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Western Europe During the High Middle Ages

Western Europe During the High Middle Ages. The Establishment of Regional States The Holy Roman Empire Regional Monarchies in France and England Regional States in Italy and Iberia Economic Growth and Social Development Growth of the Agricultural Economy The Revival of Towns and Trade

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Western Europe During the High Middle Ages

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  1. Western Europe During the High Middle Ages

  2. The Establishment of Regional States • The Holy Roman Empire • Regional Monarchies in France and England • Regional States in Italy and Iberia • Economic Growth and Social Development • Growth of the Agricultural Economy • The Revival of Towns and Trade • Social Change • European Christianity During the High Middle Ages • Schools, Universities and Scholastic Theology • Popular Religion • Reform Movements and Popular Heresies • The Medieval Expansion of Europe • Atlantic and Baltic Colonization • The Reconquest of Sicily and Spain • The Crusades

  3. A Quick Review… • Recall Western Europe during the early middle ages (500-1000): • Violent and disorderly following collapse of Roman empire and invasions by migratory peoples • Little role in hemispheric economy • But foundations laid for more dynamic society • Regional states as basis for political order • New tools and technologies  increased agricultural production and economic growth • Strong western Christian (Catholic) Church brought cultural and religious unity

  4. The Establishment of Regional States

  5. The Holy Roman Empire • Unity of the Roman Empire never returned to Christian Europe during the Middle Ages • Otto I of Saxony takes advantage of decline of Carolingian Empire to establish kingdom in north Germany, mid 10th century CE • Military forays into eastern Europe • Twice enters Italy to aid Roman Catholic church • In appreciation, Pope John XII names Otto Emperor of Holy Roman Empire, 962 CE

  6. The medieval expansion of Europe, 1000-1250 C.E.

  7. Tensions between Emperors and the Church • Conflict with papacy prevented HRE from developing into a strong and dynamic state (papal claims of authority over monarchs, emperors seeking to control Italy and Church) • Investiture Contest, late 11th-early 12th centuries • Pope Gregory VII (1073-1085) attempts to end practice of lay investiture • Excommunicates Emperor Henry IV (1056-1106 CE) • German peoples take opportunity to rebel • Quashed with difficulty

  8. Frederick Barbarossa (r. 1152-1190 CE) • Frederick I, “red beard” • Attempt to absorb Lombardy (northern Italy) • Popes did not want him to gain that much power, enlisted aid from other states • Frederick forced to back down • Thus, papal policies again keep HRE from transforming into a powerful state

  9. Holy Roman Empire? • Voltaire: Holy Roman Empire was “neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire.” • Was he right? • “Holy?” Nope, secular. • “Roman?” Nope, German. • “Empire?” Nope, a regional state.

  10. Regional Monarchies: France and England • Without an effective imperial power, regional states emerge through medieval Europe. • Capetian France • Hugh Capet succeeds last Carolingian Emperor, 987 CE • Slowly expands authority out from Paris • Normans in England • Descendants of Vikings, settled in France • Invade England in 1066 under William the Conqueror • Dominate Angles, Saxons, and other Germanic groups

  11. Italy • No single regime controls entire peninsula • Series of competing ecclesiastical states, city-states, and principalities • Papal State directly controlled by Pope, good-sized territory in central Italy • By 12th century, city-states wealthy from trade increasingly displace church control in northern Italy • Normans invade southern Italy and displace Byzantine and Muslim authorities, bringing southern Italy into the Catholic orbit and laying foundation for emergence of powerful kingdom of Naples

  12. Iberian Peninsula • Muslims control most of Iberian peninsula from 8th to 11th centuries • From 11th century on, Christians from small Christian states in northern Spain attack Muslim territories and enlarge Christian holdings • By the late 13th century, only the small kingdom of Granada remains in Muslim hands

  13. Economic Growth and Social Development • Effective political organization of regional states contributed to economic growth and social development in medieval Europe. • Process similar to that which had already strengthened China, India and the Islamic world. • Increased agricultural production, urbanization, manufacturing and trade made Europe powerful and drew it back into commercial relationships with distant lands.

