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Barbarian Tribes

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Barbarian Tribes WHO LET THE DOGS OUT?? Vandals Headquarters were _at_ Carthage, on the north coast of Africa Built ships to raid Rome in 455 CE Famous leader: Gaiseric ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Barbarian Tribes


1
Barbarian Tribes
  • WHO LET THE DOGS OUT??

2
By the late 300s, uncivilized people began to
migrate into the Roman Empire
  • Long migration great changes
  • Middle Ages (Latin Medieval) lie between
    ancient and modern times
  • 500-1500 C.E.
  • Began when the Roman govt hired German
    mercenaries to fight, and paid them w/land along
    the northern border.

3
Germanic Tribes
  • Angles and Saxons and Jutes (Oh, my!)
  • Vikings
  • Franks
  • Burgundians
  • Bavarians
  • Lombards
  • Goths Ostrogoths (east), Visigoths (west)
  • Vandals

4
Barbarian Migrations
5
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6
Background
  • Neolithic lifestyle (while Mediterranean area was
    more advanced) Why?
  • Simple life nomads with no , cities, trade
  • Farming left to women
  • Hunting, fighting left to men
  • Wedge formation used in battle
  • Bravest, best armed men in front
  • Contempt for cowards

7
Germanic Religion
  • Showed love of war, animal sacrifices in sacred
    groves
  • Valkryies spirits who fly the souls of dead
    warriors to Val Halla
  • Val Halla Hall of the Slain, happy hunting
    ground, days for fighting, nights for drinking
  • Odin God of the Dead, giver of Victory, suffered
    on a tree for the Runes, gave mead to men
  • Thor Odins son, thunderbolts for weapons

8
Days of the Week
  • Named for Germanic Gods
  • Sun
  • Moon
  • Tiu son of Woden and Frigg (fertility goddess)
  • Woden another name for Odin
  • Thor
  • Frigg
  • Saturn Roman agriculture god

9
Germanic Writings
  • Runes magical inscriptions, another of Odins
    gifts to mankind
  • Beowulf most famous epic hero story, valuable
    insights into the Germanic lifestyle

10
Germanic Government
  • All fighting men had a say in decisions
  • This assembly was called the Mall.
  • Wergelds laws formed by tradition
  • Judges of crimes were the Elders.
  • Punishments were harsh right hand or bow fingers
    were severed.
  • Families sought revenge clan feuds
  • Wolfshed outside the law (anyone could murder
    him w/o punishment)

11
Angles and Saxons and Jutes
  • Invaded Roman-held Britain in waves from
    Scandinavia and Denmark
  • Set up farming communities
  • Eventually intermarried, thus Anglo-Saxons
  • Britain became Angleland

12
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13
Vikings (Danes, Northmen, Norsemen)
  • Origin Scandinavia
  • Warrior/farming society, worshipped Odin,
    warriors beserker
  • Viking technologies boat building, jewelry
    making, carving
  • Attacked coastal areas of Angleland, Europe, and
    Russia, sailed up rivers to loot and pillage
  • Sent exploration boats to Greenland.
  • Discovered the New World in 1003 C.E.
  • Were defeated in Italy.

14
Lost Wax Method
15
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16
Franks
  • Established the greatest barbarian state
  • Slowly migrated, intermarried as they progressed
  • Were heathens (no religion) so religious conflict
    was kept to a minimum.
  • Brave warriors, sturdy farmers
  • Expanded rapidly under Clovis

17
Clovis, the 1st Merovingian
  • Clovis was descended from Meroveg, a famous
    Frankish war hero
  • Was brutal, cruel, w/o conscience, but was an
    excellent military leader, treated conquered
    people w/consideration
  • Conquered other Frankish tribes and united them
  • Christmas Day, 496 CE Clovis along with 3,000
    of his men, converted to Christianity to honor
    his vow to his wife
  • Became a champion of the Catholic Church

18
  • Conquered the Burgundians
  • Killed the Visigoth king
  • Ruled all of Gaul, so is considered the Founder
    of the French Nation
  • Died in 511 CE. Divided kingdom among his sons,
    according to Frankish tradition.

19
Later Merovingians
  • Preoccupied by pleasure and luxury, the
    Do-Nothing Kings left the business of ruling to
    the Mayor of the Palace.
  • 700 CE Pepin II, Mayor of the Palace succeeded
    in making the position hereditary, so was king in
    all but the title.
  • Son of Pepin Charles Martel became Mayor
  • 732 CE Moors (Moslems) from Spain invaded
    France, but were defeated by Charles Martel at
    the battles of Tours and Poitiers. Became a hero
    and a champion of the Catholic Church.

20
Pepin III (The Short)
  • Son of Charles Martel
  • Wanted title of King, so wrote to the Pope
    Stephan, asking for support
  • Pope replied He who wields the power, wields the
    title.
  • 751 CE Assembly of Frankish lords deposed the
    Do-Nothing Merovingian king and elected Pepin III
    as King of the Franks.

21
Ill scratch your back if
  • 754 CE Pope Stephan travels to Frankish Kingdom
    and crowns Pepin III as King by the Grace of
    God.
  • Sets a Precedent- a standard for future
    actions. Later popes claimed the power to install
    and depose kings.
  • Pope asks for help to conquer the Lombards, who
    were threatening his rule on the Italian
    peninsula.

