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Europe in the Middle Ages: Inventions and Innovations

Explore the important inventions and innovations from Europe in the Middle Ages, including the horse collar, horseshoe, flying buttress, three-field system, carruca, and vernacular literature. Learn about the social structure of serfs, slaves, and peasants, as well as the influence of the Inquisition and the impact of the Hundred Years' War. Discover how commercial capitalism evolved and the economic consequences of the Black Death epidemic.

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Europe in the Middle Ages: Inventions and Innovations

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  1. Chapter X: Europe in the Middle Ages

  2. Inventions/ Innovations • Horse collar • Horseshoe • Flying buttress (medieval churches had very thick walls and few windows prior) • Three-field system • Carruca= a heavy wheeled plow with an iron plowshare • Vernacular literature=literature written in the language of everyday speech in a particular region

  3. In the early Middle Ages, peasants divided their land into two fields of equal size. One field was planted, while the other was allowed to lie fallow to regain its fertility. Later, however, lands were divided into three parts. One field was planted in the fall with grains that were harvested in the summer. The second field was planted in the spring with grains and vegetables that were harvested in the fall. The third field was allowed to lie fallow. The three-field system meant that only one third, rather than one half, of the land lay fallow at any given time. The rotation of crops also kept the soil from becoming exhausted so quickly, which allowed more crops to be grown.

  4. Serfs, Slaves and Peasants • Serfs were required to provide labor services for the manor • Serfs were different from peasants in that serfs were legally bound to the land upon which they worked and lived • Peasants were required to pay their local village church a tithe which was 10% of their produce • The property assigned to a serf could not be taken away from him. His duties to the lord were fairly well defined. The lord had a responsibility to protect and provide for his serfs. A slave usually did not enjoy any of these assurances.

  5. The Inquisition • The court created by the Catholic Church to find and try heretics

  6. The Hundred Years’ War • The Hundred Years’ War proved to be a turning point in the ways of warfare in several ways. First, it proved the value of peasant foot soldiers over heavily armored and mounted knights. Until the battle of Crécy, the French knights looked down on foot soldiers as inferior. The English armies proved that foot soldiers could defeat knights in battle, especially through the use of the longbow, which was another new aspect to warfare. Finally, toward the end of the war, the use of the cannon changed the face of warfare forever and helped the French defeat the English armies at long last.

  7. Commercial Capitalism • Merchants and artisans living in walled cities came to be called burghers or bourgeoisie (wall enclosure) • Lay investiture was a practice by which secular rulers both chose nominees to church offices and gave them the symbols of their office.

  8. Commercial Capitalism • Increased barter helped lead to the rise of commercial capitalism in the Middle Ages when the demand for gold and silver coins arose at fairs and trading markets of all kinds. Trading fairs had been initially established by the counts of the Champagne region of France, in order to encourage trade between Italy and Flanders. Slowly, a money economy began to emerge. New trading companies and banking firms were set up to manage the exchange and sale of goods. All of these new practices were part of the rise of commercial capitalism, an economic system in which people invested in trade and goods in order to make profits.

  9. The Black Death • Killed 38 million people • Resulted in severe economic consequences • Anti-Semitism spread http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muHAaWxn9eA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KHlIWpyJrQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KA6nij1kdjE

  10. The Black Death epidemic and the death of so many people had severe economic consequences for the people of Europe in the Middle Ages. Trade declined, and some industries suffered greatly. A shortage of workers caused a dramatic rise in the price of labor. At the same time, the decline in the number of people lowered the demand for food, resulting in falling prices. Landlords were now paying more for labor while their incomes from rents were declining. Some peasants who survived the Black Death bargained with their lords to pay rent instead of owing services. In essence, this change freed them from serfdom, an institution that had been declining throughout the High Middle Ages.

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