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1. The Middle Ages 1066-1485
2. Norman Invasion Battle of Hastings
Duke William of Normandy, William the Conqueror defeats King Harold of England
Start of the Medieval Period
3. Norman Influence
Emphasis on law and order
Cultural unity
Inventory of land
Doomsday Book
Taxes based on what people owned
4. William the Conqueror Provided order
Merciless soldier
Efficient ruler and administrator
Able to conquer entire country
Ruled for twenty-one years
5. History of the Normans The Normans
Descended from the Vikings
Seized and remained in northwestern France (Normandy)
Adopted many French customs
6. THE NORMAN CONQUEST The Fusing of the Norman and Anglo-Saxon Cultures
Neither dominant
Anglo-Saxons adapted to the Norman ways
Realized they could raise their place in society through the Church or through the court
Began to mingle with the Norman overlords
7. THE NORMAN CONQUEST Thomas Becket
Henry II’s Lord Chancellor
Archbishop of Canterbury
Defended the claims of the Church against the interests of the King
Murdered by several of Henry’s knights
Became a saint of the Church and a hero of the people
8. LAND & THE FEUDAL SYSTEM
William took land of fallen English -had a great deal of land at his disposal
Retained much for himself
Divided rest to his followers
Felt he was free to deed land due to conquest (royal charter)
Expected obedience and service in return
Introduced into England the feudal system
9. LAND & THE FEUDAL SYSTEM The Doomesday (Doomsday) Book
1086 by William
Disputes over vague property lines
Complete inventory of all property
Listed all landowners and showed the extent of their claims
Taxes could now be based on real property
Previously, there had been a uniformed tax for all
10. 11th-15th Century people of Western Europe belonged to one society with common beliefs and culture
Latin became the language of educated people
Everyone was responsible to the church, regardless of standing or where they resided
Main force in preserving and conveying the culture
11. Medieval Life Knights
Important and respected position
Chivalry
Code of conduct
First obligation to defend the king and Christian faith
Also treatment of women and help others- how to “behave”
Courtly love
12. Medieval Life People move to towns and cities
Began a merchant class
Focus on herding not farming
Gave the people actual wages
Formed the guilds
System of workers regulating wages and prices
Fair to all in the profession
Created and extended family
Stonecutters, masons, carpenters, glass blowers
13. MEDIEVAL LIFE Life in the Middle Ages was difficult and challenging
The difficulty of life was balanced with religious festivals, magnificent tournaments, and brilliant pageantry
14. English Law William the Conqueror instituted written public documents for most government actions
Common Law
Refers to law common to the whole country and all its people, instead of laws applying only to certain classes of persons
15. ENGLISH LAW Ordeals
Innocence or guilt was settled by tasks
In 1215, Pope Innocent III declared that the ordeal system was irrational
Jury system
16. The Crusades 1095-1270
Series of holy wars waged by European Christians against the Muslims
Pope Urban II began Crusades
Goal was to conquer Jerusalem
17. The Hundred Years’ War 1337-1453
First national war waged by England against France
Claims to the throne: Edward III and Henry V
Focus away from the knight and on the yeoman
Small land owner
Yard-long arrows
18. The Black Death 1348-1349
Contagious - spread by fleas
Reduced population by a third
Shortage of labor
Gave lower classes more power against their overlords
Serfs gained freedom and ended Feudalism
19. MEDIEVAL LITERATURE Romance
Tales of chivalry with a love interest and all sorts of wonders and marvels
Fairy enchantments
Giants
Dragons
Wizards
Sorceresses
20. MEDIEVAL LITERATUREThree Principal Sources Britain
King Arthur and his knights
Based on Celtic folklore
Almost no historical basis
Illustrate chivalric ideals of honor, courage, courtesy, and service to women
21. MEDIEVAL LITERATUREThree Principal Sources France
The Court of Charlemagne
22. MEDIEVAL LITERATUREThree Principal Sources Rome
Classical stories such as the conquest of Troy
23. FOLK POETRY AND DRAMA Drama
Originated in Middle Ages
Miracle Plays
Performed by guilds during holidays celebrating religious festivals
Rough dramatizations of Biblical stories
24. FOLK POETRY AND DRAMA Drama (cont.)
Morality Plays
Took the place of miracle plays toward the end of the Middle Ages, during the dark and troubled times of the 15th century
Elaborate dramatic allegories in which characters representing various virtues and vices confronted one another
Most famous was Everyman