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Chapter 9: Christian Societies Emerge in Europe, 600-1200

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Title: Chapter 9: Christian Societies Emerge in Europe, 600-1200


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Chapter 9 Christian Societies Emerge in Europe,
600-1200
  • AP World History

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I. The Byzantine Empire 600-1200
  • A. An Empire Beleaguered
  • 1. Muslim Arabs took the wealthy of Syria,
    Egypt, and Tunisia and converted their people to
    Islam.
  • 2. The Byzantine Empire experienced declining
    relations with the popes and princes of Western
    Europe and the formal schism between the Latin
    and Orthodox churches in 1054.

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  • B. Society and Urban Life
  • 1. Decline of urbanism with the loss of the
    middle class and there was a gap between the
    wealth of the aristocrats and the poverty of the
    peasants.
  • 2. Women were confined to the house and wore
    veils when they went out, but did rule alongside
    men from 1028-1056.
  • 3. Emperors intervened in the economy by setting
    prices, controlling the provision of grain in the
    capital, and monopolizing trade on certain
    goods.
  • 4. Western Europe began to view the Byzantine
    Empire as a crumbling power while the Byzantines
    viewed the westerners as uncouth barbarians.

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  • C. Cultural Achievements
  • 1. Legal scholars put together a collection of
    Roman laws and edicts under the title Body of
    Civil Law.
  • 2. Became basis of Western Law.
  • 3. Byzantine developed the technique of building
    domed buildings.
  • 4. In the 9th century, missionaries Cyril and
    Methodius preached to the Slavs of Moravia and
    taught their followers to write in Cyrillic
    script.

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II. Early Medieval Europe
  • A. A Time of Insecurity
  • 1. After the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th
    century Europe was fragmented, with Germanic
    Kings ruling a number dissimiliar kingdoms.
  • 2. Muslim Arabs and Berbers took the Iberian
    Peninsula and pushed into France, but were
    defeated by Charles Martel at the battle of
    Tours.
  • 3. In the 8th century the Carolingians united
    various Frankish kingdoms and at its height under
    Charlemagne, the empire included Gaul and parts
    of Germany and Italy, but it was divided by his
    sons and was never united again.
  • 4. Vikings raided England, France, and Spain in
    the late 8th and 9th centuries.
  • 5. Vikings also settled Iceland and Normandy,
    from which the Norman William the Conqueror
    invaded England in 1066.

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Charles Martel Tomb
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  • B. A Self-Sufficient Economy
  • 1. Fall of the Roman Empire led to an economic
    transformation with a decline in urbanization and
    a decline in trade.
  • 2. The medieval diet in the north was based on
    beer, lard or butter, and bread while the diet in
    the south was based on wheat, wine, and olive
    oil.
  • 3. Self-sufficient farming estates called manors
    began to develop.
  • 4. The lord of the manor had almost unlimited
    control of his serfs, but the serf conditions
    varied based on the tradition of free peasantry
    in some areas.

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  • C. Early Medieval Society in the West
  • 1. Class of nobles emerged and developed into
    mounted knights.
  • 2. Landholding and military service became
    almost inseparable.
  • 3. The need for military security including the
    stirrup, bigger horses, and the armor and weapons
    of a knight.
  • 4. These weapons were expensive and a man needed
    land to afford them.
  • 5. Kings granted a fief to a man who promised to
    supply military service.
  • 6. Kings were weak because they depended on
    their vassals.
  • 7. Kings and nobles had limited ability to tax
    and administer their realms because they could
    not tax the vast landholdings of the church.
  • 8. Women were pawns in marriage politics.

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III. The Western Church
  • A. Politics and the Church
  • 1. Popes sought to combine their religious power
    with political power by forging alliances with
    kings and finally by choosing to crown a German
    king as Holy Roman Emperor.
  • 2. Popes and kings disagreed with who had the
    power to appoint bishops.(investiture
    controversy)
  • 3. Western Europe was heir to three legal
    traditions German feudal law, canon, and Roman
    law.

