Chapter 13.3 and 13.4
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Transcript Chapter 13.3 and 13.4
Chapter 13.3 and 13.4
THE FEUDAL AND MANORIAL SYSTEMS
THE GROWTH OF MONARCHIES
13.3-The Feudal System
Knights did not exist at the beginning of the Middle
Ages.
There were large armies that fought on foot
As the Middle Ages progressed Knights began to
emerge, what was responsible for this shift?
13.3- The Feudal System
Origins of Feudalism
Invasions from Vikings, Magyars, and Muslims . In the face of
these attacks Kings all over Europe found themselves unable to
defend their lands and their noblemen's lands
Noblemen had to protect their own lands
Built Castles on hilltops to retreat to when attacked
Castles were originally not elaborate but built of wood and were
just for protection
13.3- Feudal System
Knights and Lords
To defend the castles they needed trained soldiers
The most important soldiers were Knights
Knights need weapons, horses and armor so they demanded
payment for their service
They were typically paid in land- fief
Anyone who accepted a fief was called a vassal and the person
giving the land was called a lord.
The exchange of land for services is called the feudal system
13.3- The Feudal System
Feudal Obligations
Lords and vassal had duties to fulfill to another
Knight to Lord
Knights provided military service, remain loyal and not turn
against his lord. This promise was called fealty- or loyal
Knight had to pay for the lord ransoms if captured
Knight also gave his lord money on special occasions
Lord to Knight
Lord could not demand to much time or money from Knight
Lord had to protect the Knight when attacked by enemies
Lord had to act as judge between disputes knights
13.3- The Feudal System
A Complicated System
The feudal system in Europe was very complex
A Person could be a lord and a vassal at the same time
One knight could serve many lords
If a Knights two lords went war the knight had choose between the two
Almost every Knight served two lords
They were all suppose to be loyal to the King
Some knights given large lands subsides it and gave fief and gained vassals..
Ect…
Everyone was the Kings vassals
However many nobleman ignored their duties as vassal to the king and the
authority of the king faded
The Feudal obligation could change over time and space
The rules between a Knight and Lord in England were different than those in
France
Also they would change periodically
13.3- Manorial System
Manorial System
The feudal system was essentially a political and social system.
A related system was at the heart of medieval economics. This
system was called the manorial system because it was built
around large estates called manors
13.3- Manorial System
Lord, Peasant, and Serfs
Lords owned the manors and the peasants and serf worked on the
land in exchange for protection and plots of land
Most workers were serfs- someone who is tied to the land
Technically not slaves because they could not be sold away from the
land
However they were not free to leave the manor or marry without the
lords permission
Serfdom was hereditary
If your mom or dad was a serf you would be as well, at the same
manor
Some free people worked and owned land on a manor
Lord could sell a portion of his land to a free person but they would
still own him part of their earns
Skilled workers such a blacksmiths would work for the Lord and live
on the land
13.3 The Manorial System
A Typical Manor
Lots of farm land
3-field crop system to help preserve the land and yield better
crops
2 fields would yield a crop one for spring one for fall and the other
would be left empty for a year to improve the soil. This system
would rotate
Manor house for the nobles to live in
Castle to retreat too when attacked
Village where the peasants and serfs lived
Lords wanted the manor to be self sufficient
So it included church, mill and a blacksmith
13.3-Daily Life in the Middle Ages
Life in a Castle
Castles were in place of manors and were built for defense
purposes
Private rooms were very rare because they had to many
occupants
Most bedrooms not separate
Waste system traveled in pipes into the moat of river
Hay as toilet paper
13.3- Daily Life in the Middle Ages
Life in a Village
Families lived in one or two bedrooms homes they built
themselves
Hay roofs for insulation and water protection
Slept on hay beds, little furniture
Woke up early – boys and men work in the fields- girls and
women worked with the animals and the home. Everyone
worked in the field during harvest time
13.4 Notes
THE GROWTH OF MONARCHIES
13.4- Growth of Monarchies
Anglo-Saxons
England was the first country in Europe to develop a strong
monarchy under the Anglo-Saxons, who first unified the
country
Descendants from the Angles and the Sax that invaded the
island in the 400’s
For most of their rule England was separated into 7 small
kingdoms each with it’s own law and customs
Late 800’s Vikings invaded a conquered most of the kingdoms
878 Alfred The Great an Anglo-Saxon ruler pushed the Vikings
out ruled in England
his descendants unified England and ruled until 1066
13.4- English Monarchy
The Norman Conquest
English King died in 1066 without an heir and 2 men claimed the
throne, Harold an Anglo-Saxon English nobleman and William, the
duke of Normandy in France a distant relative of the dead king
Supported by England Harold was named king
The two fought for the throng
William of Normandy won the battle for the throne and became
known as William the Conqueror
Claimed all the land in England as his property
Broke up the land and it to his noblemen
This created a new nobility who were loyal to their king
Had a survey taken of English property to see how much he could tax
each land- collected in the Domesday Book
Since William was from France and so were his noblemen French
culture began to influence England and would for centuries
13.4 English Monarchies
The English in France
Williams descendants not only gained the English throne but
also his power and land in Normandy as the duke of
Normandy
Williams great-grand son, Henry II also gained his father’s
land in France which became part of England
Even more French territory was added to England when Henry
married Eleanor of Aquitaine
Together they rule all of England and more than half of France
13.4-The English Monarchy
Magna Carta
By 1200 the English Monarchy was very powerful and worried the nobles
They feared the King would abuse his power and take power from the
nobles
In 1215 King John was at war with France he lost most of the English
French holdings and lots of money.
