Title: The Rise of the Middle Ages
1Tell me what you know about the Middle Ages
2Periodization
Early Middle Ages 500 1000 High Middle Ages
1000 1250 Late Middle Ages 1250 - 1500
3The Early Middle Ages
4Middle Ages, Medieval ages , Dark ages ?
- Middle as in time between the end of the Roman
Empire and ancient civilization and the rebirth
(Renaissance) of progress/growth in Europe - Medieval is middle in Latin
- Early Middle Ages is called the Dark Age because
it was not a great time in Europe - Fall of Rome left vacuum filled by brutal
warlords and barbarians - Much knowledge lost
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5Barbarians of the Dark Ages
- Celts
- Huns
- Goths
- Visigoths
- Ostrogoths
- Vandals
- Burgundians
- Britons and Picts
- Anglo-Saxons
- Jutes
- Angles
- Saxons
- Franks
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7Fact to know and remember
- Europe is the continent having a Dark Age
- Everyone else is not
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9Britons
Huns
Celts
310 to 500 AD
Africa
10Who and when are Arthur and Merlin?
- No artifacts found
- a half-forgotten Celtic deity that devolved into
a personage ? - a Roman-British leader who fought against the
invading Saxons ? - Castus, a Roman leader who led a group of
Samatians near Hadrians Wall? - First appears in Welsh literature In a surviving
early Welsh poem, The Gododdin (ca. AD 594)
400 to 500 AD?
11Mosaic of King Arthur on floor of Otranto
Cathedral in Italy built in 500s AD
12Arthur ?
13Merlin ?
14Valle Crucis Abbey near the town of Llangollen in
North Wales. The present ruins date from around
the year 1200, but a monastic building has stood
on this spot since the early Dark Ages(300-400).
15Glastonbury Abbey- Avalon?
16How about Druids?
- priestly class in ancient Celtic Iron Age
societies - Acted as priest, arbitrator, healer, scholar, and
magistrate. - Polytheists and animists,
- All instruction was communicated orally,
- Believed in reincarnation
- Worshiped in groves of oak trees
- Gone/no mention after 100 AD
- Samhain Halloween
Base-relief found at Atun of two Druids
17Mabinogian
- 1060 to 1200,
- Collection of stories from Medieval Welsh
- Rhiannon
- Merlin/Taliesin
- Evangeline Walton
- The Chronicles
- of Prydain by
- LLyod Alexander
- The Black Cauldron by Disney
18The Rise of the Franks
- Franks originally from a Germanic tribe that
settled in Belgium and the Netherlands - Merovingian's (The Matrix)
- Clovis
- Carolingians-
- Charles Martel
- Pepin the Short
- Charlemagne
19Clovis
- Cruel, merciless
- United Franks by war
- Excellent military leader
- France gets name
- from the Franks
- Converted to Christianity
- Ordered his people
- to do so also
- Sons divided the Kingdom
20Carolingians 714 to 843 AD
- Pepin the Short-
- Crowned by Pope
- The Pope wants to holds authority over Kings
- Pepin wants Popes help to defeat invading
Lombards from Germany - Pope agrees to crown Pepin
- Pepin gave Land gained in Italy to Pope -Papal
states
- Charles Martel-
- His Calvary defeated invading Moors near Tours in
France - Halted the Islamic advance into Europe
- Martel means Hammer in English
21Charlemagne- 768 AD
- Outstanding ruler with minimal formal education
- Religious, practical, and intelligent
- Good military skills- controlled Western Europe
- Good at PR-claimed descent from Mary and Joseph
- Drove Moors back across the Pyrenees
- Goal-Renewal of the Roman Empire
- Pope crowned him due to increasing mixture of
secular and profane in government - Capital at Aix-la-Chapelle in Germany
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23Frankish weapons
24Charlemagnes rule
- Government of checks
- and balances
- No direct taxes because his
- holdings supported the State
- Monastic schools for nobles and intelligent
- lower classes
- Libraries
- Produced one standardized Bible
- Encouraged people to convert
25Frankish costume
26The Frankish Empire declines
- Charlemagnes son, Louis the Pious , was
- no Charlemagne
- Charlemagnes descendents fought each other
- Kingdom broke up and splintered
- Four groups of invaders
- Viking (Scandinavia)
- Slav (eastern Russia)
- Magyar (Hungarians)
- Muslim (Arabia and North Africa)
27 Magyars 800s AD
- Resembled Attila the Hun because they were nomads
and fierce so Franks called them the Hun - In WWII the Allies called Germany the Hun
- Invaded the Frankish Empire from the East
- Later settled down and eventually came to be the
Kingdom of Hungary
28The Vikings 8th to 9th centuries
29Viking Weapons
30Viking Jewelry
31Where did the Vikings attack?
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33Odin
Thor
34Ride of the Valkyries
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36The Varangian Guard
Vikings made it as far as Russia (Rus and Rurik)
and then to Constantinople where they became the
Emperors personal bodyguards. Fought Muslims for
the Emperor
37Why did the Vikings go a-Viking and why did they
stop?
