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Church and the Rise of Cities

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Church and the Rise of Cities Coach Parrish OMS Chapter 14, Section 2 * * * * * * Church in the Middle Ages Most gothic cathedrals were built between 1100 1400 AD. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Church and the Rise of Cities


1
Church and the Rise of Cities
  • Coach Parrish
  • OMS
  • Chapter 14, Section 2

2
Church in the Middle Ages
  • Most gothic cathedrals were built between 1100
    1400 AD. Gothic is a style of architecture.
    Most people in western Europe were Roman
    Catholic.
  • The Church was powerful for the reasons on the
    following slides.

3
Reims Cathedral - France
4
Reims Cathedral - Interior
5
Religious and Economic Power
  • People followed the Church. Why?
  • Promise of Rewards
  • Threat of Punishment
  • The Church gained great wealth by charging taxes.
    The Church took fiefs in exchange for religious
    services performed by clergy persons authorized
    to perform religious services.

6
Political Power of the Church
  • The Church set up laws and put together courts to
    enforce them. People who did not obey were
    threatened with excommunication - expelled from
    membership in the Church.
  • High Church officials were advisors to kings and
    lords. The Church used its power to limit
    warfare.

7
Church Organization
  • The Church was highly organized. Almost every
    village had a priest. A bishop supervised
    several priests. An archbishop supervised
    several bishops.
  • The archbishops answered to the Pope. The
    papacy, or government of the Church, was based in
    Rome.

8
Church in Everyday Life
  • The Medieval Church touched nearly all aspects of
    life. During the Middle Ages, the clergy were
    almost always in attendance to offer a blessing
    or to perform a service.
  • The clergy listened when people confessed their
    sins and forgave them.

9
Monasteries and Convents
  • Monasteries were communities where men who had
    dedicated their life to God lived together.
    Women who had dedicated their lives to God lived
    in convents.
  • Men were called monks and women nuns. They were
    better educated than most and invented new ways
    of growing crops.

10
Scholasticism
  • Scholasticism used reason to support Christian
    beliefs. The Church asked that people believe
    things on faith even though some had taken up
    Greek reason.
  • Scholasticism was a method to try and eliminate
    contradictions between the Church and philosophy.

11
Early school practicing scholasticism
12
Growth of Towns
  • As trade increased, villages turned into larger
    trading towns. Traders gathered at convenient
    locations to help their sales.
  • Manors were becoming overcrowded, and lords
    encouraged peasants to move to the growing towns.

13
Trading Routes
14
Rise of Middle Class
  • Town life was far different than manor life.
    Towns existed because of the exchange of goods
    and services.
  • A new class of people developed, made up of
    merchants, traders, and craft people. They
    became the middle class.

15
Role of Guilds
  • In many towns, the middle class formed guilds
    medieval organization of crafts, workers, and
    merchants. Example Shoemaker guild
  • Guilds set prices and prevented people from
    outside the town to sell their goods. Guild
    members paid dues which went for needy members or
    loved ones who died.

16
Role of Guilds, cont.
  • Joining a guild took time. Between the ages of 8
    and 14, a boy who wanted to learn a certain job
    became an apprentice unpaid worker being
    trained.
  • He lived with a training master for up to 7
    years. He then became a journeyman, or salaried
    worker. After time, he could join the guild.

17
Guild Coat of Arms
18
Overcrowding and Disease
  • Medieval towns and cities were extremely
    overcrowded. The lack of sanitation caused
    diseases that spread very quickly. One disease,
    the bubonic plague, wiped out 1/3 of Europes
    population in just 4 years.
  • Called the Black Death, it was spread by fleas
    living on rats.

19
Medieval Culture
  • Chivalry code of honorable conduct by which
    knights were supposed to live.
  • Troubadours traveling poets and musicians.
    They went around singing about brave missions
    performed by knights.

20
Troubadours
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