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Medieval History 101

Medieval History 101. Or: 1500 years of history in 90 minutes. Periodization. Always arbitrary Always contested. ‘ Medieval ’. From the Latin ‘ medium aevum ’ Literally ‘ the Middle Age ’

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Medieval History 101

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  1. Medieval History 101 Or: 1500 years of history in 90 minutes

  2. Periodization • Always arbitrary • Always contested

  3. ‘Medieval’ • From the Latin ‘medium aevum’ • Literally ‘the Middle Age’ • So defined by Renaissance scholars who saw the medieval period as a middle period between Greece and Rome and their own age, which they hoped would be a return to the glory of Greece and Rome

  4. Most Common Periodization • 0-476: Late Antiquity • 476-843: Early Middle Ages • 800-1050: Central Middle Ages • 1050-1300: High Middle Ages • 1300-1492/1521: Late Middle Ages

  5. Late Antiquity • The Roman Empire • United culturally/politically until 286-337 CE • Parted and began to diverge culturally/linguisitcally etc 337  • Empire survived until: • West: 31 BCE - 476 CE • East 31 BCE - 1453 CE

  6. Coming of Christianity • Entered Roman Empire as one of many Eastern mystery religions • Christians initially practiced in their homes • Experienced periodic persecutions until 313 CE • Officially adopted as religion of the Empire (both East and West) in 337

  7. Early Christian Communities, 62 CE

  8. Rapid Spread of Christianity after 313 CE • Popularity of Christianity exploded • Became fashionable to be Christian • By 337: 1/4 of Europe Christian • 391: Official Religion of Roman Empire • By 400: more Christians than non-Christians

  9. Changing Nature of the Church after 313 CE • Structure of worship more rigid, development of liturgy • Theology less fluid • Grew wealthier • Architecture became more public • Hierarchy of church officials created • Institutionalization of church

  10. Bishops • Chosen by communities to lead the church and resolve disputes about Christian teaching • After Constantine, bishops, who were often educated, would also act as administrators in the cities • As other wealthy Romans left the cities, Bishops took over the tasks of running them

  11. Merging Cultures in the West The Roman, Germanic and Christian Heritage of Medieval Europe

  12. The Roman Heritage • Trade networks (land and sea) • Literacy • Classical learning in medicine, philosophy and literature • Administrative units • Beginnings of legal serfdom • Law • continuously in the East • rediscovered in 11th c in West

  13. The Germanic Heritage • Bonds of loyalty amongst lords and warriors • The beginnings of medieval feudal relationships • Beginnings of medieval manorialism • Dependents work the land for their lords who do not do agricultural work • Judicial system (until 1215) • Trial by compurgation • Trial by ordeal

  14. The Christian Heritage • The Christian Heritage • Monotheistic belief • Belief in the message of the gospels • charity, humility, poverty, kindness • Belief in everlasting life for the faithful • Anti-Semitism

  15. Charlemagne’s Empire • Consolidation of Frankish territory under the Carolingians • Had been mayors of the palace but overthrew the Merovingian dynasty to become kings of the Franks in their own right

  16. Rule of Charlemagne (r. 768-814) • Ruled together with his brother Carloman until Carloman’s death in 771 • Worked tirelessly to expand his kingdom • Went on campaign every spring to annex territory • Numerous alliances through marriage (at least 11 wives and concubines) • 794 established permanent capital at Aachen • Established professional bureaucracy, missi dominici

  17. Carolingian Renaissance • Renewal in education • For boys and girls • Church reform • Foundation of 22 cathedrals, hundreds of monasteries • Uniformity of ritual • Carolingian minuscule • Encouraged greater scholarship • Preservation of Greek and Roman texts • Easier to read

  18. Merovingian Script

  19. Carolingian Minuscule

  20. Fragmentation of the Carolingian Empire • Collapse of the Carolingian Empire • Treaty of Verdun 843 • East Francia • Lotharingia • West Francia • Viking invasions, Magyar invasions, Muslim incursions • Three initial kingdoms were divided many times • Power of the kings was usurped by local powerful land holders

  21. Division of Charlemagne’s Empire

  22. Rivals for Power • In the years after 843, the kingdoms of East and West Francia and Lotharingia divided further • Nobles created alliances, married and fought to gain land (the currency of the day) and power

  23. Second Conversion • Climatic warming • Results in food surplus • Results in job specialization and the rise of cities • Results in labour rather than subsistence economy • Results in increased leisure time • Results in second conversion

  24. Outcomes of the Second Conversion • Health of one’s own soul as important as outward displays of religious faith • Sacraments seen as medicine for a sick soul • People’s relationship with God and Christ became much more personal

  25. Outcomes of the Second Conversion • People begin to invest the papacy and the church hierarchy with authority • As a result the power of the church grows

  26. Investiture Contest • Pope Gregory VII (1073-1085) • Dictatus Papae (1075) • That the pope alone can instate bishops • That the pope has the power to depose emperors • That all princes shall kiss his feet • Synod of Rome (1075) • Denunciation of lay investiture

  27. Investiture Contest • 1075 Henry IV of Germany appoints his own bishop of Milan • Gregory excommunicates Henry IV, Henry IV responds by deposing Gregory • Bishops refused to disobey Pope • German duces, released from feudal obligations issued ultimatum= obtain absolution from Pope • Canossa • reconciliation

  28. Crusades • People’s Crusade 1097 • First Crusade 1096-1099 • Second Crusade 1147-1148 • Third Crusade 1189-1192 • Fourth Crusade 1200-1204

  29. Results of the Crusade • Shared Eastern and Western cultures • Muslim science esp. medicine and travel technology • Return of Greek knowledge through Arabic manuscripts • Luxury goods trade • silk, spices, jewels • Awareness of otherness

  30. Religious Fervor • Rise of new religious orders • Franciscans (1209) • Dominicans (1215) • Beguins and beguines • Mystics • All of which, in different ways, demonstrated a much more personal relationship with God

  31. Giotto, Francis Receiving the Stigmata

  32. The Twelfth-Century Renaissance • Development of a scientific method • Rise of scholastic inquiry • Major technological advances • Windmills, gunpowder, astrolabes, Arabic numerals, eyeglasses

  33. Heresy • Two theories of heresy Church doctrine was solidified and this made it easier to decide who was a heretic and who was not OR With an increase in leisure time, people began to contemplate religious doctrine more and were more likely to conceive of heretical ideas

  34. Heretical Movements of the Middle Ages • Waldensians • Advocated printing bibles in the vernacular • Preached without permission • Denied that priests were necessary to remit sins • Cathars • Believed in two gods a god of good and a god of evil • Believed the material world was evil • Denied the authority of Catholic clerics • Created their own mirror heirarchy

  35. Responses to Heresy • Crusade • Albigensian Crusade (1209-1229) • Inquisitions • 1184?-- Episcopal inquisitions established • Not at all efficient • 1230s-- papal inquisition • Run by Dominicans • Efficient at gathering and storing information • Punishments, generally were light

  36. The Calamitous Fourteenth Century • Famine • War • Plague

  37. Famine • 1050-1300: population explosion in Europe • European agriculture was supporting all the people it could • Post 1300: little ice age • Universal famine 1315-1317 • Food prices rose exponentially • Disastrous results

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