- Medieval ages in Scandinavia were warmer than
must of Europe - Increased population and resources
- Then the Little Ice Age occurs in the 900s
- Resources start to dwindle, people begin to
starve - Increased conversions to Christianity
- Rest of Europe becomes warmer, especially Britain
38Society in the Middle Ages
39Feudalism- system of loyalties and
protections during the Middle Ages.
- King the Man
- Lord-the Boss Man
- Vassal- nobles who get land for supporting a Lord
or a king - One could be a Lord and vassal at the same time
- Fief or land grant-what the lord gives vassals in
exchange for military support - Primogeniture- eldest son always inherits the
Fief. - Freeman and artisans few in the Middle Ages
- The Church- could be a vassal
- Serfs-most of us (not the man)
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41The Manorial System
- As the Roman Empire crumbled, Emperors granted
land to nobles in exchange for their loyalty. - These lands were called manors.
- A manor becomes the land owned by a noble and
- everything on it.
- A typical manor consisted of a castle, small
village, forestland and farmland. - Former landowners exchanged freedom for safety
and became serfs that were owned by the Lord
of the Manor
42Serfs
- Serfs would often have to work three or four days
a week for the lord as rent for the land they
farmed - They would spend the rest of their week growing
crops to feed their families. -
- Some serfs worked as sharecroppers. A
sharecropper would turn over most of what he
grew in order to be able to live on the land
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44Manors
- An economic unit onto itself
- Self sufficient
- A third to a half of all produced goes to the
Lord and King. Rest to the Manor's serfs - Subsistence or Barely sustainable life for serfs
- Short, hard , sickly life
45Duc de Berry Book of Hours
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47Defense
- Castles are Wood/Stone
- Built to resist attack
- Moats
- Drawbridge
- Keep
- Window slits
- Cold, dark, drafty, damp
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49So how do enemies attack castles?
50KNIGHT SQUIRE PAGE
The Road to Knighthood
51Soldiers
52Knights
- Years of training as page and squire
- Knighthood ceremony
- Coat of arms
- Heavy armor-hoisted on to horse
- Ideal- pious, fair, brave, loyal, gallant,
respectful to - women of his class
- Tournaments/jousts are war training
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53Chivalry A Code of Honor and Behavior
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55The Church
56The Petrine Succesion
- You are Peter and
- upon this rock I will build my Church
Matt1618-19 - Peter is allegedly the first bishop of Rome
- The bishops of Rome eventually become the
father of the Christian church - Continues so after the split with Eastern
Orthodoxy - Early popes were trained in Roman civil
bureaucracy and shaped the church that way
57Characteristics of the Medieval Western or Roman
Catholic Church
- Hierarchy
- Pope
- Curia or cabinet of cardinals-counselors
- Archbishop
- Bishop-Cathedra
- Parish priest
- Monasteries/Nunneries/Hermits
- Sacraments
- Baptism
- Holy Eucharist
- Confirmation
- Penance
- Holy orders
- Matrimony
- Extreme unction
58Social mobility
- Rigid, hierarchal society with rare exceptions
which were in the Church - A slave became a pope
- Allegedly a woman became a pope
59- John Anglicus was a ninth century Englishman. In
853 A.D., he was unanimously elected pope. - While riding one day gave birth to a child.
- The first written reference to Joan occurs in the
thirteenth century - During the Reformation in the sixteenth century,
the Catholic Church began to deny the existence
of Pope Joan and the Gender checking chair. - Modern scholars have been unable to resolve the
historicity of Pope Joan.
60Monasticism
- Lived by rules
- Withdrawal from world
- Prayer, fasting, self-denial and work
- Saint Benedict and the Benedictine Rule
- Religious communities with an abbot as head
- Monasteries and convents preserved learning,
copied books, maintained schools, encouraged art,
reminded people that there was more than warfare,
preserved the memory of Rome, were the only means
of social welfare or help
61A Medieval Monks Day
62Nuns Then and Now
63Monks then and now
64The role of the Church
- Missionaries St Patrick, St Augustine
- Canterbury priests established cities and
centers of learning - Political and Social power
- Canon law
- Excommunication
- Interdict or The Big Whammy
- Tithe
- Power of life or Death eternally
- Economic power-trade, hospitals, agriculture.
- Grew in Wealth and therefore power
- Eventually able to dictate to Kings and Lords
65Why did they have such power?
- Faith
- Belief
- Power to forgive or dam all that occurs on Earth
- Lack of literacy. Minimal Bibles
- Offered best security available at the time,
eternity and sanctuary - Short brutal lives look forward to eternity and
do not want to mess that up
66Relics
67Problems the Church faced
- Corruption- with power and money comes temptation
- Lay Investiture
- Simony
- Heresy
- Luxury
- No one expects
- the Inquisition
- Reform St Francis
68How do you think the problems the Church faced
hurt or helped
- The Church?
- The King?
- A serf?The Priests?
69The End by Miz D