Title: Final Review:
1Final Review The Middle Ages 1250-1500
2Geography
3Europe in 800
4Europe in 1346
5European Rivers ? Barriers or Highways?
6Political
7Pope Crowned CharlemagneHoly Roman Emperor Dec.
25, 800
8Charlemagnes Empire CollapsesTreaty of Verdun,
843
9Feudalism
- Relationships between lord and vassal based on
specific contractual obligations of loyalty and
protection - Peasants provided labor in return for security
- Controlled through an intricate set of
obligations, fees, rituals and taxes - Only the wealthy could engage in warfare, and
society became divided - Those who fought (nobles and knights)
- Those who prayed (the clergy)
- Those who worked (peasants and artisans)
10Feudalism
A political, economic, and social system based on
loyalty and military service.
11Feudalism
12National Monarchies
- City-states lacked complexity of modern nations
- Rulers began to establish hereditary claims to
the thrones - Bureaucracy of modern nation-state can be seen in
several nations - Monarchs had to establish the power to tax
subjects - Usually had to get support and approval from
other political bodies
13Magna Carta
- Great Charter
- Signed in 1215
- Monarchs were not above the law
- Eventually led to the creation of
Parliament - Other nation-states created councils and
representative bodies to limit power of
monarchs
14The Hundred Years War1337 to 1453
- A series of wars fought by England and France
over the French throne - Challenged ideas of medieval warfare as English
longbows and infantry destroyed French mounted
knights - 1429 Joan of Arc helped the French Army break
the siege of Orleans - Her success threatened the French Dauphin, so
Joan was killed - By 1453, England held only the city of Calais
15Intellectual
16Schools and Universities
- Growth of cities quickened intellectual life
- Universities taught a variety of subjects,
without the separation of spiritual and material
subjects - Theology was the queen of the sciences and
liberally borrowed from other disciplines to
elaborate its truths - Led to the creation of Scholasticism
17Medieval Universities
18Scholasticism
- Mid-13th Century Aristotles philosophies were
rediscovered - Pagan ideas regarding logic and the natural world
were synthesized into Christian dogma to explain
divine truths - This intellectual system came to dominate the
universities until the 18th century - St. Thomas Aquinas Christian scholar who
embraced scholasticism - Note much of the Renaissance was directed
against what was perceived as the Scholastics
focus on stale logic and impractical learning
19Religious
20The Medieval Catholic Church
- At the height of its political, spiritual and
cultural influence - Pope and Holy Roman Emperor vied for power in
Central Europe, essentially checking each other - Growing criticisms of the behavior of the clergy
and the lack of regularity in church doctrine and
practice - Led to the crisis of the Babylonian Captivity
21The Babylonian Captivity and the Great Schism
- 1307 Pope began exile in France
- Not a captive of the French, but prestige of the
pope decreased due to increased bureaucratic
apparatus necessary to run the Church and
increased material wealth - Great Schism (1378-1417) resulted from efforts by
French and Italian cardinals to elect a pope - Ended up with two popes, then three
- Nations of Europe were forced to chose sides
22Opposition to the Catholic Church
- Reformers used the Great Schism as an example of
why the Church had to change - John Wyclif (the Lollards) England
- Jan Hus (the Hussites) Bohemia
- Attacked the institutional power and wealth of
the church and began a call for a simpler
Christianity - Council of Constance ended the Great Schism, but
the foundation was laid for the Protestant
Reformation
23Artistic
24Illuminated Manuscripts
25Gothic Architectural Style
- Pointed arches.
- High, narrow vaults.
- Thinner walls.
- Flying buttresses.
- Elaborate, ornate, airier interiors.
