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The Middle Ages (1066-1485) By Rachele Dessì and Simone Giuffrida

The Middle Ages (1066-1485)

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The Middle Ages (1066-1485). By Rachele Dessì and Simone Giuffrida. - The Historical Background - Medieval Literature. The Normans. With William the Conqueror starts the permanent Norman occupation of England. The Normans spoke French but originally came from Denmark . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The Middle Ages

(1066-1485)

By Rachele Dessì and Simone Giuffrida

Page 2: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

- The Historical Background- Medieval Literature

Page 3: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

Siege of a motte-and-bailey castle from the Bayeux Tapestry.

The Normans

With William the Conqueror starts the permanent Norman occupation of England. The Normans spoke French but originally came from Denmark.

Many of the Anglo-Saxons nobles tried to oppose the predominance of the Norman aristocracy, but by the 12th century, all land was completely in the hands of the Normans.

After an initial period of conflict they eventually began to mix through marriage and languages and traditions.

Page 4: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The feudal systemThe King

Barons and

LordsMerchants and YeomenPeasants

Page 5: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The Domesday Book

The Domesday Book, completed in one year (1086), is the first census in English history.

A page of the Domesday Book for Warwickshire.

Page 6: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

ReformsUnder Henry II, who was

the first Plantagenet, the Constitutions of Clarendon were enforced (1164) which led to a clash between the State and the Church.

With this set of legislative procedures the king wanted to establish a compromise between these two powers.

King Henry II and a stained glass window of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.

Page 7: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

Richard the Lion Heart and King John

Henry II was followed by his son Richard I who spent almost ten years abroad engaged in various wars.

In his absence , his younger brother John became king.

On returning from one of his campaigns in France, he was forced to sign a document, the Magna Carta.

This document limited the absolute power of the king.

Page 8: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The Hundred Years’ WarEdward III went to war against France but this war

was interrupted by the Black Death (1348).

The war came to an end in 1453 but by then England had lost all of its French possessions

except Calais.

In the course of the Hundred Years’ War the Anglo-Norman aristocracy came to consider itself truly

English.

The Triumph of Death, oil panel painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder painted c. 1562.[

Page 9: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

John WycliffeIn the second half of the

14th century John Wycliffe led a protest against the Church, accusing it of excessive wealth and corruption.

Many of the supporters of his movement were persecuted and burnt as heretics.

They can be seen as the forerunners of the Protestant movement.

Wycliffe speaking to Lollard preachers

Page 10: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The Wars of the RosesThe long war was over but

there was still no peace to be had in England. The House of Lancaster and the House of York started the Wars of the Roses.

It was a negative period for England as trade and industry were stagnant and Parliament was weakened by corruption.

At the end Henry Tudor won esabilishing a future for the powerful dynasty of the Tudors. Choosing the Red and White Roses (c.1908),

Henry A. Payne.

Page 11: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The BalladBallads were short narrative poems often accompanied by music.

Ballads were generally simple and characterized by the presence of:- Four lines stanzas- A refrain or a chorus

Main themes:- Tragic death - Love- War

Page 12: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

Geoffrey Chaucer

Portrait of Geoffrey Chaucer

Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400), the most notable of

English poets from the Middle Ages,

created a great and original work

enriched by his great spirit of

observation and narrative technique:

The Canterbury Tales.

Page 13: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The rise of the theatreIn England, as in the rest of Europe, dramatic performance originates from religious dramatisation. Originally the dramas were in Latin.The subjects were mainly religious, but gradually they became independent from the liturgy.

Page 14: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

The most important characteristics of the English romance were:

-the authors were mostly anonymous

-the story is centered around a hero

-chivalric ideology is predominant

-the setting is often vague and includes elements of fantasy and the

supernatural.

The Romance

Page 15: The Middle Ages  (1066-1485)

King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table

The stories which centre about King Arthur, started in Wales and are dated back to the 5th century.

There are a lot of versions and stories about the figure of King Arthur and in all of these, the number of the

knights of the round table changes.

Arthur as one of the Nine Worthies, c. 1385