Transcript Chapter 17
Chapter 17
THE FOUNDATIONS OF CHRISTIAN
SOCIETY IN WESTERN EUROPE
Example Question
Which of the following achievements was not a
part of the early middle ages?
a. a restoration of political order through a feudal
system.
b. economic recovery.
c. the reestablishment of centralized, imperial rule.
d. the creation of an institutional framework for the
Christian church based in Rome.
e. Both c and d are true.
Overview
Political order restored out of disruption caused
by the fall of the Roman Empire.
Economic recovery based first on increased
agricultural production within the rural manorial
system.
During this period Roman Christianity provided
the impetus for cultural continuity and unity in
Western Europe.
The office of the papacy and the monastic
movement were two powerful institutions that
developed and consolidated a uniquely
European culture.
Germanic successor states
Germanic kingdoms: Visigoths, Ostrogoths,
Lombards, Burgundians, Angles/Saxons.
The Franks: center of gravity shifted from Italy
to northern lands.
The Franks
Clovis
Led the Franks and wiped out
the last vestiges of Roman
authority in Gaul
The Franks converted to
Roman Christianity
Alliance with the Roman
church greatly strengthened
the Franks
The Franks
The Carolingians
Carolingians, an
aristocratic clan,
asserted
authority in the
early eighth
century
Charles Martel's
son claimed the
throne for
himself, 751
Carolingian Map
The Franks
Charlemagne (reigned 768-814 C.E.)
Grandson of Charles Martel, founder of
Carolingian empire
Control extended to northeast Spain,
Bavaria, north Italy
Charlemagne Map
Charlemagne
Capital city at Aachen (in modern
Germany)
Relied on aristocratic deputies, known as
counts
Used missi dominici to oversee local
authorities
Pope Leo III proclaimed Charlemagne
emperor, 800
Decline of the Carolingian empire
Charlemagne's only surviving son;
lost control of the counts
His three sons divided the empire
into three kingdoms, 843
Muslims raided south, seized
Sicily, parts of northern Italy and
southern France
Magyars invaded from the east
Vikings invaded from the north
Vikings- Norsemen
Most were merchants and migrants
Mounted raids in many European regions from Russia to
Spain
Outstanding seafarers; even established a colony in
Canada about 1000
Fleets could go to interior regions via rivers, attacking
towns and villages
Early medieval society
After Carolingian empire dissolved,
local nobles built decentralized
states
Lords and retainers
Lord provided retainer
Retainers owed lord loyalty, obedience,
respect, counsel, and military service
Lord/retainer relationships become
stronger; retainer status became
hereditary
Serfdom
Serfs
Serfs as an intermediate category emerged
about the mid-seventh century
Could not move to other lands without
permission
Serfs had right to work on land and pass it to
heirs
Manors were a principal form of agricultural
organization
A manor was a large estate, controlled by the
lord and his deputies (self-sufficient)
Agriculture of early medieval Europe
Heavy plows
appeared in the sixth
century
Agricultural
production increased
Cultivation of new
lands; watermills;
and rotating crops
Agricultural surplus
not enough to
support large cities
PERSIAN Chart- The Franks
(Carolingian)
Complete a PERSIAN Chart on the
Franks.
Focus your study on the Carolingian
empire.