1 chapter 9 europe: early history. 2 section 9.1 classical europe (pages 236–239)

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1 Chapter 9 Europe: Early History

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Chapter 9Europe: Early History

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Section 9.1Classical Europe (pages 236–239)

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Did you know???

The ancient Greek Olympics included boxing, footracing, and the pentathlon (wrestling, long jump, running, throwing the discus, and throwing the javelin), as well as chariot racing and an event called the pancratium—a brutal mixture of boxing and wrestling.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

A. The Classical period of Greece reached its “Golden Age” in the 400s B.C.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

B. By that time, the city-state, or polis, had grown from being ruled by a king to the almost direct rule of the people, or democracy.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

C. Athens was the home of the world’s first democratic constitution.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

D. Athenian artists produced famous and influential works of philosophy, literature, and drama. Three great philosophers were Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

E. During this period, city-states like Athens and Sparta often fought against each other because they wanted to expand their empires.

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I. The Golden Age of Greece (pages 236–237)

F. In the 300s B.C. Phillip II and his son, Alexander the Great, conquered all of Greece.

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II. The Rise of Rome (pages 237–238)

A. Rome was settled sometime around 1000 B.C. and dominated much of the Italian Peninsula by 700 B.C.

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II. The Rise of Rome (pages 237–238)

B. The Romans were a mostly agricultural society and were less likely to live in cities.

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II. The Rise of Rome (pages 237–238)

C. Rome started as a monarchy, but changed to a republic. In a republic, people choose their leaders.

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II. The Rise of Rome (pages 237–238)

D. The foundation of Roman law was the Twelve Tables. The “tables” were actually bronze tablets on which laws regarding wills, courts, and property were recorded, and the laws applied to all citizens of Rome, both common and noble.

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III. From Republic to Empire (pages 238–239)

A. From 246 to 146 B.C. a series of wars transformed the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire.

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III. From Republic to Empire (pages 238–239)

B. The peoples conquered by Rome were given Roman citizenship and equality under the Roman law.

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III. From Republic to Empire (pages 238–239)

C. Under the empire, Senators lost power to emperors, or absolute rulers, of Rome. Caesar Augustus was the first Roman Emperor, and he initiated the Pax Romana.

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III. From Republic to Empire (pages 238–239)

D. Jesus Christ was born a citizen of Rome. Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire in the A.D. 300s.

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III. From Republic to Empire (pages 238–239)

E. The Roman Empire began to decline in the early A.D. 300s. Some of the causes were reform in government coming too late, plagues that killed many people, and the crumbling of the frontier defenses in the north.

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Section 9.2Medieval Europe (pages 241–244)

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Did you know???

In the Middle Ages, Christians made pilgrimages to Palestine to visit the places associated with Jesus Christ. To journey to these sites, European pilgrims might have to travel for years and put up with many hardships and frequent danger.

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I. The Rise of Christianity (pages 241–242)

A. It was during the Middle Ages that Christianity in the form of the Roman Catholic Church became a political power in Western Europe. By the A.D. 500s, popes had become the leaders of the Church.

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I. The Rise of Christianity (pages 241–242)

B. In Eastern Europe, Christianity was known as Eastern Orthodoxy and was under the leadership of the emperors in Constantinople.

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I. The Rise of Christianity (pages 241–242)

C. The early popes sent missionaries, teachers of Christianity, to every part of Europe. Through its schools, the Christian Church greatly advanced learning in Europe.

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I. The Rise of Christianity (pages 241–242)

D. Beginning in the A.D. 1000s, the Church sponsored a series of holy wars called the Crusades.

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II. The Holy Roman Empire (page 242)

A. The Germans combined their common law, the unwritten laws that come from local customs, with Roman law and founded kingdoms all over Europe— from Spain to England to Germany and Italy.

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II. The Holy Roman Empire (page 242)

B. One of the most important German kingdoms was that of the Franks.

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II. The Holy Roman Empire (page 242)

C. In 771 Charlemagne was elected king of the Franks.

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II. The Holy Roman Empire (page 242)

D. On Christmas Day in the year 800, Charlemagne was proclaimed the protector of the Christian Church in the West and was crowned the head of the Roman Empire in the West, which became known as the Holy Roman Empire.

