II Granted charters to new towns Introduced a standing army Filled government positions with loyal middle-class officials Introduced new national tax Quadrupled land holdings Capetians Louis IX made the throne hereditary added to their lands by playing rival nobles against each other Checked up on local officials won the support of the Church Ended serfdom in his lands built an effective bureaucracy Left France an efficient, centralized monarchy Expanded royal courts Outlawed private wars. Homework – Global 9 1. Read Chapter 9 – Sections 1 & 2 2. Complete the WORKSHEETS for each Section 3. BE PREPARED (answer questions from me) TO BE THE KING OF ENGLAND OR FRANCE OR THE POPE!!! Kings vs. the Church (Popes) "What miserable drones and traitors have I nurtured and promoted in my household who let their lord be treated with such shameful contempt by a low-born cleric!" - Henry II to his knights and barons in 1170 Darkness had just fallen when four armed knights burst into Canterbury Cathedral in southern England. “Where is Thomas Becket, traitor to the king and the realm?” they shouted Becket, the archbishop of Canterbury, stepped forward. “I am here, no traitor, but a priest. Why do you seek me?” The knights served King Henry II. They came to make Becket lift the excommunication of several of Henry’s supporters. When the archbishop refused their demand, the knights struck him. An eyewitness reported the bloody scene that unfolded: “At the third blow, [Thomas] fell on his knees and elbows, offering himself a living victim, and saying in a low voice, ‘For the name of Jesus, I am ready to embrace death.” News of the murder quickly reached the king. Henry was appalled. He realized that his own words had doomed the man who had once been among his closest friends. Eight years earlier in 1162, Henry had appointed Becket as archbishop. Once in office, Becket surprised Henry by resisting his attempts to extend royal power over the clergy. A bitter quarrel flared between the two men. Each man used his power to block the other. Henry, forced to live with his careless words, had to abandon his efforts to extend royal power at the expense of the church. The Holy Roman Empire With secular and religious rulers advancing rival claims to power, explosive conflicts erupted between monarchs and the Church. • After the death of Charlemagne in 814 A.D., the Holy Roman Empire dissolved into a number of separate states. • German emperors (monarchs) claimed authority over much of central and eastern Europe and parts of France and Italy. • The hundreds of nobles and Church officials, who were the emperor’s vassals, held the real power. The Struggle Over Investiture The Holy Roman emperors and other monarchs often appointed the Church officials within their realm. This practice was known as lay investiture. Popes, such as Gregory VII, tried to end lay (non-church) investiture, which they saw as outside interference from secular rulers. The struggle over investiture dragged on for almost 50 years. Finally, in 1122, both sides accepted a treaty known as the Concordat of Worms. It stated that only the Church could appoint bishops, but that the emperor had the right to invest them with fiefs (land grants). German Emperors in Italy – challenging the Pope on his “turf” During the 1100s and 1200s, ambitious German emperors struggled with powerful popes as the emperors tried to gain control of Italy. **While the emperors were involved in Italy, German nobles grew more independent. As a result, Germany did not achieve unity for another 600 years (Global 10). In Italy, the popes asked the French to help them overthrow the German emperors. Power struggles in Italy and Sicily led to 200 years of chaos in that region. The Height of Church Power “The pope stands between God and man, lower than God, but higher than men, who judges all and is judged by no one.” — Pope Innocent III • Pope Innocent III claimed supremacy over all other rulers. He used the tools of excommunication and interdiction to punish monarchs who challenged his power. • After Innocent’s death, popes continued to press their claims for supremacy. However, English and French monarchies were becoming stronger. •The papacy (Pope) soon entered a period of decline. The World in 1050 A.D… **As Western Europe was just emerging from a period of isolation, (The DARK AGES) civilizations were thriving elsewhere. ISLAMIC EMPIRE INDIA CHINA Islamic civilization spread from Spain to India. Islamic traders went as far as West Africa. Cities thrived, despite political division. Culture flourished under Tang and Song dynasties. Hinduism and Buddhism flourished. Chinese made advances in technology. WEST AFRICA AMERICAS The Sonike people built the great trading empire of Ghana. Merchants traded gold all over the world. BYZANTINE EMPIRE Mayas cleared rain forests to build cities. Scholars studied Greek and Roman writings. Native Americans in Peru built empires. Merchants mingled with traders from the Italian states. Europeans look outward During the Middle Ages, most people in Western Europe were unaware of advanced civilizations in Asia, Africa and the Americas. The CRUSADES (1095-1291)introduced Europeans to a wider world of goods and knowledge. They led to increased trade and more powerful monarchs. About Pilgrimage • A pilgrimage was the travelling to a sacred place for the purpose of penance. • Pilgrimage has a long tradition in the Catholic Church (and in other churches and in other faiths), dating all the way back to the Roman Empire. We have pilgrim accounts dating back to the 300s and we have at least a mention of pilgrims dating to a century before that. By the Middle