Title: The Hundred Years' War
1The Hundred Years War and the Plague (1347-1453)
2The Church Loses Power
- In 1300, Pope Boniface VIII tried to enforce
papal authority on kings as previous popes had - King Phillip IV of France rejected Bonifaces
assertion that kings must always obey the pope - End of papal authority over secular rulers
King Phillip IV and his court.
3Avignon and the Great Schism
- Phillip IV convinced the College of Cardinals to
appoint a French archbishop as the new pope - Disputes over the nationality of the pope led to
a divide in the church - The Great Schism Split in the Church between
French and Italian Christians - Eventually the selection of a new pope ended the
Great Schism but left the Church greatly weakened
Pope Boniface VIII
4The Bubonic Plague Strikes
- During the 1300s, an epidemic swept Europe
- Originated in the Mongolian Steppe
- Spread via trade routes
- Black Death Killed one-third of the population
- Disease was carried by fleas
- Was called the Black Death because of the black
spots persons infected with the disease developed
on their skin - Over 50 million died
The Spread of the Plague
5Medieval Art and the Plague
6Medieval Art and the Plague
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8Attempts to Stop the Plague
Flagellants
Jewish Pogroms
9Effects of the Plague
- Town populations fell
- Trade declined
- Prices rose
- Church lost prestige
- Prayers failed to stop the plague
A plague victim reveals a buboe on his leg, 14th
century CE.
10Causes of the 100 Years' War
11A Struggle for National Identity
- France was NOT a united country before the war
began. - The French king only controlled about half of the
country.
12The Hundred Years War
- When the last Capetian king died without a
successor, England's Edward III claimed the right
of the French throne - Edward was a grandson of Phillip IV
- The Hundred Years War (1337-1453)
- Century of war between France and England over
rule of France - Victory passed back in forth between the two
- Eventually the French drove out the English
The Battle of Agincourt, 1415 CE
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14Battle of Agincourt
Battle of Agincourt
15Joan of Arc
- In 1420, the French and English signed a treaty
- Gave Henry V the crown after the death of the
French king Charles VI - Joan of Arc Peasant girl who felt moved by God
to save France from its English invaders and
return the crown the Frances true king, Charles
VII - Battle of Orleans
- Captured by the English in 1430
- Tried as a heretic and burned at the stake in
1431
Joan of Arc
16The Impact of the Hundred Years War
- Strong feelings of nationalism
- King was now seen as a national figure, not
simply a feudal lord - The power and prestige of the French monarch
increased - Many historians consider the end of the Hundred
Years War in 1453 as the end of the Middle Ages - The twin pillars of the medieval world, religious
devotion and chivalry, both crumbled
17France Becomes Unified!
France in 1337
France in 1453