Title: Bellwork
1Bellwork
- In the last lesson, what occurred to
Charlemagnes empire? What affect did this have
on their government system?
2World History
- Middle Ages pt. 1
- Rise of Feudalism and Chivalry
3Objectives
- Compare the Middle Ages system of feudalism to
the Japanese style of feudalism. - Describe the new social stratification system
formed in Medieval Europe - Explain the role of Chivalry in everyday life of
a knight - Examine the manor system and the purposes behind
it.
4Treaty of Verdun
- After the Treaty of Verdun, Charlemagnes three
feuding grandsons broke up the kingdom even
further. - Part of this territory became a battleground as
new waves of invaders attacked Europe.
5Invasions
- Between 800 and 1000, invasions completely
destroyed the Carolingian Empire. - Muslims seized Sicily and raided Italy.
- Magyar invaders struck from the east and
terrorized Germany and Italy. - Vikings sailed from the north and terrorized all
of Europe.
6Vikings
- The Vikings hailed from the cold climate of
Scandinavia, which was north of Eastern Europe. - They were Germanic peoples, who were often called
Northmen or Norsemen and worshipped warlike gods. - The Vikings even took pride in nicknames like
Eric Bloodaxe and Thorfinn Skullsplitter.
7Vikings
- Vikings carried out raids extremely quickly.
- They struck and then headed out to sea again and
by the time troops arrived, they were usually
gone. - Viking ships were extremely well crafted. They
could carry enormous amounts of weight, but still
sail in water that was 3 feet deep this allowed
them to traverse across Europe completely by
boat.
8Vikings
- Vikings were not only warriors, but also traders,
farmers, and explorers. - Vikings ventured far beyond Europe and went into
Russia, to Constantinople, and even across water
into the North Atlantic. - The Viking Leif Erikson more than likely reached
North America at least 500 years before Columbus
did.
9Vikings
Map of Viking Explorations
- Around 1000, Viking terror faded away.
- The Vikings gradually accepted Christianity and
stopped raiding monasteries. - As well, a warming trend in Europe made farming
easier in Scandinavia and this caused many
Scandinavians to stop raiding other villages.
10Magyars
- As the Viking assaults lessened, Europe became
the target of new assaults. - The Magyars, a nomadic peoples, attacked on
horseback. - They swept across western Europe and sold those
who were captured as slaves.
11Muslims
- The Muslims struck from the south. From there,
they controlled the Mediterranean and disrupted
trade. - The Muslims got so far as to establish a
territory in southern Spain, but also took
control of Sicily.
12Effects of Invasions
- The invasions caused western Europeans to fear
for their lives. - Central authority proved powerless to help them
and they looked to local leaders who had
armies-- for protection. - These local leaders often had armies and those
who could defend their lands attracted followers
and gained strength.
Question How is this similar to the lords in
Japan?
13Structured Society begins
- In 911, two enemies met in a peace ceremony.
- Rollo was a Viking leader who had been plundering
the lands of Charles the Simple, of France. - Charles gave Rollo a huge piece of French
territory (present-day Normandy), and, in return,
Rollo pledged his allegiance to Charles.
Question What was Japanese feudalism based on
the control or trade of?
14Structured Society
- Between 850 and 950 during the worst years of
attack many leaders made similar agreements to
that of Charles and Rollo. - The system of governing and landholding called
feudalism emerged in Europe.
15Feudal System
- The feudal system was based on mutual
obligations. - In exchange for military protection and other
services, a lord landowner is granted land
called a fief. - The person receiving this land is called a
vassal. Feudalism depended on the control of
land.
16Feudal Pyramid
King
Population Increases
Increases
17Feudal Pyramid
- At the top of the pyramid, the king ruled.
- Next came powerful vassals, known as nobles and
bishops all of these people were wealthy. - Below them were knights, who were warriors who
pledged to defend their lords land in exchange
for fiefs and below them were the peasants.
18Feudal System
- In practice, the feudal system did not work so
simply. - Relationships between various lords and vassals
were never clear cut and, in some cases, one
noble might have several lords who gave them
land. - In some cases, the feudal system often became a
complex tangle of conflicting loyalties.
19Social Classes
- In the feudal system, status was determined by
prestige and power. - Medieval writers classified people into three
groups - Those who fought (nobles and knights)
- Those who prayed (those of the Church)
- Those who worked (peasants)
- Social class was usually inherited.
