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Chapter 9.3. The Growth of European Empires. The Growth of European Kingdoms. E N G L A N D. 5 th century: Angles and Saxons invaded the island. Late 800s: King Alfred the Great united various kingdoms. England ruled by Anglo-Saxon kings. The Growth of European Kingdoms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Growth of European Kingdoms
5th century: Angles and Saxons invaded the island
Late 800s: King Alfred the Great united various kingdoms
England ruled by Anglo-Saxon kings
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Normandy: area of what today is NW France
The Growth of European Kingdoms
October, 1066: William of Normandy invaded Britain
Portrait of William the Conqueror
-aka: William I
William defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings
William became the king of England
His kingdom included western France, southern 2/3’s Britain, and eastern ½ of Ireland
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Norman knights received fiefs from William I
-all knights swore an oath of loyalty directly to William I
-this allowed William I to be the overlord of ALL fiefs in his kingdom
The mixing of the Anglo-Saxons and Normans created a new English culture
Normans took over the existing Anglo-Saxon political posts
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Norman horseman at the Battle of Hastings
The Growth of European Kingdoms
William’s elite cavalry
The Growth of European Kingdoms
The Battle of Hastings by Frank W Wilkin, restored to glory.English Heritage / Conservation Department
The Growth of European Kingdoms
A reconstruction drawing of the first stage of the Battle of Hastings.English Heritage / drawing by Peter Dunn
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Picture by Tom Lovelle-The Battle of Hastings
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Domesday Book: William’s census of England
-completed in 1086
-Europe’s first census since Roman times
-William used the census to help develop his system of taxation and royal courts
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Henry II: English ruler from 1154 to 1189
-expanded the power of the monarchy
-expanded power of royal courts (criminal and property cases)
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Common Law: a uniform system of law based on court decisions and on customs and usage
-replaced law codes which varied from place to place within the English kingdom
VERSUS
Henry II claimed he had the right to try and punish clergymen in the royal courts
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Thomas á Becket: archbishop of Canterbury
-highest ranking official in England
Claimed that only church courts could try clerics
Henry II publicly expressed his desire to be rid of Becket
The Growth of European Kingdoms
-four knights murdered Becket at the Cathedral of Canterbury
There was much public outrage, and Henry was forced to back down against the Church
The Church later named Becket a saint
murdered in 1170, canonized 1173
The Growth of European Kingdoms
King John: became king of England in 1199
-nobles had become outraged at the ongoing growth of the king’s power
-John began losing popularity as he argued with the pope about who should become new archbishop of Canterbury
-pope placed England under excommunication
-John also lost a series of military conflicts
The Growth of European Kingdoms
1215: nobles rebelled at Runnymeade
-they forced John to sign the Magna Carta (Great Charter)
The Growth of European Kingdoms
The Magna Carta was a feudal contract, only in writing
Strengthened the idea that a monarch’s power was not absolute and that there were ‘mutual obligations’
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Edward I: ruled from 1272 to 1307
Rhuddlan Castle --In the town, Denbighshire, northeast Wales, one of Edward’s first castles
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Beaumaris Castle
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Edward’s last castle
The Growth of European Kingdoms
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Edward I known as a great military leader, very good at castles and sieges
-during his reign, the English Parliament emerged
-a form of representative government
-two knights from each county, two people from every town, and all nobles and bishops
The Growth of European Kingdoms
-this assembly eventually developed into two separate houses:
1. House of Lords—nobles and church lords
2. House of Commons—knights and townspeople
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Why do historians consider 1066 a turning point in history?
This was the date of William of Normandy’s victory at Hastings.
This was the beginning of a reorganization of English government
The Growth of European Kingdoms
After the death of Charlemagne, the Carolingian Empire was divided into three major sections
-Louis V (Louis the Do Nothing)
-the last Carolingian king
-died in 987
The Growth of European KingdomsHugh Capet: chosen by French nobles as the new king
-began the Capetian Dynasty of French kings
-Capetians had very little ‘real’ power
-they only controlled a small area of land around Paris )—Ile de France
-the Capetians were the ‘formal overlords’ of the other French lords
-but in reality, many other French dukes (lesser lords) were more powerful
The Growth of European Kingdoms
King Philip II Augustus: king of France 1180 to 1223
Waged war against the English possessions of Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Aquitaine
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Philip II Augustus gained control of most of these territories for France
-he expanded the power of the French monarchy and income as well as territory
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Louis IX: king of France from 1214 to 1270
-the Church named him a saint in 1297
-became king at age 12
-Louis IX worked at unifying all French lands and was an effective diplomat (peacefully resolved territorial disputes with neighbors)
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Louis IX protected vassals from oppression and forced lords to fulfill their obligations
-he largely eliminated feuds between French nobles
-he encouraged ‘written law’ so all knew what was expected
-he reformed taxation, and the court system
-virtually eliminated trial by combat and replaced it with court trials
-he founded a hospital named Quinze-Vingts to care for the sick, poor, and blind
The crowning of Saint Louis
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Philip IV (Philip the Fair): French king from 1285 to 1314
-light hair and good looks
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Philip IV expanded the French bureaucracy
-expelled Jews from France after taking all of their possessions
-removed one eye and threatened to remove the other if they didn’t give up their claims
French government most efficient in Europe under his rule
1302: Philip IV calls for a meeting of the Estates-General to swear allegiance to their king
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Three classes of the Estates-General:
1. First Estate: clergy
2. Second Estate: nobles
3. Third Estate: townspeople and peasants
French Parliament, although very limited in power
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Why was the reign of King Philip II Augustus important to the growth of the French monarchy?
