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The
Middle Ages
“The dArk Ages”
#26
World History Ch 13 &
Europe in the 6
Century AD

th
Changes in W. Europe due
to Germanic Invasions
• Disruption of Trade /Economic Centers
• Downfall of Cities
- abandoned
- dwindling population moved to
the countryside
• Decline of Learning
- besides clergy /few were educated
• Loss of Common Language
- Cultural Unity is Destroyed
FeudAlisM

• System of Govt. / Military that began after
the fall of the Franks from power
• Small kingdoms developed / ex. 350 counties
• In order to maintain control a relationship
between kings and lesser nobles was
needed
• This was the Feudal Contract
Two Important Aspects:
1. Land Grants from Lords
2. Exchanged for Protection
& Loyalty
(Serfs)
Peasants who
worked the
land
The Road to
KNIGHT
Knighthood

Age 21

SQUIRE
Age 14

PAGE

Age 7
Knight in Full Armor - Jousting
Chivalry
A Code of Honor and Behavior
Knights Ruled the Battlefield
From Charlemagne to the Hundred Years War
Age of Knights Ends with
Development of the Welsh
• Up to six feet long
Longbow
- Cheap to make
- Easy to Carry
- Quick to Fire
12-15 shots per min
• Deadly from 200yd
“The Middle Finger”
- Capture/Fr. Cut M.F.
Bodkin
- Battle of Agincourt
(Eng. Showed Finger)
Feudalism

political, economic & social system
based on loyalty and military service
Key words/Concepts
• Lords – nobles who make a grant of land
(kings / barons / counts, etc)
• Vassals – nobles who received the land
(knights could be included here)
• Fief – the land that was granted (hereditary)
- Could be Both a
lord & vassal
- couldn’t divide the
fief within the family
- Law of Primogeniture
(eldest son)
- Obligations were only
for lord above & vassal below
The Manor System
within Feudalism
• Economic System of the Dark Ages
(agricultural based)
• Large fief’s might have several manors
- stewards ran them if lords were away

• Centered around the Manor (estate)
- manor house(castle), pastures, fields
village, church, mill, forests,etc.
• Manors were Self-Sufficient –very little
trade during this period
Social Structure
1. Nobility – Kings/Lords/Knights
– inherited

2. Clergy – each manor had a priest
3. Free Men (Few) – had certain
valuable skills – Blacksmith,etc.
- rented land from nobility
4. Serfs – peasants bound to the land
Serfs lived a hard life
• Forced to work land they were born
on
- farmed the Domain (1/3 of Land)
for the lord: 1 or 2 days of week
- farmed land assigned to them(2/3)
paid taxes on what was produced
In exchange for protection in the Castle
• Denied Marriage or leaving land
w/out consent of the lord
• Standard of living was very low
Manor in the Middle Ages examples
The Medieval Manor
/ p.362
Life on the Medieval
Manor

Serfs at work
on the manor
Castles were the best
example of Power in the
Medieval World
Medieval Castle – In
France
Akershus Castle in Oslo
View from the Top
Trebuchet
Small model
Making a trebuchet
• Nova – 5 min Film / Two types of
Trebuchets are shot at a stone wall
-- accurate from about ¼ mile -shot up to 500 pd. boulders
The Trebuchet ruled the Medieval
battlefield for more than 200 years
• The Cannon Ultimately Ended the
Age of the Castle & Feudalism
The Roman Catholic Church
Ch 13.4
A Medieval
Monastery

-Spread the word of God-Keep alive the memories of the past-
Illuminated
Manuscripts
A Medieval Monk’s
Day
The Medieval Catholic
 filled the power vacuum left from the
Churchworld.
collapse of the classical
 monasticism:
 St. Benedict – Benedictine Rule of
poverty, chastity, and obedience.
(giving up free will) – No Speaking, etc

 provided schools for the children of
the upper class.(later Middle Ages)

 inns, hospitals, refuge in times of war.
 libraries & scriptoria to copy books
and illuminate manuscripts.

 monks  missionaries to the

barbarians. [St. Patrick, St. Boniface]
The Power of the
 bishops and abbots played a large part in
Medieval
the feudal system. Church
 the church controlled about 1/3 of the
land in Western Europe.
 tried to curb feudal warfare  only 40
days a year for combat.
 curb heresies  crusades; Inquisition
 tithe  1/10 tax on your assets given to
the church.
 Peter’s Pence  1 penny per person
[paid by the peasants].
The Middle Age ChurCh
Feudalism/Manor system – fragmented Europe

The Church was the glue (stability)
LATIN CHRISTIANDOM
• Religious Events Marked a Person’s Life
• Eventually the Church devised a uniform
path for all Christians to follow – 7 Sacraments
1. Baptism – enter church community
2. Holy Eucharist – communion
3. Confirmation – church membership
4. Penance – repentance of sins
5. Holy Orders – admitted to priesthood
6. Matrimony – marriage
7. Extreme Unction – anointing the sick/dying “last rights”
Beginning of Modern States
• Ch 14.3 & .4
•
•
•
•

