Title: MIDDLE AGES
1MIDDLE AGES
- Began with collapse of Western Roman Empire in
the 6th century AD and came to an end sometime in
the 14th-15th centuries
- Once considered to be one long, bleak period of
violence, ignorance, and superstition
- The Dark Ages
- Period did represent regression from achievements
of the ancient world but it was not completely
dark
- Preserved what was best of the ancient heritage
and mingled it with new Germanic and, later,
Arabic traditions to create a new civilization
- One that was capable of further growth and
progress
- Major contribution to the creation of the
foundation for the modern western world
2MIDDLE AGES
- Western Europe
- Hodge-podge of loosely organized kingdoms
- Became even more fragmented as time went on
- East
- Highly centralized Byzantine Empire
3CHARLEMAGNE
- Tried to overcome chronic disunity in Western and
Central Europe
- Approx. 800 AD
- Established empire that included France, most of
Italy, Germany, and part of Eastern Europe
- Took title of Holy Roman Emperor
4BREAKUP OF CHARLEMAGNES EMPIRE
- Incompetence of his descendants
- Charlemagnes failure to set up an effective
administrative system
- Invasions of the Magyars
- Invasions of the Vikings
5POST-CAROLINGIAN EUROPE
- Hopelessly complex jigsaw puzzle of small states
- Each with its own ruler
- Sometimes with title of duke or count
- Nominally owed allegiance to kings but this
allegiance was more theoretical than real
- Long-distance trade virtually disappeared
- Currency fell into disuse
- People reverted to barter system
- Cities shrank dramatically and sometimes
disappeared
- Educational standards declined
- Even kings were illiterate
- Only form of unity was the Christian Church
- But even its intellectual standards had declined
due to the prevalent ignorance and isolation of
the times
- Europe had become a desolate rural world in which
petty rulers lorded over tiny pieces of territory
and ignorance prevailed everywhere
6FEUDALISM
- Developed in response to the need of local
warrior-aristocrats to protect and administer
their territories in the absence of any sort of
effective central authority - Grant of a piece of land (fief) by a lord to a
subordinate (vassal) in exchange for the vassals
promise to provide lord with military service for
a specified period of time - Subinfeudation vassals having vassals of their
own
7FEUDAL PLAYERS (VASSALS)
- Feudalism also provided a decentralized form of
government
- Vassals were supreme within their fiefs
- Made own laws
- Enforced them as he saw fit
- Settled disputes between people who lived on the
fief
8MEDIEVAL PEASANTS
- Small scale farmers who devoted their lives to
growing enough to stay alive
- Lived and worked on manors
- Economic subunit of fief
9MEDIEVAL MANOR and THREE FIELD SYSTEM OF ROTATION
Fields divided into narrow strips with each
peasant family holding a number of them in each
field
System designed to avoid complete soil exhaustion
Arable land divided into three fields, each in a
different state of cultivation
Fields rotated each year
10PEASANT OBLIGATIONS
- Paid portion of harvest to lord of the manor as
rent
- Also had to work a certain number of days a weeks
on strips the lord retained for his own use
- Had to bring their legal disputes to the lords
court
- Even had to pay a fee for the lords approval to
marry
- Peasants were serfs
- Bound to the manor and their lord for life
- Also had to pay the Church the tithe and,
later, had to also pay royal taxes
- Lot of peasant was one of backbreaking labor,
deep poverty, no personal independence, and
resigned and hopeless desperation
11HIGH MIDDLE AGES (1000-1300)
- Cities grew in size and beauty
- Local and international trade revived
- Kings began to break down feudal system and
create nation-states under their direct control
12REVIVAL OF LOCAL TRADE
- Growth in European population after centuries of
decline and/or stagnation
- Caused by increase in food supply
- Made possible by draining of swamps and clearing
of forests by monasteries
- Created surplus people on manors
- Manorial economy could not support them
- Moved to long-dormant towns