- Stained-glass windows
- Designed to educate the illiterate population
26Obsession with Death and Dying
- Representations of death became a prominent theme
in European arts throughout the plague years - Apocalyptic images featuring the allegoric figure
of Death attempted to explain the importance of
the Black Death for European society
27The Danse Macabre
28Technology
29Cannons
- Petrarch wrote "these instruments which discharge
balls of metal with most tremendous noise and
flashes of fire...were a few years ago very rare
and were viewed with greatest astonishment and
admiration, but now they are become as common and
familiar as any other kinds of arms. - Beginning of the end for walled fortifications
- Allowed New Monarchs to consolidate power by
eliminating fortified towns and castles of
nobility
30Longbow
- High rate of fire and penetration power
- Contributed to the eventual demise of the
medieval knight - Used particularly by the English to great effect
against the French cavalry during the Hundred
Years' War (1337-1453). - Longbow helped New Monarchs to create
cost-effective standing armies, to maintain and
expand power
31Printing Press
- Developed in 1439 by Johann Gutenberg
- Made possible the dissemination of knowledge to a
wider population - Lead to more egalitarian society
- Laid the foundation for the Renaissance,
Reformation and Enlightenment
32Economic
33Towns and Commerce
- Towns acted as magnets for skilled labor, ideas,
and goods - Typically lay outside of the feudal structure
- Banded together in leagues to protect
independence and promote commerce - Hanseatic League German trading centers in the
Baltic region, controlled the herring market
34Hanseatic League
35Medieval Trade
36Medieval Guilds
Guild Hall
Medieval Guilds A Goldsmiths Shop
- Central institutions of most towns
- Commercial Monopoly
- Controlled membership apprentice ? journeyman
? master craftsman - Controlled quality of the product masterpiece
- Controlled prices No Free Market!
37Agricultural Improvements
- Three-crop field rotation
- Iron plow
- Windmills
- More land brought under cultivation
- Helped produce a food surplus
- Increased trade networks
By 1300, population at an all-time high of 75
million
38Social
39Social Order
- A new social order had evolved by 900 that was
distinctively medieval. - Alfred the Great of England a kingdom needs men
of prayer, men of war, and men of work. - Tripartite view of society
- The Clergy
- The Landed Nobility (knights)
- The Peasantry and Village Artisans
- A fourth emerged after the 13th century middle
class merchants townspeople - burgesses in English, bourgeoisie in French,
burghers in German
40Gender Roles
- Womens roles limited by legal and economic
prescriptions - Many women did find ways to express autonomy,
initiative, and talent within these parameters - Noblewomen often ran the manors in the absence of
their warrior husbands - Younger noblewomen joined convents
- Allowed them to pursue intellectual and spiritual
pursuits outside the control of men - Ideal of courtly love and chivalry placed women
at the center of an important cultural tradition
41Chivalry A Code of Honor and Behavior
- Chivalry began as the code of conduct for mounted
warriors. - Chivalry highly esteemed certain masculine,
militant qualities. - Military prowess
- Generosity
- Loyalty, the glue that held feudal society
together.
42Gender Roles
- Cities and towns relied upon the labor of women
in the food preparation, brewing and the
production of cloth - Peasant and serf women labored alongside husbands
in mowing hay, tending the vegetables, or
harvesting - Domestic chores actually played a minor role for
most women
43The Medieval Manor
- A powerful lord controlling the lives of an often
large number of dependents. - He required payments and services from them and
regulated their ordinary disputes. - The structure of individual manors, and the dues
owed by peasants, varied tremendously across
Europe. - Parallel sets of vertical bonds of associations
- Feudal lords and vassals entered into political
bonds - Lords and peasants entered into economic bonds.
44The Medieval Manor
45Life on the Medieval Manor
Serfs at work
46The Black Death Causes
- By 1300, the large population explosion had
outgrown the food supply. - Progressively weakened by malnutrition, Europes
population was highly vulnerable to disease - Devastation resulted from the Black Death
(1348-1351) - Killed about 40 of the European population
- More important were the psychological and social
costs of the disease
47(No Transcript)
48The Black Death
- Disease carried by fleas on rats, so urban areas
were devastated - Many believed that this was Gods punishment for
living too well - 60 of theclergy diedtreating thedisease,
causingpeople toquestion thepower of thechurch
49The Black Death
- Led to persecutionof Jews, who wereblamed
forpoisoning the wells - Caused a laborshortage that undermined the
feudal structure - Allowed peasants to bargain for improved labor
conditions and payment - Note Did not affect Eastern Europe as much as
Western/Central Europe, which allowed the feudal
system to last much longer
50Attempts to Stop the Plague
FlagellantsSelf-inflicted penance for our
sins!