Title: The Great Schism
1The Great Schism
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2Kidnapped Pope
- 1300, Philip IV of France refused to bow to papal
authority - Philip held the pope prisoner and NO ONE CAME TO
HIS RESCUE - Philip had a new pope chosen who would be
favorable to France and moved the pope to France!
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3Two Popes
- The people demanded the pope be returned to Rome
(after 68 years in France) - Cardinals (highest church officials) elected a
pope, changed their mind and elected a second
pope
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4Religious Civil War
- Divided the church THE GREAT SCHISM
- Popes tried to excommunicate each other.
- Council elected a third pope to try and end the
problem - Holy Roman Emperor made them all resign finally
a new pope was elected in 1427
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5England France Develop
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6Englands Two Goals
- Gain Lands in France
- Strengthen power over nobles within England
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7Juries Common Law
- King sent Judges to all the parts of England
- Judicial system no longer in hands of lords
- Also collected taxes
- Rulings by these judges came to be called COMMON
LAW
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8The Bad English King
- King John Softsword (Richard the Lionhearts
brother Prince John from Robinhood) was a weak
cruel king - Huge losses in France
- Nobles revolt
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9The Magna Carta
- Nobles forced John to sign the MAGNA CARTA (Great
Charter) guaranteeing basic political rights - No taxation w/o representation
- Trial by jury
- Protection of the law
- Eventually rights extended to all English citizens
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10Parliament
- When the next English king needed to raise taxes
he created PARLIAMENT to approve his tax increase
- 2 wealthy citizens from each urban area
- 2 knights from each county
- The Bishops
- The Lords
Initially controlled by the king, eventually came
to be a power rivaling the king
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11The Capetians
- Royal house of France for over 300 years
- Initially one of several kings of France,
eventually united France
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12Estates-General
- ESTATES-GENERAL when the king called all of the
councils together. - The First Estate (Church leaders)
- The Second Estate (great lords)
- The Third Estate (commoners/wealthy landholders
merchants ) - Never an independent power like parliament
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13Beginning of Democracy
- Founding institutions that would develop into
democracy - Centralized government
- Common law court systems
- Including commoners in decision making
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14The Hundred Years War
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15Background
- In keeping with royal tradition, marriages
between the royal houses of Europe were arranged
to - Promote relations between ruling houses
- Legitimize royal bloodlines
- Included marriages between England France
16England
- Previous kings of England were more French than
English - i.e. Richard the Lionhearts mother first
language French - Gascony, Aquitaine, port areas in the north of
France were controlled by English lords
17France
- The royal family, the Capetians, had consecutive
male heirs for over 340 years! - Didnt have a clear plan on how to handle the
succession w/o a direct male heir. - The sons of Philip IV did not have any male heirs
but.
Hugh Capet
18Englands Claim to France
- Edward III was Philip IVs grandson on through
his mother. - Lands held by Edward in Gascony Aquitaine meant
he was already ruling in France (according to him)
19France says No Way Jacque!
- As Lord of Gascony and Aquitaine, Edward is a
VASSAL of the King of France therefore the King
of England is NOT king over French lands - French tradition says heirs must come through
male heir
20England Fights Guerilla War
- Englands resources and small raiding army were
not initially taken serious by the French. - England didnt fight fair
- Used commoners as combatants
- Welsh English Longbow
- England argued they didnt have a choice
21The Welsh English Longbow
- Advantages
- Cheap
- Portable
- Deadly penetrate armor, fatal at 100yds,
accurate to 200yds
- machine gun of the Middle Ages
- 12-15 arrows per minute
22Longbow ends Medieval Warfare
- Armor is almost pointless
- No longer need years of training to fight
- Commoners are actually better in battle than
knights
23Hundred YearsSort of
- 1337 1453 the kings of England and France
fought off and on - Victory passed back forth until
24Peace Treaty of 1420
- After the deat of current French King Charles VI,
Henry V of England would inherit the French crown
- Joan of Arc, a 13 year old girl who believed she
heard the voices of saints convinced the French
king to fight on - Led France to victory
- Had Charles VII crowned king
- Captured by English, executed by the Church
25Victory for France
- Between 1421 1453, France finally gains enough
strength to drive the English entirely out of
France. - except the port of Calais
- A necessary concession as the English needed
access to trade with the mainland of Europe
26Impact of the War
- NATIONALISM developed as the people of France
England - Saw king as a national leader
- Fought for glory of country (not out of duty)
- Powerful French monarchy
- England suffers as two noble houses fight for the
thrown.
Note These are not the flags flown during the
15th century!!!!!!!!
27Result
- Political leaders held more power than religious
leaders - People looked on the church of the Middle Ages as
extravagant and arrogant - New scholars began pointing to the Christian
Bible as a higher authority than the pope