The Middle Ages - Scott County School District 1
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Transcript The Middle Ages - Scott County School District 1
Medieval Period 500CE-1500CE
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Rome
Europe
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Roman Empire,
modern times
Prehistoric times,
modern times
Roman Empire,
Renaissance
Prehistoric times,
Renaissance
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Castles
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Wars
Taxes
Diseases
Overrun the West
Cities fall
Populations shift to rural areas for food
Trade disrupted
No common language
Decrease in literacy and learning
Church provided safety and order
Germanic people life: small communities, led by
chiefs, no respect for king (no taxes)
Clovis: Frankish Leader of
Gaul (France)
United a Kingdom & Spread
Christianity
Germanic people
converted
Monasteries- monks lived
w/o possessions to serve
God
Convents- nuns also
followed this life
Became best educated
communities
Charlemagne- inherits
kingdom around 800 CE
Conquests reunite West
into empire
Crowned “emperor” by
crushing attack on Pope
Signified union of Germanic
power & Church
He spreads Christianity &
establishes central
government
Limits noble’s authority, ruled
justly
Supports learning and culture
Opened palace schools
Multilingual (English, German, Italian, Spanish)
Son (Louis the Pious) left 3 heirs/ all faught
▪ Ended with Treaty of Verdun- divided land by 3
Muslims enter into Spain and Sicily
Bring science and math
Christians fear the invasions
Lords owned land where peasants worked.
Based on land exchange for protection and
services (mutual obligations)
Kings, Nobles, Clergy, Knights, Peasants
Social Class inherited
Determines prestige and power
King gave land to Lords
Lords give land (fiefs) to vassals (lower lords)
▪ Vassals promise loyalty and service to lords
▪ Peasants (serfs) worked on manors
(estates)
Knights- mounted warriors to protect
lands
Manor- lord’s estate
Economic side of Feudalism
Lord gives serfs land, shelter, protection
in exchange for work
Peasants: self-sufficient community
Peasants pay high taxes & live harsh life
Tax on grain and marriage
Marriages approved by lords
Had to tithe- 1/10th of earnings
Small 1 room cottages
Accepted their place in society based on bible
Holy Roman Empire
Different ranks of religious
officials
Allowed shared religious
beliefs to unify
Sacraments- important
religious ceremonies
Cannon Law- law of Church
(guides conduct)
German-Italian Empire
King Otto I (Otto the
Great)
Forms alliance with
church
Most effective ruler,
invades Italy for Pope
Italians resent his rule/
Pope fears his power
Pope & Emperor clash
Clash of choosing clergy
Lay investiture- ceremony where king appoints
clergy
▪ 1075 CE Pope Gregory VII bans it
▪ Henry IV – “not pope, but false monk”
▪ Excommunicated- removed from church
Compromise reached/ German power declines
Concordant of Worms- church right, emperor veto
Power struggles within Church + Empire split feudal
states
Church power weakened by:
Clergy Marriages
Simony- positions in Church sold by bishops
Secular- worldly (non religious) king leads
Church was restructured to resemble a
kingdom
Extended Pope’s power & Church Authority
New religious orders revitalize the Church
Cities of God
Gothic- style of
architecture from Goth
tribes
Tall, light and used stain
glass
Replace Romanesque
Style
Built all over Europe
1170-1270