Ages, pilgrimage was an important part of Western culture. The sacred character of the place itself was the chief factor in its importance--the more sacred the place, the more effective the penance. Distance also figured in, because the danger of the travel and the hardships endured en route were part and parcel of the penance. • It is therefore no surprise that a pilgrimage to Jerusalem was the greatest of all pilgrimages for western Christians. The Crusades did not enhance the prestige of the Jerusalem journey, but having the city in Christian hands did facilitate travel. Even after the city was re-captured by the Muslims, the western powers were able to negotiate special arrangements for Christian pilgrims. About Pilgrimage • Because a pilgrimage was a penance, a person could not just set out on his or her own. The pilgrim needed to go through the necessary acts of confession and his pilgrimage had to be recognized and approved by a priest. Only then would the pilgrim gain the benefits of the act. • The pilgrimage to Jerusalem was not just to the city in general but was specifically and especially to visit the Holy Sepulchre (the purported site of the death and resurrection of Jesus) It was praying there that actually completed the pilgrimage. Once there, of course, the pilgrim usually visited other sites as well. And if possible, tried to take in other pilgrimage shrines en route to the Holy Land. • By the later Middle Ages, this had become so formalized that something like tour companies and a tour route had developed. Going to the Holy Land involved a relatively set itinerary, carefully controlled by Muslim officials. For the wealthy, at least, a pilgrimage could look very much like a pleasure trip. But for most, the hardships were quite real. 1095 A.D. - Pope Urban II Launches the First Crusade At the Battle of Manzikert (located in Turkey), in 1071, the Seljuk Turks (Muslims) massacred the Byzantine Empire’s armies. The feared Turks overran Asia Minor and began to threaten even the capital of Constantinople. Meanwhile, they had also conquered Jerusalem, preventing Christian pilgrimages to the holy sites. In 1074, Pope Gregory VII proposed leading fifty thousand volunteers to help the Christians in the East and possibly liberate the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Finally, in 1095, in response to desperate appeals from Eastern Emperor Alexius Comnenus, the new pope, Urban II, preached a stirring sermon at Clermont: The site is venerated as Golgotha (the Hill of Calvary), where Jesus was crucified, and is said also to contain the place where Jesus was buried (the Sepulchre). The church has been a paramount (more important than anything else) – and for many Christians the most important – pilgrimage destination since at least the 4th century, as the purported site of the resurrection of Jesus. 1095 A.D. - Pope Urban II Launches the First Crusade “A horrible tale has gone forth,” he said. “An accursed race utterly alienated from God … has invaded the lands of the Christians and depopulated them by the sword, plundering, and fire.” …When they wish to torture anyone by a base death, they perforate his navel and dragging forth the extremity of the intestines, bind it to a stake; then by blows they compel the victim to run around the stake, until the viscera gush forth and the victim falls prostrate on the ground. Others they bind to a post and pierce with arrows. Others they compel to extend their necks and then, attacking them with naked swords, attempt to cut through the neck with a single blow. What shall I say of the abominable rape of the women? To speak of it is worse than to be silent On whom therefore is the labor of avenging these wrongs and of recovering this territory incumbent if not upon you? 1095 A.D. - Pope Urban II Launches the First Crusade Toward the end, he made his appeal: “Tear that land from the wicked race and subject it to yourselves.” The people were riled (angry or fired up). They began shouting, “Deus vult! Deus vult!” (“God wills it!”) Urban II made “Deus vult” the battle cry of the Crusades. The Crusades (1095-1291) brought changes, and caused Europeans to learn more about the Middle East and Asia = TURNING POINT CAUSES • Desire to free Holy Land from Seljuk Turks (Muslims) = GOD • Desire to get rich and gain new lands = GOLD • Desire to see new places or escape troubles of home = GLORY 1099- After a long bloody fight, Christian knights captured Jerusalem. They capped off their victory with a massacre of the Muslim & Jewish residents of the city. 1204-During the Fourth Crusade, after helping Venetian merchants defeat their Byzantine trade rivals, crusaders captured and looted Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire…That’s not right? 1291 1095 Revered as a hero of Islam, Saladin united Arab forces and recaptured the holy city of Jerusalem from Christian Crusaders in the 12th century A.D. Surrender of Jerusalem The Third Crusade, waged from 1189 - 1192, followed on the capture in 1187 of Jerusalem by Saladin. After negotiations, Saladin re-opens the holy city to Christian pilgrims…What are they fighting for ? Map of the Crusades The Crusades (1095-1291) brought changes, and caused Europeans to learn more about the Middle East and Asia. EFFECTS • Increased trade (with East) • Religious hatred between Christians, Muslims AND Jews • Pope becomes more powerful in the short term • Feudal kings become more powerful in the LONG term • Serfs gain freedom as feudalism is in decline • Europeans become interested in travel (leads to Age of Discovery • People learn more about other cultures (Marco Polo) “History’s Most Successful