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The Reformation. Lesson 3. Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class. During the Middle Ages, there was little trade and almost no industry Slowly, over centuries, all this changed The main reason – the economy in Europe slowly improved. Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class.
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The Reformation Lesson 3
Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class • During the Middle Ages, there was little trade and almost no industry • Slowly, over centuries, all this changed • The main reason – the economy in Europe slowly improved
Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class • Trade began in increase • Largely the result of the contacts Europeans made with the outside world • Trade routes developed between Europe and Asia • As trade increases, towns increase – no need for people to live on farms
Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class • The growth of towns and cities is called urbanization • People who lived in towns tended to be more sophisticated, educated, and wealthier • During the Middle Ages there were only 2 main economic classes in Europe: the very rich nobles and very poor peasants
Urbanization & the Rise of a Middle Class • With the rise of trade and towns, a new class emerged • The Middle Class • Middle class was mostly traders and merchants • As the size of the middle class grew, so did their influence on European life
Check for Understanding What is urbanization? • The movement of people from cities to the suburbs • The desire to live on farms • The growth of cities and towns • The growth of farms
Check for Understanding What is the middle class? • An economic class of people that is wealthier than the poor but not as wealthy as the rich • The largest class of people in any society • The most powerful classes of people in any society • A class of people bound to nobles as part of the feudal system
The Roman Catholic Church • The church was a central part of most people’s lives • Headquartered in Rome • Headed by the Pope • Archbishops answered to the pope • Bishops answered to the archbishops • Local priests answered to the bishops • In this way, the authority of the Church filtered down to nearly everyone in Europe
The Roman Catholic Church • The Church was extremely wealthy • Became the largest landholder during the Middle Ages • The Church officials could excommunicate people, or cut them off entirely from the church
Check for Understanding What was the most powerful religious and social force during the Middle Ages? • The Church • The Roman Catholic Church • Both a and b, since the refer to the same thing • The Medici family
Check for Understanding What is excommunication? • The act of challenging the authority of the Roman Catholic Church • The act of entering the Roman Catholic Church • A religious upheaval • The act of cutting someone off from the Roman Catholic Church
The Reformation • A great challenge to the Roman Catholic Church • Took place during the 1500s • Main cause for the Reformation was due to the abuse of power • The abuse of power took many forms
The Reformation • One abuse had to do with the way the Church obtained money • The Church and its many officials needed money to function • To get it, the Church sometimes sold positions with the Church • Many poor people resented this
The Reformation • Church officials abused their positions to personally benefit from the wealth of the Church • Many church officials lived like kings • Huge, lavish (fancy) homes
The Reformation • The Church also engaged in the sale of indulgences • Indulgences were pardons from sin • Under this practice, people could be pardoned for their sins by giving money to the Church
The Reformation • People felt the Church neglected spiritual leadership in favor of worldly wealth and power • As people became educated, they began to question the Church’s interpretation of the Bible • The middle class no longer needed the protection of feudal and manor lords, who were often bishops of the Church
The Reformation • All the factors combined to create a great revolution against the Church • The greatest leader of the revolution, or Reformation, was MartinLuther
Check for Understanding TRUE or FALSE _____As people became more educated, they flocked to join the Church _____The sale of indulgences contributed to people’s dissatisfaction with the Church _____Most Church leaders were poor and humble _____The Reformation affected the Roman Catholic Church
Martin Luther (1483 – 1546) • Leader of the Reformation, Catholic monk • In 1512, earned his Doctorate of Theology at the University of Wittenberg • He became a member of the faculty there • Was appalled by the sale of indulgences • Shocked by the wealth, worldliness, and corruption of the Church leaders
Martin Luther • In protest he nailed a document to the door of the church in Wittenberg on October 31, 1517 • This document was Luther’s Ninety-five Theses, or ninety-five statements
Martin Luther95 Theses • He denounced the corruption of the Church, especially the sale of indulgences • The 95 Theses were printed and widely distributed • Remember the Gutenberg printing press was developed 50 years earlier
Martin Luther • Spoke out even stronger against the Church • Denied the authority of the Church and the pope completely • He said people did not need the church at attain salvation • They had a direct line with God • Only needed their Bibles, their minds, and their souls
Martin Luther • Had the support of many people including some powerful nobles • One of his most important works was a new translation of the Bible • He translated it into German, instead of Latin
Check for Understanding What were the Ninety-five Theses about? • Luther’s belief that there was no God • Luther’s protest of corruption and the sale of indulgences • Luther’s respect for the Roman Catholic Church • All of the above
Protestantism • People who broke from the Roman Catholic Church came to be called Protestants because the had protested against the Church • Protestantism took hold in northern Europe • Catholicism remained strong in southern Europe
Protestantism • Protestants of northern Europe formed many different denominations • Each was organized differently and had some differences in beliefs • All believed very differently from the Church • They didn’t need the Roman Catholic Church to receive God’s grace
John Calvin (1509 – 1564) • Lived in Switzerland, was a priest • Thought that God decided the fate of every person • He directed efforts that would lead to the firm establishment of Protestantism in Switzerland, France, and other countries throughout northern and western Europe
Protestantism • In England, Queen Elizabeth I created an official form of Protestantism called, Anglicanism in 1563 • It was a moderate form of Protestantism • Many people in England did not support this • They preferred the Congregational system of John Calvin • These people became known as Puritans
Protestantism • Puritans followed a more “pure” version of Protestantism • Within a century, the Puritans, fleeing religious persecution, would come to America
Check for Understanding What were the people who broke from the Roman Catholic Church? • Disciples • Protestants • Peasants • nobles
Check for Understanding Who directed efforts that would spread Protestantism ideas? • Martin Luther • The Roman Catholic Church • John Calvin • Galileo Galilei
Results of the Reformation • Before the Reformation, there was only the Roman Catholic Church • After, Europe was divided • Protestant ethic, or way of life – stresses the importance of home and family and the role of the individual in community life • Hard work and thrift are celebrated • The most important result of the Reformation was simply the establishment of Protestantism
Check for Understanding TRUE of FALSE _____After the Reformation, there was only one major church in Europe _____The Reformation marked the end of Catholicism _____The Roman Catholic Church remained strongest in southern Europe _____The Protestant ethic stresses hard work and thrift