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Church Reform and the Crusades

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Title: Church Reform and the Crusades


1
Church Reform and the Crusades
2
Serious Problems in Church
  • Between 500 and 1000, Europe was experiencing
    constant invasion from Vikings, Muslims, and
    Magyars
  • Vikings looted monasteries (centers of learning)
  • Learning declined significantly priests could
    barely read some popes had questionable morals

3
Specific Problems
  • Priests were marrying
  • Simony practice of selling positions in the
    Church
  • Lay Investiture practice of kings appointing
    bishops instead of the pope

4
Reforms Begin
  • WHERE a Benedictine monastery at Cluny in France
  • WHEN 910 A.D.
  • WHAT lived by Benedicts strict code ended
    simony and priest marriage
  • WHO Pope Leo IX began the reforms after spending
    time at Cluny (followed by Pope Gregory VII
    remember Canossa?)

5
Church Reorganization
  • In the 1100s and 1200s the church looked more
    like a kingdom with the pope at the head
  • Popes advisors were called the papal Curia
  • Curia acted as a court, developed Canon Law, made
    decisions about marriage, divorce, and
    inheritance
  • Church taxes (tithes) collected approx. 10 of
    wages
  • Hospitals started by the church

6
Preaching Friars
  • In the early 1200s, Friars traveled from place
    to place
  • They took vows of chastity, poverty, and
    obedience
  • Dominicans earliest order of friars started by
    a Spanish monk, Dominic
  • Franciscans started by St. Francis of Assisi who
    was the son of a rich merchant
  • Poor Clares helped the poor and sick

7
Cathedrals
  • New architectural style emerged called Gothic
  • Very tall buildings with large stain glass
    windows
  • Cathedrals were supposed to represent the City of
    God
  • Large spires that seemed to reach to heaven

8
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9
Crusades
  • Age of Faith began in 1093
  • Come then, with all your people and give battle
    with all your strength, so that all this treasure
    shall not fall into the hands of the Turks. . . .
    Therefore act while there is still time lest the
    kingdom of the Christians shall vanish from your
    sight and, what is more important, the Holy
    Sepulchre the tomb where Jesus was buried shall
    vanish. And in your coming you will find your
    reward in heaven, and if you do not come, God
    will condemn you.EMPEROR ALEXIUS COMNENUS

10
Goal of the Crusades
  • The Crusades had economic, social, religious, and
    political goals
  • Muslims controlled Palestine (the Holy Land) and
    threatened Constantinople

11
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12
First and Second Crusade
  • Large amount of religious unity
  • Crusaders were promised place in heaven if they
    died in battle
  • First Crusade
  • Completely unorganized
  • Mostly French, some Bohemians (Czechs), German,
    English, Spanish
  • With 12,000 men they besieged Jerusalem for one
    month July 15, 1099 capture Jerusalem

13
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14
Third and Fourth Crusade
  • The Big Three Phillip II (France), Richard the
    Lion Hearted (England), and Frederick I (Germany)
  • Phillip II wimped out
  • Frederick drowned in a river
  • Saladin successfully recaptured Jerusalem great
    Muslim warrior
  • Richard the Lionhearted vs. Saladin
  • Ended in a truce
  • Saladin agreed to allow Christians to visit holy
    places

15
The Later Crusades
  • In 1204, the Fourth Crusade to capture Jerusalem
    failed.
  • The Children's Crusade took place in 1212
  • Led by 12-year-old Stephen of Cloyes
  • An estimated 30,000 children under 18 joined him
  • Many died from cold and starvation
  • The rest drowned at sea or were sold into slavery

16
The Spanish Crusade
  • Muslims (called Moors) controlled most of Spain
    until the 1100s
  • Reconquista The long effort to drive the Muslims
    from Spain
  • 1492 the last Muslim Kingdom in Spain fell to
    Ferdinand and Isabella (Columbus sailed the ocean
    blue)
  • Inquisition a court held by the Church to
    suppress heresy

17
The Effects of the Crusades
  • Women who were widowed or left at home began to
    manage personal affairs and run businesses
  • Trade expands from Europe to Middle East
  • Popes power decreased
  • The intolerance and prejudice displayed by
    Christians in the Holy Land left behind a legacy
    of bitterness and hatred
  • Future persecution of Jews throughout Europe
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