File - Don Dickinson
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Transcript File - Don Dickinson
Dark, Middle, or Medieval?
• All three terms (Dark Ages,
Middle Ages, Medieval
Period) are acceptable, but
“Dark Ages” is becoming
increasingly rejected by
scholars.
• “Middle Ages” implies a lull
between the glory of Rome
and the glitter of Renaissance
Dark, Middle, or Medieval?
• Time Period: fall of Western Rome
(5th c.) to decline of Europe’s feudal
and religious institutions (15th c.)
• Early Middle Ages (5th-10th):
period of decline, backwardness
and vulnerability
• High Middle Ages (10th-15th):
period of slow emergence and
change (trade, intellectual
activity, Gothic)
• Gothic architecture: 12th -16th
Century
Medieval Themes
• Extremely devout Christians
with strong participation, and
fervent spread of beliefs by
missionaries
• Change in relationship
between West and other
regions
• Europe originally at mercy
of invasions (Vikings,
Barbarians)
• Increasing participation in
trade with Asia and Africa.
Medieval Themes
• Contact with Byzantines and
Arabs through Crusades
taught Western scholars
advances in math, science,
philosophy.
• Very nervous about Islam
(belief that it is a false
religion, threat to Christians
and Holy Land) . . . yet,
Europeans will actively copy
Islam (law, science, art)
Manorialism
• System of economic organization
between landlords and peasant
laborers (serfs) who lived on estates
(manors)
• Reciprocal obligations
• Serfs were obligated to give their
lord a portion of their produce
• Lords protected serfs and
provided everyday needs
• Levels of production = low;
technology = limited
• Local level; no involvement of
military because of localized nature
Manorialism
• Manors helped to create a system of local politics
with regional aristocrats
• Most common form of political organization until
Vikings invaded in 9th century
• Weaknesses: isolation due to poor communication
networks; political instability; warfare and raids; no
centralized governments; no need for outside trade
(manors were self-sustaining)
Feudalism
• Vikings invaded in
9th century
Western Europeans
will turn to
feudalism for greater
protection, but
manorialism is kept
as an economic
system within small
communities
Feudalism
• Military and political system
• Rulers provided protection and aid to
nobles (vassals)
• Nobles owed rulers: military service via
knights; goods; payments; counsel; would
sometimes receive land in exchange
• Nobles retained peasants who worked
their lands
• Benefits: provided greater protection
against raids; political stability; standing
army; manors no longer were isolated
Feudalism
Results of Feudalism
• Growth of strong feudal monarchy in Europe;
took many centuries
• Absorbed manors into larger kingdoms as more
nobles pledged allegiance to kings
• Result: regional monarchies with strong
aristocracies
• Frequent warfare castle defense systems
developed
Results of Feudalism
• Example: William the
Conqueror, Duke of
Normandy
• Introduced feudal monarchy
to England following Norman
invasion in 1066
• Declared that all nobles and
knights must swear allegiance
to him; minimized loyalties to
nobles
Quick Review Question
What are the differences between
manorialism and feudalism?
What caused European communities to
develop feudalism?
Limiting Feudal Governments
• Growth of feudal monarchies
decreased aristocratic power
attempts were made to limit
monarchical power
1) 1215: Magna Carta
• English King John recognized
supremacy of written law; forced
by noblemen to adhere
• Granted basic rights to noblemen
2) 1265: creation of English
Parliament
• Served as check on royal
authority; collaboration between
king and aristocrats
Limiting Feudal Governments
11th-12th c.: Three Estates (Church,
Nobles, Commoners) created in
France
• Legal rights related to your
estate
• Despite all this, monarchs
continued to increase in power
• Large conflicts like Hundred
Years War led to early ideas of
nationalism where kings are
leaders that embody the
countries’ principles
Vikings
• Danish; Norwegian; Swedish in origin
• Raids from 8th to 11th centuries caused feudal estates
to form
• Lightweight boats with wide hulls; stable and easily
handled in rough water; many oars
• Could navigate the oceans and rivers
Vikings cont.
• 10th c.: Began to cease raids, converted to Christianity,
and became settled peoples in Europe.