England absorbs waves of Invaders
England’s evolving govt.
France / Capetian Dynasty
The Hundred Years’ War / Joan of Arc
Feudalism and the Mounted
Knight comes to England
-Battle of Hastings 1066
Angles & Saxons

Harold
Godwinson
William
of
Normandy
William the Conqueror:
Battle of Hastings, 1066
(Bayeaux Tapestry)
Modern States Emerge
1. England – After the Norman Conquest
Kings begin to unify but lose their power to
a Great Council of Nobles & The Church
2. France – Charlemagne's old land
Kings used a Council to control the Nobles
& Clergy
3. Holy Roman Empire – German & Italy(800 yrs)
Power struggle between the Emperors & the
Clergy – power is divided(no one side wins)
Evolution of England’s
Political System
 Henry I:
 William’s son.
 set up a court system.
 Exchequer  dept. of royal finances.


Henry II:
 established the principle of common law
throughout the kingdom.

 grand jury.
 trial by jury.
Magna Carta, 1215
 King John I

 Runnymeade
 “Great Charter”
 monarchs were not
above the law.
 kings had to
consult a council of
advisors.
 kings could not tax
arbitrarily.
The Beginnings of the British
Parliament
 Great Council:
 middle class merchants, townspeople

[burgesses in Eng., bourgeoisie in Fr.,
burghers in Ger.] were added at the
end of the 13c.

 eventually called Parliament.
 by 1400, two chambers evolved:
o House of Lords  nobles & clergy.
o House of Commons  knights and
burgesses.
The Rise of European
Monarchies:
The Beginnings
of
European
Transformation
Gothic
Architectural Style

 Pointed arches.
 High, narrow
vaults.

 Thinner walls.
 Flying buttresses.
 Elaborate, ornate,
airier interiors.
 Stained-glass windows.

“Flying” Buttresses
Oxford University
Medieval
Universities
Late Medieval Town
Dwellings
Medieval Guilds
Guild
Hall


Commercial Monopoly- (Trade Associations)

 Controlled membership

apprentice  journeyman  master craftsman

 Controlled quality of the product [masterpiece].
 Controlled prices
Medieval Guilds: A
Goldsmith’s Shop
Medieval Trade
Possible Three-Field System
Film – Knights & Armor
•
•
•

•
•
•
•

Knights / William Marshall
Squires
Tournaments
Events - Running of the Rings
Joust
Quatrain
Castles
Coat of Arms / Order of the Garter
Chivalry (Chivalary)
King Arthur
Medieval Life & Times

http://www.medieval-life-and-times.info/inde
Assignment:
1. From within selected Topic pick
two sub categories for your paper
Ex. – Medieval Clothing /Chain Mail & Hair Styles

