The Hundred Years` War
Download
Report
Transcript The Hundred Years` War
Chapter 12
The Hundred Years’ War &
Decline of the Church
Hundred Years War
England & France forged their identities
Fought intermittently between 1337 & 1453
Began as a feudal war – developed two powerful &
territorially integrated states
Challenges to the Catholic Church
Kings sought greater influence over the clergy
Theologians rejected many of the church’s positions
Legitimacy of its power
Damaged prestige
The Babylonian Captivity
The Great Schism
Social Change
Growing cities
Tightening membership in Guilds
Stratification of gender roles
Peasant and urban revolts
Sexual issues became public concern
1337 – 1453
England and France
fought over English
feudal claims to the
French throne
116 years of
intermittent war
England won every
important battle
Except the last one
Causes
Aquitaine
Inherited in the 12thC by England (Capetian dynasty)
Capetian dynasty died out in 1328
French nobles did not want England’s king Edward III to
exercise his royal claim in France.
French nobles seeking to weaken French monarchy supported
Edward
Econ competition over the rich Flemish wool-producing
towns
Flemish aristocracy supported France
Merchant class suported England
The war presented many opportunities for honor,
advancement, and wealth for nobles
• Importance
• Nationalism grows
• Both countries sesationalized the evils of the other
• Fostered mutual hatred
• Military
• Ended medieval tactics and chivalric rules of war
• England won most of the battles
• Used artillery for the 1st time & the longbow,
• Which unhorsed knights in armor, superior to the crossbow
• The cannon meant stone castles were obsolete
• France won the war
• Joan of Arc – spurred nationalistic fervor
• Joan of Arc
• Peasant girl
• 16 years old
• Heard voices urging her to help the dauphin (uncrowned king)
• Convinced king to allow her to accompany an army to the siege of
Orleans.
• Her leadership inspired the soldiers
• 10 days later England withdrew
• 10 days after that Charles was crowned
• Joan was captured by Burgundians
• Sold her to England
• Tried and executed for witchcraft and heresy
• Cut her hair
• Wore men’s clothes
• Claimed to hear directly from God
• Became one of two patron saints of France
• Consequences
• Death Toll was huge in contrast to medieval wars
• Economies in France where the battles were fought, were devastated.
• England’s economy suffered due to the stunning costs of the war
• Plunder soldiers brought back added to their coffers
• Gov raised taxes on wool – making it harder to sell aboard, thus
hurting the econ
• Parliament grew - Constitutional Monarchy advanced
• Edward III called Parliament into session 37 our of the 50 years of his
reign to ask for finances for the war.
• Commons separated from the Lords
• Commons – knights and wealthy burgers
• Right to approve non-feudal levies – financial power
• England only had one Parliament – other countries had dominate
regional/provincial assemblies
• Seeds of change – Parliament
• Limited monarchy (nearly 800 years)
• Origin
• The Magna Carta
The barons of England forced King John to sign – 1215
Estab. Limitations on royal power
Restricted judicial powers of the king
Protected the barons, clergy and burghers (wealthy townsmen)
from arbitrary arrest or cruel punishment
• Granted trial by jury
• Required the “common consent of the realm” for new taxes
•
•
•
•
• During the 100 Years’ War
• The king needed the common consent to acquire more
(and more) funds for the war
• Parliament became more powerful
• A feudal origin the Magna Carta guaranteed right to the ruling
elites, that were extended over the centuries to all royal
subjects
• Catholic Church
• Inadequate and
conflicted leadership
• Putting it under the
domination of powerful
states
• Demand from within to
restructure from a
papal hierarchy to
councils made up from
the clergy
• The growth of lay piety
• Mysticism
• The Babylonian Captivity 1309 – 1376
• The popes resided in Avignon
• Under the domination of the French king (not in Rome)
• Focused on internal administrative reforms
• Return to Rome (after nearly 70 years)
• Dispute over who should be pope
• Fueled by nationalism
• Two popes were elected
• Urban VI – Italian
• Clement VII – cousin of the king of France
• States supported according to their political interests
• The Great Schism
• Effort to reform the monarchical organization of the church by sharing
power with church councils representative of all Christians
• Defensor Pacis of 1324 - Marsiglio of Padua
• Intellectual underpinnings of the conciliar movement
• Argued that the church must be subordinate to the state
• The church had no right to own property
• Led to his excommunication
• John Wyclif (later his ideas were used by Martin Luther)
• The only source of Christian doctrine & practice – the Scriptures
• Scriptures should be read in the vernacular by the laity
• Common religious practices were illegitimate
•
•
•
•
•
Veneration of saints and pilgrimages
Simony (buying/selling of church offices)
Pluralism (holding several offices at the same time)
Absenteeism (holding an office, but living in another place)
Property ownership
• AP Tip
• Pilgrimages and veneration of saints were also an
important part of the urban economy
• Pilgrimages fostered trade and the founding of
towns along their routes
• Lollards
• Wyclif’s supporters
• Used his ideas to justify peasant revolts -1381
• Same time as 1st Eng. Translation of the Bible
• Women
• Lollard’s supported women preachers
• Significant impact – 15thC
• Bohemia
• Czech priest John Hus
• Preached in native language – not Latin
• Not a radical – but
• Argued for Scripture to be accepted
• Denounced abuses of the church
• Communion for clergy and laity
• Czech nobles used ideas to push independence from Habsburg
(Gr overlords)
• Council of Constance 1415 – tried and executed for heresy
• Hussite Wars – Nobles/people rebelled against Habsburgs
• Council called an end to the Great Schism
• Martin V – pope
• Councils lose power – papacy wins power
AP tip!
• Religion & Politics
• Wyclif & Hus reveal the degree to which religious reform was
tied to politics
• Seeds of Change
• Martin Luther would use their ideas a century later
• Martin Luther was able to bring about reform they could
not (Wyclif and Hus opposition too powerful – supports
too weak)
• Lay Piety gain prominence
• Disorder & disunity
• disputes among various orders
• particularly Franciscans & Dominicans
• Disappointing performance of some priests
• Absence of priests
• The Black Death took many priests