• Continue to explore northern Atlantic (Iceland;
Greenland; North America)
• First European steps in Americas, Hudson Bay area
Franks, Carolingians, and Charlemagne
• 400: Franks were strongest
Germanic barbarian tribe
• 732: Charles Martel,
Carolingian Frankish ruler,
defeated Muslims in Battle
of Tours 732
• Halted Muslim advance into
Western Europe
Franks, Carolingians, and Charlemagne
• Germany)
• Established by Charlemagne,
Martel’s grandson
• Charlemagne (ruled 800-814)
• Pope’s coronation of
Charlemagne was first Holy
Roman Emperor to set precedent
that Church approval was
necessary to legitimize Western
political power
• 843: Treaty of Verdun (empire
fragmented into three kingdoms)
Holy Roman Empire (962-1806)
• Emerged from one kingdom
(Germany, Italy) from Treaty of
Verdun
• Kingdom collapsed but was
revived in 962 by Otto I, who
was crowned HRE
• “Neither holy, nor Roman, nor an
empire” - Voltaire
• Merged classical and Christian
claims; proclaimed itself a
Christian continuation of Ancient
Rome
Holy Roman Empire in 1600
Holy Roman Empire (962-1806)
• Provided a small amount of
stability, but power of HRE was
limited because he was a
subsidiary to the Pope, and the
HRE utilized a system of feudalism
which weakened Emperor’s power
• Most of Germany was still
managed by feudal lords; most of
Italy in city-states
Holy Roman Empire in 1600
• HRE found it difficult to enforce
his rule
• Dissolved in 1806 during
Napoleonic Wars
Quick Review Question
What were some of the steps European
aristocrats took to limit monarchical
power?
What precedent did Charlemagne create
for European rulers?
First Crusade (1095)
• 1095: Called by Urban II; to end
Muslim (Seljuk Turk & Abbasid)
control of Holy Land
• Overwhelming response; 60,000
knights joined in just the first
year
• Initial success (capture of
Jerusalem) but ultimately ended
with defeat
• 4th Crusade (1204): Passed through
Byzantine Empire (architectural
achievements noted; sacked
Constantinople)
First Crusade (1095)
• New contact with Islam; opened
western Europe’s eyes to new
possibilities, especially with trade
• Discovered sugarcane, spices,
porcelain, glassware, carpets
from East
• Unbalanced trade: West wanted
Eastern goods
• Showed aggressive spirit of
Western Europe; Muslims were
now united against Europeans
The Catholic Church
• Catholic Church
became most powerful
and wealthy institution
in West
• After collapse of
Western Rome, cultural
unity was provided by
Christianity
• Opportunities for abuse
and corruption
• Church often owned
large landholdings
The Catholic Church
• Clear hierarchy of Church
power (like Roman
government)
• Popes regulated doctrine
• After precedent set by
Charlemagne, papal
power was greater than
political power of kings
• Just like “Royal Cult” of
Islam, early Germanic kings
were interested in
Christianity (ex.
Charlemagne)
Religious Reform in the Middle Ages
• 1073-1085: Gregorian Reform
with Gregory VII
• Result: Separation of secular
and religious spheres; Church
> Kings
• Gregory VII tried to free
church from interference from
kings
• Investiture Controversy
• Fought with HRE Henry
IV over investiture (whose
right is it to appoint
bishops? King or Pope?)
Religious Reform in the Middle Ages
• 13th c.: Reform
movements created to
combat Church
corruption
• Mendicant friar groups
• St. Francis (Franciscans)
• St. Dominic
(Dominicans)
• A religious lifestyle of
discipline, intense
spirituality, extreme
piety, and celibacy
• Monks were examples
to ordinary people of a
holy life
• Monasteries:
• Church
• Residences of monks
• Pilgrimage centers
Monasticism
• Intellectual life and
literacy declined in
Middle Ages, except
among monks in
monasteries
• Libraries maintained;
books created
• 6th c.: Monk Benedict of
Nursia
• Created Benedictine rule
for monks
• Founder of Western
monasticism
Monasticism
Quick Review Question
What were some of the responses to Catholic
and papal corruption?
What is monasticism? Why are monasteries
significant in Medieval history?
The High Middle Ages (11th-15th c.)
• Emergence from the Dark Ages
• Increased agricultural output
• New techniques introduced
• Increased urbanization and
declining manorialism
• Increased population
demand for jobs, education
• Increased universities
The High Middle Ages (11th-15th c.)
• Increased economic trade and
banking
• Increased social mobility
• Declining number of smaller
feudal structures stronger
centralized monarchies
• Viking raids ended
• Strengthening of nation-states
(Hundred Years’ War)
• New warfare technology
Urbanization and Education
• Population increased towns grew
growing economy
• Literacy expanded in urban
centers
• New emphasis on education
• 11th c: Cathedral schools trained
children to be clergy members
• 13th c: Universities trained
students in theology, law, and
medicine
• Result: increased economic and
cultural vitality in Europe after 1000
Theology
(Assimilating Faith and Reason)
• Exploration of Greek philosophy
became popular, but how to assimilate
into Catholic religious tradition?
• Debate in universities: how to combine
rational philosophy with Christian
faith?
