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End of the Middle Ages

End of the Middle Ages. Three big events have come to herald the end of the Middle Ages The 100 Years War The Black Plague The Great Schism. The Hundred Years' War (1347-1453). Western Europe. The political map of WE was a patchwork quilt of family holdings.

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End of the Middle Ages

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  1. End of the Middle Ages • Three big events have come to herald the end of the Middle Ages • The 100 Years War • The Black Plague • The Great Schism

  2. The Hundred Years' War (1347-1453)

  3. Western Europe • The political map of WE was a patchwork quilt of family holdings. • On the Iberian Peninsula (Spain), was still divided between Christian kingdoms and the Muslim kingdom of Grenada. • In Italy the country was divided by internal revolts, expansionism and family politics. • In France and England, family rivalries destroyed the monarchies in the 14th and 15th centuries. • In both kingdoms weakening economies and demographic catastrophe just made things a giant mess. • The survival of the French and English monarchies was due to LUCK!!!

  4. Causes of the 100 Years' War

  5. 1. Controversy Over Succession • French king, Charles IV died without an heir. Closest descendent was Edward III of England. • The French nobility selected Philip of Valois, a cousin of the last king through the male line. • He founded a new French dynasty that ruled through the 16c. • At first the English had no objection to this, but in 1337 a dispute over land and Philip attempting to take it from Edward III caused Edward to declare war on Phillip. • In 1340, Edward claimed the title “King of France.” His goal was to recover Gascony and the crown.

  6. 2. Fr. Land Belonging to Br. Kings • A longer standing issue was the status of lands within France that belonged to English kings. • Edward was actually a vassal of Philip’s, holding sizable French territories (Gascony) as fiefs from the king of France [it went back to the Norman conquest]. • Neither monarchy was content with this arrangement and fought constantly for the next 75 years over sovereignty in the region.

  7. 3. Conflict Over Flanders The ‘dagger’ pointing at the ‘heart’ of England! • Close relationship btw England and Flemish cloth towns. • Wool industry of England is centered here. • Flanders wants its independence from French control. • Asks England for help. England sides with Flanders and France with the wealthy merchants.

  8. 4. A Struggle for National Identity • France was NOT a united country before the war began. • The French king only controlled about half of the country. This is significant because even though France was much larger and wealthier but its division made it hard for Philip to harvest these resources

  9. Chivalry • Although territorial and dynastic rivalry were triggers, Chivalry was the deeper cause. • The elites of Europe were stuck maintaining their honor by violence and cultivating violence to increase that honor.

  10. The War Itself

  11. Military Characteristics • The War was a series of short raids and expeditions punctuated by a few major battles, marked off by truces or ineffective treaties. • The relative strengths of each country dictated the sporadic nature of the struggle.

  12. French Advantages • Population of about 16,000,000. • Far richer and more populous than England. • At one point, the French fielded an army of over 50,000  at most, Britain mustered only 32,000.

  13. British Advantages • Weapons Technologies. France still fought as they did in the 12th century, but centuries of fighting the wealth and Scottish enemies transformed and modernized the English and their tactics • In almost every engagement, the English were outnumbered. • Britain’s most successful strategies: • Avoid pitched battles. • Engage in quick, profitable raids • Steal what you can. • Destroy everything else. • Capture enemy knights to hold for ransom.

  14. The Longbow as a Weapon • The use of the English defensive position was the use of the longbow. • Its arrows had more penetrating power than a bolt from a crossbow. • Could pierce an inch of wood or the armor of a knight at 200 yards! • A longbow could be fired more rapidly. • 6 arrows per minute.

  15. English Successes • Battle of Crecy- 1346- larger French force surrounded the English army • English archers rained down arrow on the chivalric but foolish charging French. • By midnight the English had fought off 16 assaults losing 100 men, to the French 3000. • This pattern was repeated at Poitiers (where they captured the French King- John II) and again in 1415 at Agincourt where the French charged the English’s elevated position.

