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Transcript
Emerging Europe and
the Middle Ages
500-1500 A.D.
Germanic Kingdoms
• Germanic people began moving into Rome in the 3rd
century.
• Visigoths initially occupied Spain & Italy until the
Ostrogoths took control of Italy and Rome in the 5th
century.
• By 500 Western Roman empire had become a
number of states ruled by Germanic kings.
• Germanic Angles & Saxons = Anglo-Saxons moved
into Britain in 5th century.
• Clovis-Christian convert who established Frankish
kingdom -509.
Germanic Kingdoms
• Clovis converted to Christianity after calling for
Jesus’ help during battle – the enemy supposedly
fled after the plea.
• Clovis gained support of the Roman Catholic
Church. First European ruler to endorse the church.
• By 510, Clovis’Frankish kingdom stretched from the
Pyrenees Mountains to present day Germany.
• After Clovis’ death, his sons divided the kingdom.
• Germans & Romans intermarried = German
customs had an important role.
Germanic Kingdoms
• Extended families in German society worked
together & defended each other during violent
times.
• Germanic law was personal, one injuring another
led to a savage blood feuds.
• Wergild (money for a man) system was developed
to avoid bloodshed after crimes such as murder/
wrongdoer paid the injured party’s family a set
amount of money which varied by social status.
Role of the Church
• Christianity became main religion of Roman empire
by 4th century. (Constantine and Edict of Milan)
• Roman church developed a system of organization.
• Priests were head of parishes – local communities.
• Bishop was head of diocese - a group of parishes.
• Archbishop – head of groups of diocese.
• Bishop of Rome became known as Pope – the head
of what is now known as the Roman Catholic
Church.
Pope
Patriarch
Archdiocese/Archbishop
Bishop/Diocese
Priest/Parish
Roman Catholic Church
• Pope claim to power was based on the belief that Jesus
gave Peter the keys to Heaven.
• Peter was considered to be the chief apostle & the first
bishop of Rome. He was executed by the Romans under the
orders of Emperor Nero during the Christian persecutions.
• Bishops who succeeded Peter were called popes = Greek
word for father – (pappas). 265 Popes to date.
• Western Christians accepted the pope as the church’s
leader, but Eastern Christians didn’t recognize his power,
led to a schism (break).
• Gregory I strengthened Pope’s power by taking political
control of Rome & surrounding territories.
Peter 1 B.C. – 67 A.D.
Saint Peter Statue at the Vatican
Roman Crucifixion of Peter
Saint Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican
Gregory I – 540-604
Tomb of Pope Gregory I
The Vatican in Rome
The Vatican City – 110 Acres,
Population of 800
Role of Church
• Gregory I – pope from 590-604, extended papal
authority over the Western Church & actively
converted non-Christians.
• Monk = man who separates himself from the rest of
the world to become closer to God/ Monasticism is
the practice of living like a monk.
• Saint Benedict founded an order of Monks & wrote
rules for their practice.
• Benedict’s rules divided the day into activities;
emphasizing prayer & physical labor to keep monks
busy.
Role of Church
• Monks meditated & read privately/ They prayed
together seven times a day.
• All aspects of Benedict life were communal.
• Abbot (father) ruled each Benedictine monastery.
• Monks were to obey the Abbot/ took a vow of
poverty/monks’ dedication made them new heroes
of Christian civilization/ were social workers in
communities.
• Monks spread Christianity throughout Europe/Irish
& English monks were enthusiastic missionaries.
Role of Church
• Nuns = women who withdrew from the world to
dedicate themselves to God.
• Nuns lived in convents headed by abbesses.
Nuns
Monks
Charlemagne
• 600 & 700’s, Frankish kings lost their power to the
chief officers of the king’s household = mayors of
the palace (Majordomo).
• Pepin assumed the kingship in 752.
• Pepin’s son became king after his death in 768 = son
was Charles the Great – Charlemagne.
• Charlemagne = one of history’s great kings/ curious,
driven, intelligent, strong warrior, devout Christian/
was illiterate, but strongly supported learning.
• Ruled from 768 to 814/ Expanded the Frankish
kingdom into Carolingian empire = covered much of
western & central Europe.
Charlemagne
• Charlemagne established missi dominci
(messengers of the lord king), two men who were
sent to make for sure the king’s wishes were
followed.
• In 800, he was crowned emperor of the Romans/
the coronation symbolized the coming together of
the Roman, Christian, & Germanic elements that
forged European civilization.
• Carolingian Renaissance was promoted by
Charlemagne’s desire to promote learning.
• Benedictine monks played important role in revival
of learning during the Carolingian Renaissance.
Fall of Carolingian empire
• Charlemagne died in 814/ by 844 Carolingian
empire divided into 3 kingdoms by grandsons.
