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Chapter 13Chapter 13
The Middle Ages (400s-1500s A.D.)
The Middle Ages (400s-1500s A.D.)
The FranksThe Franks
Clovis (481)Merovingians
Took over Gaul (modern France)Kingdom divided upon deathPepin II reunited Frankish
kingdoms
Clovis (481)Merovingians
Took over Gaul (modern France)Kingdom divided upon deathPepin II reunited Frankish
kingdoms
Frankish RulersFrankish Rulers
Charles Martel “the hammer” Son of Pepin II Defeated the Moors
(732) Pepin III
“the short” Anointed king of the
Franks with the pope’s blessing
Defeated Lombards and donated land as Papal States
Charles Martel “the hammer” Son of Pepin II Defeated the Moors
(732) Pepin III
“the short” Anointed king of the
Franks with the pope’s blessing
Defeated Lombards and donated land as Papal States
CharlemagneCharlemagne
Son of Pepin III Wanted to create a
“new Rome” Spread Christianity
Drove Moors back into Spain
Lombards (Italy), Saxons (Germany), Avars (central Europe)
Son of Pepin III Wanted to create a
“new Rome” Spread Christianity
Drove Moors back into Spain
Lombards (Italy), Saxons (Germany), Avars (central Europe)
Charlemagne’s KingdomCharlemagne’s Kingdom
Supported EducationStarted school for noble children at the
palaceGrammar, rhetoric, logic, math, music,
astronomy
Gov’t divided into regions, each with a Count (took oath of fidelity)
Missi dominici - king’s messengers
Supported EducationStarted school for noble children at the
palaceGrammar, rhetoric, logic, math, music,
astronomy
Gov’t divided into regions, each with a Count (took oath of fidelity)
Missi dominici - king’s messengers
The Fall of the FranksThe Fall of the Franks
Louis the Pious = very weak rulerTreaty of Verdun
Divides kingdom between sons (Lothair, Charles the Bald, and Louis the German)
Fighting amongst themselvesInvasions from Muslims, Slavs,
Magyars, and Vikings
Louis the Pious = very weak rulerTreaty of Verdun
Divides kingdom between sons (Lothair, Charles the Bald, and Louis the German)
Fighting amongst themselvesInvasions from Muslims, Slavs,
Magyars, and Vikings
The VikingsThe Vikings
“Norsemen” or men from the North
Sweden, Denmark, and Norway
Traveled to Iceland, Greenland, N. America, England, Ireland, and France
“Norsemen” or men from the North
Sweden, Denmark, and Norway
Traveled to Iceland, Greenland, N. America, England, Ireland, and France
Viking SocietyViking Society
Centered on pagan godsRuled by kings and nobles
Democratic - assemblies of landowners made laws
Farmed, gathered, fished, huntedRaided and looted settlements
Axes and large dogs = fear
Centered on pagan godsRuled by kings and nobles
Democratic - assemblies of landowners made laws
Farmed, gathered, fished, huntedRaided and looted settlements
Axes and large dogs = fear
Feudalism and Manorialism
Feudalism and Manorialism
Lord - person who grants a fiefVassal - receives a fiefFief - grant of landPrimogeniture - passing fief to
oldest sonSerf - peasantManor - large estate
Lord - person who grants a fiefVassal - receives a fiefFief - grant of landPrimogeniture - passing fief to
oldest sonSerf - peasantManor - large estate
Feudal JusticeFeudal Justice
1) Trial by BattleDuel between two parties
2) Trial by Oath TakingUse of witnesses to prove point
3) Trial by OrdealPut to some sort of physical test to
prove guilt/innocence
1) Trial by BattleDuel between two parties
2) Trial by Oath TakingUse of witnesses to prove point
3) Trial by OrdealPut to some sort of physical test to
prove guilt/innocence
King of the Castle
• Nobles often lived in Castles– Central building of enforcement on a
manor– Thick walls and small windows
• Keep = main building in center of castle
Living by the Code
• Chivalry (late 1100s) - honest, loyal, brave, fair, courteous– Only applied to people in your same class
• To become a knight, boys had to be nobles and pass 2 levels of training– Page = 7 yrs old
• Learn manners and care of weapons– Squire = teen
• Take care of horse, armor, weapons for knight• Prove yourself in battle
Guess Who?
• Because of their extensive armor, it was near impossible to tell who a knight was
• Used Coat of Arms as identification– Symbols
representing your family
The Church Hierarchy
Secular Clergy Regular Clergy Chain of command
and influence within the church
Secular Clergy
Parish Priest = lowest– Attend to his parish– Perform 5/7 sacraments (no confirmation
or Holy Orders) Bishop
– Head of group of parishes– Cathedral = bishop’s church– Often selected by nobles or the king
Secular Clergy (cont’d)
Archbishop– Ruled a group of diocese (called an archdiocese)
Pope = supreme authority– Bishop of Rome– Curia = highest ranks of clergy who acted as
advisors to the Pope– Cardinals = the most important members of the
curia• They elect the Pope
Regular Clergy
Monasticism = the way of life in convents and monasteries– Withdrawn from
society (fasting, prayer, self-denial)
St. Benedict
Benedictine Rule Begins in Monte Cassino EVERYTHING belonged
to the community/monastery
More about monastic life
abbot = the elected head of the monastery abbess = the elected head of the convent St. Patrick --> credited with leaving
monastery and bringing Christianity to Ireland in 432
St. Augustine --> credited with bringing Christianity to England
Church Politics
Cannon law = church’s rules– Excommunication = no sacraments– Interdict = shut down churches in region– Heretic = denying principles/beliefs
Everyone had to pay a tithe– Tax that was 10% of your income, paid to
the church
Problems and Corruption
simony = buying positions in hierarchy– Also led to clergy charging for different
religious services St. Francis and St. Dominic started
orders attempting to end this– Franciscans and Dominicans– Lived among the people - friars
The Inquisition The Church asked the Dominicans to
help search out heretics and force them to confess
People who did not confess/convert were often executed