1 / 14

Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms

Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms. The end of the Roman Empire (476 AD); the end of classical antiquity. The Middle Ages or medieval period (500 – 1500 AD). The Renaissance and the beginning of modern history. Roots of the Middle Ages. The classical heritage of Rome

tovi
Télécharger la présentation

Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms

  2. The end of the Roman Empire (476 AD); the end of classical antiquity The Middle Agesor medieval period (500 – 1500 AD) The Renaissance and the beginning of modern history

  3. Roots of the Middle Ages • The classical heritage of Rome • The beliefs of the Roman Catholic Church • The customs of various Germanic tribes

  4. Invasions of Western Europe • Repeated invasions and constant warfare in the western half of the Roman Empire led to major changes: • Breakdown of trade • Downfall of cities; population becomes mostly rural • Decline of learning • Loss of a common language; Latin no longer part of everyday speech; new languages evolved

  5. Germanic Kingdoms Emerge • 400 – 600 AD, small Germanic kingdoms replaced provinces of the Roman Empire • Government changed from the public government and written laws of Rome to the family ties and personal loyalties of Germanic society • No orderly government for large territories

  6. Clovis Rules the Franks • Franks held power in what is present-day France • Led by Clovis • Converted to Christianity • United all Franks into one kingdom

  7. Germans Adopt Christianity • By 600, many Germanic people converted to Christianity • Church built monasteries, religious communities where monks and nuns lived • Monks opened schools, maintained libraries, and copied books, partially preserving the learning of Rome. • Pope Gregory expanded power of the papacy (Pope’s office) • Church became a secular(worldly) power involved in politics

  8. Illuminated manuscripts, made by monks, were copies of religious writings decorated with ornate letters and brilliant pictures.

  9. An Empire Evolves • Europe was made up many small kingdoms, of which the Franks were the largest and strongest • Charles Martel led Franks in early 700s, expanded their territory and defeating Muslim raiders at the Battle of Tours in 732 • Became a Christian hero • His son began the Carolingian Dynasty which ruled until 987.

  10. Charlemagne Becomes Emperor • Martel’s grandson, Charlemagne, built the Frankish empire into the largest empire since Rome • Spread Christianity • Reunited western Europe • Pope made him “emperor”

  11. Charlemagne Leads a Revival • Charlemagne strengthened his power by limiting the power of nobles • Encouraged education by ordering monasteries to open schools to train future monks and priests • After his death, Charlemagne’s sons divided the Empire into three kingdoms • Led to breakdown of strong, central government • Resulted in a new system called feudalism

More Related