• Muslims invaded southern France.
• Magyars settled on the plains of Hungary.
• Vikings (Norsemen of Scandinavia) started to attack
the empire.
• Vikings were superb warriors & shipbuilders/ famed
dragon ships carrying about 50 men could go
shallow rivers to attack inland.
• By the 9th century, Vikings settled in Europe.
• 911, Frankish king gave Vikings land of Normandy.
Feudalism
• Invaders posed a threat to the safety of the people due to
decentralized government.
• People began to turn to aristocrats or nobles for
protection/ led to feudalism and manorialism.
• Manorialism – giving legal and economic power to the Lord
of the Manor. This was the main economic principle of the
European Middle Ages.
• Feudalism arose between 800-900/ similar system in AsiaSamurai.
• Vassalage = center of feudalism/ came from Germanic
society where warriors swore oath to their leader.
• Vassal = man who served a lord militarily.
Feudalism: Military
Service for Land
Feudalism
•
•
•
•
Knights = heavily armored warriors.
Chain mail = armor made of metal links or plates.
Frankish army initially set up foot soldiers in mail.
Heavily armored knights dominated warfare for
over 500 years.
• Knights had great prestige & formed much of
European aristocracy.
• Early Middle Ages (500-1000) wealth was based on
owning land/very little trade.
• Nobles gave a piece of land to Vassals in exchange
for fighting = fief.
Feudalism
• Vassals had political authority in their fief/in charge
of keeping order.
• Feudalism became complicated = kings had vassals
who had vassals.
• Feudal contract = unwritten rules that characterized
feudal relationship between king & vassal/knights.
• Vassals were to advise the lord, financial obligations
to the lord, knighting of his eldest son.
• Lord supported the vassal with land grant &
protection.
Feudal Obligations
Vassals:
Lords:
Military service.
Financial obligations to
the lord.
Serve on the lord’s
court/advise the lord.
Provide gifts for
weddings and
knighthoods.
Protection.
Land.
Justice in legal affairs.
Wardship – oversee
personal affairs and
family if vassal dies in
service.
Feudalism
• Castles = permanent residences &
fortresses/numbers increased in late middle ages
(1000-1300).
• Middle Ages = nobles dominated European society/
main concern was warfare.
• Nobles = kings, dukes, counts, barons, bishops,
archbishops.
• Knighthood = united lords & knights in aristocracy.
• Knights = trained as warriors.
• Young knights held tournaments to show their
skills- jousts became main attraction.
Castle in England (built by William
the Conquerer
Castle in Wales (built by Edward I)
Castle in Scotland
Castle in Belgium
Castle in the Netherlands
Chivalry
• 11th & 12th century, under influence of Church- chivalry
became important to knights.
• Chivalry = civilized behavior, knights were to defend the
church & defenseless people, treat captives as honored
guests, fight for glory not rewards.
• Women could own property, but were under control of
men/ first their fathers, then their husbands.
• Lady of the castle in charge of household & estate.
• Eleanor of Aquitane = Most powerful woman of Middle
Ages/married to king Louis VII of France & Henry II of
England/ 2 children became kings of England(Richard the
Lionheart and King John).
Alfred the Great Unified
The Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy
England
• King Alfred the Great united the various kingdoms
of England that had been ruled by Anglo-Saxon
kings.Took place in the 9th century.
• Alfred also managed to fight of Viking attacks
during his reign.
• Angles, Saxons, Germanic people were united.
Norman Conquest
• 10/4/1066, William of Normandy defeated King Harold of
England at the battle of Hastings.( William the Conquerer)
• He claimed he had been promised the throne by his distant
cousin King Edward.
• William was then crowned King of England.
• Norman knights received land as a fief and swore allegiance
to the king.
• Marriage of French & Anglo-Saxons led to a new English
culture.
• Normans adopted Anglo-Saxon institutions = office of
sheriff, census called Domesday Book.
• William further developed taxation & royal courts.
William I, the Conqueror
Brought Norman
Feudalism To England
Henry II
• Henry II enlarged English monarchy in 1100’s.
• Expanded the power of the royal courts & king’s
power/increased number of criminal cases tried on
the king’s court.
• Common law replaced law codes across the
kingdom (idea of precedent becomes important).
• Tried to control Church but failed.
• Thomas Beckett, archbishop of Canterbury said only
Roman Catholic Church could try clergy (gets killed).
• Four knights murdered Beckett, Henry was outraged
& backed down.
Magna Carta
• English nobles resented the growth of the king’s
power/ rebellion was raised against King John.
• 1215, King John was forced to put his seal on the
Magna Carta.
• Magna Carta = feudal document, written
recognition that the power of the king was limited.
• 13th century, under Edward I = English parliament
emerged.
