Early Middle Ages PowerPoint
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The Middle Ages
The Collapse of Trade and Towns
• Warfare disrupted trade.
• Towns and Cities declined – Without the
empire, no need for cities as centers of
administration.
• City dwellers moved back to the countryside,
western Europe became very rural as the
population shifted from urban to rural.
Loss of Literacy
• The “barbarians” who
invaded the Germanic
Kingdom were illiterate
• Learning declined as people
moved out of the cities
• By the 600’s priests and
clergy were the only
Europeans who were
literate
Loss of a Common Language
• Latin declined after the Empire
collapsed.
• Formation of the Romance
Languages – different dialects
of Latin formed (combo of
Latin and languages of the
Germanic tribes)
• By the 800’s – French, Spanish,
Italian and other Romance
languages had evolved
The Concept of Government Changes
• Germanic kingdoms replaced Roman
provinces – borders were constantly
shifting
• Family ties and personal loyalties replaced
public government and public law.
• Made orderly government for large areas
difficult
Alliance Between the Church and the Franks
• Clovis – Frankish king, converted
to Christianity in the 490’s.
• His conversion created an alliance
between the Franks and the
Church that would last for
centuries.
• By 600 – Roman Catholic church
had converted many Germanic
tribes to Christianity.
Europe after the Fall of the Roman Empire
Benedict and the Benedictine Rule
Benedict
• Italian Monk in the 500’s who developed a
strict set of rules for monastic life – called the
BENEDICTINE RULE
• Established a model for religious communities
called monasteries for monks and convents for
nuns
THE BENEDICTINE RULE
Must vow to stay for life
Spend 7 hours a day in manual labor
Two hours daily devoted to reading the Bible
Pray and worship 8 times daily
Meals should be limited with no red meat allowed
Role of Monasteries and Convents
• Stable communities in a time of chaos in Europe
• Well governed because they followed an orderly
written body of rules
• Most educated communities – operated schools,
libraries and copied books
• Monasteries preserved a large part of Rome’s
intellectual heritage with illuminated
manuscripts.
Pope Gregory I
• Became Pope in 590. Expanded the power of the
Pope
• Made the Papacy a political office as well as religious
power.
• Gregory’s palace became the center of Roman
government
• Used church revenues to raise armies, repair roads,
and relieve the poor – Pope acted as mayor of Rome
• Sent missionaries to England to spread Christianity
among the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms
• Ignored political divisions between kingdoms – had a
vision of Christendom – A Christian kingdom ruled by
the Pope.
The Frankish Kingdoms
and Charles (the Hammer) Martel
Frankish Mayor of the Palace (Major Domo)
Held the real power of the Frankish
Kingdom
Commanded Frankish Army
In 732 Charles the Hammer Martel met and
defeated the Moors (Muslims) in the Battle
of Tours in France.
This saved Europe from further Muslim
invasion and protected Christianity and the
Church.
Pepin and Establishment of the
Carolingian Dynasty
Succeeded his father Charles Martel as Mayor
of the Palace.
He defeated the Lombards who were
threatening Italy and the Church.
He gave the land of the Lombards to the
Church. This became the Papal States.
Appointed by the Pope as King of the Franks.
Pepin established the Carolingian dynasty.
Charlemagne (Charles the Great)
Charlemagne (Charles the Great)
Succeeded his father Pepin as King.
Considered the greatest of medieval kings.
United all Frankish lands under his rule.
His empire was larger than any since the Roman
Empire.
Divided his land into counties administered by counts.
Charlemagne’s Empire
Charlemagne (Charles the Great)
Greatly interested in learning and started
schools to bring literacy back to Europe.
Crowned Emperor of the Holy Roman
Empire on Christmas Day in 800.
His son Louis the Pious inherited the
Empire. After he died his kingdom split
among his three sons (Charlemagne’s
grandsons)
Lothair – Central (Italy, Switzerland)
Charles the Bald – West (France)
Louis the German – East (Germany)
They fought each other and in 843 signed
the Treaty of Verdun dividing the empire.
Division of the Frankish Empire Treaty of Verdun
843
• After the death of the three brothers the Carolingian kings lost power
and central authority broke down.
• A new system of governing and landowning called Feudalism emerged