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The High Middle Ages (ca. 900-1200) The High Middle Ages How can we view the Middle Ages as a time of progress and innovation? Economy and Society The Social Orders Oratores Bellatores Laboratores (SERFS) Economy and Society Personal Dependency Lords and Vassals VASSALS served lords Lords provided land Lords and peasants Peasants worked, paid dues Status was hereditary Lords provided necessities Reeve, and serfs at work Economy and Society Agricultural Innovations Three-field system Iron plowshare Horses Results Better standard of living Population doubled Economy and Society Economy and Society The Guilds Formed by urban merchants and artisans Nature of guilds *Economic: standards for products, additional regulations Also social, spiritual Guild hierarchy: masters, journeymen, apprentices Economy and Society Engaging in the Economy CREDIT Loans USURY Economy and Society Economy and Society Medieval Trade Routes Economy and Society Trade in the Far East Mongol Empire encouraged trade Marco Polo (1254-1324) Court of Kubilai Khan Venetian merchant Present at court of Kublai Khan The Description of the World (ca. 1298) Economy and Society Questions? The Emerging Western States England (9th-10th cents.) Small kingdoms Viking occupation KING ALFRED THE GREAT (r. 871-899) Raised army (878), defeated Vikings First king of all English King Alfred the Great The Emerging Western States Bronze statue of King Alfred the Great Winchester, United Kingdom The Emerging Western States The Norman Conquest The Bayeux Tapestry (ca. 1070-80) Edward the Confessor (r. 1042-1066) died Two heirs: Harold of Wessex, William of Normandy William invaded England, defeated Harold at BATTLE OF HASTINGS (1066) The Emerging Western States William the Conqueror (r. 1066-1089) First Norman king of England Distributed lands among family, Norman barons “Domesday Book” (1086): census, inventory The Emerging Western States The Emerging Western States Magna Carta (1215) Origins: King John’s conflict with France The document Defined rights, obligations of nobility King John forced to sign Major point: king is not above law! The Emerging Western States The Emerging Western States Holy Roman Empire Many principalities, under an emperor Princes governed independent states Emperors Claimed highest authority Had to respect princes’ rights A decentralized monarchy The Emerging Western States Christian Spain Muslim power weakened Christian princes seized opportunity RECONQUISTA Christian reconquest of Islamic Spain Result: Christian Iberian states emerging The Emerging Western States Questions? The Church and Christianity The Church and Christianity The “Papal Monarchy” Supreme authority of Latin Church Claimed authority over secular rulers, Greek Church Papal States The Curia Papal Tiara (“Triregnum”) Papal Court, Rome COLLEGE OF CARDINALS The Church and Christianity The Great Schism (1054) Eastern and Western Churches at odds Papal supremacy asserted at Constantinople (1054) Greek and Latin Churches excommunicated each other The Church and Christianity The Investiture Conflict (1075-1076) Pope Gregory VII prohibited lay investiture Emperor Henry IV appointed new archbishop Gregory’s response Excommunicated Henry, deprived him of office! Released HRE from allegiance to emperor! Henry submitted The Church and Christianity Pope Innocent III (r. 1198-1216) Lawyer-pope Most powerful pope ever Clash with King John Over new archbishop of Canterbury Innocent excommunicated John John submitted to pope Innocent III The Church and Christianity The Church and Christianity The Crusades Origins: Turkish threat to Byzantine Empire Council of Clermont (1095) called for recapture of Holy Land First Crusade (1095-99) Siege of Antioch Force of 50-60,000 Holy Land “Pilgrimage” salvation as reward! Victory Crusader States established The Church and Christianity Other Crusades Because Christians lost ground in Holy Land Third Crusade (1189-92) Saladin captured Jerusalem (1187) Another crusade failure Crusades over by 1300 Saladin The Church and Christianity The Franciscans Founder: Francis of Assisi (ca. 1182-1226) Son of cloth merchant Conversion experience poverty Franciscans (1215) Friars Poverty Preached penance, served lepers and poor Francis of Assisi The Church and Christianity Robe of Francis of Asissi, Basilica di S. Francesco, Assisi The Church and Christianity The Dominicans Founder: Dominic Guzman (1170-1221) Spanish missionary Disillusioned by Church’s preaching methods Preach as seen in Gospels! Dominicans (1216) Friars Preaching on foot Intellectual order The Church and Christianity Medieval Heresy Many heretical groups The Church’s response Preaching Medieval Inquisition (1231) Guide heretics to recantation, penance Variety of penalties The Church and Christianity The Church and Christianity The Sacraments Seven Essential to salvation! Performed by clergy alone The Eucharist Corpus Christi Procession Sacrament of the Mass TRANSUBSTANTIATION The Church and Christianity Questions? Culture The University Organization of master and students Specialization Students given clerical status, grouped into “nations” Culture Classroom Setting Lectures considered best method of teaching Books very expensive! Master’s role Read excerpt of text Commentary Refute objections Students’ role: commit it all to memory! Culture and Society Scholasticism Used Aristotelian logic to explain knowledge Faith, reason are harmonious! THOMAS AQUINAS (1225-1274) Dominican Summa Theologica Culture and Society Vernacular Literature Latin: language of Church, academia VERNACULAR Vernacular literature Chanson de Roland (12th cent.) Dante Alighieri The Divine Comedy (1313-1321) Beowulf (ca. 1000) Culture and Society Opening section of Beowulf “HWÆT, WE GAR-DEna in geardagum, þeodcyninga þrym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon! oft Scyld Scefing sceaþena þreatum, monegum mægþum meodosetla ofteah, egsode eorlas, syððanærest wearðfeasceaft funden; he þæs frofre gebad, weox under wolcnum weorð myndum þah, oð þæt him æghwylc ymbsittendra ofer hronrade hyran scolde, gomban gyldan; þæt wæs god cyning!” Culture and Society Romanesque Architecture Massive stone churches Sculpture on exterior Round arches “Leaning Tower,” Pisa (1053-1272) Culture and Society St. Sernin de Toulouse (1070-1120), France Exterior Culture and Society St. Sernin de Toulouse, Interior Culture and Society Gothic Architecture Chartres Cathedral (1145-1220), France Pointed arches Stained-glass windows Flying buttresses Culture and Society Chartres Cathedral Interior Stained-Glass Window, Chartres Cathedral Culture and Society Women during the High Middle Ages Still a man’s world! Rulers were mostly male Women excluded from universities Guilds run by men Significant roles for women? Noblewomen Convents Culture and Society Female Rulers Women were lords, vassals ELEANOR OF AQUITAINE (1122-1204) French landowner Wife, mother of kings Patroness of troubadours Eleanor of Aquitaine Culture and Society Eleanor of Aquitaine in Robin Hood (2010) Culture and Society Women and the Church Only role: convent Clare of Assisi (1194-1253) Clare of Assisi Loyal disciple of Francis Formed Order of Sisters of St. Francis (1212) Sisters worked alongside friars, but later cloistered Culture and Society Questions? The High Middle Ages How can we view the Middle Ages as a time of progress and innovation?