1 / 27

Early Middle Ages Again

Early Middle Ages Again. Part II. Feudalism. Feudalism arose when local lords began to govern their own lands in the absence of a strong central government. To get needed military help, weak kings granted powerful lords the use of land from the royal estates.

Download Presentation

Early Middle Ages Again

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. Early Middle AgesAgain Part II

  2. Feudalism • Feudalism arose when local lords began to govern their own lands in the absence of a strong central government. • To get needed military help, weak kings granted powerful lords the use of land from the royal estates. • Strong lords, with more land than they needed, granted the use of part of it to lesser lords in return for military aid and other services. • Each man who granted land was a lord: each man who held land in return for services was a vassal. • The grant of land was called a fief. (Fife or Feef)

  3. Feudalism & Fiefs • The Latin word for fief is feudum, from which come the word feudal. • In times the fief became hereditary. • Legal ownership passed from the lord to his son, while legal possession and use passed from the vassal to his son. • Only the oldest son inherited for a fief was never divided. • Many lords held more than one fief, often in widely scattered locations.

  4. The Feudal Relationship • In order to understand the relationship between lord and vassal, it is helpful to remember three things. • Only nobles could be vassals. • It was an honorable relationship between legal equals. • A man could be a vassal and a lord. • It was a very personal relationship. • Each man’s loyalties and obligations were owed only to the lord immediately above him or to the vassal below him.

  5. Obligations of Feudalism • The granting and holding of a fief was really a contract between lord and vassal. • The lord granted the fief – that is, use of the land. • He also guaranteed the vassal protection and justice. • The obligations of a vassal were more numerous. • Promised the lord a certain number of fully equipped horsemen and foot soldiers. • Military service was usually limited to 40 days. • Other obligations involve aids to the lord.

  6. Feudal Justice and Warfare • Feudal justice was quite different from Roman ideas of law. • Trial decisions were made in any one of three days. • Trial by battle (the winner is innocent) • Compurgation (oath-taking) • Ordeal (tests used to determine innocence or guilt.) • War was the usual rather than the unusual state of the feudal world. • Most wars were between feudal lords or between lords and vassals. • Few wars were between kings, or kings fighting vassals.

  7. Armor and Weapons • In the early Middle Ages, the armor of the fighting man was simple. • Soldiers wore an iron helmet and a shirt of chain mail. • He also carried a sword, a large shield, and a lance. • Armor became complicated in later medieval times, with metal plates replacing chain mail. • Because the armor was so heavy, a knight often had to be hauled or boosted onto his horse. • The greatest sport of the feudal lord was the tournament, or mock battle.

  8. “The Truce of God” • For nobles, wars were fascinating affairs, but they brought suffering and famine to the peasants. • The Church tried to improve conditions by limiting private wars. • It issued decrees, known together as the Peace of God, which set aside certain places, such as churches, where fighting was not permitted. • The Church also tried to get all lord to accept another decree, known as the Truce of God, which forbade fighting on weekends and holy days. • Eventually, only 80 days a year was fighting allowed.

  9. Chivalry • During the 1100’s, feudal society was changed by the development of chivalry, a code of conduct for knights. (brave, loyal, and true to their word) • To become a knight, a boy had to pass through two preliminary stages of training supervised by a knight. • At age 7, a boy became a page. • Learn knightly manners and begin his training. • In his early teens, he became a squire. • Became a knight’s assistant. • After proving yourself as a squire you were worthy to become a knight. • Knighted in a ceremony called a dubbing. • Chivalry made a great improvement in the rough and crude manners of early feudal lords. • The system was not perfect because the courtesy of the knights was only extended to those of noble class.

  10. The Byzantine Empire

  11. Territory of the Empire • In the year 500, the Roman Empire in the east included Greece, and the northern Balkan peninsula, Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine,Egypt, and Cyrenaica. • Though also attacked by the by the Goths the Eastern empire was able to survive the attacks. • The Rome had collapsed in the West, the eastern empire was ready for a great political, economic, intellectual, and artistic revival.

  12. Emperor Justinian • Emperor Justinian • The leader of the revival was the Emperor Justinian, (527-65). • Under Justinian, the Byzantine Empire will expand to dominate the majority of the Mediterranean area. • Under Justinianthe Byzantines reached their greatest glory. • Great accomplishments were made in the fields of: • Government, religion, art, architecture, and law.

  13. Strengths of the Empire • The Byzantine Empire survived for a long time because its people were skilled at adapting themselves to change. • It also had other strengths: • Political Strength – the government was highly centralized, efficient bureaucracy, highly skilled diplomats and autocratic. • Military Strength – good natural frontiers that were easily defensible. They had excellent leadership and a good intelligence system. • Economic Strength – the wealth of the region was based on a sound mixture of agriculture, manufacturing, and trade.

  14. Religion • The two branches began to drift apart and in 1054, the final split came when the pope and patriarch at Constantinople excommunicated each other. • The church in the west became the Catholic Church. • The church in the east became the Orthodox Church.

  15. Orthodoxy • The Orthodox faith was a source of both weakness and strength for the Byzantine Empire. • Conflicts over interpretation tended to divide and weaken the empire. • However, the Church provided the basis for a kind of patriotism that strengthened the government and the emperor was head of the Church without little question.

  16. Byzantine Culture • The Byzantine Empire performed a great service for civilization. • Its scholars did not produce much that was original, but they did preserve and pass on classical writings of Greece and Rome. • For a thousand years, while the states of Western Europe were struggling to develop a new way of life, Constantinople was the center of a brilliant civilization. • Through missionary work, the Byzantines were also able to expand their culture beyond their borders.

  17. Art • Byzantine art is noted for its use of color and ornamentation. • Made beautiful tapestries and jewelry. • At its best, Byzantine art glorified religion. • The walls and ceilings of churches were covered with murals. • Brightly colored mosaics covered the walls and floors also. • The subjects in their art style were stiff and unemotional.

  18. Architecture • Architecture, especially religious architecture, was the greatest of Byzantine arts. • The finest building built during this period was the Santa Sophia which was begun in 532. • The central feature of the Santa Sophia is its large dome. • When Santa Sophia was completed in 537, one Byzantine writer said that it was a church “the like of which had never been since Adam, nr ever will be.”

  19. Law • Of all the Byzantine contributions to civilization , the greatest was probably the preservation of Roman law. • Emperor Justinian ordered his scholars to collect and organize, all Roman law. Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil law). • It is made up of four parts: • The Code • A collection of Roman laws. • The Digest • Summary of the great legal experts of the Romans • The Institutes • The basic principles of Roman law. • The Novels. • Justinian's Code forms the basis of many modern European legal systems.

  20. Decline of the Empire • In the 1000s, the Seljuk Turks, originally a nomadic people captured most of Asia Minor. • The Byzantine Empire appealed to the West for aid in defending itself against the Turks. • Emperor Alexius I asked for aid from the West, which marked the beginnings of the Crusades. • The First Crusade drove the Muslims out of Palestine, but eventually the city will fall to members of the Fourth Crusade. • Eventually, the Byzantine Empire will come to an end when Constantinople is captured in 1453, by they Ottoman Turks.

More Related