1 / 19

Western Europe

Western Europe. Ch 10. I. Introduction. Middle Ages/ Medieval Age Begins with the fall of Rome in 476 AD Ends with the Renaissance in the 15 th Century Period of overall illiteracy Church and some nobility were semi literate Roman Catholic church ruled Regional wars were common.

osgood
Download Presentation

Western Europe

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Western Europe Ch 10

  2. I. Introduction • Middle Ages/ Medieval Age • Begins with the fall of Rome in 476 AD • Ends with the Renaissance in the 15th Century • Period of overall illiteracy • Church and some nobility were semi literate • Roman Catholic church ruled • Regional wars were common

  3. II. Catholic Church • “Rome” ruled during the Middle Ages • Followed Roman Empire’s Structure • Pope- Roman Emperor • Bishops- Senators • Priest- local governors • Popes held much power even over kings • Would force kings to submit through excommunication • HRE Henry IV and Gregory VII- lay investiture • Pope Urban II ordered the first Crusade • Priest and Bishops were subject to Rome • Conversion legitimized rulers (Clovis 496 AD) • Required taxes to be payed

  4. II. Catholic Church • Education was centered in the churches • Religious works were written in Latin • Not all priest/religious leaders were exceptionally skilled • Copied older text • Lacked understanding of text • Illiterate people had no choice but to follow church

  5. II. Catholic Church • Monasticism • Benedictine • Typical idea of monks (living in Monastery) • St. Benedict of Nursia (480-543 AD) • Strict/ regulated life • Copied religious documents • Franciscan • St. Francis of Assisi (1181-1226 AD) • Friars- monks who go out to preach • Vowels of poverty and plain dress • Influenced Claire of Assisi who started her own convent • Helped preserve religious text • Promoted education • Helped agriculture

  6. II. Catholic Church • Avignon Papacy(1309-1376) • AKA Babylon Captivity of the Papacy • Pope Clement V refused moving to Rome and stayed in France • France had a strong influence on the papacy • Very corrupt • Pope Gregory XI moved back to Rome

  7. II. Catholic Church • Papal Schism/ Great Schism(1378-1417) • Two men had the title of Pope • Pope Gregory XI- elected by Cardinals but regretted decision • Elected Pope Clement VII and he moved back to Avignon • Both excommunicated each other • Individual countries had to choose which Pope to follow • Ended with the Council of Constance 1414 • Took place after the original two died) • Pope Martin V was elected (some countries did not accept him at first)

  8. III. Manorial/Feudal System& Towns • Common in most of Western Europe • Serfs lived on manors • Protected by a lord in exchange for a percentage of goods produced • Worked the lord’s land • Could not leave manor (but not a slave) • Could pass ownership of land to children • Predominantly self-sufficient • Life improved with some advancements • Moldboard plow • 3 fold system • Horse collar (imported)

  9. III. Manorial/Feudal System& Towns • Feudal System • Lord gives a vassal a fief (land) • Vassal promises to supply Lord military service • Could be as small as a lord giving property to a knight or as large as a king and lesser lords

  10. III. Manorial/Feudal System& Towns • Towns • The place of escape for serfs • Escape to a town for 1 year and 1 day- free from manor • Towns were places of merchants and freedmen • Banking became a major business • Dominated by Jews • Guilds • Regulated quality, prices, supply and resources • Hanseatic League • German and Scandinavian Towns that joined together to promote trade • Education was more prevalent

  11. III. Manorial/Feudal System& Towns • Problems with towns • Filthy living conditions • Sewage, rats and garbage • Bubonic Plague/ Black Death • Spread by fleas carried by rats • Came from the east with trade • Killed 30-60% of Europe’s population

  12. IV. European kingdoms/Rulers • Carolingians • Northern France • Charles Martel • Defeated Muslims at Battle of Tours 732 AD • Stopped Muslims from invading France and kept them in Spain • Charlemagne (Charles the Great) • Expanded territory to include most of France and some of Germany • Encouraged church based education • Split Empire among 3 grandsons • Led to ineffective rule

  13. IV. European kingdoms/Rulers • Holy Roman Empire • Part of Germany and Northern Italy • Given by the pope for protecting Rome • Began with the death or Charles the Fat (888) and the Otto I becoming King(962) • Mostly ran by local leaders and predominantly had no real power

  14. IV. European kingdoms/Rulers • England • William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066 • Took over local rulers • Hired local rulers and gave them title of Shire Reeves (sheriffs) • Instituted a loose bureaucracy • Set up a feudalism where the great lords were responsible to the king. • Eventually limited the Kings power • Magna Carta1215 • King John forced to sign • Parliament • House of Lords, House of Commons • Gave power to the People

  15. IV. European kingdoms/Rulers • Hundred Years War (1337-1453) • Between England and France • Between the House of Plantagenet's (E) and the House of Valois(F) • Resulted in Capetians not producing an heir. • England Plantagenets owned territory in France and wanted to claim throne of both England and France • French won • Cannons and English Longbow(6ft tall and 105 lb pull) were used during this war

  16. IV. European kingdoms/Rulers • Crusades • Pope Urban II • Reasons • Forgiveness for sins • Guaranteed heaven if you died • Spoils from Arabs • Excitement • Venice commercial rights (from Byzantines) • Facilitate Christian Pilgrimages to Holy Land

  17. V. Culture • Scholasticism • Medieval philosophy that used “logic” to discuss theology • Sometimes was ridiculous • Peter Abelard • Yes and No- looked at contradictions in teachings. At times considered a heretic • Bernard of Clairvaux • Challenged Abelard • Focused on faith/mysticism rather than rationalism • Thomas Aquinas • Taught at Paris University • Summa Theologica- Summary of Christian teachings • Genius

  18. V. Culture • Gothic Architecture • Very ornate style • Used mostly for churches • Used flying buttresses to support walls

  19. V. Culture • Literature • Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales • Showed some distaste for the rule of the Catholic Church • Beowulf • Saga about a dragon slayer

More Related