• Bernard of Clairvaux, monk
• Opposed to integration of Greek
philosophy into Catholic tradition
• Supported mysticism (receive truth
only through faith with God), not
through Greek reason
Theology
(Assimilating Faith and Reason)
• Thomas Aquinas, Summas,
13th c.
• Faith is primary, but
reason leads to
understanding; therefore,
one can reconcile Greek
philosophy with Catholic
theology
• Scholasticism: use logic to
resolve theological
problems
Art and Literature
• Architecture, literature, and
art often reflected religious
themes
• Painting: wood panels,
religious scenes, no
perspective, training has been
lost
• Romanesque architecture: for
pilgrimages, blocky,
“Roman”-like
Art and Literature
• Gothic architecture: 11th c. 14th c., verticality, light,
growing technical skills,
expensive
• Literature
• Latin: law, education
• Vernacular: secular
literature (Chaucer’s
Canterbury Tales; Beowulf)
• Court poetry and chivalry
Quick Review Question
What are some of the changes that the High
Middle Ages brought?
What was the main concern for Medieval
theologians? What was a solution to this
dilemma?
Agricultural
Innovations
• 800-1300 CE: Warmer
temperatures
• Moldboard: curved iron
plate, allowed deeper
turning of heavy soil
• Crop rotation: leave half of
land uncultivated each
year to restore soil limits
productivity
• Solution: Three-field
system (Only 1/3 of
land left unplanted)
Moldboard and Crop Rotation
Agricultural
Innovations
• New horse collar and
stirrups
• Agricultural improvements
increased production
population growth
increased size of urban
areas
• Peasants gained financial
freedom with agricultural
advances, some became free
farmers with no landlord
and moved to cities
Moldboard and Crop Rotation
• Organizations that grouped
people in the same business
or trade in a single city
• Merchants; weavers;
woolmen; sculptors;
artists; blacksmiths
• Gave workers financial
security
• Protected markets
• Set prices
• Ensured standards
• Regulated apprenticeships
• Provided training and
materials
Guilds
Growth of Trade and Banking
• Low Countries (coastal W.
Europe) begin to specialize
in trade goods
• Netherlands: cloth;
England: wool; France:
wine and cheese;
Scandinavia: timber;
fish; fur
• Money replaced barter
system
• Banking and insurance
emerged
Growth of Trade and Banking
• Hanseatic League
• Confederation of merchant
guilds and cities in
Northern Europe working
together for mutual
economic benefit
• Merchants: considerable power
in trading cities; weak
governments failed to regulate
merchants
• Merchants had low social
status; Christian thought
raised concerns about
capitalism and greed
Quick Review Question
Describe some of the economic and
technological changes in the High Middle Ages.
The Role of Women
• Traditional roles: wife and
childcare provider, patriarchal
society
• Code of Chivalry: reinforced
ideas that women were weak,
delicate, and subordinate
• Nun: only alternative to
marriage
The Role of Women
• Two opposing attitudes:
• Veneration of Mary and
female saints; gave women
cultural and religious
prestige
• Emphasis on Eve as source
of sin
• No property rights, but could
trade and belong to some craft
guilds
• Literature discussed women’s
roles as comforters to men,
listed docile virtues
The Black Death
• After 1300:
overpopulation; severe
famine; warfare; disease;
Little Ice Age
(temperatures cool
less food, vulnerable to
disease)
The Black Death
• 1348: Bubonic Plague (Black Death)
• Arrived in October 1347 from
Genoese trading ships that docked
in Sicily
• Killed ½ European population
• Started in China; traveled along
Silk Road with infected rats and
fleas in bags of trading goods
• Believed to be God’s divine
punishment for earthly sins
• Purge community of heretics
(thousands of Jews killed)
The Decline of the Medieval World
• Knights lose military purpose;
become decorative
• Foot soldiers: more
important /practical
• Growth of professional
armies; shook authority of
feudal lords who used to
supply armies
The Decline of the Medieval World
• New weaponry (cannons,
gunpowder); traditional
methods (fortified castles)
irrelevant
• Example: Hundred Years
War (1337-1453)
• Aristocracy does not disappear;
choose to live in rich
ceremonial style that exhibits
court life and chivalry
Changing Culture in Europe
• Church: increasingly
rigid
• Series of controversies
over papal authority
distanced Church
from everyday
devotion (rival
claimants to papacy)
• Reformers and
mystics emerged (no
longer need Church to
have direct experience
with God)
Changing Culture in Europe
• Proto-Renaissance:
Intellectual and
artistic life developed
• Art: realistic
portrayals of space
and nature, growing
interest in the body
Quick Review Question
How does the Medieval world decline
towards the end of the High Middle Ages?