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Title: Germanic and Medieval Europe


1
Germanic and Medieval Europe
  • Chris Anderson
  • Randolph-Henry High School

2
Germanic Rule
  • By AD 500the Roman Empire had been destroyed by
    Germanic invasions
  • Many things happened after the Germanic peoples
    took power
  • Trade decreased
  • Cities, bridges, and roads fell into disrepair
  • Law order vanished
  • Education almost disappeared
  • Money was no longer used
  • Life did not extend beyond the village

3
Germanic Rule
  • Western Europe had become a very backward place
  • The period when the Germanic tribes first took
    over the west is called
  • The Dark Ages
  • Middle Ages
  • Medieval Period
  • The era contained elements of Germanic, Roman,
    and Christian cultures

4
Merovingian Rulers
  • AD 400sthe Franks emerged as the most powerful
    Germanic group
  • The Franks settled in Gaulmodern day France and
    Western Germany
  • The early Frankish rulers were called Merovingian
    Kings
  • The Merovingian Kings held power until the 700s

5
Merovingian Rulers
  • A.) Clovis
  • 481Clovis became leader of the Franks
  • 496Clovis converted to Christianity to please
    his wife
  • The conversion identified him with Rome and his
    people
  • He was very strong because of his military
  • Upon his death, his kingdom was divided among his
    sons

6
Clovis
7
Merovingian Rulers
  • B.) Charles Martel
  • 714Charles Martel became Mayor of the Palacethe
    leading government official under the king
  • 732Martel defended France from Muslim invasion
    at the Battle of Tours

8
Charles Martel
9
Merovingian Rulers
  • C.) Pepin the Short
  • Pepin was Charles Martels son
  • 741Pepin became Mayor of the Palace
  • Pepin wanted to be king, but he had no royal
    blood
  • He used his influence with the Frankish bishops
    and the Pope to bring about dynastic change

10
Merovingian Rulers
  • The Pope made Pepin king of the FranksKing Pepin
    I
  • Pepin agreed to defend the Catholic Church
    against its enemies
  • 754Pepin helped to drive the Lombards out of
    Rome
  • Pepin received a lot of Lombard land near Rome
  • Pepin gave the land to the Pope
  • The land became the Papal States

11
Merovingian Rulers
  • D.) Charlemagne
  • 768Charlemagne became king of the Franks
  • Charlemagne was Pepins son
  • Charlemagne has also been called
  • Charles the Great
  • Carolus Magnus
  • His dynasty has been called the Carolingian
    Dynasty

12
Charlemagne
13
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • He increased the size of the empire
  • The kingdom came to include
  • Germany
  • France
  • Northern Spain
  • Most of Italy

14
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • He knew he needed to restore literacy to his
    kingdom
  • He made his royal court into a center of learning
  • By 800, Charlemagnes empire included all of
    civilized Western Europe

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16
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • 800Charlemagne traveled to Rome to defend the
    Pope against upset Roman nobles
  • Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as Emperor of
    the Romans on Christmas Day
  • Charlemagne wanted the title but was unsure of
    the Popes crowning of himwould seem like the
    Pope had power over him
  • His crowning helped to better the relationship
    between the Pope and the Holy Roman Emperor

17
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • Charlemagne used counts to help rule his vast
    empire
  • The counts solved the local problems and helped
    to get soldiers for Charlemagnes army

18
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • Charlemagne personally held his empire together
  • 814Charlemagne dies leaving his son in
    powerLouis the Pius
  • Louis was very weak
  • After Louis death, he left the kingdom to his 3
    sons

19
Merovingian Rulers
  • Charlemagne
  • Louis 3 sons constantly fought over control in
    the kingdom
  • 843the 3 brothers agreed to divide the empire in
    the Treaty of Verdun
  • Charles the BaldWestern Part (France)
  • Louis the GermanEastern Part (Germany)
  • LothairHoly Roman Empire (N. Italy and S.
    Germany)

20
  • By the end of the 800s, Charlemagnes empire lay
    in ruins
  • The nobles had gained lots of power
  • Feuds occurred between the nobles and kings
  • Muslims took over Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica
  • Slavs took central Europe
  • Magyars invaded
  • Vikings invaded

21
  • Vikings
  • Traveled in long, deck less shipsusually with
    only 1 sail
  • Known for surprise attacks and quick retreats
  • Motto if they could not steal it, they would
    burn it
  • All of Europe was afraid of the Vikings
  • They were after money and adventure
  • They showed little or no mercy on their victims
  • They explored and settled new lands

