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World History 1 Final Review - Europe (Middle Ages - Industrial Revolution) - Middle Ages - Scientific Revolution - Charlemagne - Enlightenment - Feudalism - French Revolution - Crusades - Napoleon - Medieval Society - Industrial Revolution - Renaissance - Reformation - Absolutism

Europe Review

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by Mr Valadaio

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Page 1: Europe Review

World History 1 Final Review - Europe (Middle Ages - Industrial Revolution)

- Middle Ages - Scientific Revolution- Charlemagne - Enlightenment- Feudalism - French Revolution - Crusades - Napoleon- Medieval Society - Industrial Revolution - Renaissance- Reformation - Absolutism

Page 2: Europe Review

Middle Ages• Rome falls• Feudalism and the Catholic Church

provide stability during this period• Rome is Replaced by lots of small

kingdoms, most notably…- Frankish kingdom, including present-day France, largest

- Charlemagne becomes leader of the Franks in 768

Page 3: Europe Review

Charlemagne, 771-814

• Strengthened royal power

and limited power of nobles• Supported Church and

crowned “Roman Emperor”• Encouraged learning by

surrounding himself with

scholars and founding schools

Page 4: Europe Review

Charlemagne’s Empire

Page 5: Europe Review

Age of Feudalism

• Europe is attacked from 850-950 by Vikings, Magyars, and Muslims

• In exchange for protection, vassals living on manors, were granted fiefs, by lords

• Peasants paid tithes to church• Gave rise to the Age of Chivalry

Page 6: Europe Review

Crusades

• In 1093, Pope Urban II calls for a “holy war” to gain control of the Holy Land

• First Crusade, 1096-1099, succeeds in recapturing Jerusalem

• Second Crusade, 1147-1149, launched to regain control, after it is conquered by the Turks

• Third Crusade, 1189-1191 ends in a truce• Fourth Crusade, 1204, fails to capture Jerusalem,

and knights instead loot Constantinople

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Effects of Crusades• Expansion in trade

and increase in cultural exchanges between Europe and Middle East

• Power of Pope decreases

• Power of Kingsincreases

• Legacy of bitterness between Christians and Muslims

Page 8: Europe Review

Medieval Society

• Growing Food Supply

• Formation of Guilds

• Increase in trade

• Growth of business and banking

• Towns grow

• Rise of a merchant class

• Growth of learning

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Beginnings of Modern Democracy

• Nobles force King John

to sign Magna Carta in 1215• Common law• Court systems• Parliament (England)

• Estates General (France)

Page 10: Europe Review

Other changes in Medieval Society

• Bubonic plague strikes, killing 1/3 of population of Europe

• Longbow changes warfare

• Nationalism emerges in France and England

• Hundred Years’ War between France and England ends 1453

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Renaissance

• Why it begins in Italy– City-States– Merchant Class

– Humanism – Secularism

Page 12: Europe Review

Impact of the Renaissance

• Art draws on techniques and styles of classical Greece and Rome

• Due to the invention of the printing press, books become more widely available

• People question political structures and religious practices

Page 13: Europe Review

Reformation

• Problems within the Church• Most priests were poorly educated• Growing wealth and increased corruption• Practice of selling indulgences

• Martin Luther responds with 95 Theses in 1517 and says that “salvation comes through faith alone”

• Henry VIII breaks away in 1534 and becomes the head of the Church of England because the Pope would not grant him a divorce

Page 14: Europe Review

Catholic Response

• Council of Trent (1545-1563)

• Church’s interpretation of Bible is final

• Bans false selling of indulgences

• Both faith and works are necessary for salvation

• Order of

Jesuits

Page 15: Europe Review

Age of Absolutism• Absolutism - the belief that one ruler should

hold all of the power within the boundaries of a country. Ruled by Divine Right.

“L état, c’est moi”

Page 16: Europe Review

Scientific Revolution

• What led to it– Age of Discoveries– Printing press– Need for new

geographic instruments

Page 17: Europe Review

• Copernicus develops the heliocentric theory of the universe

• Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler develop the scientific method

Page 18: Europe Review

Enlightenment

• Thomas Hobbes - Social Contract

• John Locke - natural rights

• Montesquieu - separation of powers

• Voltaire - freedom of speech

Page 19: Europe Review

French Revolution

• Causes– Enlightenment ideas– Economic troubles– Dissatisfied Third Estate– Weak leadership of Louis XVI– Extravagant living of

Louis and Marie Antoinette

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Napoleon

• Restores order

• Creates lycées

• Establishes

Napoleonic Code• Signs Concordat with Pope• Expands Empire• Finally defeated at

Waterloo

Page 21: Europe Review

Congress of Vienna (1815)

• Restore balance

of power to Europe• Restore European

royal families

to their thrones• Prevent future

French aggression

Page 22: Europe Review

Rise of Nation-State

• Nationalism - belief that people should be loyal to their nation

• Bonds that create a Nation-State:- History - Language

- Territory - Nationality

- Religion - Culture

Page 23: Europe Review

Industrial Revolution

• Begins in England…- Enclosure Movement- System of crop rotation- Extensive natural resources- Human resources and capital

• New Inventions- Steam engine, railroads, spinning

jenny

Page 24: Europe Review

• Effects on the Middle Class

- Long hours, harsh working conditions,

crowded cities

- Growing middle-class

- Began to organize • Capitalism, Socialism, Marxism

- Adam Smith & laissez-faire

- Marx, Engels & Marxism