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The Middle Ages/Caulley

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Title: The Middle Ages/Caulley


1
D.Caulley
  • The later middle ages

2
The Hundred Years War
  • The Hundred Years' War was a series of conflicts
    waged from 1337 to 1453 between the Kingdom of
    England and the Kingdom of France for control of
    the French throne. Many allies of both sides were
    also drawn into the conflict. The war had its
    roots in a dynastic disagreement dating back to
    the time of William the Conqueror.

3
The course of the war
  • War of 1812
  • Course of the War
  • War was declared June 18, 1812. It was not until
    hostilities had begun that Madison discovered how
    woefully inadequate American preparations for war
    were. The rash hopes of the "war hawks," who
    expected to take Canada at a blow, were soon
    dashed. The American force under Gen. William
    Hull, far from gaining glory, disgracefully
    surrendered (Aug., 1812) at Detroit to a smaller
    Canadian force under Isaac Brock. On the Niagara
    River, an American expedition was repulsed after
    a successful attack on Queenstown Heights,
    because the militia under Stephen Van Rensselaer
    would not cross the New York state boundary.

4
French King dies no heirs
  • The crown of France under the earliest Captain
    monarchs was elective, not hereditary. There was
    no mechanism for automatic succession unless an
    heir was crowned as associate king, ready to step
    up as primary king when the previous king died.
    This procedure was very similar to the method by
    which the Germans elected a King of the Romans
    during the lifetime of the German monarch. The
    early Captains generally made sure their sons
    were crowned as associate kings with them, with
    such success that the inheritance of the eldest
    son and heir to the kingship came to be accepted
    as a matter of right. Louis VI of France was the
    first king to take the throne without having been
    crowned in his father's time however, his right
    to take the throne was initially contested.

5
Two men claim throne
  • The English claims to the French throne have a
    long and complex history between the 1340s and
    the 19th century. From 1340 to 1801, with only
    brief intervals in 136069 and 142022, the kings
    and queens of England (and, later, of Great
    Britain) also assumed the title of King or Queen
    of France.

6
English take the lead
  • On July 12, 1789, the French journalist named
    Camille Desmoulins incited the people of Paris to
    invade the arsenals and arm themselves in fear
    that King Louis XVI was about to attack the city.
    Two days later, on July 14, the people of Paris
    attacked the fortress of the Bastille and
    murdered its governor and defenders, as well as
    the city's magistrates. This violent event was
    the beginning of fundamental political changes in
    France and Europe that are known as the French
    Revolution.

7
Joan of Arc
  • Joan of Arc (French Jeanne d'Arcy,4 IPA an
    dark ca. 14125 30 May 1431), nicknamed "The
    Maid of Orleans" (French La Purcell d'Orléans),
    is a folk heroine of France and a Roman Catholic
    saint. She was born a peasant girl in what is now
    eastern France. Claiming divine guidance, she led
    the French army to several important victories
    during the Hundred Years' War, which paved the
    way for the coronation of Charles VII of France.
    She was captured by the Burundians, transferred
    to the English in exchange for money, put on
    trial by the pro-English Bishop of Beauvais
    Pierre Capuchin for charges of "insubordination
    and heterodoxy",6 and was burned at the stake
    for heresy when she was 19 years old.

8
Results of the War
  • Results of the war between Britain and the United
    States involved no geographical changes,1and no
    major policy changes. However, all the causes of
    the war had disappeared with the end of the war
    between Britain and France and with the
    destruction of the power of First Nation Indian
    tribes. American fears of the Indians ended, as
    did British plans to create a buffer Indian
    state. After Napoleon's defeat in 1814, Britain
    was no longer at war with France and there were
    no restrictions of neutral trade the British
    suspended their policy of impressments of
    American sailors, and never resumed it--but they
    insisted they still had the right to resume it.
    Americans regained their honor2 and proclaimed
    victory in what they called a "second war of
    independence" for the decisive defeat of the
    British invaders at New Orleans seemed to prove
    that Britain could never regain control of
    America, and the threat of secession by New
    England ended with the failure of the Hartford
    Convention.

