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Geography of Europe: Where it all took place! Latitude Comparison

Geography of Europe: Where it all took place! Latitude Comparison. Warriors and Warbands in the West. Period of change in Western Europe as barbarians were migrating in to areas given up by Romans As more barbarians moved westward, other tribes were forced to move

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Geography of Europe: Where it all took place! Latitude Comparison

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  1. Geography of Europe: Where it all took place! Latitude Comparison

  2. Warriors and Warbands in the West • Period of change in Western Europe as barbarians were migrating in to areas given up by Romans • As more barbarians moved westward, other tribes were forced to move • Groups categorized by languages and little else • Celtic: Gauls, Britons, Bretons • Germanic: Goths, Frank, Vandals, Saxons • Slavic: Wends

  3. The beginning…Early Middle Ages • Decline of Roman Empire • Rise of Northern Europe • New forms of government • Heavy “Romanization” (religion, language, laws, architecture, government) • Latin- “medium aevum” means “middle age” and is source of English word “medieval”

  4. Feudalism • Increasing violence and lawless countryside • Weak turn to the strong for protection, strong want something from the weak • Feudalism= relationship between those ranked in a chain of association (kings, vassals, lords, knights, serfs) • Feudalism worked because of the notion of mutual obligation, or voluntary co-operation from serf to noble • A man’s word was the cornerstone of social life

  5. A New Social Order: Feudalism • Social Classes Are Well Defined • Medieval feudal system classifies people into three social groups • those who fight: nobles and knights • those who pray: monks, nuns, leaders of the Church • those who work: peasants • Social class is usually inherited; majority of people are peasants • Most peasants are serfs—people lawfully bound to place of birth • Serfs aren’t slaves, but what they produce belongs to their lord

  6. Feudalism Pyramid

  7. Slaves and Serfs • Slaves made up of conquered peoples • Some treated harshly, while other were treated fairly • Rural slaves became serfs, who worked the land and provided labour for owner (in return from protection) • Set up for system of feudalism

  8. Manors: The Economic Side of Feudalism The Harshness of Manor Life Peasants pay taxes to use mill and bakery; pay a tithe to priest (a church tax equal to one-tenth of a peasant’s income) Serfs live in crowded cottages with dirt floors, straw for beds Daily grind of raising crops, livestock; feeding and clothing family Poor diet, illness, malnutrition make life expectancy 35 years Serfs generally accept their lives as part of God’s plan

  9. Manors: The Economic Side of Feudalism • The Lord’s Estate • The lord’s estate, a manor, has an economic system (manor system) • Serfs and free peasants maintain the lord’s estate, give grain • The lord provides housing, farmland, protection from bandits

  10. Manors: The Economic Side of Feudalism • A Self-Contained World • Medieval manors include lord’s house, church, workshops, village • Manors cover a few square miles of land, are largely self-sufficient

  11. Manor Map

  12. The Middle Ages And Christianity

  13. Most people in the early Middle ages lived on a manor.

  14. A small church was an important part of each manor.

  15. The church saved education from completely disappearing after the fall of Rome.

  16. Christian priests learned to read an write. All books were handwritten.

  17. Monks “Illuminating” Manuscripts

  18. The church helped keep the knowledge of Greece and Rome from being forgotten

  19. The Church Had Power! • Church leaders played a large part in the feudal system. • The church controlled about 1/3 of the land in Western Europe. • Tried to curb feudal warfare  only 40 days a year for combat. • Tried to 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].

  20. You scratch my back… I’ll scratch yours…. • Church was granted favours by Roman Emperors / Kings (land, exemption from taxes, immunity in courts, positions in courts) and in return the Church would endorse kings to help secure their rule • Kings looked to Church to supply educated administrators to help run kingdoms and in return kings would enforce laws that prohibited other religions

  21. Late Medieval Town Dwellings

  22. The Magna Carta • 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.

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