22
Early Medieval Europe
  • Feudalism dominated early Medieval Europe
  • Feudalism was a highly decentralized form of
    government stressing mutual alliances between
    monarchs and nobles in which land is given away
    in exchange for loyalty and military service
  • Feudalism started in France and moved to other
    parts of Europe in the 1000s

23
  • In Feudalism, land was given to warriors as
    payment
  • Everything on the land was also given to the
    warriors
  • The peasants that lived on the land
  • Any animals--domesticated and wild
  • Any buildings on the land

24
  • Feudalism was developed by Charles Martel while
    he was fighting the Muslims
  • Martel noticed the Muslims had an improved
    saddlethe Muslim saddle had stirrups, European
    saddles did not
  • Martel wanted to add the new saddle to his
    military and create a true cavalry
  • He had no money to pay the new soldiers, so he
    gave them land instead
  • The soldiers then could use the products from the
    land to get a weapon, a horse, and a saddle with
    stirrups
  • Trade farm productsfoodfor the materials they
    needed
  • They could trade animals or hunting privileges
    for the things they needed

25
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26
Early Medieval Europe
  • Feudalism involved 2 people
  • The Lord gave the land away
  • The Vassal received the land
  • The land that is given away is called a fief
  • The vassal had to provide certain services to the
    lord in exchange for the land

27
Early Medieval Europe
  • 1.) Provide a certain number of knights
  • Most important duty
  • The vassal would give away his land as payment to
    knights
  • Thus the vassal could become a lord
  • 2.) Serve on the lords court
  • 3.) Provide food and housing if the lord ever
    visited

28
Early Medieval Europe
  • 4.) Give to the lord if his son became a
    knight or his eldest daughter became married
  • 5.) Pay the lords ransom if he were ever
    captured

29
Early Medieval Europe
  • Most of the obligations were never carried out
  • Most vassals would raised knights not to give to
    the lord, but to fight the lord to get more land
  • Feudalism lack of centralization led to lots of
    war between the lords and vassals
  • The Catholic Churchunsuccessfullytried to limit
    the number of wars with many laws

30
  • The Catholic Church tried to limit the number of
    wars by passing laws
  • 1.) Peace of God made it illegal for anyone to
    fight in Churches
  • 2.) Truce of God outlawed battles on holidays
    and weekends
  • 3.) Other Laws other laws only allowed
    fighting to occur on 80 days of the year
  • The Church could not enforce these laws thus,
    the battles and warfare continued

31
  • At the top of the Feudal system was the King
  • At the bottom was the Knight
  • Peasant were not part of the Feudal system
    because they owned nothing

32
Early Medieval Europe
  • Castles
  • Lords were only powerful if they could protect
    themselves
  • They built castle for defense
  • Castles were a complex of different buildings

33
  • Inside the walls was a main building that was
    used for storage and housing troops, the lord,
    and his family
  • Castles had their own wells
  • Castles had their own Churches, stables, and
    storage buildings
  • Some had water filled moats to protect the
    castles from attack

34
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35
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36
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Nobility
  • The nobility included
  • Kings
  • Lords
  • Knights
  • ladies
  • Nobles had easy lives when compared to the
    peasants
  • Their castles were cold, dark, damp, and dreary
    places

37
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Nobility
  • Nobles had lots of power in their lands
  • Collect taxes and rent
  • Administer justice
  • Female nobles had very few rights
  • Forced into fixed marriages
  • Could marry at age 12
  • Main dutyto have and raise kids

38
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Nobility
  • Noblemen participated in tournaments to keep
    their skills sharp
  • Noblemen also enjoyed hunting, falconry, and
    archery

39
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40
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Knight
  • Knights came from the noble classes
  • 1.) _at_ age 7, training began
  • The boy was a page and learned skills
  • 2.) _at_ 15 the boy became a squire
  • Assists a knight in battle
  • 3.) _at_ 21 the boy became a knight

41
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Knight
  • Knights followed a code called chivalry
  • Had to be brave
  • Fight fairly
  • Keep promises
  • Defend the Church
  • Treat noblewomen with respect

42
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Manorial System
  • The nobles were wealthy because of the work the
    peasants were doing
  • The peasants lived on and worked the nobles
    lands
  • Manorial Systeman agricultural system that
    provided both the lord and peasant with food,
    shelter, and protection

43
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Manorial System
  • Manors were the lands and buildings that were
    farmed and used by both the lord and the peasants
  • Lords house
  • Pastures and fields
  • Forests
  • Peasant village

44
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Manorial System
  • The manors peasants agreed to provide services
    to the lord in return for the lords protection
  • The peasants farmed the land to produce food for
    themselves and the lord
  • The peasants served as the tool
    producersblacksmiths, carpenters, millers, etc.