• Parliament = 2 knights from every county, 2 people
from every town, and all the bishops & nobles
throughout England.
John Was
Forced
To Sign the
Magna
Carta in 1215
English Parliament
•
•
•
•
Eventually 2 houses were formed.
Nobles & church lords = House of the Lords
Knights & townspeoples = House of Commons
Parliaments granted taxes & passed laws.
Edward I Called a Parliament
Of Lords and Commons
The English Parliament
The English Parliament
French Kingdom
• Kingdom of France was 1/3 of the former
Carolingian empire by late middle ages.
• Hugh Capet was chosen to be king by west Frankish
nobles establishing the Capetian dynasty in late
900’s.
• Capetians had little power & only controlled the
land around Paris. Dukes had more power than
kings.
• Phillip II of Augustus = was the turning point in the
French monarchy.
• Phillip waged war against England & gained control
of several new French territories.
French Kingdom
• Phillip II’s successors continued to add land to the
Kingdom.
• 13th century, Louis IX ruled/ deeply religious man
who later made a saint by the Catholic church.
• Phillip IV (Phillip the Fair) was effective in
strengthening the French monarchy & expanding
the royal bureaucracy.
• Phillip IV started a French parliament/Estates
General.
Philip IV Called the EstatesGeneral to Raise Taxes
Holy Roman Empire 962-1806
• Area in Central Europe whose leaders called themselves
the Holy Roman Emperor (Combination of Christian
and Roman ideas). Otto I was the founder.
• German kings attempted to rule both German & Italian
lands but struggled to do so.
• Frederick’s attempt to conquer northern Italy caused
problems.
• Pope opposed him fearing that he wanted to include
Rome & the papal states in his kingdom.
• Northern Italian cities did not want to be his subjects.
• Alliance of Italian cities & pope defeated Frederick I in
1176.
• Frederick II also waged a war against the pope &
northern Italian cities & lost in 1235.
East & Central Europe
• Slavic tribes divided into 3 groups: western, eastern,
& southern Slavs.
• Western Slavs formed the Polish & Bohemian
kingdoms in 12th century.
• Poles, Czechs, Hungarians were all converted to
Christianity by German Monks.
• Eastern Slavic people were converted to Orthodox
Christianity by two Byzantine missionary brothers;
Cyril & Methodius.
• Croats, Serbs, & Bulgarians were converted to
Eastern Orthodoxy.
St. Cyril and St. Methodius
Russia
• Eastern Slavic people settled in present day Ukraine
& Russia.
• 8th century, Swedish Vikings began to move in
search of plunder & trade routes.
• Vikings eventually dominated the native people of
Russia.
• Vikings named it Rus = where word Russia is
derived.
Kievan Rus
• Oleg, Viking leader, settled in Kiev at the beginning
of 10th century & created principality of Kiev.
• Oleg ‘s successors expanded Kiev until it reached
territory between Baltic & Black Seas, & Danube &
Volga rivers.
• Vikings married Slavic wives & gradually assimilated
into the Slavic population.
• Rus leader, Vladimir, married sister of Byzantine
Emperor & officially accepted the Eastern Orthodox
Church for all the people in 988.
• Kievan Rus prospered up until invasions brought an
end to the 1st Russian state in 1169.
Vladimir I Chose
Eastern Orthodoxy
Mongol Rule in Russia
• 13th century, Mongols conquered Russia & forced
Russian princes to pay tribute to them.
• Alexander Nevsky, prince of Novgorood, defeated a
German army in northwest Russia in 1242.
• Khan, leader of Mongolia, rewarded Nevsky title of
grand prince.
• Nevsky descendants became the royalty of Moscow
& eventual leaders of Russia.
