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JEOPARDY
Medieval Europe
Categories
The Franks
Feudalism
100
100
200
300
200
300
400
400
People
100
300
400
The Church
100
200
200
500
500
300
400
500
100
200
300
400
500
100
200 300
400
500
England+France
Vocabulary
500
Who was Clovis?
He was the first of the Frankish, Merovingian
kings, who accepted Christianity after winning
an important battle.
Where was Tours?
This is where the Franks stopped the Muslim
expansion into Southern France and Western
Europe.
What was the Carolingian Dynasty?
This is the name of the dynasty established by
Pepin III after giving the Pope, Lombard lands
conquered in battle.
Who was Charlemagne?
He was crowned King of the Franks and
Holy Roman Emperor on Christmas Day
800 A.D.
What was the Treaty of Verdun?
This is the Treaty that divided
Charlesmagne’s great empire into three
weaker Kingdoms.
What is primogeniture?
This is the name given to the act of awarding all
of the land, and the title to the eldest son in a
family.
What is a fief?
This is feudal grant of land.
What was the Lord’s domain?
This the lord’s third of the land that he kept for
himself.
What was chivalry?
This was the Medieval code of conduct.
“Don’t Choke!”
Daily
Double
What was manorialism, where everything was
made on the manor?
This was the economic system that developed
in Medieval Europe after the fall of Rome.
Who were the Magyars?
These people were the nomads from central
Asia, whose tactics and fighting style resembled
the Huns, settling in Eastern Europe.
Who was William the Conqueror?
He was the Norman leader who
conquered England in 1066.
Who was Thomas Becket?
He was the archbishop of Canterbury who
was murdered by the King’s soldiers after
refusing to allow Henry II to take control of
Church law and revenues.
Who was King John I?
He was the English king that was forced
to sign the Magna Carta in 1215 at
Runnymeade.
Who was Philip Augustus or Philip II?
He was the shrewd French Capetian king who
seized English lands while Richard II was off
fighting the Crusades.
Who was Pope Innocent III?
From 1198-1216, he was considered the most
powerful Pope in history and led the papacy to
its zenith in prestige and power.
What was simony?
This was the practice of paying for a position in
the church.
What was baptism, communion ( Holy
Eucharist), confirmation, penance, ordination,
matrimony, and extreme unction ( last rites)?
These were the sacraments of the Roman
Catholic Church.
Who was the Bishop?
This was the church position that was head of
the diocese and the manager or head of the
Cathedral.
What was the Benedictine Rule?
This was the oath a monk took upon joining a
Monastery pledging to always obey the abbot,
and granting that all his property was also the
property of the other monks.
“Don’t Choke!”
Daily
Double
What or who was the Archbishop of
Canterbury?
This position in the English church later
becomes the highest position and the leader of
the Anglican Church that forms around 1529
A.D.
What were shires?
These were the governmental districts in early
Anglo - Saxon England.
What was English common law?
This was the type of English law based on a
judge’s decision rather than a set of established
rules or statutes.
What was the Ile-de- France?
This was the small area around Paris
that the early Capetian kings ruled.
What was the formation of the English
Parliament ?
This was the expansion of the English Great
Council by Simon De Montfort, that allowed
merchants, and representatives of the middle
class to advise the King.
What was an interdict?
This was the Papal act of excommunicating
an entire country.
What was the Inquisition?
This was the organization formed by the
Dominicans to eliminate heresy and often
heretics.
Who were the serfs?
These were the peasants that were bound to
the land.
What or who was a vassal?
This was the person who held and worked
the land in exchange for his services in battle.
What was the Domesday Book?
This was the book or tabulation of the wealth
of England compiled for tax purposes by
William I of England from 1066- 1087?