Failure” • Christians ultimately did not regain control of the Holy Lands in Jerusalem… BUT… • European economy expanded due to increased trade with the Middle East • Helped to decrease serfdom – Allowed to pay rents in money instead of labor • Increased power of Roman Catholic Church for a brief period • Eventually led to exploration & globalization due to the desire for goods brought to Europe during & after the crusades The Crusading Spirit & The Reconquista • Muslims conquered most of Spain in the 700s • Spanish Muslims are called Moors • Christian kingdoms did survive in the north of Spain • By 1300, Christians controlled majority of Iberian Peninsula except Granada • 1469: Isabella of Castile married Ferdinand of Aragon • With their combined forces…they took Granada ( a great Muslim city) • In 1492…Granada fell to the Spanish (What else happened that year? Hmmm) • Isabella & Ferdinand started the Spanish Inquisition – a court trying heretics Learning, Literature and the Arts - Improved conditions in the 1100’s in Europe led to a revival of learning during the High Middle Ages Sparked by improving economic and political conditions, a REVIVAL of learning took place in the 1100’s. Writers across Western Europe began publishing in the vernacular (everyday language of ordinary people). (Romanesque and Gothic cathedrals served as symbols of religious devotion) Medieval Universities As economic and political conditions improved, the need for education expanded. • By the 1100s, schools to train the clergy had sprung up around the great cathedrals. Some of these cathedral schools evolved into the first universities. • The first universities were in Salerno and Bologna in Italy, and then in Oxford and Paris. • The curriculum covered the seven liberal arts: arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music, grammar, rhetoric, and logic. • Women were not allowed to attend the universities. “New Learning” and Medieval Thought An explosion of knowledge reached Europe in the High Middle Ages. Many of the new ideas were based on logic and reason (*Consider – “Been there, done that”?), and posed a challenge to Christian thought, which was based on faith. Christian scholars, known as scholastics, tried to resolve the conflict between faith and reason. Scholasticism used logic to support Christian beliefs. (Today? Intelligent Design theory?) The scholastic Thomas Aquinas concluded that faith and reason existed in harmony. Both led to the same truth, that God ruled over an orderly universe. Science made little progress in the Middle Ages because most scholars still believed that all true knowledge must fit with Church teachings. That will change…WHY? Literature, Architecture, and Art As economic and political conditions improved, Europeans made notable achievements in literature and the arts. LITERATURE New writings in the vernacular, or language of everyday people, captured the spirit of the times. The epic Song of Roland (France) Dante’s Divine Comedy (Italy) Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (England) ARCHITECTURE Towering stone cathedrals symbolized wealth and religious devotion. ART Sculptors portrayed religious themes. The Romanesque style reflected Roman influences. Stained-glass windows added to the splendor of Gothic churches. The Gothic Style was characterized by flying buttresses, or stone supports that stood outside the church. The Gothic style was applied to painting and illumination, the artistic decoration of books. An illuminated manuscript is a manuscript in which the text is supplemented by the addition of decoration, such as decorated initials, borders (marginalia) and miniature illustrations. Manuscripts are among the most common items to survive from the Middle Ages. The majority of these manuscripts are of a religious nature. However, especially from the 13th century onward, an increasing number of secular texts were illuminated. Chartres Cathedral is considered one of the finest examples in all France of the Gothic style of architecture cruciform According to legend, since 876 the cathedral's site has housed a tunic that was said to have belonged to the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Sancta Camisa. The relic had supposedly been given to the cathedral by Charlemagne who received it as a gift during a crusade in Jerusalem. In fact, the relic was a gift from Charles the Bald and it has been asserted that the fabric came from Syria and that it had been woven during the first century AD The kings of France were once crowned in Reims Cathedral. Along with the cathedrals of Chartres and Amiens, Reims is a member of the illustrious triad of "High Gothic" or "Classical" French cathedrals built in the 13th century. The interior of the cathedral is 455 ft. long, 98 ft. wide in the nave, and 125 ft. high in the centre The Black Plague • • • • • 1300s Started in Central Asia Growth of Mongol Empire was contributing factor Spread by fleas on black rats Killed 35 million people in China By 1347, the bubonic plague had spread to Europe. Before it had finished taking its toll, one in three Europeans had died. • The Bubonic Plague – Symptoms • Fever • Headaches • Chills • Weakness • Boils (buboes) The Black Death Caused Social and Economic Decline. Social Effects •Some people turned to magic and witchcraft for cures. •Others believed they were being punished by God. •Some people turned to wild pleasure, believing the end was inevitable. •Normal life broke down. •Individuals turned away from neighbors and relatives to avoid contagion. •Christians blamed and persecuted Jews. Economic Effects •As workers died, production declined. •Surviving workers demanded