1 / 37

Ch. 14 sec. 3 page 393

Ch. 14 sec. 3 page 393. England: “land of the Angles”. Celts Romans Germanic Tribes (Angles, Saxons, Jutes) + Vikings. Alfred the Great: King 871-899. Unites Anglo-Saxons Turned back Viking invaders Later…. Edward the Confessor: 1042-1066. No heir, so three claim throne.

toki
Download Presentation

Ch. 14 sec. 3 page 393

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. Ch. 14 sec. 3 page 393

  2. England: “land of the Angles” • Celts • Romans • Germanic Tribes (Angles, Saxons, Jutes) + Vikings

  3. Alfred the Great: King 871-899 • Unites Anglo-Saxons • Turned back Viking invaders Later…

  4. Edward the Confessor: 1042-1066 • No heir, so three claim throne

  5. 1066 A.D.: Three claim throne… • King Harald of Norway • Duke William II of Normandy • Harold of Wessex

  6. 1066 A.D.: Three claim throne… • King Harald of Norway • Duke William II of Normandy • Harold of Wessex becomes King Harold II

  7. 1066 A.D.: Three claim throne… • King Harald of Norway attacks and is killed.

  8. 1066 A.D.: Three claim throne… • Duke William II of Normandy attacks King Harold at the Battle of Hastings

  9. The Bayeux Tapestry (1066 A.D.) • “Here King Harold is slain”

  10. 1066 A.D.: Three claim throne… • Duke William II of Normandy wins, becomes William the Conqueror • Declares all of England his personal property (Feudalism) Later…

  11. Henry II: 1154-1189 • strengthened Royal Courts • introduced Juries (p.394) • established Common Law – rulings by courts

  12. Richard (I) the Lion-Heart • King from 1189-1199 • Left no heir • You may know him from the story of…

  13. Robin Hood…

  14. While on the Third Crusade…

  15. Prince John…

  16. Actually…

  17. Returning from the Crusade…

  18. Richard is shot by an arrow…

  19. And dies of Gangrene

  20. John Softsword: 1199-1216 • Trouble with the Church • Trouble with the Nobles

  21. King John vs. The Church

  22. Kingly Troubles • Many kings became ruthless and increasingly power hungry.

  23. Kingly Troubles • Many kings became ruthless and increasingly power hungry. • King John argues with Pope Innocent III over picking new Arch-Bishop of Canterbury

  24. Troubles with the Church • Pope chooses… • King John won’t allow him in England and seizes Church land

  25. Troubles with the Church • So, the Pope excommunicates King John • placed an interdict on England

  26. Troubles with the Church • King John eventually gives in • Must pay compensation to Church

  27. King John vs. The Nobles

  28. The Magna Carta 1215 A.D. Nobles were upset due to: • Argument with Pope (interdict) • High taxes; cruelty • Lost costly wars (lost Normandy) • So, they REBEL

  29. The Magna Carta • They wrote out a list of their demands called the Magna Carta “Great Charter”. • They said either you agree to our demands or no more feudalism.

  30. InCommon?

  31. Nobles will face punishment only by other nobles. The king, like all others in England, must follow the law. The rights of the Church are considered to be the same as the rights of freemen. Your lands cannot be taken in payment for debt as long as you pay the debt some other way. There shall be standard weights and measures throughout the realm. The King shall not raise taxes without first consulting with the barons. No one will be put in jail without first having a trial by jury. No widow shall be forced to marry so long as she prefers to live without a husband. For small offences you will face only a small penalty. The king cannot force anyone to go to war outside of the country. No one will be forced to make bridges at river-banks. (seriously) The Magna Carta

  32. This is Important! The Magna Carta I, King John, accept that I have to rule according to the law. So I agree: 1. Not to imprison nobles without trial 2. To have fair taxation for the nobles 3. To let nobles travel wherever they like 4. Not to interfere in Church matters 5. Not to take crops without paying for them …and lot more things too!!

  33. Magna Carta: page 395 • Written by Nobles, signed/ sealed by King John • Limits King’s powers • Guarantees certain rights Later…

  34. Edward I 1272-1307 • Edward “Longshanks” • 1295 A.D. – created the “Model Parliament” with Lords, Knights, Bishops, and Burgesses* *Commoner or Freeman

  35. What about France? • P. 397: Estates-General

More Related