Title: THE LATE MIDDLE AGES:
1CHAPTER 9
- THE LATE MIDDLE AGES
- Social and Political Breakdown (1300-1453)
2Black Death, 13481350
- precursor overpopulation malnutrition
- agricultural improvements increase food supply
European population doubles, 10001300,
thereafter outstripping food production - 13151317 crop failures produce worst famine of
Middle Ages - bubonic plague (Black Death) followed trade
routes from Asia into Europe, probably via fleas
on rates from Black Sea area - popular remedies relevant medical knowledge
absent - aromatic amulets
- temperance moderation
- promiscuity abandon
- flight seclusion
- self-flagellation
3Black Death (cont.)
- economic consequences
- dramatic labor shortage, climbing wages for
laborers artisans - falling agricultural, climbing luxury
pricesnoble landowners hardest hit - attempts to freeze wages force peasants to stay
on land ? peasant revolts - cities (artisans) benefit from demand for luxury
goods - political/social consequences
- artisan guilds win some political power
- kings take advantage of weakened nobility church
4The Culprits
5The Symptoms
Bulbous
Septicemic Formalmost 100 mortality rate.
6The Disease Cycle
Flea drinks rat blood that carries the
bacteria.
Bacteria multiply in fleas gut.
Human is infected!
Fleas gut cloggedwith bacteria.
Flea bites human and regurgitates blood into
human wound.
7Attempts to Stop the Plague
Leeching
A Doctors Robe
8Attempts to Stop the Plague
FlagellantiSelf-inflicted penance for our
sins!
9Attempts to Stop the Plague
Pograms against the Jews
Golden Circle obligatory badge
Jew hat
10Medieval Art the Plague
An obsession with death.
11The Mortality Rate
353099930 - 70
25,000,000 dead !!!
12 Hundred Years War (13371453)
- nominal cause English king Edward IIIs claim on
French throne, thwarted by accession of first
Valois king, Philip VI (r. 13281350) - larger cause English-French territorial,
commercial, cultural rivalry - French weakness larger wealthier, but more
internal discord
13Causes of the 100 Years' War
141. Controversy Over Succession
- The French nobility selected Philip of Valois, a
cousin of the last king through the male line. - He founded a new French dynasty that ruled
through the 16c. - He was chosen in preference to King Edward III of
England, whose mother was the daughter of the
late king, Philip IV. - In 1340, Edward claimed the title King of
France.
152. Fr. Land Belonging to Br. Kings
- A longer standing issue was the status of lands
within France that belonged to English kings. - Edward was actually a vassal of Philips, holding
sizable French territories as fiefs from the king
of France it went back to the Norman conquest.
163. Conflict Over Flanders
The dagger pointing at the heart of England!
- Wool industry.
- Flanders wants its independence from French
control. - Asks England for help.
174. A Struggle for National Identity
- France was NOT a united country before the war
began. - The French king only controlled about half of the
country.
18Hundred Years War (cont.)
- First phase (under Edward III)
- Flanders allies with England, recognizing Edward
as king of France, 1340 - English seize Calais, 1346
- English rout near Poitiers, 1356 French king
John II taken captive - 1360 treaty John II ransomed, English claims in
France recognized, Edward renounces claim to
French throne - Second phase (Treaty of Troyes)
- English war effort flags due to peasant revolts
- recommences with English victory at Agincourt,
1415 - Duchy of Burgundy joins English
- Treaty of Troyes, 1420 named English Henry V
successor to French Charles VI, but both soon die
19Hundred Years War (cont.)
- Third phase (Joan of Arc)
- French teenage peasant Joan of Arc declares call
from God to deliver besieged Orléans from English - tired English repulsed, followed by string of
French victories - Joan captured 1430, tried burned as heretic at
English-held Rouen - English forced back, conclude war with Calais as
only French possession (1453) - Summary 68 years of peace, 44 of war France
devastated, but national feeling awakened
English French peasants suffer most from taxes
services
20The War Itself
21Military Characteristics
- The War was a series of short raids and
expeditions punctuated by a few major battles,
marked off by truces or ineffective treaties. - The relative strengths of each country dictated
the sporadic nature of the struggle.
22French Advantages
- Population of about 16,000,000.
- Far richer and more populous than England.