  14. Growth of the Agricultural Economy • Increase in agricultural yields was the foundation of economic growth and social development. • Factors leading to increased agricultural production: • Expansion of arable lands • Improved agricultural techniques • New Tools and Technologies • Introduction of new crops

  15. Increasing development of arable lands • Local lords pacified territories in the late 10th Century, ending threat of invasions • Population pressure emerges in Europe • Draining of swamps and clearing of forests by serfs and monks increases arable land • Improved agricultural techniques • Crop rotation, increased cultivation of beans especially • Increase in domestic animals, fish ponds • Horseshoes, horse collars (horses faster than oxen) • Addition of meat, dairy, fish, vegetables, legumes to European diet

  16. European Population Growth, 800-1300 CE

  17. Revival of Towns and Trade • Urbanization follows increase in food supply; cities begin to play a major role in European economic and social development for the first time since the fall of the western Roman empire • Urbanization brings specialization of labor, which results in dramatic expansion of manufacturing and trade • Main manufactured product: wool textiles • Mediterranean Trade • Italy well-positioned for sea trade • Italian colonies established in major ports of Mediterranean, Black seas

  18. The Hanseatic League • “Hansa,” association of trading cities • Trade in Baltic and North seas • Poland, northern Germany, Scandinavia

  19. Social Change • The Three Estates • Those who pray: clergy • Those who fight: knights • Those who work: peasants • Oversimplification of complex social reality • Chivalry encouraged warriors to become cultivated leaders of society • Initiation as a knight involved a promise of service to God

  20. Chivalry • Code of conduct for nobles • Sponsored by Church to minimize fighting among Christians • Technically, knight to dedicate his efforts to promotion of Christianity • Protection of women

  21. Troubadours • Class of traveling poets, minstrels, entertainers • Borrowed Islamic traditions of love poetry • Spread of cultural ideas to Europe • Popular among aristocratic women • Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122-1204) major supporter • Popularization of idea of romantic love, refinement of European knights

  22. Independent Cities • Additions to class of “those who work” • Merchants, artisans, physicians, lawyers, etc. • Awkward fit into tripartite caste system • By late 11th century, towns demand charters of incorporation for greater self-government and lower taxes

  23. Guilds • Urban nobles often dominate city affairs, yet medieval towns and cities also reflected the interests and contributions of the working classes. • Organizations of merchants, workers, artisans organize guilds to regulate production and sale of goods. • By 13th century guilds control good portion of urban economy • Price and quality control • Membership • Created social support network

  24. Urban Women • Women in the countryside perform the same kinds of tasks as their ancestors in the early middle ages • But towns and cities offer new economic opportunities for women • Dominated textiles and decorative arts • Representation in wide variety of trades • Admitted to most guilds • Some guilds for women only • Increasing prominence of women illustrates significance of towns and cities as agents of social change in medieval Europe

  25. European Christianity During the High Middle Ages

  26. Cathedral Schools • During early middle ages, European society too unstable to provide institutions of advanced learning • Some rudimentary education at monasteries, occasional scholars at courts, but few schools offered formal education beyond elementary level • High middle ages (1000-1300 CE) increasing wealth makes resources available for education • 11th Century: bishops and archbishops in France and northern Italy organize schools based in cathedrals • Curriculum of Latin writings • Literature, philosophy, some law, medicine, theology, works of Plato and Aristotle

  27. Universities • Academic guilds formed in 12th century • Both student and faculty organizations • Student guilds were concerned with treatment of students in town and quality of instruction • Faculty guilds give teachers the right to bestow academic degrees, which serve as licenses to teach, and the right to control the curriculum • Guilds help transform cathedral schools into universities

  28. The Influence of Aristotle • Latin translations of Byzantine Greek texts circulate in Europe • Jewish and Muslim scholars provide other translations from Arabic translations • St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), major proponent of Scholasticism • Synthesis of Christianity and Aristotle • University of Paris

  29. Popular Religion • Population at large remained unaffected by Scholasticism, which was aimed at intellectual elites. • For most, Christianity was important as a set of beliefs, rituals and observances that gave meaning to life and coherence to communities. • The Seven Sacraments gain ritual popularity, especially the Eucharist. • Devotion to Saints and prayers for heavenly intercession; veneration of relics and physical remains, pilgrimages • Most popular saint: The Virgin Mary

  30. Religious Movements • Rebellion against perceived materialism of Roman Catholic Church • Dominic (1170-1221) and St. Francis (1182-1226) create orders of mendicants (“beggars”), known as the Dominican and Franciscan friars • Vows of poverty • Popular preachers • Religious zealots, very opposed to heretical movements, tried to get heretics to return to the Roman Catholic Church

