European Transition
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Transcript European Transition
TRANSITION
Europe in the
th14 15th Centuries
The 14th Century
Cataclysm
Events of the 14th Century
The transition from the Medieval Warm Period to the
Little Ice Age
Beginning of the Ottoman Empire, early expansion
into the early Balkans : Osman I, 1st Sultan of
the Ottoman Empire
The Avignon papacy transfers the seat of the Popes
from Italy to France
The Great Famine of 1315-1317 kills millions of people
in Europe
The death of the Ilkhan Abu Said in 1335, causes the
disintegration of the Mongol rule in Persia.
The Hundred Years' War begins when Edward
III of England lays claim to the French throne in 1337.
Joan of Arc at the Siege of Orléans 1431
Black Death kills around a third of the population of
Europe. (1347–1351).
Pieter Breughel, The Triumph of Death
Black Death: Bubonic Plague
One of the deadliest pandemics in human history,
peaking in Europe between 1348 and 1350.
Started in Central Asia, it reached the Crimea by
1346
From there, it spread throughout
the Mediterranean and Europe -- probably from
black rats on merchant ships,
Estimated to have killed 30% to 60% of Europe's
population
World population fell from about 450 million to
between 350 and 375 million in 1400.
It took 150 years for Europe's population to
recover.
The plague returned at various times, resulting in
a larger number of deaths, until it left Europe in
the 19th century.
The Dance of Death
The Bubonic Plague
Boccaccio’s Decameron
Collection of 100 novelle
with a frame tale
Frame tale realistically
details the Black Death
in Italy
Novelle: short tales
based set in realistic
settings with a variety of
characters from all social
classes
Economic Effects of the Plague
Labor shortage
Demand for workers
End of feudal system
Serfs left manors to which they had been
bound – often for the cities
Villeins (free peasants) became tenant
farmers or landowners
Workers’ riots
France 1358: The Jacquerie
England 1380: Peasants’ Revolt led by
Wat Tyler
A Counting House 14th c. ms.
Medieval Towns
Rise of the Middle Class – merchants,
artisans, professionals – dependant on
commercial exchanges
Guilds – trade “unions” – protected buyers
and sellers
Charters of self-government – city-states
with elected officials
Bourgeois vernacular literature
Fabliaux: humorous narratives
Novelle: realistic, contemporary stories
Dits: urban poetry
Chaucer’s The
Canterbury Tales,
c. 1390
Chaucer’s masterpiece
Frame: Pilgrimage
from London to
Canterbury
Brilliant portraits of
English characters
Tales include many
genres: romance, sermon,
fabilaux, lai, etc.
Christine de Pisan
1364-ca. 1430
First European
professional female
author
Prominent in the
“Debate about Women”
Works include
courtesy books, military
treatises, dream visions
and The Book of the
City of Women
From Christine de Pisan, 'Works'.
Copyright ©, The British Library
Book of the City of Ladies, 1405
The
Hundred
Years War
1337-1453
100 Years' War Battle of
Nogent-sur-Seine
The Hundred Years War 1337-1453
Struggle between the English and French over territories
in France and the French crown claimed by England – result
of Norman Conquest in 1066
Importance:
the war gave impetus to ideas of both French and
English nationality: nation states
the introduction of new weapons and tactics, which
eroded the older system of feudal armies dominated by
heavy cavalry:
the longbow
gunpowder – introduced by Muslims from China
foot soldiers (infantry) – peasant military
the first standing armies in Western Europe since
the Roman Empire
Territories in dispute
Jeanne d’Arc
1412-1431
May 1429: Led French army
to victory at Orleans
July 1429: French army under
her command captured Rheims
and the Dauphin was crowned
Charles VII
1430: Captured by Burgundians
and sold to the English
1431: Tried and convicted of
heresy
A miniature of Joan of Arc, painted
some time between 1450 and 1500.
Notice the three saints sitting above her
shoulder.
1431:
Burnt at the
stake
1456: Retrial
called by Pope
Callixtus III: Joan
was declared a
martyr. The court
declared her
innocence on 7 July
1456.