45
Early Medieval Europe
  • The Manorial System
  • The manors had to be self-sufficientmaking
    everything the manor needed
  • Most peasants never left the manor
  • Some peasants were serfssimilar to slaves, but
    they could not be bought or sold

46
Early Medieval Europe
  • Agricultural Advances
  • 2 new agricultural improvements occurred in the
    Middle Ages that led to more food production
  • 1.) New Plow
  • Heavier
  • Made deeper cuts in the soil
  • 2.) Three Field System
  • Crop rotation

47
Early Medieval Europe
  • Peasant Life
  • Peasants lived very hard lives
  • Life expectancy40
  • Disease and hunger were rampant
  • Housing was small1 room with a dirt floor
  • Rarely at meat
  • Enjoyed holidayslots of entertainment and food

48
Medieval Church
  • During the Medieval period, the Catholic Church
    proved to be very powerful
  • The Catholic Church became the center of life for
    nearly all Western Europeans
  • The primary job of the Church was spiritual
  • The Church became involved in politics and social
    issues

49
Medieval Church
  • The Pope became the most powerful figure in
    Europe
  • Nearly all of Europe fell under the Popes
    control
  • All the people were Catholic, giving the Pope
    control over peasants, nobles, and kings
  • The Church taught that all people were sinners

50
Medieval Church
  • The only way to reach salvation was by gaining
    the Grace of God
  • To gain Gods grace, one had to participate in
    the sacraments
  • Sacraments
  • Baptism
  • Penance
  • Eucharist
  • Confirmation
  • Matrimony
  • Anointing of the sick
  • Holy Orders

51
Medieval Church
  • Most Europeans were very religious even though
    they truly did not understand Christianity
  • The Mass was said in Latina language that only
    the clergy understood
  • Many of the priests were uneducated
  • Most people learned about Christianity by looking
    at religious paintings, statues, and stained glass

52
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53
  • Church Organization
  • Pope
  • Archbishop
  • Bishop
  • Parish Priest

54
Medieval Church
  • There were 2 types of Catholic Clergy
  • 1.) Secular Clergy
  • Pope, Bishops, Priests
  • 2.) Regular Clergy
  • Monks and nuns

55
Medieval Church
  • 520St. Benedict created a monastery in Italy
  • He issued very strict rules for monks to follow
  • Monks could never marry
  • Monks could not own property
  • Monks had to be obedient

56
St. Benedict
57
Medieval Church
  • Monastic Life
  • Monks were very simple people
  • Clothing was simplea long, loose robe made from
    dark, coarse material
  • Ate 1 to 2 meals a day
  • Most monks had to take vows of silence
  • Lived in monasteries

58
Medieval Church
  • Monastic Life
  • Women also participated in a life devoted to
    religion
  • These women were nuns
  • Nuns lived in convents
  • Nuns are known for their gown and veil

59
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60
Medieval Church
  • Monastic Life
  • Monks and nuns lived isolated from the rest of
    the people
  • Yet, they played a large part in the peoples
    lives
  • The monks preserved classical Roman and Greek
    texts by hand copying the works

61
Medieval Church
  • Monastic Life
  • Monasteries and convents provided schools for the
    young
  • They were hospitals for the sick
  • They were hotels for the travelers
  • Monks and nuns taught the people new skills in
    carpentry, farming, and weaving

62
Medieval Church
  • Power of the Church
  • The Catholic Church was powerful both spiritually
    and politically
  • The rich gave to the Church
  • Most bishops and abbots came from the wealthy
    families
  • The Church was becoming very corrupt from the
    and power it had
  • Church leader cared less about salvation and more
    about

63
Medieval Church
  • Church Reform
  • People began to call for reform because the
    Church was becoming too secular
  • Monasteries led the reform
  • A College of Cardinals would choose the popes
  • 1073the Pope (Pope Gregory VII) outlawed the
    Practice of Lay Investiturewhen secular rulers
    appointed Church officials

