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Throughout the Middle Ages, the churchwas one of the few sources of leadershipand stability that people could rely upon.One historian has noted that ?The continuity and the authority of the Church of Rome stood out in marked contrastagainst the short-lived kingdoms whichrose and fell in the
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1. Chapter 13 - The Rise of the Middle AgesSection 5: The Power of the Church
2.
Throughout the Middle Ages, the church
was one of the few sources of leadership
and stability that people could rely upon.
One historian has noted that “The
continuity and the authority of the Church
of Rome stood out in marked contrast
against the short-lived kingdoms which
rose and fell in the early Middle Ages.” As
a result, the Catholic church became one
of medieval Europe’s most powerful and
enduring institutions.
4. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Medieval church had broad political power,
performed many government functions
5. I. Religion in the Middle Ages By 1200s, the church was a leading landowner
and wealthiest institution in Europe
6. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Clergy was organized in strict hierarchy of rank
–parish priest was at bottom
7. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Priests directly served people in parish;
administered five of the seven sacraments
8. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Bishops managed a diocese; performed
sacraments of confirmation and holy orders
9. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Kings or nobles selected bishops based on
family connections or political power
10. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Archbishops managed a group of several
dioceses called an archdiocese
11. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Cardinals most important and powerful clergy;
advised pope on legal and spiritual matters
12. I. Religion in the Middle Ages Pope held supreme authority during his
pontificate; head of ecclesiastical courts; power
to excommunicate
13. I. Religion in the Middle Ages 1054 - Bishop of Constantinople rejected Pope
Leo IX’s authority; excommunication split church
into Roman Catholics and Orthodox
14. II. Monasticism Monasticism - life in religious communities;
monks in monasteries and nuns in convents
15. II. Monasticism Monks and nuns served God through fasting,
prayer, and self-denial
16. II. Monasticism Benedict established monastery in the 500s;
Benedictine Rule governed monks’ lives
17. II. Monasticism Benedictine Rule abandoned in 900s after
rulers began appointing unqualified abbots
18. II. Monasticism New monastery at Cluny, France, reestablished
Benedictine Rule; became most influential
monastery in Europe
19. III. The Church and Medieval Life Church leaders were feudal lords and political
advisors; popes held political and spiritual
power over monarchs
20. III. The Church and Medieval Life The church had the power to tax; parish priests
collected a tithe - one-tenth of a person’s
income
21. III. The Church and Medieval Life Major problems in the church were lay
investiture and simony
22. III. The Church and Medieval Life Heretics - people who denied the church’s
principles