1909: Joan of Arc
was beatified
1920: JOAN OF
ARC was
CANONIZED by
Pope Benedict XV
Classical Humanists
Classical Humanism
All- embracing appreciation for Greco-Roman
culture in all its aspects.
Rebirth of classical culture: art, architecture,
philosophy, literature
Emphasis on the individual – a rational guide to
self-fulfillment
Check out Petrarch, Alberti, Pico della
Mirandola, Castiglione, Machiavelli, and
Lucretia Marinelli on the aspects of the
Renaissance individual.
The Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman Empire 14th-20th C.
Oghuz tribes settled in Turkey in the 11th
C.
By 1400, the Ottomans had managed to
extend their influence over much of
Turkey and into eastern Europe:
Macedonia and Bulgaria.
1453: Sultan Mehmed (1451-1481), called
"The Conqueror," finally took
Constantinople, the one last remnant of
Christian Byzantium and renamed it,
Istanbul.
Under Sultan Suleyman (1520-1566), called
"The Lawmaker" in Islamic history and
"The Magnificent" in Europe, the empire
reached its greatest expansion over Asia
and Europe.
Suleyman
Ottoman
Empire
REFORMATIONS
Challenges to the Hegemony
of the Roman Catholic Church
12th C: Cathar Heresy – countered by Crusade against
Cathars
13th C: Establishment of the Inquisition (1233): court
established to stamp out heresy
14th C:
John Wyclif (1328-84): first English Bible: Lollard
Movement
Jan Hus (1369-1415): launched religious movement
in Bohemia based on Wyclif’s ideas: Hussites.
Excommunicated and burned at the stake.
Challenges to the Hegemony
of the Roman Catholic Church
15th C:
William Tyndale (1484-1536):
first printed English Bible
Rise of nation-states –
breakdown of medieval
centralization under Church and
Pope
16th C: Humanist reaction against
Church corruption
Weaknesses in Roman Catholic Church
Administrative divisions: competing Popes
Proliferation of questionable rituals
Pilgrimages
Saint worship
Endowment of masses
Corruption
Sale of Indulgences – certificates of remission from
Purgatory
Simony – sale of Church offices
Northern Renaissance
Rise of Middle Class that patronized the
arts and valued education
Christian Humanism
Interest in classical humanism
Renewal of spiritual values and
teachings of early Church Fathers
Criticism of Church corruption and
materialism
The Printing
Press
Although printing with
movable type had existed in
East Asia since at least the
700's, the invention had not
spread to Europe.
About 1440, the German
goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg
developed movable type.
Printing soon became the first
means of mass communication.
It put more knowledge in the
hands of more people faster
and more cheaply than ever
before.
Reading and writing spread
widely and rapidly.
Erasmus by Hans Holbein
Northern Renaissance:
Christian Humanism
Grew out of German
Universities
Renaissance classical
studies: Greek and Latin
Focused on study and
translation of early
Christian manuscripts
Revival of Church life
and doctrine based on
early Christian literature
Sir Thomas More by
Hans Holbein
Rabelais
Lutheran Reformation
Martin Luther (1483-1546)
Augustinian monk and
Biblical scholar
1517: Nailed 95 Theses on
Church door at
Wittenberg: particularly
incensed by selling of
indulgences
German translation of
Bible
“Justification by faith
alone” and “The
Priesthood of all
believers”
Lutheran Reformation
Martin Luther (1483-1546)
Two sacraments: Baptism
and Holy Communion
Consubstantiation rather than
Transubstantiation
Advocated universal
education
Wrote hymns: “A Mighty
Fortress Is Our God”
Supported by bourgeoisie,
merchants, German princes
Countered Peasants’ Revolt
Lutheran Reformation: Music
Luther saw music as a form of religious
instruction
Hymnals: collections of religious songs
Professional and congregational singing
in vernacular languages
Chorale: congregational hymn –
communal expression of devotion
“Ein feste Burg is unser Gott” : “A
Mighty Fortress is Our God”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiRpUtVByxU
Albrecht Dürer
1471-1528
Portraits, landscapes,
naturalistic studies,
religious meditations
Woodcut engravings
Mass produced
images
Illustrated books
Available to wide
population
Albrecht Dürer
Praying Hands
woodcut print
Albrecht Dürer
Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse
woodcut print
Book of Revelation (6:1–8): "And I saw, and
behold, a white horse, and its rider had a bow; and
a crown was given to him, and he went out
conquering and to conquer. When he opened the
second seal, I heard the second living creature say,
'Come!' And out came another horse, bright red;
its rider was permitted to take peace from the
earth, so that men should slay one another; and he
was given a great sword. When he opened the
third seal, I heard the third living creature say,
'Come!' And I saw, and behold, a black horse, and
its rider had a balance in his hand; … When he
opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the
fourth living creature say, 'Come!' And I saw, and
behold, a pale horse, and its rider's name was
Death, and Hades followed him; and they were
given great power over a fourth of the earth; to
kill with sword and with famine and with
pestilence and by wild beasts of the earth."
