Download - The Middle Ages
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The Middle Ages
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The Middle Ages: 500 – 1500
The Medieval Period
Rise of the Middle Ages
Decline of the Roman Empire
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Western Europe
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Feudalism
Think of a chess set
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Feudalism
Based on mutual obligation
Military protection
Provide knights in times of war
service
Fiefs – land grants
Fiefs – land grants
protection
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FeudalismManors
The lords estate – The lord provided the
serfs with housing, farmland and protection
Serfs tended the lands, cared for the animals, maintained the estate
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FeudalismManors
Peasants rarely traveled more than 25 miles from the manor
Was home to 15 – 30 families
Self-Sufficient community
Peasants heavily taxed, including a tithe – a church tax of 1/10 their income
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Early Middle Ages450 - 1050
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Roman Empire Vs. Germanic TribesRome• Unified by loyalty to
public government and written law
• Orderly government
• All peoples followed the same rules
Germanic• Family ties and personal
loyalty• People lived in small
communities governed by unwritten rules and traditions
• Ruled by a Chief who led a band or warriors loyal only to him – not some emperor they’d never seen
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End of DemocracyRoman empire overran by Germanic groups with repeated
invasions and constant warfare• Breakdown of trade: money became scarce.• Cities abandoned – no longer center of economy or
administration• Population became rural.• Decline of literacy – priests and other church officials were
the few that were literate.• Breakup of unified empire• End of Democracy
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European Empire EvolvesAfter the decline of the Roman Empire small kingdoms
sprang up all over Europe.
The largest and the strongest was controlled by the Franks
• Lead by Clovis – first Christian king• Greatest king was Charlemagne
• most powerful king in Western Europe• encouraged learning
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His father, Pippin, left Charlemagne his Frankish empire when he died in 768 AD. The Franks were already very powerful when Pippin died, but Charlemagne made them more powerful still.
Charlemagne organized a centralized system of governors (counts) throughout his kingdom, sending out men he knew to keep order all over his kingdom, and then sending out other men to check up on the counts.
Charlemagne also greatly expanded the size of his kingdom. He conquered France down to the Pyrenees mountains, and even into northern Spain . He crossed the Rhine river and conquered Germany , Switzerland and Austria , even into modern Hungary. To the north, he conquered Belgium . And in 774 AD Charlemagne also conquered the Lombards in northern Italy
Rise of Charlemagne
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On Christmas Day, 800, Pope Leo III repaid Charlemagne for defeating the Lombards. As Charlemagne rose from prayer, Leo placed a crown on his head and proclaimed him "Augustus," emperor of the "Holy Roman Empire." The coronation united Christendom under Charlemagne's rule, but it troubled him. If the Pope had the power to crown Charlemagne king, did the Pope also have the right to remove the crown? When Charlemagne named his son as his successor, he presided over the ceremony himself and did not invite the Pope. What did this indirectly tell the Pope about
Charlemagne’s feelings for him?
Charlemagne on the Rise
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High Middle Ages
1050 - 1300
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A violent society
Noble’s constantly fought each other Defend estates Seize new territories Increase wealth
Kept Europe fragmented Glorification of warriors
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The Age of Chivalry
The mounted Knights were the most important part of an Army
Professional solders – main obligation was to serve in battle Rewarded with land Devoted lives to war
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The Age of Chivalry
Chivalry – a complex set of ideals, demanded that a knight fight bravely in defense of three masters
1. His feudal lord
2. His Heavenly Lord
3. His Lady
Meant to protect the weak and the poor
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The Age of Chivalry
Sons of nobles began training at an early age for knighthood
Page – at 7 they were sent to another lord to be trained
Squire – at 14 they act as a servant to a knight
Knight- at 21 they become a knight and gain experience in local wars and tournaments
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The Age of ChivalryTournaments – mock battles that combined recreation and
combat training
Fierce and bloody competitions
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The Great SchismDivision of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox
Church1054 and 1378
“Great Divide” “Western-Eastern Schism” “Great Separation”
ReasonsCharlemagne not inviting pope to the “party”
Meant he had ultimate power over the churchCaused Tension (1054 – Eastern and Western
Churches)Death of Gregory XI and the mob
Started getting along againFrench people and priests were not happyElected their own pope
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Reasons (cont’d)People Involved
Pope Urban VI – ItalyPope Clement VII – FranceOther Random pope for the rest
Council of Constance 1414 – 1418Outcomes
Kicked them all out a picked someone new
The Great Schism (cont’d)
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The Crusades (1097 – 1272)Causes:
European ExpansionismAgricultural advances increase food supply · More people = need of more land to grow more
foodRoman-Byzantine Rivalry
· Help Great Schism · Capture land back to obligate the Byzantines
· Reclaim the Holy Land· Bored Soldiers or Knights
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Europe 1000-1100
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Project Questions to Answer 1. Relate the outcome of the Crusade to
something that is happening today. (ie: 1 of the Crusades had a 3 against 1 battle. There are many countries helping us in Afghanistan right now)