- Created demand for agricultural products from
countryside
- Stimulated demand for manufactured products
- Sparked revival of local trade and commerce
13CRUSADES
- In theory, purpose was to take back the Holy Land
from Moslem Turks
- Caused tremendous human and material damage
without permanently achieving purpose
- Created demand for Middle Eastern luxury products
among returned Crusadersthus stimulating
international trade
- Revival of local and international trade created
Commercial Revolution
- Introduced modern capitalism
14WILLIAM I (THE BASTARD) OF ENGLAND
- Conquered England in 1066
- Wanted to bypass feudal system and exert direct
control over his realm
- Divided England into shires, each administered by
a shire-reeve (sheriff)
- Did end run around feudal system by creating an
alternative and parallel system
- Similar system devised by Philip Augustus in
France
15THE CHURCH
- Administration of pope was larger and more
sophisticated than that of any king
- Wealth of the Church was greater than any king or
merchant
- Also largest landowner in Europe
- Popes contended with kings on a equal basis
- Using powerful spiritual weapons
- Excommunication
- Interdict
16SUMMARY
- High Middle Ages were a period of progress and
prosperity
- Cities grew in size and beauty
- Trade revived
- Kings reasserted their power over their realms
- Church was at its peak of power and prestige
- Then it all came crashing down in the 14th
century
- Crisis of the Late Middle Ages
17CRISIS IN THE CHURCH
- Babylonian Captivity
- 1309-1372
- Popes fell under the control of the French
monarchy
- Forced to move to the southern French city of
Avignon
- Lost much power and prestige
- Great Schism
- Late 1370s
- Two, and for a while three, men all claimed to be
pope at the same time
- Threw the church into confusion
- Crisis resolved in 1415 but Church prestige had
been permanently damaged and many Christians were
left confused and/or cynical
18100 YEARS WAR
- Caused by dispute over French throne by France
and England
- Lasted actually 116 years
- France won
- Introduction of longbow rendered the heavily
armored horseman obsolete
- Hundreds of thousands people died, decimating the
population growth of earlier years
- Heavy taxation provoked peasant uprisings
(jacqueries)
19THE BLACK DEATH (BUBONIC)
- Started in China in 1331
- Traveled across Asia to Black Sea region
- Picked up by Italian merchants and taken to
Europe
- Spread from Italy to Germany, France, Spain, and
England
- Europeans could not cure it or prevent it from
spreading
- Catastrophic results
- 25 of population killed
- Some cities lost 75 of their population
- Plunged Europe into a severe depression
20ARTISTIC THEMES IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES
Danse Macabre
Four Horsemen Of Apocalypse
21BYZANTINE EMPIRE
22JUSTINIAN AND THEODORA
- Conquest of old Western provinces
- Justinians Code (compilation of Roman law)
- Construction of Santa Sophia (Church of the Holy
Wisdom)
23BYZANTINE ACHIEVEMENTS
- Empire renown for its wealth, power, and military
strength for centuries
- Army threw back or weakened wave after wave of
would-be invaders
- Persians, Arabs, Seljuk Turks, and others
- Saved Western Europe from conquest
- Civilized barbarian tribes on fringes of Europe
- Russians
- Converted to Christianity by Byzantine
missionaries
- Gave them alphabet they still use today
- Cyrillic alphabet
24BYZANTINE CHRISTIANITY
- Church had fallen under the control of the
emperor
- Through his puppet, the bishop of Constantinople
- Created tension with the pope
- Resulted in split within Christianity in 1054
- Roman Catholic Church
- Headquartered in Rome
- Led by pope
- Eastern Orthodox Church
- Headquartered in Constantinople
- Led by bishop of Constantinople (and Byzantine
emperor)
- Shattered unity of Christian Church forever
25END OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE
- Territory of empire shrunk over centuries
- Only included Constantinople and parts of Asia
Minor and southeastern Europe by 1200
- Constantinople falls to Ottoman Turks in 1453
- Renamed city Istanbul
- End of Byzantine Empire