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Unit 3 Europe in the Middle Ages Power of the Church

Day 17 Skinny 33-34. Unit 3 Europe in the Middle Ages Power of the Church. Unit 3 Essential Questions. What political and economic systems emerged in the Middle Ages? How was the Roman Catholic Church a unifying force?. Emperor wielded authority in political matters.

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Unit 3 Europe in the Middle Ages Power of the Church

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  1. Day 17 Skinny 33-34 Unit 3 Europe in the Middle AgesPower of the Church

  2. Unit 3 Essential Questions • What political and economic systems emerged in the Middle Ages? • How was the Roman Catholic Church a unifying force?

  3. Emperor wielded authority in political matters Gelasius’ Two Swords Theory • Pope wielded authority in religious matters Did not always work smoothly—conflicts over who ruled what

  4. Clergy=church officials • Pope—highest rank • Bishops—supervised priests • Priests—served the local people Medieval bishop's palace Medieval bishop

  5. Unifying power of the Church • Shared beliefs church brought people together during time of constant warfare • Sense of community • Sacraments—religious ceremonies that marked membership in the community • Baptism • Communion

  6. Canon Law=Church Law • Laws about marriage and church practices • Church courts could try people who broke canon law • Punishments • Excommunication • Interdict

  7. Interdiction You could not have sacraments performed on your land So all your people were doomed to hell, too Punishment related to authority Pope had the authority to punish political rulers, even kings & emperors. • Excommunication • You were denied salvation • All your vassals were free from their duties • Could lead to interdiction

  8. Church and StatePopes and the Holy Roman Empire • Otto I, or Otto the Great • Crowned 936 • Charlemagne was his hero • Allied with Church • Fought for the Church in Italy • 962, pope crowns him “Emperor” Wax seal of Otto the Great

  9. Church and StatePopes and the Holy Roman Empire • German-Italian empire became known as “Holy Roman Empire” • Lasted until 1100 • Italians and popes did not like being ruled by Germans • Why? • Lay investiture—kings or nobles had power to appoint clergy, name bishops • Church resented this which led to a ...

  10. Showdown at Canossa Primary Source Page 372 • 1075 Pope Gregory banned lay investiture • German emperor Henry IV called a meeting of bishops he had appointed and ordered Gregory to step down (quit as pope) • Gregory excommunicated Henry • The bishops then sided with Gregory, threatening Henry's legitimacy as a ruler • Henry tried to make up to Gregory to save his throne

  11. Concordat of WormsSolution to Conflict • 1122 • Church and Emperor met to work out lay investiture • Compromise called “Concordat of Worms” • Only Church can appoint bishops • Emperor can veto Henry IV begs forgiveness

  12. The End of Another Empire • Frederick the I, or Barbarossa, strong central leader • Attacked Italy frequently, pope not happy • Lombard League fought him in 1176 • Lombard foot soldiers beat the knights • Made peace in 1177 • 1190—Holy Roman Empire in pieces after Fred's death • They kept trying to put together again • Clashed with Italian cities and pope • Weak central leadership because princes elected emperor • Think—why did election by princes weaken central leadership?

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