He waged war against England and gained control of the French territories of Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and
Aquitaine
This increased income and power for the French monarchy
The Growth of European Kingdoms
10th century: Saxon dukes become kings of Eastern Frankish Kingdom
-this area will become known as Germany
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Otto I: crowned Emperor of the Romans in 962
-Otto agreed to protect the pope and his lands around Rome
-new German leaders attempted to rule both Germany and Italy
The Growth of European Kingdoms
-the purple is Otto’s Empire
-although he didn’t control the Italian peninsula, he protected Rome from the Byzantine’s (orange) as well as the Muslims (green)
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Frederick I: Holy Roman Emperor from 1155 to 1190
Frederick in a 13th century Chronicle
In 1154, Frederick helped the pope who was under revolt
Pope rewarded him by crowning him Holy Roman Emperor in 1155
Frederick considered Italy to be the center of a great ‘holy empire’Frederick ends up going against pope and tries to conquer northern Italy1176: Lombards and other northern Italian states unite with pope to defeat Frederick’s army and drive him back north across the Alps
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Frederick II (left) meets al-Kamil (right)—from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor
Frederick II: Holy Roman Emperor from 1220 to 1250
-also from Hohenstausen family
-he also wanted to establish a unified Italian and Germanic kingdom
-tried to centralize Italian states, but they resisted and wanted to maintain their autonomies
-pope was able to unify with northern Italian states and defeat Frederick II’s army as well
As these Hohenstausen kings focused on trying to unite Italy, Germany became controlled by strong local lords who established their own independent kingdoms
-these nobles began to ignore the emperor, which weakened the German monarchy
-the Holy Roman Emperor lost power
-as a result, both Germany and Italy maintain highly powerful and independent states
The Growth of European Kingdoms
What is the origin of the term Holy Roman Empire?
German kings received the title of Roman Emperor from the pope, but they considered Italy as the center
of a “holy empire,” hence the name
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Slavs: central European group which split into 3 main factions
Belarussians Croatians Poles SerbsWends Yugoslavs Bosnians Slovenes Czechs Macedonians Russians RusynsSlovaks Ukrainians
1. Western Slavs:
-Czechs in Poland and Bohemia
-accepted Roman Catholicism
-Hungarians (non-Slavic) also accepted Catholicism
2. Eastern Slavs:
-settled in Belorussia, Ukraine, Russia
-accepted Eastern Orthodox Christianity
-were converted by Byzantine missionaries Cyril and Methodius around 863
-their culture focused on Byzantium rather than Rome
3. Southern Slavs:
-Croats, Serbs, Bulgarians
-Croats accepted Catholicism (Rome)
-Serbs and Bulgarians became Orthodox (Byzantium)
-separated these cultures
The Growth of European Kingdoms
From where did the Slavic peoples originate?
From central Europe
The Growth of European Kingdoms
8th century: Slavs of Ukraine and Russia were overcome by Swedish Vikings
The Growth of European Kingdoms
The Slavs in these areas called the Viking plunderers the Rus
Oleg: Viking ruler who moved capital from Novgorod to Kiev
-Viking ruler from 879 to 912
-created the Kievan Rus
-united the Eastern Slavs of what is today Belarus and Ukraine
-his successors extended the territory of Kievan Rus
-controlled the area between Baltic and Black Seas and Danube and Volga Rivers
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Kievan Rus about 900 AD
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Kievan Rus about 1000 AD
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Vikings married Slavic women, created a new culture
Vladimir I: Kievan ruler who married Byzantine emperor’s sister (Basil II’s sister, Anna)
-before this time, Vladimir was pagan, and had taken several wives
-officially accepted Orthodox Christianity in 988
-gave up other wives, destroyed pagan statues
-Kievan Rus prospered until mid-11th century
-civil wars and Mongol invasions ended the state
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Alexander Nevsky: Russian ruler who defeated an invading German army in 1242
-Mongols rewarded Nevsky by naming him ‘high prince of Moscow’
-his descendants became princes of Moscow, and strongest rulers of the area which will become Russia
The Growth of European Kingdoms
This icon depicts St. Alexander Nevsky
along with St. Titus and St. Polycarpus
He was canonized Saint Alexander locally in
1380, recognized by the Russian Church in 1547
The Growth of European Kingdoms
How was the Viking ruling class gradually assimilated into the Slavic
population?
Many of them married Slavic women
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Common law:
Magna Carta:
Estate:
A uniform system of law that developed in England based on court decisions and customs and usage rather than on written law codes
This replaced law codes that varied from place to place
The “Great Charter” of rights which King John was forced to sign by the English nobles at Runnymeade in 1215
One of the three classes into which French society was divided before the revolution
1st estate—the clergy
2nd estate—the nobles
3rd estate—the townspeople
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Know the following names and events from the power point:– William of Normandy– Battle of Hastings– Henry II– Thomas à Becket– Edward I– Capetian dynasty– Philip II Augustus– Otto I– Slavs– Hungarians– Mongols– Alexander Nevsky
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Explain what Henry II accomplished when he expanded the power of the royal courts in England.
He expanded the king’s power and helped to create common law
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Unified national monarchies did not develop in Germany and Italy as they did in France and England in the High Middle Ages. Explain why this did not happen.
The German kings spent much time in Italy which allowed independent kingdoms to be established
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Fill in the following chart to show the achievements of each listed ruler:
Monarch/Country Achievements
Henry II (England)
John (England)
Edward I (England)
Philip II Augustus (France)
Philip IV (France)
Strengthened royal courts
Signed the Magna Carta
Development of English Parliament
Regained territory from the English
Established the Estates-General, first French Parliament
The Growth of European Kingdoms
Examine the photograph of the medieval castle shown on page 294 of the textbook. Identify at least three major architectural elements that helped inhabitants of the castle to defend themselves against attack.
Turrets, moat, gated windows…