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Disasters of the Fourteenth Century

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By 1300 Europeans were farming almost all the land they could ... Self-inflicted 'penance' for our sins! Attempts to Stop the Plague. Pograms against the Jews ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Disasters of the Fourteenth Century


1
Disasters of the Fourteenth Century
  • Section 2.5 (Palmer)
  • McKay Chapter 12

2
Bring Out Your Dead
3
Late Medieval Europe
1st Crusade
Hundred Years War Begins
Babylonian Captivity begins
Great Schism Begins
Secularism Grows
Church Power declines
1095 1200 1309 1315 1337 1348 1378
Black Death Begins
Great Famine Begins
Era of Gothic Cathedrals
4
How would you describe life in Europe during the
14th Century?
  • It wasnt swell!
  • Little Ice Age
  • Growing season shorter
  • How do they know this

Annual growth bands in a stalactite with reduced
growth in the Little Ice Age
5
The Black Death
  • one of the deadliest pandemics in human history,
    peaking in Europe between 1348 and 1350.

6
Causes According to Medieval People
  • alignment of the planets
  • foul air
  • Jewish conspiracy
  • Gods punishment

7
The Famine of 1315-1317
  • By 1300 Europeans were farming almost all the
    land they could cultivate.
  • A population crisis developed.
  • Climate changes in Europe produced three years of
    crop failures between 1315-17 because of
    excessive rain.
  • As many as 15 of the peasants in some English
    villages died.
  • One consequence ofstarvation povertywas
    susceptibility todisease.

8
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9
1347 Plague Reaches Constantinople!
10
Why did it spread so rapidly?
  • Sanitation/ hygiene
  • Overcrowded cities
  • Malnourished population
  • New trade routes

11
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12
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13
Characteristics
14
Characteristics
  • 2 Strains
  • Bubonic
  • Flee to person
  • Pneumonic
  • Person to person
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Egg-sized lumps from lymph nodes
  • Infection of lungs
  • Victims died in 1 to 6 days
  • A disease of revulsion

15
Lancing a Buboe
16
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17
From the Toggenburg Bible, 1411
18
Boccaccio in The Decameron
The victims ate lunch with their friends and
dinner with their ancestors.
19
Attempts to Stop the Plague
Leeching
A Doctors Robe
20
Attempts to Stop the Plague
FlagellantiSelf-inflicted penance for our
sins!
21
Death Triumphant !A Major Artistic Theme
22
Results of the Black Death
  • Economic
  • Huge labor shortage
  • Wages rise
  • Political
  • Power vacuum as many lords perish
  • Greatly diminishes feudalism power of the
    Church
  • Social
  • Feudal distinctions erode
  • 33 of population perish
  • Anti-Semitism rose
  • Cultural
  • Mass neurosis
  • Flagellants
  • Theme of death permeates weltanschauung

23
Ring Around the RosieA Pocket Full of
PosiesAshes, AshesWe All Fall Down
24
Hundred Years War (1337-1453)
  • A series of wars between England and France (116
    years)
  • Causes
  • Capetian line (Sons of Philip the Fair) died
    without direct male heir in 1320s
  • English King Edward III (Philip the Fairs
    grandson) claimed French crown
  • Denied on grounds that Sallic law forbade
    inheritance through female line

25
Characteristics
  • Took place in France Low Countries
  • France is internally divided
  • Some French barons, Flemish wool merchants
    support England
  • Last hurrah for chivalry
  • Battle of Crécy (1346), the English disregarded
    the chivalric code and used new military tactics
    the longbow and the cannon.
  • England controlled large parts of France by 1419
  • Coincides with outbreak of Black Death

26
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27
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28
Results
  • Joan of Arc
  • Lifted siege at Orleans (1429)
  • Turning point of war
  • Tried and executed as a witch in 1431
  • Ignites French patriotism
  • England ousted from France
  • Englands Parliamentary government grew
  • Monarchs needed their money
  • Estates Generals influence decreases
  • French noble class diminished
  • Standing armies adopted

29
Social Tensions
  • Jacquerie (1358)
  • nickname for peasant in
  • Nobility prestige had sunk after Poitiers
  • Fled battlefield
  • Nobles demanded more corvee
  • Villages pillaged by marauders
  • Thousands of peasants rose up
  • Intense violence directed at lords
  • Burned castles, murdered lords
  • Watt Tylers rebellion (1381)
  • English peasant rebellion against an oppressive
    poll tax
  • Led by Walter Tyler
  • Invaded London w/ 50 thousand
  • Watt murdered by King Richard IIs vassal on
    London Bridge
  • Peasant ultimately better off

Death of Watt Tyler at London Bridge
30
Map of Hundred Years War
  • French Yellow
  • English-Gray
  • Burgundian-Dark Gray

31
Babylonian Captivity (1309-1377)
  • Papacy a tool of French
  • pope had lived at Avignon since the reign of King
    Philip the Fair of France and thus subject to
    French control
  • Pope Gregory XI brought the papacy back to Rome
    in 1377
  • His successor Urban VI alienated the church
    hierarchy in his zeal to reform the church
  • A new pope, Clement VII, was elected, and the two
    popes both claimed to be legitimate
  • Great Schism (1378-1417)
  • England/Germany recognize Urban VI
  • France recognize Clement VII
  • Papal prestige sank even lower
  • How do I save my soul?

32
Results of Babylonian Captivity
  • People begin to question the Church
  • John Wycliff and the Lollards
  • Said there is no need for a hierarchical church
  • Man can save his own soul via the Bible
  • Wycliff translated the Bible into English
  • Jan Huss
  • Utilized Wycliffs ideas for Bohemia

33
Conciliar Movement
  • Conciliarists
  • believed that church authority rested in councils
    representing the people--not the authority of the
    pope.
  • Council of Constance (1414)
  • Ends schism
  • Discourage heresy (Huss executed)
  • Issue reforms
  • Pope Martin V made pope
  • Wanted to rule Church as a Constitutional
    Monarchy
  • Martin dissolves Council
  • Refuses reform
  • Church ruled by Pope not council

34
Results of the Disasters
  • Mass Neurosis
  • Church loses power
  • Secularism rises
  • Population decline
  • Wages rise
  • Revolts break out
  • Favorable position for peasants
  • Fixed rents
  • Property owning class emerges
  • Feudalism breaks down
  • Kings begin to centralize power
  • Trade reemerges
  • Renaissance begins!!!
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