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- 1. Chapter 20
Western Europe During the High Middle
Ages
1
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- 2. The Holy Roman Empire
Otto I of Saxony takes advantage of decline of
Carolingian Empire to establish kingdom in north
Germany, mid 10th century CE
Military forays into eastern Europe
Twice enters Italy to aid Roman Catholic church
Pope John XII names Otto Emperor of Holy
Roman Empire, 962 CE
2
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- 3. The medieval expansion of Europe, 1000-
1250 C.E.
3
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- 4. Tensions between Emperors and the
Church
Investiture Contest, late 11th-early 12th centuries
Pope Gregory VII (1073-1085) attempts to end
practice of lay investiture
Excommunicates Emperor Henry IV (1056-1106
CE)
German peoples take opportunity to rebel
Quashed with difficulty
4
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- 5. Frederick Barbarossa (r. 1152-1190 CE)
Frederick I, “red beard”
Attempt to absorb Lombardy (northern Italy)
Popes did not want him to gain that much power,
enlisted aid from other states
Frederick forced to back down
5
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- 6. Regional Monarchies: France and England
Capetian France
Hugh Capet succeeds last Carolingian Emperor, 987
CE
Slowly expands authority out from Paris
Normans in England
Descendants of Vikings, settled in France
Invade England in 1066 under William the Conqueror
Dominate Angles, Saxons, and other Germanic groups
6
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- 7. Italy
Series of ecclesiastical states, city-states, and
principalities
Papal State directly controlled by Pope, good-
sized territory in central Italy
By 12th century, city-states increasingly displace
church control in northern Italy
Normans invade southern Italy, displace
Byzantine and Muslim authorities
7
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- 8. Iberian Peninsula
Muslims control Iberian peninsula, 8th-12th
centuries
From 11th century on, Christian conquest of
Spanish Muslim territories
Late 13th century, Muslims remain only in
Granada
8
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- 9. Growth of the Agricultural Economy
Increasing development of arable lands
Minimized threat of invading nomads
Clearing of swamps, forests
Improved agricultural techniques
Crop rotation
New crops, esp. beans
Horseshoes, horse collars (horses faster than oxen)
9
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- 10. European Population Growth, 800-1300
CE
80
70
60
50
40
Millions
30
20
10
0
800 CE 1000 1100 1200 1300 CE
10
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- 11. Revival of Towns and Trade
Urbanization follows increase in food supply
Specialization of labor
Textile production
Mediterranean Trade
Italy well-positioned for sea trade
Italian colonies established in major ports of
Mediterranean, Black seas
11
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- 12. The Hanseatic League
“Hansa,” association of trading cities
Trade in Baltic and North seas
Poland, nothern German, Scandinavia
12
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- 13. Social Change
The Three Estates
Those who pray: clergy
Those who fight: knights
Those who work: peasants
Oversimplification of complex social reality
13
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- 14. Chivalry
Code of conduct for nobles
Sponsored by Church to minimize fighting among
Christians
Technically, knight to dedicate his efforts to
promotion of Christianity
Protection of women
14
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- 15. Troubadors
Class of traveling poets, minstrels, entertainers
Borrowed Islamic traditions of love poetry
Spread of cultural ideas to Europe
Popular among aristocratic women
Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122-1204) major supporter
Popularization of idea of romantic love,
refinement of European knights
15
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- 16. Independent Cities
Additions to class of “those who work”
Merchants, artisans, physicians, lawyers, etc.
Awkward fit into tripartite caste system
By late 11th century, towns demand charters of
integration for greater self-government
16
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- 17. Guilds
Organizations of merchants, workers, artisans
By 13th century guilds control good portion of
urban economy
Price and quality control
Membership
Created social support network
17
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- 18. Urban Women
New economic opportunities for women
Dominated needle trade
Representation in wide variety of trades
Admitted to most guilds
Some guilds for women only
18
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- 19. Cathedral Schools
During early middle ages, European society too unstable
to provide institutions of advanced learning
Some rudimentary education at monasteries, occasional
scholars at courts
High middle ages (1000-1300 CE) increasing wealth
makes education possible
Schools based in cathedrals
Curriculum of Latin writings
Literature, philosophy, some law, medicine, theology
19
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- 20. Universities
Academic guilds formed in 12th century
Both student and faculty organizations
Higher standards of education promoted
Treatment of students in town major source of
concern
20
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- 21. The Influence of Aristotle
Latin translations of Byzantine Greek texts
circulate in Europe
Jewish and Muslim scholars provide other
translations from Arabic translations
St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), major
proponent of Scholasticism
Synthesis of Christianity and Aristotle
University of Paris
21
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- 22. Popular Religion
Population at large remained unaffected by
Scholasticism
The Seven Sacraments gain ritual popularity
Esp. Eucharist
Devotion to Saints
Heavenly intercession, pilgrimages, veneration of relics
The Virgin Mary
22
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- 23. Religious Movements
Rebellion against perceived materialism of
Roman Catholic Church
Dominc (1170-1221) and St. Francis (1182-1226)
create orders of mendicants
Vows of poverty
Popular preachers
Religious zealots, very opposed to heretical
movements
23
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- 24. Popular Heresy (southern France,
northern Italy)
Waldesians
Urged more lay control of preaching, sacraments
The Cathars (Albigensians)
Influenced by religious movements in eastern Europe
Chastity, vegetarianism, poverty
Pope Innocent III virtually destroys Cathar movement
in 13th century
24
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- 25. Medieval Expansion of Europe
Atlantic and Baltic Colonization
Scandinavians explore North Atlantic Ocean
Iceland, Greenland, Vinland (Canada)
Canadian settlements do not succeed
Kings of Denmark nominally convert to Christianity,
Sweden and Finland follow
25
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- 26. Crusading Orders
Religious Christians form military-religious
orders
Templars, Hospitallers, Teutonic Knights
Religious vows of opposition to Islam, paganism
Founded churches and monasteries
26
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- 27. The Reconquest of Sicily and Spain
Sicily taken by Muslims in 9th century,
reconquered by Normans in 11th century
Slow displacement of Islam
Opportunity for cross-cultural fertilization
Two small Christian states survive Muslim
conquest
Become nucleus of reconquest, 1060s-1492
Rapid, forceful assertions of Christian authority
27
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- 28. The Beginning of the Crusades
Pope Urban II calls for liberation of Jerusalem
from Muslim control, 1095
Salvation promised for casualties
Rapid, enthusiastic response
Peter the Hermit raises popular frenzy, mob
destroyed on way to Jerusalem
28
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- 29. The First Crusade
1096-1099 more organized expedition
Captures Jerusalem, largely due to poor Muslim
organization
Salah al-Din (Saladin) recaptures Jerusalem in
1187
29
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- 30. The Crusades
30
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- 31. Later Crusades and their Consequences
Five crusades by mid-13th century, none successful
Fourth Crusade destroys Constantinople, 1202-
1204
Yet Crusades provide direct contact with Muslim
ideologies, trade
Aristotle, “Arabic” numerals, paper production
31
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