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The Early Middle Ages

The Early Middle Ages. Germanic Invasion Notes. Objectives. The student will demonstrate knowledge of Western Europe during the Middle Ages from about 500 to 1000 C.E. in terms of its impact on Western civilization by

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The Early Middle Ages

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  1. The Early Middle Ages Germanic Invasion Notes

  2. Objectives • The student will demonstrate knowledge of Western Europe during the Middle Ages from about 500 to 1000 C.E. in terms of its impact on Western civilization by • Sequencing events related to the invasions, settlements, and influence of migratory groups, including the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, and Vikings • Sequencing events related to the spread of Christianity and the Catholic Church throughout Europe • Explaining the rise of the Frankish kings, the Age of Charlemagne, and the revival of the idea of the Roman Empire • Essential Questions • How did invasions by the Angle, Saxons, Magyars, and Vikings influence the development of Europe? • How and why did the Church grow in importance in the Middle Ages • How did Charlemagne revive the idea of the Roman Empire?

  3. Barbarian Invasions • Areas of Settlement • Angles/Saxons • Came from Continental Europe • Settled in England • Magyars • Came from Central Asia • Settled in Hungary • Vikings • Came from Scandinavia • Many settled in Russia

  4. Invasions drastically change Europe • 5 consequences • Disruption of Trade • Downfall of Cities • Population Shifts • Decline of Learning • Loss of a common language

  5. Disruption of Trade • Merchants faced invasions from both land and sea, which led to their businesses collapsing. • The breakdown of trade destroyed Europe’s cities as economic centers. • Money became scarce.

  6. Downfall of Cities • With the fall of the Roman Empire, cities were abandoned as centers of administration

  7. Population Shifts • As Roman centers of trade and government collapsed, nobles retreated to the rural areas and cities were left without strong leadership. • Other city dwellers also fled to the countryside, where they grew their own food. • The population of western Europe became mostly rural.

  8. Decline of Learning • The Germanic invaders could not read or write and only Roman church officials continued to be literate. • Knowledge of Greek was almost lost and few people could read Greek works of literature, science, and philosophy. • The Germanic tribes had a rich oral tradition of songs and legends, just no written language.

  9. Loss of a Common Language • As German-speaking peoples mixed with the Roman population, Latin began to change and was no longer understood from region to region. • By the 800s, French, Spanish, and other Romance languages had evolved from Latin.

  10. Germanic Kingdoms Emerge • Between 400- 600 C.E. Germanic Kingdoms replace Roman provinces • Borders constantly changing • Church only source of stability • New concept of Government • Family ties and personal loyalty most important • Small communities • Governed by unwritten rules and traditions

  11. The Franks • Former Roman province of Gaul (France) • Clovis • 496 C.E. led army against warring Germanic tribe • Fearing defeat prayed to the Christian God • Franks won and Clovis converted to Christianity (as well as his soldiers) • The church supported Clovis • 511 C.E. Clovis united the Franks into one kingdom

  12. Germanic Christianity • By 600 C.E. many Germanic people Christian • Rulers and missionaries helped spread religion • Spreads to England • Monasteries and Convents • Built to adapt to rural conditions • Saint Benedict 520 C.E. • Benedictine rule • Benedictines most influential monastic order • Most educated, preserved history • Preserved Greco-Roman cultural achievements • Gregory I (The Great) • Became Pope in 590 C.E. • Broadened role of the church • Became secular, involved in worldly affairs such as politics • Idea of a churchly kingdom of Europe ruled by the Pope • Made church administration more efficient • Endorsed missionaries • Supported Benedictine rule

  13. The Frankish Empire • Franks controlled largest kingdom in Europe • Clovis created the Merovingian dynasty • Near Paris, defeated rival groups 486-507 C.E. • Successors weak rulers • Charles Martel 719 C.E. • Mayor of the palace • More power than King • Battle of Tours 732 C.E. • Defeated invading Muslim army • Became Christian hero • Passed power to his son • Pepin the Short • Cooperated with Pope • Fought for the church and became the King • Created Carolingian Dynasty • Wife “big-footed Bertha”

  14. Charlemagne • Pepin died in 768 C.E. • Charlemagne (Charles the Great) • Empire • Greatest since Ancient Rome • Conquered lands through military victory • Spread Christianity through conquests • Reunited Western Europe • Pope Leo III crowned him Emperor in 800 C.E. • He needed a strong powerful leader for Western Europe • Called himself a “Roman Emperor” • Linked Carolingian Monarchy with Church

  15. Charlemagne’s Rule • Government • Limited authority of nobles • Strengthened central authority • Used Royal agents to report on countryside • Regularly participated in his kingdom’s affairs • Culture • Roman culture was reinterpreted • Encouraged learning • Opened a palace school • Built schools, churches and roads to unite the empire • Ordered monasteries to open schools to train monks and priests • Monasteries expanded their libraries

  16. The end of an Empire • Charlemagne crowned his son Louis the Pious king in 814 C.E. • Religious man • Ineffective ruler • Louis’ heirs • Three sons • Fought civil war • Treaty of Verdun in 843 C.E. split kingdom • New system of government and landholding evolved • Unifying effect of Charlemagne never died

  17. Objectives • The student will demonstrate knowledge of Western Europe during the Middle Ages from about 500 to 1000 C.E. in terms of its impact on Western civilization by • Sequencing events related to the invasions, settlements, and influence of migratory groups, including the Angles, Saxons, Magyars, and Vikings • Sequencing events related to the spread of Christianity and the Catholic Church throughout Europe • Explaining the rise of the Frankish kings, the Age of Charlemagne, and the revival of the idea of the Roman Empire • Essential Questions • How did invasions by the Angle, Saxons, Magyars, and Vikings influence the development of Europe? • How and why did the Church grow in importance in the Middle Ages • How did Charlemagne revive the idea of the Roman Empire?

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