9
Changes in England
  • The Black Death, a bubonic plague pandemic which
    reached Europe in 1347 spread to England in 1348,
    and killed between a third and more than half of
    the nation's inhabitants. The Black Death was the
    first and most severe manifestation of the Second
    Pandemic, caused by the Yesinia pests bacteria.
  • Originating in China, it spread west along the
    trade routes across Europe and arrived on the
    British Isles from the English province of
    Gascony. It is generally believed that The Black
    Plague was brought to England by people who had
    been infected on the European mainland who sailed
    into English ports, and by flea infested ship
    rats. The rats were the reservoir hosts of the Y.
    pests bacteria and the flea principally the
    Oriental rat flea was the primary vector.

10
Changes in France
  • On July 12, 1789, the French journalist named
    Camille Desmoulins incited the people of Paris to
    invade the arsenals and arm themselves in fear
    that King Louis XVI was about to attack the city.
    Two days later, on July 14, the people of Paris
    attacked the fortress of the Bastille and
    murdered its governor and defenders, as well as
    the city's magistrates. This violent event was
    the beginning of fundamental political changes in
    France and Europe that are known as the French
    Revolution.

11
Democracy in France will have to wait
  • Nobody now disputes that democracy is the most
    desirable type of political regime. This has not
    always been the case. On the right, distrust of
    popular sovereignty long reigned supreme. On the
    left, it was the term "socialism" that designated
    the true ideal. For many old-line republicans,
    moreover, the republic embodied political
    progress even more than universal suffrage did.
    The victorious path of the democratic ideal has
    thus long been strewn with formidable obstacles
    and subjected to severe competition from what
    were considered to be higher or truer
    understandings of the good.
  • But it is another fact, of a semantic variety,
    that commands our attention here -- namely, the
    relatively late arrival on the scene of the term
    "democracy" to designate the type of regime in
    which the people are sovereign. Indeed, it was
    not until 1848 that the word "democracy" really
    became current in political discourse in France
    -- long after the principle of popular
    sovereignty was formulated and recognized. How
    can we explain this lag between the acceptance of
    the view that a society must create its own rules
    and institutions (which since the seventeenth
    century had sustained the various theories of the
    social contract) and the passing into widespread
    usage of the word "democracy," when today we
    regard these as synonymous? The history of the
    word "democracy" conceals a mystery that we shall
    attempt to explore.
  • The first thing to note is that for a long time
    the word "democracy" was used only to designate
    an obsolete type of political system. In the
    eighteenth century, it was employed exclusively
    in reference to the ancient world. The
    Dictionaries universal of Antoine Fruitier (1690)
    defines the term as a "form of government in
    which the people have complete authority," noting
    that "democracy flourished only in the republics
    of Rome and Athens." The entries in the
    Dictionaries de Theroux (new edition, 1771) and
    the Dictionaries de l'Académie franchise (fourth
    edition, 1762) are in the same vein. These
    political definitions of democracy are especially
    succinct, emphasizing that the word has an
    archaic dimension (Athens and Rome), or else an
    exotic one (the French Academy's dictionary notes
    that "some Swiss cantons are authentic
    democracies"). If the Theroux dictionary seems to
    distinguish authority from sovereignty by
    specifying that, in a demo-racy, the people must
    exercise the former and retain the latter, only
    Pierre Michelet's old Dictionaries François
    (1680) was more detailed, specifying that
    democracy is "that form of government in which
    offices are distributed by lot." One must turn to
    Montesquieu Spirit of the Laws and Rousseau's
    Social Contract to go beyond these kinds of
    generalities.

12
Black Death
  • The Black Death was one of the most devastating
    pandemics in human history, peaking in Europe
    between 1348 and 1350, and killing between 75
    million and 200 million people.123 Although
    there were several competing theories as to the
    etiology of the Black Death, recent analysis of
    DNA from victims in northern and southern Europe
    indicates that the pathogen responsible was the
    Yersinia pestis bacterium probably causing
    several forms of plague.45

13
Where it came from
  • The Black Death is thought to have started in
    China or central Asia.6 It then travelled along
    the Silk Road and reached the Crimea by 1346.
    From there, it was probably carried by Oriental
    rat fleas living on the black rats that were
    regular passengers on merchant ships. Spreading
    throughout the Mediterranean and Europe, the
    Black Death is estimated to have killed 30 to 60
    percent of Europe's population.7 All in all,
    the plague reduced the world population from an
    estimated 450 million to a number between 350 and
    375 million in the 14th century.