20Social classes
- In Europe during the Middle Ages, the vast
majority of people were peasants. - Most peasants were serfs people who could not
lawfully leave the place where they were born. - Though bound to the land, serfs were not slaves.
- Lords could not buy or sell serfs, but all the
wealth the lord had came from the serfs.
21Manor System
- The manor was the lords estate.
- During the Middle Ages, the manor system was the
basic economic arrangement. - The manor system rested on a set of rights and
obligations between a lord and his serfs.
22Manor System
- The lord provided the serfs with housing, strips
of farmland, and protection from bandits. - In return, serfs tended the lords land, cared for
his animals, and performed other tasks for the
estate. - Peasant women worked with their husbands.
23Manor System
- All peasants, whether free or serf, owed a lord
certain duties. - These included a few days labor each week and a
certain portion of their grain.
24Manor System
- Peasants rarely traveled more than 25 miles from
their own manor. - A manor usually covered only a few square miles
of land and consisted of the lords manor house, a
church and some workshops. - Fields, pastures, and forests surrounded the
village and some streams ran through manors,
providing fish, which was an important source of
food.
25Manor System
- The manor was largely a self-sufficient
community. - The serfs and peasants produced nearly everything
that they or their lord needed. - The only outside purchases were salt, iron, and a
few unusual objects and millstones, which were
used to grind flour.
26The Manor System
Notice how almost everything the people would
need is in a localized area. Rarely did people
leave.
Question If the manor was largely
self-sufficient, what do you think happened to
trade in much of Europe?
27Manor Life
- For the privilege of living on the lords land,
peasants paid a high price. - They paid a tax on all grain ground in the lords
mill and any attempt to dodge taxes was treated
as a crime. - Peasants also could only get married with the
lords consent and had to pay a tax on marriage.
28Manor Life
- After all these payments to the lord, peasant
families owed the village priest a tithe, or
church tax. - The tithe represented one-tenth of their income.
29Manor life
- Serfs lived in crowded cottages with one or two
rooms. They warmed their cottages by bringing
pigs inside and the family huddled on a pile of
straw at night. - Peasants simple diet consisted mainly of
vegetables, coarse brown bread, grain, cheese,
and soup.
30Feudal Life
- Despite their hardships, serfs accepted their lot
in life as part of the churchs teachings. - They, like most Christians at the time, believed
that God determined their place in society.
Question Why might serfs have been so accepting
of their position in life?
31Women
- The Church viewed women as inferior to men.
- In contrast, however, the idea of romantic love
placed noblewomen on a pedestal where they could
be worshipped. - A true knight (as we will see in the next lesson)
pledged to protect all women.
32Women
- However, as feudalism developed, womens status
actually declined. - Their roles became increasingly limited to the
home and convent. - For the vast majority of women, their lives
remained unchanged for centuries.
33Noblewomen
- Under the feudal system, a noblewoman could
inherit a state from her husband. - Upon a lords request, she could also send knights
to war and, when her husband was off fighting,
she could act as a military commander or warrior.
- Some women went so far as to dress in armor,
mount a warhorse, and mobilize a cavalry of
knights.
34Womens power
- As the Middle Ages progressed, however,
noblewomen wielded less power. - The Church played a major role in this and as it
regained power and control, it weakened the power
of women in medieval Europe.
35Break
- Please take two minutes to relax and breath.
36Setting the stage
- During the Middle Ages, nobles constantly fought
one another. - Their feuding kept Europe fragmented and people
valued violence. - By the 1100s, however, a code of behavior arose
and high ideals guided warriors and glorified
their roles.
37Soldiers
- Mounted soldiers became valuable in combat during
the reign of Charlemagnes grandfather, Charles
Martel. - Charles Martel had often observed the usefulness
of cavalries in other armies, and began to
organize his troops of armored horsemen, or
knights.
38Technology
- The leather saddle was developed on the Asian
steppe around 200 B.C. - Stirrups were developed in India around the same
time and both technologies changed warfare in
Europe in the 70os.
39Technology
- With the use of this technology, knights became
firmly placed on their horses. - Frankish knights, galloping full tilt, could
knock over enemy foot soldiers and riders on
horseback. - Gradually, mounted warriors became the most
important part of an army.