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III. Medieval Society (pages 242–243)

A. Most people during the Middle Ages were farmers who lived under feudalism.

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III. Medieval Society (pages 242–243)

B. Under feudalism, lords would give land to a noble or knight to work, govern, and defend. In return, those who received the land swore loyalty to the lords and became their vassals.

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III. Medieval Society (pages 242–243)

C. The feudal estate and basic economic unit was called the manor.

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III. Medieval Society (pages 242–243)

D. Two types of farmers on the manor were tenants and serfs. Serfs were not as free and usually poorer than tenant farmers.

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IV. The Growth of Cities (page 244)

A. Towns in the Middle Ages were fairly independent and free of the feudal lords’ control. They served as centers of trade and manufacturing.

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IV. The Growth of Cities (page 244)

B. Manufacturing came under the control of workers’ organizations known as guilds.

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IV. The Growth of Cities (page 244)

C. Over time, some towns grew into cities and became political and religious centers as well.

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IV. The Growth of Cities (page 244)

D. Kings won the support of the townspeople by building great cathedrals and granting the residents privileges and freedoms in written documents called charters.

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Section 9.3The Beginning of Modern

Times (pages 245–249)

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Did you know???

Many of the crops grown in the world today were originally from the Americas and introduced to Europe during the Age of Exploration. These crops include corn, potatoes, tomatoes, and chocolate.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

A. The growth of cities and trade and the gradual breakup of feudalism led to the end of the Middle Ages.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

B. The Renaissance—sparked by an interest in education, art, and science—began around 1350 in cities of northern Italy and spread to other cities of Europe.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

C. Curiosity and enthusiasm for life were at the heart of the Renaissance.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

D. Noted Renaissance artists were Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo Buonarotti.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

E. During the Renaissance, writers began to use the language they spoke every day instead of Latin or French, the language of the educated.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

F. The printing press with moveable type was invented around 1450 by Johannes Gutenberg. The printing press made books more numerous and less expensive, thereby encouraging more people to learn to read and write.

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I. The Renaissance (pages 245–246)

G. Western European rulers became more powerful.

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II. The Protestant Reformation (pages 246–

247)A. Some people during the

Renaissance believed that Church leaders were more interested in wealth than religion. Others disagreed with corrupt practices of the Church.

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II. The Protestant Reformation (pages 246–

247)B. Because these Christians

“protested” Catholic teachings, they came to be called Protestants. The movement to reform, or change, the Catholic Church was called the Protestant Reformation.

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II. The Protestant Reformation (pages 246–

247)C. Two Protestant leaders were Martin

Luther, who organized his own new Christian Church that taught in German, and John Calvin, whose followers included the American Pilgrims.

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III. The Age of Exploration (page 247)

A. By the mid-1400s, Europe began to reach out beyond its boundaries in a great age of discovery and exploration.

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III. The Age of Exploration (page 247)

B. In 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain sent an Italian navigator, Christopher Columbus, westward across the Atlantic searching for another way to Asia.

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III. The Age of Exploration (page 247)

C. The Dutch, English, and French soon joined the Spanish and Portuguese in exploring and settling and trading with the Americas, Asia, and Africa.

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III. The Age of Exploration (page 247)

D. Eventually—in addition to trade goods—people, diseases, and ideas were distributed around the world in a process called the Columbian Exchange.

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IV. Revolution (pages 247–249)

A. A revolution is a great and often violent change. In America, the colonies won freedom from their European mother countries. In Europe, people fought for freedom from their kings, queens, and nobles.

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IV. Revolution (pages 247–249)

B. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, people came to feel that they should play a greater, more direct role in government. John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau believed the government should serve the people and protect them and their freedom.

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IV. Revolution (pages 247–249)

C. In Britain, kings and queens were forced to accept a constitution, a plan for government that shared power, but gave most of it to the Parliament.

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IV. Revolution (pages 247–249)

D. In the 1770s, the American colonies revolted against European control and became a model for many revolutions in Europe and the Americas.

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IV. Revolution (pages 247–249)

E. The French Revolution stimulated other peoples to demand more personal and political control over their lives.

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To Be Continued…

The Industrial Revolution, World War I, The Great Depression,

World War II, and the Cold War.