Transcript Chapter 1
Chapter 10
The Rise of Kingdoms and
the
Growth of Church Power
The Emergence & Growth of
European Kingdoms, 1000 – 1300
The Power of Kings
England in the High Middle Ages
William of Normandy (1066 – 1087)
Battle of Hastings (1066)
Fusion of Normans and Anglo-Saxons
Involvement in France
Kings of Medieval England
A New Dynasty
Henry II (1154 – 1189) and the Plantagenet dynasty
Administrative reform
The church
Finances and exchequer
Royal courts and common law
Thomas à Becket (Archbishop of Canterbury)
King John (1199 – 1216) and Magna Carta
Edward I (1272 – 1307) and the Emergence of
Parliament
Knights, burgesses, barons, and church lords
The Growth of the French Kingdom
Hugh Capet and the Capetian Dynasty
Little real power and limited royal domain in
the Île-de-France
The Conquests of Philip II Augustus (1180 –
1223)
War against the English
French bureaucracy
Medieval French Kings
The Saintly Louis IX (1226 – 1270)
Justice
Participates in Crusades
Philip IV (1285 – 1314) and the EstatesGeneral
Royal Administration
Council for Advice
Chamber of Accounts (Finances)
Parlement (royal court)
Estates-General (Parliament): clergy, nobles, and
Christian Reconquest: The Spanish
Kingdoms
Muslim Spain and Córdoba
The Reconquest (Reconquista)
Offensive by Christian kingdoms begun in
eleventh century
Christian victories in the northern kingdoms of
Castile, Navarre, Aragon, and Portugal
Continued Muslim domination in the south
Christian conquests in the south
The policy of repartimiento
Alfonso X (1252 – 1284)
The Lands of the Holy Roman
Empire: Germany and Italy
The Salian Kings: patterns of weakness
Involvement in Italy
Frederick I Barbarossa (1152 – 1190)
Attempts to conquer northern Italy
Opposition from the pope and Italian cities
The Battle of Legnano (1176)
Frederick II (1212 – 1250)
King of Sicily, Germany, and Holy Roman Emperor
Germany left in confusion and chaos
Rudolf of Hapsburg (1273)
Emergence of Italian city-states
The New Kingdoms in Eastern Europe
The Scandinavian Kingdoms
Germans and Slavs
Political structures and organized churches
Teutonic Knights
Prussia: German and Christian by the end of the
thirteenth century
Periodic Invasions
Medieval Mongols & Russians
Impact of the Mongol Empire
Temuchin: Genghis Khan (c. 1162 – 1227)
Khubilai Khan and the conquest of China
Advances against the Muslim world
Advances against Europe
The Development of Russia
Kievan disintegration by 1169
The unification provided by the church
Mongol invasion
Alexander Nevsky (c. 1220 – 1263)
The title of grand-prince and legacy in Moscow
The Recovery and Reform of the
Catholic Church
The Problems of Decline
Worldly bishops and abbots, monastic decline
The Cluniac Reform Movement
Cluny: founded by Duke William of Aquitaine (910)
The spread of reform in western and central Europe
Reform of the Papacy
Pope Gregory VII (1073 – 1085) and reform
The problem of lay investiture
The Investiture Controversy
King Henry VI of Germany
Concordat of Worms (1122)
Christianity and Medieval Civilization
Growth of the Papal Monarchy
Administrative structure
The pontificate of Innocent III (1198 – 1216)
Conflict with Philip Augustus of France
Interdict of England
New Religious Orders and Spiritual
Ideals
The Cistercian Order
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux (1090 – 1153)
Women in Religious Orders
Hildegard of Bingen (1098 – 1179)
Living the Gospel Life
The Franciscans / Order of Friars Minor
Saint Francis of Assisi (1182 – 1226)
The Dominicans / Order of Preachers
Mystical visions
Dominic de Guzmán (1170 – 1221)
Monasticism and Social Services
Popular Religion in the High Middle
Ages
The Sacraments
The Importance of Saints
The Use of Relics
The Virgin Mary
Indulgences and purgatory
The Pilgrimage
Spiritual benefits
Voices of Protest and Intolerance
Heresy
Catharism
The Holy Office (papal Inquisition)
Persecution of the Jews
Dualist system
Albigensian Crusade (began in 1209)
The impact of the Crusades
Decrees of the Fourth Lateran Council (1215)
Expulsion
Intolerance of Homosexuality
Legislation: “sin against nature” (Aquinas)
Severe punishment
The Crusades
Background to the Crusades
Islam and the Seljuk Turks
Change and disintegration in the Muslim World
Seljuk Turks: nomadic people from Central Asia
Capture of Baghdad (1055)
Battle of Manzikert (1071)
The Byzantine Empire
Divisions between the Catholic and Orthodox Church
Schism (1054)
External threats to security
Alexius I Comnenus (1081 – 1118)
The Early Crusades
The Idea of Holy War
Pope Urban II (1088 – 1099)
Crusading fervor
Council of Clermont (1095)
“Armed pilgrimages”
The First Crusade (1096 – 1099)
Capture of Antioch (1098)
Capture of Jerusalem (1099)
Crusader States
Edessa, Antioch, Tripoli, and Jerusalem
The Early Crusades
The Second Crusade
The Muslims strike back: the fall of Edessa
(1144)
Saint Bernard’s call ends in total failure
The Third Crusade (1189 – 1192)
The leadership of Saladin
Reaction to the fall of Jerusalem
Led by Frederick I Barbarossa of Germany,
Richard the Lionhearted of England, and Philip
Augustus of France
The Crusades of the Thirteenth
Century and the Effects of Crusades
The Fourth Crusade (1202 – 1204)
Sack of Constantinople
Latin Empire of Constantinople (1204 – 1261)
Children’s Crusade (1212)
What Were the Effects of the Crusades?
Little impact on the Muslim World
Impact on European society
Many young warriors removed from Europe
Italian cities benefited economically
Attacks on Jews
Discussion Questions
How was royal power strengthened in France and England
beginning in the eleventh century?
What forces pulled apart the Holy Roman Empire between
the twelfth and thirteenth centuries?
How was the history of Russia linked to the invasions of the
Mongols?
What was the function of the pope in medieval Europe?
What fed the climate of intolerance in Europe after the
twelfth century?
What were the causes of the Crusades?
Were the Crusades a success or a failure? How were they a
reaction to the Muslim threat?