Alexander
Nevsky, Prince
Of Novgorod
Thanksgiving Kitty
Reign of Justinian
• 5th century, Eastern Roman empire was centered
around Constantinople
• Justinian became emperor in 527/ determined to
reestablish the Roman empire in the
Mediterranean/ reached his goals by 552
• 3 years after Justinian’s death, the Lombards
conquered Italy & most of the area that Justinian
had controlled
• Justinian created the Body of Civil Law = code of
Roman laws that was the basis of imperial law in
Eastern Roman empire until its end in 1453
Constantinople
Emperor Justinian
Beginning of Byzantine Empire
• Justinian’s conquest left Eastern Roman empire with
too much land to protect far from Constantinople
• Arab Muslims were the biggest threat to Eastern
Roman Empire
• Islamic forces defeated an army of Eastern Roman
at Yarmuk in 636 & lost Syria & Palestine
• 679, Bulgars defeated the Eastern Roman empire &
took possession of the lower Danube Valley
• 8th century, Eastern Roman empire was much
smaller (Asia minor & eastern Balkans)
Byzantine Empire
• Both a Greek & Christian state
• Greek replaced Latin as the official language
• Christian church became known as Eastern
Orthodox Church
• Byzantine emperor controlled the church & the
state
• Emperor appointed the head of the church
• Government & religious officials were all bound
together in the service of a spiritual ideal
Life in Constantinople
• Largest city in Europe in the Middle Ages
• Based on trade until the 12th century/ Europe’s
greatest center of Commerce
• During Justinian’s reign, silkworms were smuggled
from China to begin a silk industry
• Hagia Sophia = church of Holy Wisdom
• Hippodrome = arena where gladiator fights &
chariot races were held
Byzantine Empire
• Macedonians ruled the Byzantine Empire from 8761081
• Macedonians expanded the empire
• Expanded trade relations w/ Western Europe
• Late 11th century = lot of political & social disorder
EOC & Catholic Split
• Eastern Orthodox Church did not accept the pope’s
claim as head of Church
• 1054, Pope Leo IX & Michael Cerularius (Head of
Byzantine Church) excommunicated each other
• Great Schism = seperation between two great
branches of Christianity
Byzantine Art: Mosaics
and Illuminated Manuscripts
Hagia Sophia
Crusades
• 11th & 13th centuries, European Christians carried
out a series of military expeditions to take back the
holy land (Jerusalem) from the Muslims.
• Seljuk Turks won several battles & threatened
Constantinople.
• Crusades began when Pope Urban II responded to
the request of Alexius I of Byzantine Empire to
liberate Jerusalem & Palestine.
• Urban II called for crusades against infidels.
• Infidels were the non believers = Muslims and Jews.
Alexius I Asked
For Help and
Urban II Called
For the
First Crusade
First Crusades
• Mostly French knights = captured Antioch in 1098
& Jerusalem in 1099.
• Knights massacred Muslim & Jewish inhabitants.
• 4 Latin Crusader states were established that lasted
almost 100 years.
• By 1120’s, Muslims began to strike back and took
over a Crusader state, which led to a call for
another Crusade.
2nd Crusade
• The fall of a Latin Kingdom to Muslim armies led to
the call for another crusade.
• Saint Bernard of Clairvaux (Monastic leader) called
for the crusade & got the support of King Louis VII
of France & Conrad III of Germany.
• 2nd Crusade was a total failure.
• 1187, Jerusalem fell to Muslim ruler Saladin.
• 3 important rulers then agreed to begin a third
Crusade.
Louis VII and Conrad III Respond
To Bernard of Clairvaux’s Call
For a Second Crusade
Saladin’s Capture of Jerusalem
Sparked the Third Crusade
3rd Crusade
• Frederick Barbarossa of Germany, Richard I (Richard
the Lionhearted) of England, Phillip II of Augustus of
France.
• Members of the 3rd arrived in the East by 1189 &
encountered problems.
• Barbarossa drowned while swimming in a river. Phillip
II took his army home.
• English & French had success with their naval fleets
against coastal cities, but failed as they moved inland.
• Richard I negotiated a settlement with Saladin to
allow Christian pilgrims free access to Jerusalem.
Philip II, Frederick I
And Richard I Responded
th
4
Crusade
• 6 years after the death of Saladin in 1193, Pope
Innocent III initiated the 4th crusade.
• On their way to the East became involved a conflict
with the Byzantine Empire over the succession to
the Byzantine throne.
• Crusaders diverted to Constantinople & invaded the
city in 1204/ Byzantine empire was reestablished in
1261 but was never as powerful.
• Ottoman Turks eventually conquered Byzantine
Empire for good in 1453.
Osman: Founder
Of the Ottoman Turks
Sultan Mahmet II:
Conqueror of
Constantinople
The Crusades
• 9 official Crusades.
• Even a children’s crusade in 1212 (Most under age of 15)Over two-thirds
were killed, sold into slavery, or got lost.
• Ottoman Turks politically controlled the Holy Land until after WWI when
Britain set up a military administration and later divided up the territory.
(Israel – 1948)
• Crusades were more about wealth, glory, and control and less about
religion. Historians have since judged the Crusaders harshly. Even the word
“Crusade” still has a very negative connotation in the Middle East today.
• “those who survive, together with their children, are more and more
embittered against the Christian faith.” – Roger Bacon, 13th Century
Scholar
• “High ideals were besmirched by cruelty and greed. The Holy War was
nothing more than a long act of intolerance in the name of God.” – Steven
Runciman, 20th Century British Historian
Results of the Crusades
Increased wealth of Italian city-states like
Genoa and Venice.
Created animosity in the Middle East towards
the West and Christianity.
Started the breakdown of feudalism.
Improved technology.
Helped to end the Dark Ages.
Crusading Kitty