  16. The British Longbow:The Battle of Poitiers, 1356

  17. Early English Victories

  18. First and Second Phase • First phase (under Edward III) • Flanders allies with England, recognizing Edward as king of France, 1340 • English seize Calais, 1346 • English rout near Poitiers, 1356; French king John II taken captive • 1360 treaty: John II ransomed, English claims in France recognized, Edward renounces claim to French throne • Second phase (Treaty of Troyes) • English war effort flags due to peasant revolts • Recommences with English victory at Agincourt, 1415 • Duchy of Burgundy joins English • Treaty of Troyes, 1420: named English Henry V successor to French Charles VI, but both soon die

  19. The Effective Use of the Cannon at Poitiers, 1356

  20. French Confusion • The English captured the French king, John II [r.1350-1364]. • France was now ruled by the Estates General • A representative council of townspeople and nobles. • Created in 1355. • Purpose to secure funds for the war. • In theory, the French king could not levy taxes on his own!!

  21. The Jacquerie, 1358 • The French gov’t raised taxes on the peasantry, at the same time nobles increased rents and demands. • Peasants all over Paris, fearing the loss of their modest level of prosperity and rebelled against their landlords. • Peasants attacked and killed nobles and their families all over France, Churches were burned and priests killed too. There was no organization though. • The rebels were defeated by aristocratic armies.

  22. Trouble in England • French revolt set the stage across Europe. • Peasant Revolt in 1381 was put down by King Richard II[r. 1377-1399]. • After charges of tyranny, Richard II was forced to abdicate in 1300. • Parliament elected Henry IV[r. 1399-1413], the first ruler from the House of Lancaster. • Henry avoided war taxes. • He was careful not to alienate the nobility. • Therefore, a truce was signed ending French and British hostilities [for the time being, at least].

  23. King Henry V (r. 1412-1422) • Renewed his family’s claim to the French throne. • At Agincourt in 1415, the English, led by Henry himself, goaded a larger French army into attacking a fortified English position. • With the aid of the dukes of Burgundy, Henry gained control over Normandy, Paris, and much of northern France!

  24. A Burgundian Presence

  25. Treaty of Troyes (1420) • Charles VI’s son [the future Charles VII], was declared illegitimate and disinherited. • Henry V married Catherine, the daughter of Charles VI. • Henry was declared the legitimate heir to the French throne! • A final English victory seemed assured, but both Charles VI and Henry V died in 1422. • This left Henry’s infant son, Henry VI [r. 1422-1461], to inherit BOTH thrones.

  26. Height of English Dominance

  27. The French “Reconquest” • The two kings’ deaths ushered in the final stage of the 100 Years’ War [1422-1453]. • Even though in 1428 the military and political power seemed firmly in British hands, the French reversed the situation. • In 1429, with the aid of the mysterious Joan of Arc, the French king, Charles VII, was able to raise the English siege of Orleans. • This began the reconquest of the north of France.

  28. Joan of Arc (1412-1432) • The daughter of prosperous peasants from an area of Burgundy that had suffered under the English. • Like many medieval mystics, she reported regular visions of divine revelation. • Her “voices” told her to go to the king and assist him in driving out the English. • She dressed like a man and was Charles’ most charismatic and feared military leader!

  29. Cannons Used at Orleons

  30. Joan Announces the Capture of Orleans to the King

  31. Joan of Arc (1412-1432) • She brought inspiration and a sense of national identity and self-confidence. • With her aid, the king was crowned at Reims [ending the “disinheritance”]. • She was captured during an attack on Paris and fell into English hands. • Because of her “unnatural dress” and claim to divine guidance, she was condemned and burned as a heretic in 1432. • She instantly became a symbol of French resistance.

  32. Joan as a “Feminist” Symbol Today?

  33. The End of the War • Despite Joan’s capture, the French advance continued. • By 1450 the English had lost all their major centers except Calais. • In 1453 the French armies captured an English-held fortress. • This was the last battle of the war. • There was not treaty, only a cessation of hostilities.

  34. France Becomes Unified! France in 1453 France in 1337

  35. English War of the Roses • Warfare with France had ended, but was just beginning in England. • The 100 Years War created powerful and autonomous aristocratic families with their own armies. Weak kings led to these armies fighting each other to determine royal succession. • From 1455-1485 the House of York/White Rose fought the House of Lancaster/Red Rose. • The War of the Roses ended in 1485 when Henry Tudor defeated his opponents and started a new era of the Tudor dynasty.

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