2. Discuss or Define its purpose
3. Compare or Contrast to Modern Times
4. Short Presentation to Class

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Medieval feudalism 4

  • 1. The Middle Ages “The dArk Ages” #26 World History Ch 13 &
  • 2. Europe in the 6 Century AD th
  • 3. Changes in W. Europe due to Germanic Invasions • Disruption of Trade /Economic Centers • Downfall of Cities - abandoned - dwindling population moved to the countryside • Decline of Learning - besides clergy /few were educated • Loss of Common Language - Cultural Unity is Destroyed
  • 4.
  • 5. FeudAlisM • System of Govt. / Military that began after the fall of the Franks from power • Small kingdoms developed / ex. 350 counties • In order to maintain control a relationship between kings and lesser nobles was needed • This was the Feudal Contract Two Important Aspects: 1. Land Grants from Lords 2. Exchanged for Protection & Loyalty
  • 7. The Road to KNIGHT Knighthood Age 21 SQUIRE Age 14 PAGE Age 7
  • 8. Knight in Full Armor - Jousting
  • 9. Chivalry A Code of Honor and Behavior
  • 10. Knights Ruled the Battlefield From Charlemagne to the Hundred Years War
  • 11. Age of Knights Ends with Development of the Welsh • Up to six feet long Longbow - Cheap to make - Easy to Carry - Quick to Fire 12-15 shots per min • Deadly from 200yd “The Middle Finger” - Capture/Fr. Cut M.F. Bodkin - Battle of Agincourt (Eng. Showed Finger)
  • 12. Feudalism political, economic & social system based on loyalty and military service
  • 13. Key words/Concepts • Lords – nobles who make a grant of land (kings / barons / counts, etc) • Vassals – nobles who received the land (knights could be included here) • Fief – the land that was granted (hereditary) - Could be Both a lord & vassal - couldn’t divide the fief within the family - Law of Primogeniture (eldest son) - Obligations were only for lord above & vassal below
  • 14. The Manor System within Feudalism • Economic System of the Dark Ages (agricultural based) • Large fief’s might have several manors - stewards ran them if lords were away • Centered around the Manor (estate) - manor house(castle), pastures, fields village, church, mill, forests,etc. • Manors were Self-Sufficient –very little trade during this period
  • 15. Social Structure 1. Nobility – Kings/Lords/Knights – inherited 2. Clergy – each manor had a priest 3. Free Men (Few) – had certain valuable skills – Blacksmith,etc. - rented land from nobility 4. Serfs – peasants bound to the land
  • 16. Serfs lived a hard life • Forced to work land they were born on - farmed the Domain (1/3 of Land) for the lord: 1 or 2 days of week - farmed land assigned to them(2/3) paid taxes on what was produced In exchange for protection in the Castle • Denied Marriage or leaving land w/out consent of the lord • Standard of living was very low
  • 17. Manor in the Middle Ages examples
  • 18.
  • 19.
  • 21. Life on the Medieval Manor Serfs at work on the manor
  • 22. Castles were the best example of Power in the Medieval World
  • 23. Medieval Castle – In France
  • 28. Making a trebuchet • Nova – 5 min Film / Two types of Trebuchets are shot at a stone wall -- accurate from about ¼ mile -shot up to 500 pd. boulders The Trebuchet ruled the Medieval battlefield for more than 200 years • The Cannon Ultimately Ended the Age of the Castle & Feudalism
  • 29. The Roman Catholic Church Ch 13.4
  • 30. A Medieval Monastery -Spread the word of God-Keep alive the memories of the past-
  • 33. The Medieval Catholic  filled the power vacuum left from the Churchworld. collapse of the classical  monasticism:  St. Benedict – Benedictine Rule of poverty, chastity, and obedience. (giving up free will) – No Speaking, etc  provided schools for the children of the upper class.(later Middle Ages)  inns, hospitals, refuge in times of war.  libraries & scriptoria to copy books and illuminate manuscripts.  monks  missionaries to the barbarians. [St. Patrick, St. Boniface]
  • 34. The Power of the  bishops and abbots played a large part in Medieval the feudal system. Church  the church controlled about 1/3 of the land in Western Europe.  tried to curb feudal warfare  only 40 days a year for combat.  curb heresies  crusades; Inquisition  tithe  1/10 tax on your assets given to the church.  Peter’s Pence  1 penny per person [paid by the peasants].
  • 35. The Middle Age ChurCh Feudalism/Manor system – fragmented Europe The Church was the glue (stability) LATIN CHRISTIANDOM • Religious Events Marked a Person’s Life • Eventually the Church devised a uniform path for all Christians to follow – 7 Sacraments 1. Baptism – enter church community 2. Holy Eucharist – communion 3. Confirmation – church membership 4. Penance – repentance of sins 5. Holy Orders – admitted to priesthood 6. Matrimony – marriage 7. Extreme Unction – anointing the sick/dying “last rights”
  • 36. Beginning of Modern States • Ch 14.3 & .4 • • • • England absorbs waves of Invaders England’s evolving govt. France / Capetian Dynasty The Hundred Years’ War / Joan of Arc
  • 37. Feudalism and the Mounted Knight comes to England -Battle of Hastings 1066 Angles & Saxons Harold Godwinson William of Normandy
  • 38. William the Conqueror: Battle of Hastings, 1066 (Bayeaux Tapestry)
  • 39. Modern States Emerge 1. England – After the Norman Conquest Kings begin to unify but lose their power to a Great Council of Nobles & The Church 2. France – Charlemagne's old land Kings used a Council to control the Nobles & Clergy 3. Holy Roman Empire – German & Italy(800 yrs) Power struggle between the Emperors & the Clergy – power is divided(no one side wins)
  • 40. Evolution of England’s Political System  Henry I:  William’s son.  set up a court system.  Exchequer  dept. of royal finances.  Henry II:  established the principle of common law throughout the kingdom.  grand jury.  trial by jury.
  • 41. Magna Carta, 1215  King John I  Runnymeade  “Great Charter”  monarchs were not above the law.  kings had to consult a council of advisors.  kings could not tax arbitrarily.
  • 42. The Beginnings of the British Parliament  Great Council:  middle class merchants, townspeople [burgesses in Eng., bourgeoisie in Fr., burghers in Ger.] were added at the end of the 13c.  eventually called Parliament.  by 1400, two chambers evolved: o House of Lords  nobles & clergy. o House of Commons  knights and burgesses.
  • 43. The Rise of European Monarchies:
  • 44.
  • 46. Gothic Architectural Style  Pointed arches.  High, narrow vaults.  Thinner walls.  Flying buttresses.  Elaborate, ornate, airier interiors.  Stained-glass windows. “Flying” Buttresses
  • 50. Medieval Guilds Guild Hall  Commercial Monopoly- (Trade Associations)  Controlled membership apprentice  journeyman  master craftsman  Controlled quality of the product [masterpiece].  Controlled prices
  • 54. Film – Knights & Armor • • • • • • • Knights / William Marshall Squires Tournaments Events - Running of the Rings Joust Quatrain Castles Coat of Arms / Order of the Garter Chivalry (Chivalary) King Arthur
  • 55. Medieval Life & Times http://www.medieval-life-and-times.info/inde Assignment: 1. From within selected Topic pick two sub categories for your paper Ex. – Medieval Clothing /Chain Mail & Hair Styles 2. Discuss or Define its purpose 3. Compare or Contrast to Modern Times 4. Short Presentation to Class