higher wages. As the cost of labor soared, inflation, or rising prices, broke out. •Landowners abandoned farming, forcing villagers to look for work in the towns. •Unable to find work, peasants revolted. The Hundred Years’ War 1337 - 1453 The Hundred Years’ War Between 1337 and 1453, England and France fought a series of conflicts, known as the Hundred Years’ War. CAUSES EFFECTS •English rulers wanted to keep the French lands of their Norman ancestors. •French kings wanted to extend their own power in France. •In 1337, Edward III claimed the French crown. •Once fighting started, economic rivalry and a growing sense of national pride made it difficult for either side to give up. •In France, national feeling grew and kings expanded their power. •In England, Parliament gained the “power of the purse,” and kings began looking at trading ventures overseas. •The longbow and cannon made soldiers more important and knights less valuable. •Castles and knights became obsolete. •Monarchs came to need large armies instead of feudal vassals. Turning Points of the Hundred Years’ War Longbow Joan of Arc Cannon During the early years of the war, English armies equipped with the longbow overpowered their French counterparts equipped with the crossbow. An English archer could shoot three arrows in the time it took a French archer to shoot one. From 1429 to 1431, Joan’s successes in battle rallied the French forces to victory. French armies continued to win even after she was executed by the English. The cannon helped the French to capture English-held castles and defeat England’s armies. French cannons were instrumental in defeating English forces in Normandy. • • • • Actually 116 years … not constant fighting The Plague was during the same period Between England & France England wanted to hold onto lands from their French ancestors (William the Conqueror) • neither side wanted to give in • England was winning in the beginning…due to new technologies such as the… New Military Technologies Longbow: – Can fire 3 arrows at a time – Could pierce through armor from about a football field away – Hence…armor was no longer effective The French then started to use a new invention of their own: The Cannon – Allowed the French to take English held castles – Castles then became obsolete (unnecessary) Joan of Arc • The English were beating the French • Luckily…a miracle of sorts happened • A 17 year old peasant girl started having visions from God • The real miracle is that Joan got control over part of the French military • She gets captured by the English – Told to recant or she’ll be burned – She recanted – She then recanted her recant – Tried as a witch – Burned at the stake Results of Hundred Years’ War • France wins and the Kings of France grow stronger and stronger • The English, defeated, will turn their attention to trading ventures overseas (trade companies) • Age of Feudalism & Chivalry is officially over • No need for armor … longbow pierces it • No need for castles … cannons blow through them • After the bubonic plague “dies down”, WESTERN Europe recovers and is ready for REBIRTH (Renaissance) 1300’s (Late Middle Ages) – “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” were widely portrayed on the walls of churches. Their appearance signaled the end of the world FAMINE Widespread crop failures leads to massive starvation and malnutrition WAR (Hundred Years War) • English King wants to be king of France • French Kings want to expand their own landholdings • Joan of Arc helps France ultimately win DISEASE (Pestilence) The Black Death = the Bubonic Plague One in three Europeans die Society and economy fall apart DEATH "The evil men came together without leaders armed with pikes and knives. They violated and killed all the ladies and girls without mercy, like mad dogs.” “The mortality in Sienna ...began in May. The people swelled beneath the armpits and in their groins and fell over while talking. And so they died. Great pits were dug. I, Anyulah, Vitolla buried my five children with my own hands. So many died that all believed it was the end of the world.” The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are described in the last book of the New Testament of the Bible, called the Book of Revelation of Saint John the Evangelist. The chapter tells of a scroll in God's right hand that is sealed with seven seals. Jesus Christ opens the first four of the seven seals, which summons forth the four beasts that ride on white, red, black, and pale-green horses symbolizing conquest, war, famine, and death, respectively. The Christian apocalyptic vision is that the four horsemen are to set a divine day of reckoning upon the world as harbingers of the Last Judgment. Horse Horse Represents Rider Power Rider Represents White False innocence peace Carries Conquers bow; wears crown Antichrist, The False Christ, False Religion Red Blood spilled on the battlefield Carries sword Brings war War, Destruction Black Black barren fields Carries scales Scarcity of food Pale Paleness of skin in death, decay Death Kills by war, hunger, etc Famine, Unfair Trade Death Crusades as a “successful failure” Top Bun = Introduction – “Hook me” or start with a general statement about history and events Top layer = Task #1 – DISCUSS 3 motives or REASONS why people became Crusaders or went to fight in the Crusades Middle Layer = Task #2 – EXPLAIN why the Crusades failed in their ORIGINAL (stated) purpose. Bottom Layer = Task #3 – Show (illustrate) 3 different ways that life changed in Western Europe as a RESULT of the Crusades Bottom Bun = Conclusion – Show me that you learned something OR connect the theme to something else in history