Forced King John to sign the Magna Carta which outlined the
noblemen's rights, and restricted the kings power.
To make up for the money lost he tried to tax the nobility and they refused and
took up arms against him
King could not tax without the consent of the nobles
King could not arrest some or take their land without proper legal proceedings
Important ideas were set forth in the Magna Carta
Set forth ideas of limiting the government and kings power
Even the king was not above the law
One of the most important historical documents in the formation of modern
democracies
13.4- The English Monarchy
Parliament
1260 another rebellion broke out against the king
King was always asking to raise taxes and finance wars the nobles did
not want to get involved in
To obtain a say in the gov’t nobles started another rebellion
As a peace agreement the king agreed to meet with the nobility,
clergy, and middle class to discuss key issues in England
This eventually led into the development of the Parliament which is
still a governing body in England
In 1295 King Edward I help define the role of Parliament and allowed
representatives from every county
Power to create taxes, advise king on law making and royal policy
This helped create England’s centralized government and reformed
it’s system of law
Parliament was still the secondary role to the monarch
13.4- Other European Monarchies
France
After Charlemagne the kings of France did not rule much
territory.
Noblemen typically owned more land than the king, which
gave them more power than the.
Even England ruled parts of France.
They all ignored the wishes of the King
In 900 Capetians a noble family took control of France and
expanded the rule of the monarchy in France
They fought nobleman for land and power
Made alliances with powerful nobleman
Arranged marriages with powerful nobleman
By 1300 the Capetians ruled most of modern France
13.4- Other European Monarchies
Holy Roman Empire
After Charlemagne died the Empire spilt
France remained under one king for the most part
Germany was spilt up into many small states and ruled by their own Duke
936 Duke of Saxony, Otto the Great had enough support from nobles and became the King of Germany and he
united most of Germany and conquered Northern Italy
In 962 Nobleman challenged Pope John XII Power
Holy because of the pope
Roman because Charlemagne once ruled those territories
Eventually the lands under Otto’s power became known as the Holy Roman Empire
He called on Otto the Great for help
After his victory the pope named Otto the Great the emperor of Rome
Otto’s territories became known as the Holy Roman Empire
The west became France
The east became Germany
It was called holy because the empire had the pope’s support
It was called Roman because Charlemagne once ruled over the area and held the title of Roman emperor
Holy Roman Emperors made the decisions and passed laws but with the help of the dukes
Dukes maintained full authority over their lands
By 1100’s the position of Emperor was not inherited
Had to be selected by the Dukes
Then had to travel to Rome to be crowned by the Pope
13.4- Other European Monarchies
Spain and Portugal
Many years Muslims (moors) were in control of the Iberian Peninsula (Spain and
Portugal)
Moors built a very powerful city in Cordoba
A few Christian ruled a small kingdom in the northern part of the peninsula
In the 1000’s a Once civil war broke out among the Moors
Christians waited until they were weakened to retake the Iberian Peninsula.
Christians in the Iberian peninsula gained the advantage with help form other
surrounding Christian kingdoms
In 1100’s the Portuguese pushed the moors out and est the Kingdom of Portugal.
In the 1230’s the Christians pushed the Moors out of Spain
These campaigns were called the Reconquista
Other than a small holding in Northern Spain
The Moors were not completely driven out of the Peninsula until 1492
In the late 1400’s a royal marriage between the two kingdoms of Aragon and
Castile combined the two and became the most powerful country in Europe…
Spain