- At one point, the French fielded an army of over
50,000 ? at most, Britain mustered only 32,000.
23British Advantages
- Weapons Technologies.
- In almost every engagement, the English were
outnumbered. - Britains most successful strategies
- Avoid pitched battles.
- Engage in quick, profitable raids
- Steal what you can.
- Destroy everything else.
- Capture enemy knights to hold for ransom.
24The Longbow as a Weapon
- The use of the English defensive position was the
use of the longbow. - Its arrows had more penetrating power than a bolt
from a crossbow. - Could pierce an inch of wood or the armor of a
knight at 200 yards! - A longbow could be fired more rapidly.
- 6 arrows per minute.
25The British LongbowThe Battle of Poitiers, 1356
26Early English Victories
27Joan of Arc (1412-1432)
- The daughter of prosperous peasants from an area
of Burgundy that had suffered under the English. - Like many medieval mystics, she reported regular
visions of divine revelation. - Her voices told her to go to the king and
assist him in driving out the English. - She dressed like a man and was Charles most
charismatic and feared military leader!
28Cannons Used at Orleans
29Joan Announces the Capture of Orleans to the King
30Joan of Arc (1412-1432)
- She brought inspiration and a sense of national
identity and self-confidence. - With her aid, the king was crowned at Reims
ending the disinheritance. - She was captured during an attack on Paris and
fell into English hands. - Because of her unnatural dress and claim to
divine guidance, she was condemned and burned as
a heretic in 1432. - She instantly became a symbol of French
resistance.
31Joan as a Feminist Symbol Today?
32The End of the War
- Despite Joans capture, the French advance
continued. - By 1450 the English had lost all their major
centers except Calais. - In 1453 the French armies captured an
English-held fortress. - This was the last battle of the war.
- There was not treaty, only a cessation of
hostilities.
33France Becomes Unified!
France in 1453
France in 1337
34 Late Medieval Church
- papal monarchy established by Pope Innocent III
strengthened the church politically, but
weakened it spirituallyundermined popular
support - Innocents successors tightened centralized
church legal proceedings elaborated clerical
taxation broadened papal powers of appointment - demise of Hohenstaufens took away galvanizing
enemy of church, made it vulnerable
35Boniface VIII (r. 12941303) vs. Philip the Fair
(r. 12851314)
- French English kings raise taxes on clergy
Boniface decrees new taxes need papal consent - French king Philip the Fair cuts off flow of
money to Rome Boniface concedes - Boniface issues Unam Sanctam (1302), as
confrontation with Philip ramps up, asserting
subordination of temporal to spiritual power - French army assault molest Boniface, who later
dies - result popes never again seriously threaten
European rulers
36 Avignon Papacy (13091377)
- Pope Clement V moves papal court here to escape
strife of Rome - to get needed revenue, papal taxes go up, and
sale of indulgences begins - Pope John XXII (r. 13161334)most powerful
Avignon pope
37John Wycliffe (d. 1384) and John Huss (d. 1415)
- Lollards followers of Wycliffe, English
spokesman for rights of royalty against popes
challenged indulgences, papal infallibility,
transubstantiationanticipates Protestantism - Hussites followers of Huss, rector of University
of Praguesimilar to Lollards
38Great Schism (13781417)
- Urban VI and Clement VIIrival popes England
allies support Urban, France allies support
Clement - Conciliar Theory idea that a representative
council could regulate actions of pope - Council of Pisa (14091410) deposed Urban
Clement (who refused to step down), elected
Alexander Vthree contending popes - Council of Constance (14141417) provides for
regular councils every few years - Council of Basel (14311449) height of conciliar
government of church negotiated directly with
heretics (Hussites) - results of conciliar movement greater religious
responsibility to laity secular governments
39 Mongol Rule in Russia (12431480)
- Mongols, or Tatars, sweep through China, Islamic
world, Russia, 13th c. - Ghengis Khan (11551227) invades Russia, 1223
- Russian cities become tribute-paying
principalities of part of Mongol Empire known as
the Golden Horde - Russians impressed into Mongol military service,
women taken as wives/concubines, some sold into
slavery - partial Islamization of Russian society
- 1380 beginning of Mongol decline in Russia ends
1480 under Ivan the Great