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The Middle Ages

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Susan M. Pojer Last modified by: D830 Created Date: 5/29/2004 5:28:21 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Middle Ages


1
The Middle Ages
2
Periods
Early Middle Ages 500 1000 High Middle Ages
1000 1250 Late Middle Ages 1250 - 1500
3
Europe in the 6c
4
The Medieval Catholic Church
  • filled the power vacuum left from the
    collapse of the classical world.
  • monasticism
  • St. Benedict Benedictine Rule of poverty,
    chastity, and obedience.
  • provided schools for the children of the upper
    class.
  • inns, hospitals, refuge in times of war.
  • libraries scriptoria to copy books and
    illuminate manuscripts.
  • monks ? missionaries to the barbarians. St.
    Patrick, St. Boniface

5
The Power of the Medieval Church
  • bishops and abbots played a large part in the
    feudal system.
  • the church controlled about 1/3 of the land
    in Western Europe.
  • tried to curb feudal warfare ? only 40 days a
    year for combat.
  • curb heresies ? crusades Inquisition
  • tithe ? 1/10 tax on your assets given to the
    church.
  • Peters Pence ? 1 penny per person paid by
    the peasants.

6
A Medieval Monks Day
7
A Medieval Monastery The Scriptorium
8
Illuminated Manuscripts
9
Romanesque Architectural Style
  • Rounded Arches.
  • Barrel vaults.
  • Thick walls.
  • Darker, simplistic interiors.
  • Small windows, usually at the top of the wall.

10
Charlemagne 742 to 814
11
Charlemagnes Empire
12
Pope Crowned CharlemagneHoly Roman Emperor Dec.
25, 800
13
The Carolingian Renaissance
14
Carolingian Miniscule
15
The Rise of European Monarchies England
16
Charlemagnes Empire CollapsesTreaty of Verdun,
843
17
Feudalism
A political, economic, and social system based on
loyalty and military service.
18
Carcassonne A Medieval Castle
19
Parts of a Medieval Castle
20
The Road to Knighthood
KNIGHT SQUIRE PAGE
21
Chivalry A Code of Honor and Behavior
22
The Medieval Manor
23
Life on the Medieval Manor
Serfs at work
24
The "Renaissance" of the 12c
25
William the ConquerorBattle of Hastings,
1066(Bayeaux Tapestry)
26
Norman Conquest
  • Doomsday Book
  • Creates Shire Reeves Sheriffs
  • Gave Land to the Catholic Church
  • Created the Great Council

27
Evolution of Englands Political System
  • Henry I
  • Williams son.
  • set up a court system.
  • Exchequer ? dept. of royal finances.
  • Henry II
  • established the principle of common law
    throughout the kingdom.
  • grand jury.
  • trial by jury.
  • Had Thomas Becket Murdered

28
King Richard The Lion Heart
  • Took Throne after Henry II died
  • Spent much time and money fighting in the
    crusades
  • His brother Prince John assumed control in
    Richards absence.
  • Richard does return to England but is not able to
    manage the country well
  • John will take over upon Richards death
  • Was the story of Robin Hood real?

29
Magna Carta, 1215
  • King John I
  • Runnymeade
  • Great Charter
  • monarchs were not above the law.
  • kings had to consult a council of
    advisors.
  • kings could not tax arbitrarily.

30
The Beginnings of the British Parliament
  • Great Council
  • middle class merchants, townspeople burgesses
    in Eng., bourgeoisie in Fr., burghers in Ger.
    were added at the end of the 13c.
  • eventually called Parliament.
  • by 1400, two chambers evolved
  • House of Lords ? nobles clergy.
  • House of Commons ? knights and burgesses.

