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Christian Europe Emerges, 600-1200

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Christian Europe Emerges, 600-1200 Chapter 9 The Crusades 1095-1204 The Roots of the Crusades The Truce of God was promoted by the Latin Church. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Christian Europe Emerges, 600-1200


1
Christian Europe Emerges,600-1200
  • Chapter 9

2
The Byzantine Empire
  • 600-1200

3
An Empire Beleaguered
  • Christianity was adopted by Byzantine Emperors
  • A single ruler had supreme power over religion
    and law
  • Kept the eastern part of the old Roman Empire
    together

4
  • Byzantines Enemies
  • Arab armies took Byzantine Egypt, Syria and
    Tunisia between 634 and 650
  • By 1100, 2/3 of the people in these formerly
    Christian lands were Muslim
  • The empire fell to Muslim conquests by 1453
  • Germanic, Slavic and Turkic in the north
  • Seljuk Turks in the south

5
  • Byzantines relationship with Europe
  • The patriarchs of Constantinople questioned the
    Popes authority in their territory
  • 1054 - There was a schism, or formal split
    between the Latin Church and Orthodox Church

6
Society and Urban Life
  • The 500s Bubonic plague swept the area
  • It was referred to as the Plague of Justinian
  • Justinian was the emperor who ruled from 527-565
  • Led to urban population decrease
  • Barter replaced money transactions
  • Urban wealth declined/the elite class shrank

7
  • The power of remaining aristocrats and landowners
    increased
  • The Byzantine government controlled all aspects
    of the economy
  • May have slowed technological developments and
    economic innovations

8
  • Constantinople seemed to thrive, while rural
    areas saw no improvement in technology
  • Ex. Byzantine farmers were using old fashioned
    scratch plows while Western Europeans had begun
    using better technology
  • Constantinople was seen by visitors to be a
    showcase of religion and prosperity on the
    surface, but was dark and lawless in reality.

9
Cultural Achievements
  • Hagia Sophia
  • Constantinoples greatest architectural
    achievement

10
  • Also created lasting styles of painting and music
  • Cyrillic writing
  • Cyril and Methodius
  • Orthodox missionaries that developed a writing
    system used by the Slavs that converted to
    Orthodox Christianity
  • Still used by Russians and Slavs of the Orthodox
    faith

11
Early Medieval Europe
  • 600-1000

12
A Time of Insecurity
  • 711-Arabs and Berbers crossed the Strait of
    Gibraltar and took over the Visigoth kingdom in
    Spain
  • They then moved into France.
  • 732 Charles Martel (Charlemagnes Grandfather)
    stopped them

13
  • The Carolingian family (Charles Martels) comes
    to power
  • Pepin (Martels son) ruled from 751-768
  • Under Pepin and Charlemagne, the Carolingian
    Empire contained Gaul (France), part of Germany
    and part of Italy
  • The empire was split into three parts when
    Charlemagnes son, Louis the Pious died
  • French speaking in the west (France) and the
    Middle (Burgundy) and German speaking in the east
    (Germany).

14
  • 793 a new threat
  • Vikings, sea raiders from Scandinavia, began
    attacking the northern coasts of Europe and along
    the coasts of the North Sea.
  • Pillaged monasteries, villages and towns
  • Vikings had versatile ships
  • Sails and oars
  • Could sail in the stormy North Atlantic
  • And could maneuver up rivers
  • Between 800 and 1000 they settled Iceland,
    Greenland, and Vinland

15
A Self Sufficient Economy
  • Germanic rule of the old Roman Empire
  • Cities shrank
  • Roads fell into disuse and disrepair
  • Bartering rather than paying with coins
  • Decline in literacy rates, allowed new Germanic
    customs to take over

16
  • Most of Western Europe began to rely on local
    resources
  • Food shipments from territories like Egypt and
    Syria (that had been taken over by Muslims) were
    reduced.
  • Manors became the primary centers of agricultural
    production
  • A manor was self sufficient
  • Had fields, gardens, grazing land, fish ponds, a
    mill, a church, workshops and a village

17
  • Manors formed when small landowners gave or sold
    their land to large landowners for political and
    physical protection
  • Nobles (landowners) controlled the serfs.
  • Serfs were agricultural workers who belonged to
    the manor
  • They worked the land
  • Could not leave the manor where they were born

18
Early Medieval Society in the West
  • Carolingian army
  • Mostly cavalry
  • Soon, being a mounted soldier meant that one was
    also a land owner
  • Feudalism
  • A society in which kings and lords gave land to
    their vassals for sworn military support.