2. What were the 2 sides of the battle trying to win?
3. How did this Crusade affect the lives of the people fighting?
4. How did this Crusade affect the relationship between the people of the Roman Catholic Church and the Byzantine Orthodox Church?
5. How did this Crusade affect the relationship between the people of the Roman Catholic Church and the Muslims?
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Major Events of Crusades· Crusade I 1097-1098
· Achieves all major objectives in Holy Land· Turkish threat blunted, though not
eliminated· Area not strategic to Muslims, could have
been held indefinitely with a little skill. · Initial gains lost through diplomatic
bungling.· Crusaders attempt to destabilize neighbors
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Major Events of Crusades
· Crusade II, 1147-1148· Military failure, discredits Crusaders as
military threat· Crusade III, 1189-1191
· Well-known in literature (Robin Hood)· Involved Richard I of England, Phillip II of
France, Frederick I of Holy Roman Empire· Saladin on Muslim side.
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Major Events of Crusades
Crusade IV, 1199-1204· Western-Greek relations always strained,
mutual contempt. · Crusaders sack Constantinople, 1204 · Chance to heal Great Schism utterly lost. · In 1453, when attacked by Turks,
Byzantines preferred surrender to asking Rome for aid.
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Major Events of CrusadesV Crusade 1218-1219
Capture Damietta, swap for JerusalemMuslims agreeCrusaders try to conquer Egypt, are routed
VI Crusade 1229Frederick II of Germany did little fighting
and a lot of negotiation Treaty gave the Crusaders Jerusalem and
all the other holy cities and a truce of ten years
He was widely condemned for conducting the Crusade by negotiating rather than fighting.
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Major Events of CrusadesCrusade VII 1248-1254
Led by Louis IX of FranceNearly an exact repeat of the Fifth
CrusadeCrusade VIII 1270
Led by Louis IX of FranceLouis’ brother, Charles of Anjou, king of
Sicily, had strategic plans of his own and diverted the expedition to Tunisia, where Louis died.
The last Crusader cities on the mainland of Palestine fell in 1291
One small island stronghold lasted until 1303.
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The Crusades (1097 – 1272)
· Died out – Causes for the end· Lack of interest, rising European prosperity · Repeated military defeats
· Effects· Fatal weakening of Byzantine Empire · Stimulated trade
· Weakening of Nobles but rise of middle class· Banking· Literature – Fiction Novels
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Magna CartaRichard I and John “Softsword”Lords revolted against John
Forced Him to sign the document Stated he no longer had ultimate
powerKing had to follow the laws
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Late Middle Ages
1290 - 1527
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b. The Hundred Years War• Fought between the French and English for the French throne
• Gun powder and heavy artillery
b. The Papal Schism • 3 popes• Loss of respectability due to political involvements
c. The Fall of the Byzantine Empire • Turks begin assault on Western boarders
5 Major Developments of the Late Middle Ages
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e) Black Death • The Bubonic Plague• killed 1/3 – ½ of European population
d) Famines • Climate became colder and rainier
• Harvests shrank• Population doubled• Move back to towns
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Castles and Keeps
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