40Role of the Knight
- By the 11th century, western Europe was a
battleground of warring nobles vying for power. - To defend their territories, feudal lords raised
private armies. - In exchange for military service, feudal lords
use their most abundant resource land.
41Role of the Knight
- Lords rewarded knights, their most skilled
warriors, with fiefs. - Wealth from the fiefs allowed knights to focus on
war and pay for the cost of weapons, armor, and
warhorses.
42Role of the Knight
- As the lords vassal, a knights main obligation
was to serve in battle. - From each of his knights, a lord required nothing
less than 40 days of combat service. - When a knight was not fighting, they often
trained for war.
43Chivalry
- Early in the Middle Ages, knights were expected
to display courage and loyalty to their lord. - By the 1100s, the code of chivalry, a complex set
of ideals, demanded that a knight fight bravely
for three masters - Feudal lord
- Heavenly lord
- Chosen Lady
44Chivalry
- A chivalrous knight protected the weak and poor
and the ideal knight was loyal, brave, and
courteous. - Most knights, however, did not meet these
standards. They often treated the lower classes
brutally.
Question How is chivalry similar to the code of
honor that Samurai live by, bushido?
45Chivalry
- Knights who failed to meet these standards faced
public shame. - First, his armor was taken, his shield cracked, a
sword broken over his head. - People then threw a knight into a coffin, dragged
him to the local church, where a mock funeral
service was held.
46Glory
- Sons of nobles began to train for knighthood at a
early age and learned the code of chivalry. - After being dubbed a knight, most young men
traveled with companions and gained experience
fighting in local wars. - Some knights took part in mock battles called
tournaments.
47Glory
- Tournaments combined recreation with combat
training. - Two armies of knights charged each other and,
like in real battles, it could be fierce and
bloody. - Winners would often demand large ransoms from
defeated knights.
48Warfare
- By 1100s, stone castles were encircled by massive
walls and guard towers. - These castles dominated much of the countryside
in western Europe. - The castle was the home of the lord and lady,
knights and other men-at-arms, and servants. - It was also a fortress, designed for defense.
49Warfare
- A castle siege was a gory sight.
- Attacking armies used a wide array of strategic
weapons to force castle residents to surrender. - Defenders of a castle poured boiling water, hot
oil, or molten lead on attackers. - Expert archers were stationed on the roof of the
castle and could fire with deadly precision using
crossbows.
50Literature of Chivalry
- While the battles were gory, medieval literature
downplayed the brutality of knighthood and feudal
warfare. - Many stories idealized castle life and glorified
knighthood.
51Literature of Chivalry
- Feudal lords and their ladies listened to epic
poems that recounted the deeds and adventures of
many heroic knights. - Some stories were about legendary heroes, such as
King Arthur and Charlemagne. - These stories often represent courage, faith, and
chivalry.
52Literature of Chivalry
- Under the code of chivalry, a knights duty to
his lady became as important as his duty to his
lord. - In many poems, the heros difficulties resulted
from a conflict between those two obligations.
53Authority
- While medieval life centered around the great
deeds of knights and heroic tales, behind the
scenes lay the Church. - The Church, as we will see in the next lesson,
controlled or influenced practically every aspect
of medieval life.
54Review Objectives
- Compare the Middle Ages system of feudalism to
the Japanese style of feudalism. - Describe the new social stratification system
formed in Medieval Europe - Explain the role of Chivalry in everyday life of
a knight - Examine the manor system and the purposes behind
it.
55Questions
- If you have a question, please ask now.
56Next lesson
- In the next lesson, we will be discussing the
pervasive role of the Church in medieval Europe.
57Review
- What was feudalism and why might it have been
beneficial to the Europeans at the time (consider
why it might have been created). - What two technologies allowed medieval Europeans
to invest more in horseback warriors? How did
they make horseback riding more efficient? - How did knights practice their military skills?
- Who were a knights three masters?
- What five groups made up the pyramid of the
feudal system? You may draw the pyramid if you
want. - What did the vassal provide for the lord in
return for land? - Why did serfs along with everyone else in
society accept their role in life? - How is warfare for a knight different from the
literature describing their lives? - Comparison How is a knight similar to or
different from the Japanese Samurai? Explain.