22
Gift of Pepin
  • Pepin and army marched on the Lombards,
    confiscated their territory around Rome, and gave
    it to the Pope. Gift of Pepin became the
    Papal States, to be ruled by the Popes for
    centuries, and greatly expanded
  • Was there an agreement between Pepin and Stephan?
    Good question, but it paved the way for the
    greatest of Frankish kings. Charlemagne

23
Charlemagne
  • Charles the Great, Karl de Grosse, Carolus
    Magnus Carolingian dynasty
  • 68, strong, handsome, dignified, intelligent,
    religious, little formal education
  • Ruled Franks for 46 years 768-814 CE.
  • Defeated Lombards, Saxons, Avars, Moors
  • Fought 54 wars, all on the pretext of converting
    pagans to Christianity
  • Song of Roland epic story of Archbishop Roland,
    a loyal, but reckless, vassal of Charlemagne

24
Its a deal?
  • 799 CE Pope Leo III (the Rake) fled Rome in
    disgrace, turned to Charlemagne for aid.
    Charlemagne reinstated the Pope.
  • Christmas Day, 800 CE While Charlemagne knelt
    praying the Pope spontaneously crowned him
    Emperor of the Romans
  • This title implied he was the successor to the
    emperors of Rome, with claims to the old Roman
    Empire.
  • Caused a split between the Roman Catholic Church
    and the Eastern Orthodox Church. Pope and
    Patriarchs excommunicated each other.
  • Rift not closed until 1965 CE.

25
Charlemagnes Government
  • He organized land holdings into regions governed
    by Counts, who raised armies and enforced laws
  • Capital _at_ Aix-la-Chapelle, but he traveled
    constantly to check on the counts
  • Missi Dominici Kings messengers heard
    info/complaints from nobles AND
  • common
  • people.

26
Charlemagnes Govt Continued
  • Sworn Inquest people were bound by oath to
    tell what they knew of local crimes
  • No direct taxes on land or people, since
    Charlemagne met govt expenses with income from
    his own estates
  • Wealthy donated cavalry and weapons.
  • Freemen served 3 months annually in army.

27
Education Under Charlemagne
  • Established Palace School at court, for
    children of nobility
  • Hired learned men from abroad to teach
  • Bishops were ordered to collect libraries and
    organize schools for lower class children
    w/ability

28
Division and Fall of the Frankish Empire
  • Empire was united only because of Charlemagnes
    energy
  • 814 CE son Louis the Pious inherited
  • 843 CE Treaty of Verdun divided the empire
    among Louiss 3 incompetent sons, who fought
    instead of uniting (Louis, Charles, Lothair)
  • Other barbarian tribes attacked (Vikings, Slavs,
    Moslems, and the Magyars, who were so much like
    the Huns that they earned the name Hungarians)

29
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30
Burgundians
  • Settled in southern France
  • Excelled at vineyards and wine-making

31
Lombards
  • Migrated from the east
  • Settled in the Po River Valley
  • Famous leader Alboin made his wife drink a
    wedding toast to him from a cup made from her
    fathers skull. In revenge, she had him killed.
    The Lombards vowed to have many leaders instead
    of one, and called them Dukes.
  • Eventually elected a duke as king.

32
Ostrogoths
  • Were captured by the Huns and forced into
    slavery. Regained freedom when Attila died.
  • Famous king Theodoric the Great, ruled Italy as
    sole ruler, but with 2 governmentsone for the
    Ostrogoths, one for the Romans.
  • Repaired aqua ducts, encouraged Latin learning
  • He tried to preserve Roman culture, tolerate
    various religions, help barbarians and Romans
    co-exist peacefully.

33
Visigoths
  • Famous leader Alaric, had been an imperial
    commander to Rome
  • Attacked Rome in August, 410 CE
  • Army occupied Rome for 3 days
  • Grain shipments to Rome were halted. St. Jerome
    reported cannabalism.
  • Visigoths retreated to settle in Africa, but
    Alaric died suddenly.
  • Legend of his tomb in the bedrock beneath the
    Busento River.

34
Vandals
  • Headquarters were _at_ Carthage, on the north coast
    of Africa
  • Built ships to raid Rome in 455 CE
  • Famous leader Gaiseric sacked Rome even worse
    than the Visigoths. They killed the last King of
    the Romans, a 14 year old boy named Romulus. This
    began the final slide of Roman power.
  • Destroyed for sheer enjoyment, thus the term
    vandalism.

35
Essay Questions
  • 1) Gregory of Tours recorded that Clovis said
    for I have invoked my own gods, but, as I see,
    they have withdrawn from aiding me. What is the
    significance of this story? What role did Clovis
    play in the rise of Europe?
  • 2) The Capitulary de Villis issued by Charlemagne
    in 807 ordered that the weapons, which are
    carried against the enemy, shall be well cared
    for, so as to keep them in good condition. Why
    would Charlemagne make this stipulation? How were
    armies organized in medieval Europe? What were
    the limitations of political organization in the
    middle ages?

36
  • 3) Examine the role played by Charlemagne in the
    establishment of a powerful Europe. What were his
    main inspirations? What were his policies?
  • 4) How did the Viking invasions influence the
    rise of Europe? Besides being powerful warriors,
    what were the main achievements of the Vikings?
  • 5) Discuss the significance of Cloviss
    conversion to Christianity? What were the
    political, intellectual, and religious
    implications of this conversion?

37
  • 6) Discuss the importance of the Franks. How did
    they build an empire? What role did the other
    Germanic tribes play after the fall of Rome?
  • 7) What impact did the barbarian invasions as a
    whole, have on the political, social, economic,
    and religious aspects of Europe?
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