31
The Rise of European Monarchies
France
32
Capetian Dynasty
  • 843- Carolingian Dynasty was divided into 3 parts
  • In the west rose Hugh Capet
  • Kings did not have much power
  • Philip II Augustus
  • Turning point extended French monarchy
  • Captured Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Aquitaine

33
Pope Urban II Preaching a Crusade
34
Setting Out on Crusade
35
Christian Crusades East and West
36
High Middle Ages Church
  • Pope Gregory VII- elected in 1073
  • Extended authority over Christian World
  • Appointed its own clergy to power and ran its own
    affairs
  • Succeed by Pope Innocent III
  • Height of Church power- 1200s

37
Rise of Orders
  • Cistercians strict simple diet no decorations,
    spiritual idea
  • Dominicans defend church teachings from heresy
  • Franciscans live among the people providing aid
    to the poor
  • St. Francis of Assisi
  • Born wealthy, devoted life to poverty, humility,
    and devotion to Jesus
  • Opposed the use of Relics

38
Life on the Medieval Manor
Serfs at work
39
Medieval Trade
40
Late Medieval Town Dwellings
41
Rise of Universities
  • 1st European university began in Bologna- early
    1300s
  • The University of Paris
  • Oxford
  • 80 universities by 1500
  • St. Thomas Aquinas- wrote the Summa Theologica

42
Medieval Guilds
Guild Hall
  • Commercial Monopoly
  • Controlled membership apprentice ? journeyman
    ? master craftsman
  • Controlled quality of the product masterpiece.
  • Controlled prices

43
Medieval Guilds A Goldsmiths Shop
44
Crest of a Coopers Guild
45
The Hundred Years' War (1347-1453)
46
100 Years War
  • France vs. England
  • French land controlled by England
  • National identity issues
  • Issues of succession
  • The War was a series of short raids and
    expeditions punctuated by a few major battles,
    marked off by truces or ineffective treaties.

47
French Advantages
  • Population of about 16,000,000.
  • Far richer and more populous than England.
  • At one point, the French fielded an army of over
    50,000 ? at most, Britain mustered only 32,000.

48
British Advantages
  • Weapons Technologies.
  • In almost every engagement, the English were
    outnumbered.
  • Britains most successful strategies
  • Avoid pitched battles.
  • Engage in quick, profitable raids
  • Steal what you can.
  • Destroy everything else.
  • Capture enemy knights to hold for ransom.

49
The Longbow as a Weapon
  • The use of the English defensive position was the
    use of the longbow.
  • Its arrows had more penetrating power than a bolt
    from a crossbow.
  • Could pierce an inch of wood or the armor of a
    knight at 200 yards!
  • A longbow could be fired more rapidly.
  • 6 arrows per minute.

50
King Henry V (r. 1412-1422)
  • Renewed his familys claim to the French throne.
  • At Agincourt in 1415, the English, led by Henry
    himself, goaded a larger French army into
    attacking a fortified English position.
  • With the aid of the dukes of Burgundy, Henry
    gained control over Normandy, Paris, and much of
    northern France!

51
The French Reconquest
  • The two kings deaths ushered in the final stage
    of the 100 Years War 1422-1453.
  • Even though in 1428 the military and political
    power seemed firmly in British hands, the French
    reversed the situation.
  • In 1429, with the aid of the mysterious Joan of
    Arc, the French king, Charles VII, was able to
    raise the English siege of Orleans.
  • This began the reconquest of the north of France.

52
Joan of Arc (1412-1432)
  • The daughter of prosperous peasants from an area
    of Burgundy that had suffered under the English.
  • Like many medieval mystics, she reported regular
    visions of divine revelation.
  • Her voices told her to go to the king and
    assist him in driving out the English.
  • She dressed like a man and was Charles most
    charismatic and feared military leader!

53
Joan Announces the Capture of Orleans to the King
54
Joan of Arc (1412-1432)
  • She brought inspiration and a sense of national
    identity and self-confidence.
  • With her aid, the king was crowned at Reims
    ending the disinheritance.
  • She was captured during an attack on Paris and
    fell into English hands.
  • Because of her unnatural dress and claim to
    divine guidance, she was condemned and burned as
    a heretic in 1432.
  • She instantly became a symbol of French
    resistance.

55
The End of the War
  • Despite Joans capture, the French advance
    continued.
  • By 1450 the English had lost all their major
    centers except Calais.
  • In 1453 the French armies captured an
    English-held fortress.
  • This was the last battle of the war.
  • There was not treaty, only a cessation of
    hostilities.

56
France Becomes Unified!
France in 1453
France in 1337
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