64
Medieval Church
  • Church Reform
  • 1215 Pope Innocent III tried to reform the
    clergy
  • He condemned drunkenness, feasting, hawking, and
    dancing among the clergy
  • Innocent III issued Church laws to stop
    heresythe denial of the Churchs teachings
  • Heretics could be killed or excommunicated

65
Medieval Church
  • Church Reform
  • Innocent also started the Inquisitiona Church
    court designed to find, arrest, judge, and
    sentence heretics
  • The Inquisition punished heretics in several ways
  • 1.)imprisonment
  • 2.)excommunication
  • 3.)taking of property
  • 4.)execution

66
Medieval Church
  • Church Reform
  • Friarswandering preachersalso attempted to make
    reforms in the Church
  • There were two groups of friars
  • 1.) Franciscans
  • Founded by Francis of Assisi in 1210
  • Followed the simple life of Jesus
  • Had a respect for nature
  • 2.) Dominicans
  • Founded by the Spanish priest Dominic in 1215
  • Lived a life of poverty and service

67
Rise of European Monarchies
68
  • During the early medieval period, kings were
    rulers only in name--they had very little power
  • in the 1100s, many monarchs in Europe began
    building powerful states with powerful
    governments

69
Medieval England
  • England was repeatedly invaded by Germanic tribes
    from the 400s until the 1000s
  • Angles, Saxons, and Jutes
  • Danes, Vikings
  • one king was able to help England defend itself
    from Viking invasion in the 800s--King Alfred
    the Great (871-899)

70
  • Alfred was an active learner, founding schools
    and hiring translators to translate books
  • Alfred also commissioned a history of England to
    be created--Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

71
King Alfred
72
  • The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was continuously
    updated for 250 years
  • England did not fare so well after Alfreds
    death--his successors were very weak
  • 1066 England will be invaded and change hands
    after King Edward dies
  • after Edwards death, three (3) persons in Europe
    lay claim to the English throne

73
Norman Invasion
  • William, Duke of Normandy was one man who claimed
    to be the next king of England
  • he was a cousin to King Edward and a vassal to
    the king of France
  • William assembled a large force of men (6,000)
    and set sail for England
  • Harold Godwinson was another claiming the throne

74
Norman Invasion
  • Harold and William fought over the throne at the
    Battle of Hastings in 1066
  • William wins the battle and the throne
  • he becomes King William I of England
  • he will also be called William the Conqueror

75
  • Although king of England, William still wants to
    keep the loyalty of his Norman vassals back in
    France
  • to keep their loyalty, he gives them land that
    once belong to Anglo-Saxon churches and nobles
  • William also sets up a new system of tax
    collection

76
  • to get an accurate estimate of how much tax he
    could collect, he commissioned a census to count
    every person, farm, town, farm animal, etc. in
    England--a 1st for Europe--Doomsday Book
  • 1066 The Year of Conquest Making of England
    6th Edition

77
William the Conqueror
78
  • William will start a new dynasty of rulers in
    England
  • Henry I (1100-1135) Williams grandson
  • Henry I greatly increases the power of the
    monarch
  • he created a system of royal courts--he was known
    as the Lion of Justice
  • Henry II (1154-1189) he was the grandson of
    Henry I
  • he will continue to improve on the judicial system

79
  • Henry II establishes common law--law that applied
    to everyone
  • he set up a grand jury to meet with judges
  • this grand jury gave names to judges of suspected
    criminals
  • he also created a petit jury used to find the
    guilt or innocence of a person who was on trial
  • he will restructure Englands military
  • he will improve Englands tax system

80
  • Henry ran into problems with the Catholic Church
    in England
  • Henry had appointed one of his friends-Thomas
    Beckett--as archbishop of Canterbury
  • Henry does this as a way to get a powerful friend
    into the Church
  • Eventually, Henry II will order his friend to be
    murdered
  • Beckett does not back Henry when Henry tries to
    keep others from taking the throne--thus Beckett
    is murdered

81
  • The rulers that followed Henry were not as strong
    as he
  • his sons--Richard I and John
  • John looses English land to the French
  • John does many things that anger the
    people--raising taxes
  • 1215--the angry English force John to sign the
    Magna Carta
  • the Magna Carta was a charter that placed limits
    on the kings power

82
  • What the Magna Carta did
  • 1.) the king could not raise taxes without the
    consent of the Great Council
  • 2.) outlawed imprisonment without a fair trial
    by ones peers

