1 / 16

Middle Ages

Middle Ages. Semester 1 – Day 57. Bellwork. Honors Review Worksheet 10-1. Regular: Review Workbook page 47. The Roman World Changes. Germanic Kingdoms Visigoths took over Spain and Italy Ostrogoths took Italy from the Visigoths

ziv
Download Presentation

Middle Ages

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Middle Ages Semester 1 – Day 57

  2. Bellwork

  3. Honors Review Worksheet 10-1

  4. Regular: Review Workbook page 47

  5. The Roman World Changes • Germanic Kingdoms • Visigoths took over Spain and Italy • Ostrogoths took Italy from the Visigoths • All of the Western Roman World was replace by German kingdoms • Anglo-Saxons took over Britain

  6. The Franks • Kingdom establish by Clovis, 1st German to covert to Christianity • Roman Catholic Church (Christian church in Rome) supported him because of his conversion • Controlled modern-day France and western Germany • Clovis’ sons divided up his kingdom

  7. German Society • Germans and Romans intermarried • German social bond was family • This affected laws: crimes were considered personal and led to blood feuds • Wergild: amount paid by a wrongdoer to the family of the person he or she had injured or killed • Ordeal: physical trials to determine guilt (divine forces)

  8. Role of the Church • Played an important role in the growth of the new European civilizations • Church Organization (clergy) • Parishes (local Christian communities) were head by priests • A group of parishes were headed by a bishop • Bishops are under the direction of the archbishop • Headed by the pope • Office of the pope strengthened by Gregory I • Had both spiritual and political authority

  9. Clergy issued sacrament or important religious ceremonies to all Christians. • The church helped to unify the people • Authority was political and religious • Canon law (Church law) • Punishments: excommunication and interdict

  10. Monks and Their Missions • A monk is a man and separates himself from ordinary society to dedicate his life to God • Saint Benedict wrote rules for monks • Monks provided a moral example to society • Monasteries became centers of learning • Worked to spread the religious message • Nuns were women who separated from ordinary society to dedicate their life to God

  11. Charlemagne and the Carolingians • Kingdom of Franks lost power to mayors of the palaces (chief officers of king’s household) • One of these mayors, Pepin took kingship • Pepin was the son of Charles Martel • After Pepin’s death his son Charles the Great (Charlemagne) took the throne • Dynamic and powerful ruler: intelligent, fierce warrior, pious Christian, supporter of learning

  12. Carolingian Empire • Covered much of western and central Europe • Used counts (German nobles) to act as king’s chief representatives in local areas • Used missi dominici (two messengers) who made sure counts were carrying out the king’s wishes

  13. Roman Emperor • Charlemagne’s new title • Symbolized the coming of Romans, Christians and Germans • Intellectual Renewal • Carolingian Renaissance • Renewed interest in Latin culture and classical works • Monks established scriptoria (writing rooms)

  14. Reading Assignment • Honors: read pages 285-290 • Regular: read pages 353-357

  15. Honors Assignment

  16. Regular Assignment

More Related