14
How it spread
  • It was probably carried by Oriental rat fleas
    living on the black rats that were regular
    passengers on merchant ships. Spreading
    throughout the Mediterranean and Europe, the
    Black Death is estimated to have killed 30 to 60
    percent of Europe's population.7 All in all,
    the plague reduced the world population from an
    estimated 450 million to a number between 350 and
    375 million in the 14th century.

15
What disease was it?
16
Effect on Manor life and feudalism/How many died?
  • The black death reached Europe in 1347 spread to
    England in 1348, and killed between a third and
    more than half of the nation's inhabitants. A
    third of the European population died, from 1347
    to 1357. It all started from the rats or mice
    that carried the fleas that were carries of the
    disease. The disease started somewhere in Asia.
  • People panicked. Some though is it was a divine
    punishment, and many left the cities to find
    refuge and isolation in the countryside

17
What happened to it?
  • The people started to clean it up.

18
Magna Carta causes changes in England
19
Magna Carta
  • Magna Carta (Latin for Great Charter),1 also
    called Magna Carta Libertatum or The Great
    Charter of the Liberties of England, is an
    Angevin charter originally issued in Latin in the
    year 1215. It was translated into vernacular
    French as early as 1219,2 and reissued later in
    the 13th century in modified versions. The later
    versions excluded the most direct challenges to
    the monarch's authority that had been present in
    the 1215 charter. The charter first passed into
    law in 1225 the 1297 version, with the long
    title (originally in Latin) "The Great Charter of
    the Liberties of England, and of the Liberties of
    the Forest," still remains on the statute books
    of England and waves.

20
Who demanded this agreement?
  • On June 15, 1215, in a field at Runnymede, King
    John affixed his seal to Magna Carta. Confronted
    by 40 rebellious barons, he consented to their
    demands in order to avert civil war. Just 10
    weeks later, Pope Innocent III nullified the
    agreement, and England plunged into internal war.
  • Although Magna Carta failed to resolve the
    conflict between King John and his barons, it was
    reissued several times after his death. On
    display at the National Archives, courtesy of
    David M. Rubenstein, is one of four surviving
    originals of the 1297 Magna Carta. This version
    was entered into the official Statute Rolls of
    England.

21
Effects of Magna Carta
  • King John ruled at the beginning of the 13th
    century. He was an unpopular king for a number of
    reasons. One was that he was unsuccessful in some
    battles which made him look like a weak leader.
    Among these battles were wars over parts of
    France which had belonged to England but which
    France reclaimed during John's reign. When John
    lost these areas less money flowed into England
    through taxes. This, along with continuing
    expensive battles with France, led John to demand
    higher taxes from people in England.
  • The English barons were not happy about this, not
    just because they did not want to pay higher
    taxes but also because it was the custom in those
    days for the king to consult with the barons
    before raising taxes. John raised taxes on many
    occasions and even introduced new ones without
    consulting them.
  • John also acted against custom by choosing
    someone to be the Archbishop of Canterbury
    against the wishes of the pope who wanted someone
    else to fill this role. This angered the pope so
    much that it caused a lot of problems for King
    John. To get back in favour with the pope, John
    gave him the kingdom of England and paid him
    yearly rent to continue living there. This gave
    the barons less control over their land because
    now it was officially owned by the Church, which
    made them even angrier.
  • There were other ways in which John acted
    according to what suited him regardless of its
    effects on others. His rule was harsh and
    unpredictable and lost him the support of many
    people including the barons and the Catholic
    bishops. These two powerful groups got together
    and wrote a list of things they wanted the king
    to do, most of which were rights that they wanted
    him to guarantee them. John rejected these
    demands until the barons raised an army against
    him and overtook London.
  • This action forced John to negotiate with the
    barons. In June 1215 he met them in a field near
    London where they made him sign a document which
    contained their list of demands. This document
    was called the Articles of the Barons but an
    official version of it called the Magna Carta was
    released soon afterwards and copies were
    distributed throughout the kingdom.
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