83
  • Another important facet of English government
    will arise in the late 1100 and early
    1200s--Parliament
  • the rise of Parliament was hinged on the rising
    middle class in England
  • this middle class made their money from business,
    not farming
  • the king of England--Henry III--added knights and
    townspeople to the Great Council, eventually
    called Parliament
  • Parliament soon included members from the clergy,
    nobles, and townspeople--making Parliament almost
    a direct representation of the English people

84
  • In the 15th century (1400s) Parliament will have
    been divided into two houses or chambers
  • 1.) House of Lords
  • -constructed of nobles and clergy
  • 2.) House of Commons
  • -constructed of knights and
    townspeople

85
Henry II
John
Richard I
86
France
  • France will also develop a very strong monarchy
    during the Medieval Period
  • Frances government, however, will not be like
    the representative government that had been
    created in England

87
  • French lands will break up during the time
    period before the 1000s
  • each of these lands was ruled by different lords
    who were independent of each other
  • 987 Hugh Capet will seize the throne of France

88
  • the dynasty created by Capet would last for 300
    yearsCapetian Dynasty
  • this dynasty greatly strengthened the French
    monarchy by slowly making the French lords come
    under the kings control

89
Hugh Capet
90
  • 1100s As the French monarchs became more
    power, the number of French towns increase
  • 1108 King Louis VI becomes king
  • he will use the French townspeople to help
    strengthen the royal government
  • he gave townspeople and members of the clergy
    high positions in his court

91
  • Louis VI also gave towns the right to govern
    themselves--making the towns no longer under
    feudal obligations
  • the townspeople were now loyal to the king, not
    the feudal lords

92
  • 1180 Phillip II (1180-1223) becomes king of
    France
  • he doubles the size of France
  • he does this through marriage and by retaking
    land from England
  • he will also take land away from feudal lords
  • he appoints local officials who are loyal to the
    king
  • both of the above greatly weaken the power of the
    feudal lords

93
Philip II
94
  • 1226 Louis IX becomes king of France
  • he will pass certain laws that further weaken the
    feudal lords
  • royal courts had power over the feudal courts
  • only the king had the right to mint coins
  • he banned private wars and certain weapons
  • Louis IX was also very religious
  • he was made a saint in 1297
  • he was a very moral and chivalrous king

95
  • Phillip IV (aka. Phillip the Fair) also
    strengthened the power of the French king
  • he gained even more territory for France by
    defeating both Flanders and England
  • he began taxing the clergy
  • he created the Estates-General--composed of
    nobles, clergy, and townspeople
  • French kings will have almost absolute power in
    France

96
Holy Roman Empire
  • France and England were becoming very strong
    states during the Middle Ages
  • the HRE (modern day Germany), however, still
    stayed very weak
  • the HRE was heavily entangled in the politics of
    the Pope and Italy

97
  • In the 1000 and 1100, German kings posed real
    threats to the Popes power
  • King Otto I will try to take over parts of Italy
  • 961 Otto is able to take over Lombardy, a
    province in Italy
  • 962 Pope John XII will ask Otto for help in
    fighting the Romans who were against the pope
  • in return for Ottos help, Pope Johan made Otto
    Emperor of the Romans--Holy Roman Emperor

98
  • With this new title, Otto and his followers had
    certain powers
  • they could approve of disapprove the election of
    popes
  • the problem with this new power was that the HRE
    could depose popes while the pope had the right
    to depose kings--a struggle over who had real
    power will develop between the HRE and popes

99
  • Holy Roman Emperors had troubles developing a
    strong German state because the powerful German
    princes would not relinquish their power
  • many civil wars break out in the HRE
  • these wars weaken the power of the Emperors in
    the HRE

100
  • 1073 a major dispute occurred between the HRE
    and the pope
  • Henry IV was HRE and the pope was Pope Gregory
    VII
  • Pope Gregory outlaws lay investiture--the process
    of lay kings appointing the clergy
  • Gregory wanted to free the Church from secular
    control
  • Henry IV refused to follow the pope because he
    needed to have power over the bishops to keep
    power over the feudal lords
  • upon this, Pope Gregory excommunicated and
    deposed Henry
  • Gregory also tries to get the German nobles to
    select another ruler

101
  • Henry will give in to the Pope and traveled to
    Rome to repent (1077)
  • the struggle between the HRE and the pope will
    continue until the early 1100s
  • 1122 the HRE and pope reach a compromise in
    the city of Worms, Germany
  • this meeting stated that the HRE was allowed to
    name bishops and give bishops land
  • the pope, however, had the power to refuse to
    approve unworthy candidates for bishop ship
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