210 likes | 703 Views
Chapter 8. European Civilization in the Early Middle Ages, 750 - 1000. The World of the Carolingians. Charlemagne and the Carolingian Empire (768 – 814) Pepin (751 – 768) / Deposed Last Merovingian Charlemagne Expansion of the Carolingian Empire Army Gathered Each Spring for Campaign
E N D
Chapter 8 European Civilization in the Early Middle Ages, 750 - 1000
The World of the Carolingians • Charlemagne and the Carolingian Empire (768 – 814) • Pepin (751 – 768) / Deposed Last Merovingian • Charlemagne • Expansion of the Carolingian Empire • Army Gathered Each Spring for Campaign • Carolingians Crush the Lombards in Italy (773) • Disastrous Campaign in Spain (777) • Campaigns against the Saxons • Bavarians, Slavs and Avars
Governing Charlemagne’s Empire • Governing the Empire • Income from Royal Estates • Counts as administrators • Missi Dominici • System very inefficient • Help from the Church • Charlemagne as Emperor • Pope Leo III (795 – 816) • Charlemagne crowned emperor in 800
The Carolingian Intellectual Revival • Carolingian Renaissance • Scriptoria • Carolingian Miniscule
The Church, Marriage and Sexuality Monogamy Divorce Prohibited The Nuclear Family Christianity and Sexuality Celibacy Sexual Activity permitted only within marriage Homosexuality Diet and Health Bread as the basic staple Pork, Wild Game, Dairy, Eggs, Vegetables Gluttony and Drunkenness Medical Practices Herbs and Bleeding Magic Life in the Carolingian World
Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire • Louis the Pious (814 – 840) • Treaty of Verdun (843) • Charles the Bald (843 – 877): Western Section • Louis the German (843 – 876): Eastern Section • Lothair (840 – 855): Middle Section • Emergence of two different cultures • Conflicts between the three sons of Louis the Pious
Invasions of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries • Muslims and Magyars • Muslims attack in Mediterranean • Magyars settled in modern day Hungary • The Vikings • Germanic People from Scandinavia • Warriors and Shipbuilders • Russia • Ireland, England and France • Iceland, Greenland and Newfoundland
Invasions of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries ©2003 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
Castle at Les Baux Constructed as a Refuge from Saracen raidsEight Century – Provence, France
The Emerging World of Lords and Vassals • Feudalism • Lords and Vassals • Larger Horses and Stirrup • Exchange of land (fief) for service • Act of Homage • Fragmented authority in the ninth century • Subinfeudation • Responsibilities between Lords and Vassals
The Manorial System • The Manor • Peasants and Serfs • 60% of European population had become serfs by ninth century • Working the demesne (lord’s land) and paying rents • Lord’s legal rights over the serfs
The Zenith of Byzantine Civilization • Michael III (842 – 867) • Foreign attacks continue • Differences with the West • The Macedonian Dynasty (867 – 1081) • Increased Prosperity • Conversion of the Prince of Kiev, Russia • Military Offensive in the tenth century • Basil II (976 – 1025)
The Slavic Peoples of Central and Eastern Europe • Conversion to Christianity by German Missionaries • Poland • Hungary • Conversion to Christianity by Byzantines • Moravia • Bulgars • Eastern Slavs • Encounters with Vikings • The “Rus” • Kiev • Vladimir (c. 980 – 1015)
The Migrations of the Slavs ©2003 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
The World of Islam • The Umayyad Dynasty • Abu al-Abbas puts an end to the Umayyads (750) • The Abbasid Dynasty • New Capital in Baghdad • Harun al-Rashed (786 – 809) • Al-Ma’mun (813 – 833) • Spain and the Continuation of the Umayyads • Abd al-Rahman (756) • Fatimid Egypt (973)
Islamic Civilization • Arabic as an international language • Cities • Baghdad • Cairo • Cordova – Population of 100,000 • Science and Philosophy • Paper and Books • Mathematics and Natural Sciences • Chemistry and Medicine • Ibn Sina (980 – 1037) • Medical Encyclopedia
Discussion Questions • How was Charlemagne able to unite and govern his large empire? • What role did the Church play on family and everyday life in the Carolingian world? • Why were the invasions of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries so damaging to Europe? • What is the relationship between feudalism and manorialism? • What liberties did peasants give up in exchange for land and protection from their lords? • What impact did the Byzantine world have on the Slavic people of Central and Eastern Europe and vice versa? • What were the factors that contributed to the flourishing of Islamic Civilization under the the Abbasids?
Web Links • NetSerf – The Internet Collection of Medieval Resources • Internet Medieval Sourcebook – The Carolingians • Wharram Percy: A Lost Medieval Village • Corpus of Early Medieval Coin Finds • Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga • Byzantine Studies on the Internet • Baghdad: Metropolis of the Abbasid Caliphate