Political
Reformation
Henry VIII
and the
Anglican
Church
Political Reformation
Henry VIII (1491-1547)
Proclaimed “Defender of the Faith” by Pope
Clement VII when he countered Luther’s
arguments
Sought divorce from Catherine of Aragon to marry
Anne Boleyn: refused by Pope
1534: Act of Supremacy: declared the king as head
of Church of England – Anglican Church
Ordered dissolution of monasteries: transfer of
property to crown; iconoclasm
The Tudor
Monarchs
Henry VIII
1509-1547
Edward VI
1547-1553
Lady Jane Grey
1553-1553
Mary I
1553-1558
Elizabeth I
1558-1603
Reformed Churches
Ulrich Zwingli (1484-1531)
Swiss Humanist
scholar
Salvation by grace
and works
Baptism as a
covenant/contract
Reformed Churches: Calvinism
John Calvin (1509-64)
French Doctor of Law
Refuted RC opposition to
usury: capitalism
Predestination
Established theocratic state in
Geneva, Switzerland
Church governance:
presbyterian, synodal,
congregationalist
Huguenots, Puritans,
Presbyterians
John Knox
(1505-72)
Scottish
Presbyterianism
Originally ordained a
Roman Catholic priest,
Knox became a Protestant
and studied with Calvin in
Switzerland.
On his return to Scotland,
he became the leader of the
Scottish Reformed Church
Knox and his supporters
began to reshape the
Scottish church-theologically and politically.
Radical Reformation: Anabaptists
Rejected all sacraments as sources of God’s grace: total
emphasis on Christian conscience and voluntary
acceptance of Christ
Adult baptism: rebaptism – considered heretical by other
Protestants
The Mass is not a sacrifice but a memorial – restricted to
baptized believers
Pacifist
Anti-secular: religious separation from secular world
Shunning of sinners
Radical Reformation: Anabaptists
Appealed to lower classes and peasants: Peasants
Wars 1525-35
Persecuted by both Catholics and Protestants –
often burned at stake
Freedom of religion: priesthood of all believers,
Bible as sole authority, ordinances rather than
sacraments, separation of church and state
Genealogy: Baptism and Confirmation Registries
Amish, Hutterites, Waldensians, Mennonites,
Quakers, Baptists, 7th Day Adventists, Jehovah’s
Witnesses
Anglican
Catholic
CounterReformation
Ignatius Loyola
(1491-1556)
founder of the
Jesuits
Catholic Counter-Reformation
Council of Trent (1545-63)
Called for moral reform of clergy
Strengthened Church structures and institutions
Proclamation of dogmas
Affirmation of both Faith and
Works
Transubstantiation
Establishment of Society of Jesus (Jesuits)
under Ignatius Loyola
Vigorous missionary work in Americas and
Asia
Revitalization of religious art: Baroque
Reformation Repercussions
Rivalry between Spain and England
1588 Defeat of the Spanish Armada
Religious wars in France (1560-98)
The Thirty Years War (1618-48)
Revival of the Inquisition’s persecution of heretics
“The Burning Times” -- Witch-hunts (1550-1750)
Religious Persecution
Migration to the New World for religious freedom
French Huguenots to Florida – driven out by
Spanish
Puritans to New England
Quakers and Amish to Pennsylvania
Roman Catholics to Maryland