Developments in Europe
600 C.E.–1450
- Developments in Europe
- Restructuring of European economic, social, and political institutions
- Economic
- West
- Before fall of Roman Empire, small landowners already selling off land holdings to larger estates
- Many people left urban for rural protection
- Trade continued to decline – political order disintegrated
- Early part – towns shrink in size
- 500-1500 Middle Ages – Medieval
- 500-1000 Dark Ages – judgmental, inaccurate
- Manorialism/Feudalism – European social, economic, political system
- Estates – fiefs/manors
- Form of unfree agricultural labor
- Method of harnessing peasant labor
- Ensure steady food supply
- Different than slavery
- Can not be bought or sold
- Could pass on property to heirs
- Peasants lived on manor – in exchange for place to live and protection
- Gave lord part of crops
- Number of days each month performed services on lord’s land
- Manors remarkably self-sufficient
- food harvested
- clothing and shoes made
- “Great Clearing” – work together to cut down forests
- Scientific advances helped manors succeed
- Three-field system – fall harvest, spring, fallow
- Led to food surplus, at times
- But…tools rather crude
- Moldboard plow in 9th century able turn soil
- Gradually skilled serfs started trading with the rest of the world
- Chipped away at social stratification
- Banking began – towns and cities gain momentum
- Middle Class emerges – craftsmen/merchants
- People lured to towns – hope of making money
- 11th century – Europe re-entering the world
- Before fall of Roman Empire, small landowners already selling off land holdings to larger estates
- East – Byzantine
- Coined money – provided stability
- Unique position between Mediterranean and Black Seas
- Crossroads of Europe and Asia
- Remarkable military/economic importance for 1500 years
- Provided commercial/cultural connections
- Preserver of Christianity
- Absolute authority
- Controlled economy
- Especially industries – silk production
- Controlled economy
- Renewed economic growth
- Caused by:
- Rise of towns
- Use of money rather than barter
- Labor shortage from plague
- Enclosure of open fields
- Peasant rebellions
- Renewed interaction between Europe and Central Asia
- Following Crusades
- Sugarcane, spices, luxury goods – porcelain, glassware, carpets
- Unbalanced trade – East showed little interest in Western goods
- 4th Crusade – Venice merchants actually raid Constantinople
- Power to monarchs to collect taxes for armies
- encouraged growth of merchant/artisan class
- exposed Europeans to learning
- gave Europeans better sense of geography
- Venice/Genoa other wealthy trading cities
- developed internal trading routes
- Bad effects
- Muslim/Christian hostility
- Encouragement of anti-Semitism
- Undermining of Byzantine Empire
- Worsens East/West relations
- Following Crusades
- Signs of changing economics
- Knights improved military effectiveness
- Created middle class
- Improved agricultural techniques > population growth
- Vikings became Christians, settled, stopped invading > relative security
- France – palace schools to educate local children
- Landlords extended holdings
- Sometimes paid serfs for these new lands
- High Middle Ages
- *** Renewal of economic/intellectual vigor and tendency toward centralized political authority led to new era in Europe
- Increased Eurasian trade
- Growth of banking
- Towns regulated business/collected taxes
- New warfare technology - gunpowder and cannon made castles obsolete
- Decline in number of serfs on manor
- Some serfs received wages
- Others fled to towns
- Serf in town for year and a day considered a free person
- Caused by:
- Social
- Feudalism – social class
- King power over kingdom
- Nobles – granted land in exchange for military service/loyalty to king
- Nobles divided land among vassals
- Vassals divide to subordinate vassals
- Peasants then worked the land of these subordinate vassals
- Everyone fulfills obligations to vassals
- Military
- Food production
- Status defined by birth – Lord > knight > merchant > artisan > peasant
- Power determined by land ownership
- Feuds develop – have etiquette – chivalry
- Rules of engagement
- Honor system – promoted mutual respect
- Most lords and knights followed this code of chivalry
- Songs/legends provided examples – King Arthur’s Round Table
- Chivalry more myth than reality
- Peasant rights
- Peasants became tied to land – literally couldn’t leave without permission
- Not quite slaves, but not entirely free
- “Imprisonment” on land made them quite highly-skilled
- Needed to be self-sufficient
- Role of Women
- Traditional roles of homemaker/childcare provider
- Code of chivalry reinforced women as weak/subordinate
- Convents offered women opportunities
- Service in communities
- Women in towns a bit more freedom
- Allowed to participate in trade/craft guilds
- Male-dominated
- Land = power, only males can inherit
- Primogeniture – eldest son