19
  • Mounted soldiers required strong grain fed
    horses.
  • Horses larger than the horses of Central Asia
  • The knight became the central figure in medieval
    warfare by the 1000s.
  • Land granted for military service was called a
    fief.

20
  • Marriage alliances
  • Men that married daughters or widows of Lords
    that did not have sons could inherit that Lords
    land.
  • Noble children often had no say in their marriage
  • Noblewomen could own land
  • Non noble women often worked alongside their
    husbands in agriculture.

21
The Western Church
22
Politics and the Church
  • Both the emperor and the church thought they were
    in charge.
  • The Pope actually crowned the Holy Roman
    Emperors.
  • The Holy Roman Empire a loose group of German
    princes that named one of their own to rule.

23
  • Canon Law, or church law, allowed the Pope to
    control church land and the Bishops.
  • Some of those Bishops were also vassals to other
    lords.
  • There was also controversy over who has the right
    to confer authority on local abbots and bishops,
    the king or the Pope?
  • Investiture Controversy

24
  • The Concordat of Worms (1122)
  • Emperor Henry V agreed that the emperor should
    not choose bishops and abbots, and the Pope
    agreed that the Emperor could name bishops and
    abbots as vassals as long as they were named so
    before their religious consecration.

25
Monasticism
  • Christian Monasticism
  • Idea originated in the east, but the Christian
    form developed in Egypt.
  • Celibacy
  • Prayer
  • Life apart from society

26
  • Benedict of Nursia (480-547)
  • Organized several monasteries in Southern Europe
  • Preserved literacy and learning
  • Monasteries and Convents
  • Became places of learning
  • Refuges for widows
  • orphanages

27
Kievan Russia
  • 900-1200

28
The Rise of the Kievan State
  • Region between the Black and Caspian Seas and the
    Baltic and White Seas
  • Different civilizations inhabited this region
    throughout history
  • Region of forest dwellers and nomads
  • Traded forest goods and slaves for goods and coins

29
  • Rus-Slavic speaking people
  • King Vladimir chose Orthodox Christianity in 988
  • After sending a group of men out to research
    other religions.
  • The group was impressed with their visit to
    Constantinople.

30
Society and Culture
  • Political power came from trade, not land
    ownership
  • Weak soil did not support a large population
  • The spread of Christianity was slow
  • Many people continued to revert to polytheism in
    times of need

31
Western Europe Revives
  • 1000-1200

32
The Role of Technology
  • New plow and harness made agriculture more
    productive
  • The horse collar , 800
  • Allowed for the use of horses to pull plows
  • 1000-1200 the population doubled in Western
    Europe

33
Cities and the Rebirth of Trade
  • Independent cities ruled by communes (groups of
    people)
  • First appeared in Italy
  • These cities turned to manufacturing and trade
  • Some laws allowed serfs to be free after living
    in a city. This drew people to the cities.
  • Spurs economic growth and increased trade

34
The Crusades
  • 1095-1204

35
The Roots of the Crusades
  • The Truce of God was promoted by the Latin
    Church.
  • Christians could not fight each other during
    certain parts of the year.
  • Powerful men in Europe were looking for more land
    to conquer
  • Especially the younger sons of nobles
  • Italian merchants wanted to increase trade in the
    Mediterranean

36
  • Why the Holy Land?
  • Pilgrimages to the Holy Land were important to
    Christians.
  • Some returned with word of the Ummayad Caliphate
    falling from power in a small territory.
  • Former Muslim rulers had allowed Christians to
    have safe passage to the Holy Land, but the new
    Seljuk kingdom did not.
  • The Byzantine Emperor asked the Pope for help.

37
  • First Crusade
  • Pope Urban II asked Christian Europeans to help
    in 1095
  • Captured Jerusalem in 1099
  • 1187 Muslim forces retook Jerusalem
  • Second and Third Crusades were unsuccessful
  • Fourth Crusade - 1204
  • Sacked Constantinople!

38
The Impact of the Crusades
  • Exposure to Muslim culture
  • Pasta
  • Paper
  • Refined sugar
  • Colored glass
  • Muslim philosophy and books on math, medicine,
    and science
  • Arabic translations of earlier Greek works
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