Title: State and Church in the High Middle Ages, 1000
1Chapter 9
- State and Church in the High Middle Ages,
10001300
2In this thirteenth-century manuscript
- In this thirteenth-century manuscript, knights of
King Henry II stab Archbishop Thomas Becket in
1170 in Canterbury Cathedral, a dramatic example
of church-state conflict. Becket was soon made a
saint, and the spot where the murder occurred
became a pilgrimage site it is still a top
tourist destination.
HIP/Art Resource, NY
3The Growth of the Kingdom of France
- Some scholars believe that Philip II received the
title Augustus (from a Latin word meaning to
increase) because he vastly expanded the
territories of the kingdom of France. The
province of Toulouse in the south became part of
France as a result of the crusade against the
Albigensians
4Almohad Banner
- This finely worked embroidered banner is typical
of Muslim style it incorporates Arabic lettering
on the edges and includes no representation of
the human form. The Almohads were a strict Muslim
dynasty from North Africa that had ruled about
half of Spain in the twelfth century. In 1212
King Alfonso VIII of Castile won a decisive
victory over Almohad forces at Las Navas de
Tolosa, and Christian holdings in Spain increased.
Institut Amatller dArt Hispanic
5Palatine Chapel at Palermo(11321140)
- Muslim craftsmen from Egypt painted the wooden
ceiling of the royal chapel for King Roger of
Sicily. This section shows the diverse
peoplesJews, Christians, Muslimswho lived in
Palermo.
Burgerbibliothek Bern Cod. 120 II, fol. 98r
6Emperor Otto III Handing a Staff to Archbishop
Adalbert of Prague (tenth century)
- The staff, or crozier, symbolized a bishops
spiritual authority. Receiving the staff from the
emperor gave the appearance that the bishop
gained his spiritual rights from the secular
power. Pope Gregory VII vigorously objected to
this practice.
Bildarchiv Marburg/Art Resource, NY
7Countess Matilda
- A staunch supporter of the reforming ideals of
the papacy, Countess Matilda (ca 10461115)
planned this dramatic meeting at her castle at
Canossa in the Apennines. The arrangement of the
figuresKing Henry kneeling, Abbot Hugh of Cluny
lecturing, and Matilda persuading suggests
contemporary understanding of the scene in which
Henry received absolution. Matildas vast estates
in northern Italy and her political contacts in
Rome made her a person of considerable influence
in the late eleventh century.
Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana
8An engraving
- An engraving (18th century) of the mass suicide
of the Jews of Worms in 1096, when they were
overwhelmed by Crusaders (with shields).
Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz/Art
Resource, NY
9Christianization of the Baltic Region
- Dioceses and monasteries served as the means by
which pagan Baltic peoples were Christianized and
brought into the framework of Latin Christian
culture.
Source Some data from R. Bartlett, The Making of
Europe Conquest, Colonization and Cultural
Change, 9501350 Princeton, N.J. Princeton
University Press, 1993, pp. 16 and 259