  31. Popular Heresy (southern France, northern Italy) • Dominicans and Franciscans worked within the Church, while others rejected the church and organized alternative movements • Waldesians • Despised Roman Catholic clergy as immoral and corrupt • Advocated modest and simple lives • Urged more lay control of preaching and sacraments

  32. The Cathars (Albigensians) • Influenced by religious movements in eastern Europe (Byzantine empire) and elsewhere in Mediterranean basin • Considered material world evil, and advocated asceticism: Chastity, vegetarianism, poverty • Considered the Roman Catholic Church hopelessly corrupt • Pope Innocent III virtually destroys Cathar movement with military campaign in 13th century

  33. Medieval Expansion of Europe • Atlantic and Baltic Colonization • Regional states began to emerge in the 9th and 10th Centuries to protect Europe from Viking raids. • Thus, Scandinavian seafarers turn attention to North Atlantic Ocean • Iceland • Eric the Red: Greenland • Leif Ericson (Eric the Red’s son): Vinland (Newfoundland, Canada) • Canadian settlements do not succeed • Christianity in Scandinavia: Kings of Denmark nominally convert to Christianity, Sweden and Finland follow

  34. Crusading Orders • Christian authority in the Baltic arrived following military conquest • Religious Christians form military-religious orders during the Crusade era (Templars, Hospitallers, Teutonic Knights) who took religious vows of opposition to Islam and paganism • Teutonic knights most active in Baltic, waging military campaigns against pagan Slavs in 12th and 13th Centuries; founded churches and monasteries in subdued territories • By 13th Century, Roman Catholic church had established presence in Baltic region, which became absorbed into Christian Europe

  35. The Reconquest of Sicily and Spain • Christian Europe also expanded in Mediterranean basin • Muslims had conquered Mediterranean islands and most of the Iberian peninsula between 8th and 10th Centuries • As European society grew stronger, Europeans sought to reconquer those territories and reintegrate them into Christian society

  36. Most important island was Sicily • Taken by Muslims in 9th century, reconquered by Normans in 11th century • Slow, gradual displacement of Islam • Cross-cultural fertilization occurs during transition: Muslim scholars in Sicily introduce Christian scholars to translations of Aristotle

  37. Spain/Iberian Peninsula • Reconquista of Spain took much longer than recapture of Sicily • After Muslim invasion and conquest of early 8th Century, caliphate of Cordoba ruled almost all of Iberian peninsula • Two small Christian states survive Muslim conquest, and they become the nucleus of reconquest, 1060s-1492 • Rapid, forceful assertions of Christian authority and displacement of Islam would begin as soon as reconquered territories fell into Christian hands

  38. The Beginning of the Crusades • “Crusade:” Holy war (Latin crux: cross) • 1095: Pope Urban II calls for Christian knights to liberate Jerusalem from Muslim control • Salvation promised for casualties • Rapid, enthusiastic response • Peter the Hermit raises popular frenzy, recruiting poor knights and peasants; ragtag mob destroyed on way to Jerusalem

  39. The First Crusade • 1096-1099: French and Norman nobles organize a more respectable military expedition to Holy Land • Captures Jerusalem in 1099, largely due to poor Muslim organization • Crusaders’ successes encourage Turks, Egyptians and other Muslims to set aside differences to expel European Christians from the eastern Mediterranean • Salah al-Din (Saladin) recaptures Jerusalem in 1187

  40. The Crusades

  41. Later Crusades and their Consequences • Five crusades by mid-13th century, none successful in reestablishing Christian presence in Palestine • Fourth Crusade destroys Constantinople, 1202-1204 and installs a Roman Catholic regime there that survives until 1261 • This seriously weakened the Byzantine Empire, propelling it into a serious decline that ended when Ottoman Turks toppled the empire in 1453

  42. Crusades were launched as wars of military, political and religious expansion • By those criteria, the Crusades failed • In the long run, however, they were important for their social, economic, commercial and cultural consequences • Brought European scholars, missionaries and merchants into contact with Muslim counterparts • This led to a large-scale exchange of ideas, technologies and goods that influenced European development and reintegrated Europe into the larger economy of Eurasia • Aristotle, “Arabic” numerals, paper production, astronomy, new foods, etc.

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