- Noblewomen few powers – though elevated through literature
- Education limited to domestic skills
- Regarded essentially as property – protected and displayed
- Needed feminine traits – beauty/compassion
- Feudalism – social class
- Political
- West
- Small feudal kingdoms
- Extreme decentralization
- No single ruler able to provide unity
- Few cultural and technological advancements
- Great Migration of Germanic and Asiatic
- Some settled permanently
- Kingdoms tended to be unsophisticated/short-lived
- As Barbarian tribes became less nomadic, played key roles
- Lords only have direct contact with king when called to service
- Normally lord in charge of his own land
- Disputes erupted between lords – the term “feud”
- Era characterized by local power struggles
- Settled through battle or marriages
- Emergence of regional governments
- not until 800s/900s did true nations – centralized states unite
- common ethnic, linguistic, cultural heritage
- Holy Roman Empire – Charlemagne (768-814)
- 800 CE crowned emperor – Charles the Great
- for protecting Church
- established papal authority over kings
- cemented relationship between rulers/Church
- 800 CE crowned emperor – Charles the Great
- Franks – overran Gaul – Germanic tribe
- 5th century converted to Christianity
- Carolingian Dynasty
- Charles Martel – stopped Muslims 732
- Frankish royalty allies with Pope
- Symbiotic relationship between Church/king
- England
- Alternative form of feudalism
- Norman invasion of 1066
- Duke of Normandy – William the Conqueror
- Viking descent – transplanted his form of feudalism
- Instead of vassal form of feudalism
- All vassals owe allegiance to monarch
- Successors started
- Paid bureaucracy
- Royal court system
- Single system of laws
- Jury system
- Growth of Parliamentary Government in England
- Unique
- Limitations on monarch
- One of earliest parliamentary governments
- 1215 nobles wanted to control tax policies of King John
- Forced to sign Magna Carta
- No taxation without cosent
- No arbitrary arrest
- Guarantee of justice to all
- Monarchy not above the law
- Entitled nobility to basic rights
- Later interpreted that all social classes get these rights
- 1265 – first English parliament
- House of Lords – clergy and nobility
- House of Commons – urban elite class
- Used power of purse to control monarchs – needed money to go to war
- Unique
- Northern Italy/Germany – gained prominence by 10th century
- Wanted to connect with classical empire of Rome
- Territory – Holy Roman Empire
- Voltaire “neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire”
- Fraction of the size
- Italy still run by city-states
- Germany still run by feudal lords
- Provided a measure of unity during Middle Ages, but…
- Delayed unification of Germany and Italy until 19th century ***
- East – Byzantine
- Absolute authority
- Secular rulers headed the church
- Justinian Code – codification of ancient Roman legal principles
- Had gone unused for awhile in the West
- High Middle Ages
- Strengthening of nation states
- Hundred Years War – 1337-1453
- Increased power of France/England
- Considered end of medieval period
- West
- Cultural
- East vs. West
- Byzantine Empire
- Greek language
- Blended Greek and Roman elements
- Icon – painted images of Christian saints, Virgin Mary and Jesus
- Architecture with domes
- More in common with Persia
- Mastery of mosaic art
- Under Justinian – trade and arts flourish
- Hagia Sophia
- Byzantine Empire
- West
- Only in Spain, was Greek/Roman learning maintained – by Muslims in Spain
- Development of vernacular languages
- Mystery plays
- Few literary works – stories about saints
- Development of polyphonic music, chants for religious ceremonies
- Return to stone for buildings – some Romanesque copies
- High Middle Ages
- Increased urbanization – still nothing like China
- Rise of universities
- Gothic architecture – cathedrals tall spires/arched windows with stained glass
- Muslim designs + Western architectural technology
- Technology
- Mechanical clock – China 750 > Europe/Italy 14th century
- Paper – along Silk Road – taught by Persians > Italians first
- Printing press – block printing China 8th Century
- Johan Gutenberg – 1436 – mass production of text critical
- Raised literacy rates
- Spread information
- Increased impact of new ideas/scientific theories
- Encouraged expansion of universities/libraries
- Key Role in Renaissance/Reformation/Scientific Revolution
- Spectacles/eye glasses – lenses originally for astronomers
- 1285 Florentine invented first spectacles
- Firearms/Gunpowder – 3 century BCE made
- Used as firearm/cannon in 9th century
- 1252 – made it to Europe
- Philosophy
- Scholastism – reconcile logic and faith
- logic, senses, scientific learning vs. dogma
- Saint Thomas Aquinas – most brilliant Italian monk – Summa Theologica
- Also influenced by Muslim/Jewish thinkers
- Music and Literature
- Gregorian chants – simple chant without instruments
- