the middle ages

38
The Middle Ages So what comes to mind when we say “Middle Ages?” 1

Upload: giorgia-gismondi

Post on 13-Jan-2015

396 views

Category:

Education


5 download

DESCRIPTION

This presentation is aimed for the 3rd class of a Liceo Scientifico.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Middle Ages

The Middle Ages

So what comes to mind when we say “Middle Ages?”

1

Page 2: The Middle Ages

Knights!

2

Page 3: The Middle Ages

Castles!

3

Page 4: The Middle Ages

Feudal Warfare!!!!

4

Page 5: The Middle Ages

Chivalry- code of honor

5

Page 6: The Middle Ages

Jousting Tournaments

6

Page 7: The Middle Ages

Invaders and Raiders make life dangerous

Vikings

Huns

Neighboring Tribes7

Page 8: The Middle Ages

A dangerous time in Europe

The strong empires of Rome and Greece that protected trade routes and encouraged science and freedom were gone.

Education died out

Only the Christian Church kept education alive in monasteries– Hand copied books

9

Page 9: The Middle Ages

No Strong Central Govt.

• Lack of central government for protection leads to rise of Feudalism.

10

Page 10: The Middle Ages

What is Feudalism?

FeudalismFeudalism: “hierarchical system of government in which local lords governed their own lands but owed military service and other support to a greater lord.”

11

Page 11: The Middle Ages

Feudalism (social system)

The king had plenty of land; but hecould not control it allSo he gave land to lords (barons) in exchange for protection, loyaltyand $.

Lords then gave their land toknights in exchange for protection,service at war, loyalty and $.

Knights let serfs (peasants) workthe land and they got protection,food and shelter.

Barons

12

Page 12: The Middle Ages

Where did the people live?

In Medieval Europe, people lived on

manors= feudo = – self-sufficient communities consisting of a

castle, church, village and surrounding farmlands.

– Serfs worked land and gave part of their crops to the local (land) lord, for letting them farm the land.

13

Page 13: The Middle Ages

14

Page 14: The Middle Ages

Problems with Feudalism

• No strong central government: – King must ask his lords for knights in time of

war– King must ask his lords for money to pay for

things– Lords hold most of the power– Lords constantly fighting among themselves.

15

Page 15: The Middle Ages

How to Gain / Stay in PowerGET More LAND!!

• More land = more crops = more $

• How to Get More Land?• Conquer it

(Medieval times saw constant fighting)

• Marry into it

• Make Alliances

• Marry off your daughter to secure an alliance

16

Page 16: The Middle Ages

The Norman Conquest• In 1066, England

was invaded by Normans (Vikings from modern-day France)

1066 The Battle of Hastings –Harold, the last Anglo Saxon King of England killed–William of Normandy (William the Conqueror) takes over.–England becomes a French colony

17

Page 17: The Middle Ages

18

Page 18: The Middle Ages

William of Normandy introduced French culture and language and codified feudalism.

19

Page 19: The Middle Ages

• French was spoken in the English court for the next 200 years.

• MIDDLE ENGLISH (1100-1500) = grammatically simpler + structures and a lot of vocabulary from French.

• 1086 - William I creates Domesday Book for purposes of fair tax collection.(= Great resource for modernhistorians to learn about Medievallife)

Norman ship

William of Normandy

20

Page 20: The Middle Ages

The Plantagenet

• The last Norman King Stephen was followed by the first Angevin king

• Henry of Anjou =

• Henry II

21

Page 21: The Middle Ages

Thomas Becket (p. 41)• Archbishop of

Canterbury• Disagreement• “Murder in the

Cathedral”• Was made saint and

martyr• Pilgrimage• J. Chaucer

22

Page 22: The Middle Ages

Richard (I) the Lion Heart

• Emblem of a good king

• Chivalry (King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table)

• Legend of Robin Hood

23

Page 23: The Middle Ages

The Magna Carta

• English King John (Lackland) was an unpopular king so his nobles forced him to sign it.

• Limited powers of king. • Signed in 1215• Example of Rule of Law.

24

Page 24: The Middle Ages

Magna Carta - 1215• No royal official shall take goods from any

man without immediate payment.• No free man shall be imprisoned except by

the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.

• In future no official shall place a man on trial without producing credible witnesses.

• Courts shall be held in a fixed place at a fixed time.

• The barons shall elect a House of Lords for the creation of laws.

• The English church shall be free.• For a trivial offence, a free man shall be

fined only in proportion to the degree of his offence.

25

Page 25: The Middle Ages
Page 26: The Middle Ages

• The conflict was between France and England lasting 116 years, though there were long periods between battles.

• It was fought primarily over claims by the English kings to the French throne.

• It was started by Edward III (his mother was the daughter of the French King Philip IV).

27

Page 27: The Middle Ages

King Philip IVCharles of Valois

Philip of ValoisHe was chosen in preference to King Edward III

Isabella of France Edward II of England

Edward III

King of France

Page 28: The Middle Ages

EARLY ENGLISH VICTORIES

The battle also saw the first use of cannons on a European battlefield.

At Agincourt in 1415, the English, led by Henry V obtained an historic victory.

Henry was declared the legitimate heir to the French throne.

This left Henry’s infant son, Henry VI [r. 1422-1461], to inherit BOTH thrones.

29

Page 29: The Middle Ages

THE FRENCH RECONQUESTIn 1429, with the aid of the mysterious peasant Joan of Arc, the French king, Charles VII, was able to defeat the English at Orleans.

Joan was later burnt at stake at the request of the English and became a martyr to the French and the symbol of the French resistance.

30

Page 30: The Middle Ages

The End of the War

• By 1450 the English had lost all their major centers except Calais.

• There was not treaty, only a cessation of hostilities.

31

Page 31: The Middle Ages

What happened during the first phase of the 100 Years War?• The plague spread all over the country in 1348

(BLACK DEATH).

- Killed a third of the population of England

• A Peasant Revolt in 1381 caused by the king’s oppressive measures.

• The rise of a religious reformist movement that anticipated the Protestan Reformation of 16° century. The Lollardy Movement founded by John Wycliffe.

32

Page 32: The Middle Ages

The War of the Roses

(1455-1485)

Page 33: The Middle Ages

• The War of the Roses was a series of dynastic civil wars in England fought between 1455 and 1485 between two branches on the same family, the House of York and the House of Lancaster.

34

Page 34: The Middle Ages

Causes

• The War of the Roses began in 1455, when many barons accused Henry VI of being responsible for the defeat in the war vs. France and that the Lancaster family (Henry V, IV or VI) were not the rightful kings.

• According to the barons, the York family, cousins of the Lancasters, were truly entitled to reign.

35

Page 35: The Middle Ages

• The Lancaster emblem was a red rose and the York emblem a white rose.

• The conflict included a series of battles with alternative results.

36

Page 36: The Middle Ages

The Battle of Bosworth 1485

37

The battle of Bosworth and the defeat of Richard III by Henry Tudor (from France), planted the Tudor house on the throne of England.

Page 37: The Middle Ages

THE TUDORS

After the battle, Henry Tudor was crowned as King Henry VII, marking the beginning of the 118-year reign of the Tudor dynasty in England.

38

Page 38: The Middle Ages

Henry Vll (representing the Lancaster family) married Elizabeth of York (representing the York family).

This marriage united the two families.

39