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  • B. Monasticism
  • 1. Based on celibacy, devotion to prayer, and
    isolation from society.
  • 2. Benedict of Nursia supplied monasteries with
    a set of written rules that governed all aspects
    of ritual and of everyday life.
  • 3. Monasteries were centers of literacy,
    learning and refuges for widows and other
    vulnerable women.
  • 4. The head of Catholic Church had a difficult
    time overseeing monasteries so the abbey of Cluny
    worked to improve the administration and
    discipline of monasteries.

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IV. Kievan Russia, 900-1200
  • A. The Rise of the Kievan State
  • 1. Territory stretched from the Black and
    Caspian Seas in the south to the White and Baltic
    seas in the north.
  • 2. Many different people groups. (Slavs, Turks,
    Finns)
  • 3. Long-distance trade linked Russia with the
    Silk Road, Varangians were active traders on the
    rivers, and the Khazar Turks built a trading
    kingdom at the mouth of the Volga.
  • 4. Vladimir I became Grand Prince of Kiev in 980
    and chose Orthodox Christianity, adopted the
    Cyrillic alphabet, and modeled the culture of the
    Byzantine Empire.
  • 5. Food production was low due to a short
    growing season so the political power in Kiev was
    based on trade.
  • 6. Christianity spread slowly, but in the 12th
    century Christianity triumphed and the Church
    became more powerful.

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V. Western Europe Revives, 1000-1200
  • A. The Role of Technology
  • 1. Population and Agricultural production
    increased due to new technologies and to the
    appearance of self-governing cities.
  • 2. Technological innovations included the heavy
    moldboard plow, the horse collar, and the
    breast-strap harness.

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  • B. Cities and the Rebirth of the Trade
  • 1. Independent cities emerged in Italy and
    Flanders.
  • 2. Venice emerged as a dominant sea power,
    trading with Muslim ports for spices and other
    goods.
  • 3. Cities like Ghent in Flanders imported wood
    from England and wove it into cloth for export.
  • 4. Europeans began to minting silver and gold
    coins.

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VI. The Crusades, 1095-1204
  • A. The Roots of the Crusades
  • 1. Series of Christian military campaigns
    against Muslims in the eastern Mediterranean
    between 1100-1200.
  • 2. The tradition of pilgrimages, Muslim control
    of Christian religious sites, and the Byzantine
    Empires requests for help against the Muslims
    combined to make the Holy Land the focus of the
    Crusades.
  • 3. Factors causing the Crusades included
    religious zeal, knights willingness to engage in
    church-sanctioned warfare, a desire for lands on
    the part of younger sons of the European
    nobility, and an interest in trade.
  • 4. Pope Urban II initiated the First Crusade
    when he called upon the Europeans to stop
    fighting each other and the fight the Muslims
    instead.

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  • B. The Impact of the Crusades
  • 1. The Crusades had a limited impact on the
    Muslim world.
  • 2. They ended Europe's intellectual isolation
    when Arabic and Greek manuscripts gave Europeans
    their first access to the work of the ancient
    Greek philosophers.
  • 3. Significant impact on the lifestyle of
    European elites.

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VII. Comparative Perspectives
  • A. Church Differences Between Western Europe and
    Byzantium
  • 1. Western Church leaders wrote their treatises
    in Latin eastern church leaders wrote in Greek.
  • 2. The eastern church was influenced by Arab
    conquests of the 7th century.

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  • B. Political and Economic Distinctions Between
    Western Europe and Byzantium
  • 1. The Byzantine Empire initially enjoyed more
    economic prosperity and sophistication in arts
    and culture than the west.
  • 2. Christianity became embedded in Byzantine
    society before it did in the western church.
  • 3. The Byzantine Empire did not witness the
    improved military techniques, new agricultural
    technologies, population growth, and trade of
    Western Europe, leading to its decline in
    prosperity and cultural innovation in comparison
    to the west.
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