The Middle Ages
The Middle Ages, or Medieval Age (Medieval is Latin for
middle ages), is the span of European history between the fall of
500-1000 A.D. The Dark Ages
1000-1350 A.D. Economic recovery
1350-1450 A.D. Crisis in the civilization of the Middle Ages
The Dark Ages in European history refers to the time after
the fall of the
A. The Franks
1.
The most powerful and influential of the Germanic tribes was
the Franks. An important event in
European history was when
2. Charles Martel
Another important Frankish ruler was Charles Martel. In 732, at
the Battle of Tours, he stopped the
advance of Muslim armies moving eastward from
3. Charlemagne was the greatest of all medieval kings. He is important because he attempted to revive learning and bring some light to the dark ages. Although he himself never learned to read, he started schools and hired the best scholars of his day to teach and copy works of math, geometry, music, logic and astronomy. He spent most of his time at war expanding his territory.
An
important event happened in Charlemagne’s life in the year 800 A.D. After helping the pope subdue some rebellious
nobles in
B. Feudalism: A New Social Order
1. Old problems and new threats
After 476 A.D. when
2. The Solution
Feudalism began when wealthy land owners (most of which were former Roman patricians) divided their lands up and gave them out to lords to manage. The lords then divided their land up yet again into manors and put faithful vassals in charge of them. These vassals, or landlords, ran the day to day affairs of the lord on the manors. Some of them were made into knights by the lord. Each manor was protected by the lord’s knights and the land was worked by many serfs. Each person pledged their loyalty to the person above them. The system looked like this:
The serfs worked the land and served as foot soldiers for the king. In return they received protection from the knights and lords against attacks. Everyone provided something for some else and received something in return.
C. The Roman Catholic Church
1. Growth
Christianity grew from a small group of devoted followers of
Christ to a highly organized religion that outlasted the
2. Organization
The church was organized much like feudalism. At the top was the Bishop of Rome, or the pope as he came to be called. Under the pope were archbishops, then bishops and then priests. Its structure was very similar to the feudal pyramid above.
3. Its Involvement in Daily Life
For the people of the Middle Ages, religion was extremely important. People did not think about religion; they thought religiously about everything. Religion was not confined to certain holidays or Sunday; daily life was inseparable from it. Seven ceremonies, or sacraments, emerged that encompassed the entire life of Medieval people from birth to death.
The Seven Sacraments
1. Baptism This was done at birth to remove the sin with which all people are born.
2. Confirmation This is to confirm that a young person has decided the continue in the religion
3. Penance This is some good work done to earn forgiveness of sin
4. Marriage A man and a woman are joined together by the Church
5. Holy Orders A person dedicates himself or herself to a life of service to the Church
6. Eucharist A eating the wine and bread that become the blood and body of Christ
7. Last Rights A person’s sins are forgiven on their death bed.
D. The Norman Conquest of
1. The Conquest
The
Later that year William sailed his ships across the
2. The Results
a. Feudalism established
William modernized
b. The English language was changed
In
E. The Crusades
1. The Cause of the Crusades
Popes were losing power to secular authorities. Offices in the church were often sold to wealthy nobles, or given by the king as favors (simony). These people had little interest in the spiritual aspects of their church offices; they were more interested in the power and wealth they received from them. Many faithful Christians were disturbed by the practice of simony.
One pope, Gregory, was worried about the effect of simony on
the church. He started a reform movement
known as the Gregorian reforms.
The purpose of these reforms was to end the influence of secular leaders
on the church. This provoked anger on
the part of kings who did not support the Gregorian reforms. One German king had even kicked the pope out
of
Towards the end of the 11th century Islam was
well established among the Turkish tribes of
In responding to this crisis the pope was trying to stop the
Muslims and to strengthen his political power in the face of European
kings. Urban II began to preach the
crusading vow across
2. Results of the Crusades
a. Trade increased. Europeans learned of other lands and things. They now wanted those things. What bothered them, was that they had to buy most of these things from Muslim traders.
b.
Rediscovery of Classical learning (ancient
c. New advances in medicine. The science of the Muslims was discovered by Europeans
d. The success of large armies encouraged the rise of nations.
A. The Birth of Towns and the Middle class
1. Increase in food production and population
By the year 1000, much of
a. Changes in technology. By 800 A.D. peasants were using plows made from iron rather than from wood. This allowed them to plow deeper into the ground and to plow more land in less time. They also developed a new harness which allowed them to use horses for plowing rather than oxen. Horses were faster and could plow more land than oxen could. Windmills were invented and used to power mills for grinding grain into flour. They did not have to depend on the presence of fast moving streams to turn mills.
b. Changes in agriculture. People learned how to increase their farmland by draining swamps and clearing forests. The amount of land that could be used for agriculture increased. Peasants also developed the three-field system. In this system, the peasants divided their land into three equal parts. On two of these parts, they planted crops and the third part they left unplanted. They would rotate this pattern within the three parts, allowing on third every year to go unplanted and restore its nutrients. This brought greater productivity because in the old system they divided their land in half and left half of it unplanted.
These changes greatly increased the production of food in
2. Changes in Feudal society
Because new technologies (iron plows, harnesses, windmills) increased production, not as many serfs were
needed to farm the manor lands. There
was a surplus of labor. Because of this,
manor lords began to release some serfs from their feudal vows allowing them to
make their own living. These people
began to learn trades and skills; they also began to trade. They formed something
Some effects of these changes were:
1) Members of this middle class began to form the first towns. They set up shops and stores and began to conduct business.
2) To get their independence from the feudal lords, they would purchase a charter that gave them rights and privileges.
3) They began to use money instead of the barter system.
4) Each town formed a bank to change money, make loans, and issue letters of credit (similar to our checks).
5) They set up guilds. A guild was a made up of people of a similar trade (weavers, bakers, brewers, goldsmiths, etc.) who formed a group to protect their occupation. They established uniform prices, created common standards and measurements, and blocked competition from foreigners and non-guild members.
B. The Middle Class and Noble class gain more rights
1. Magna Carta
In 1215 the land-owning nobles forced the English king to sign the Magna Carta. This limited the power of the king.
2. The Estates-General
In
A. Religious problems
1. Struggles between secular and religious authorities.
The conflict between secular and religious leaders became
more intense. The an
extreme example of this was when under Henry, king of
2. Divisions within the Church.
One pope moved the papacy to
B. The Hundred Years War
The rivalry between the English and French culminated in the
100 years war. The English took back
Norman lands and seemed set to conquer all of
After Joan’s death the French started to defeat the English. Their new cannons destroyed English castles and forts. The French expanded their power and the English gave up on the dream of an empire on the continent.
Results of war
1. Large armies of foot soldiers and cannon made knights and castles less important. Feudal society was changing
2. Strong kings, rather than feudal lords, were the only ones who could afford the new armies, so kings became more powerful than local lords. Nations were forming.
3. The population of
C. Black Death (Video)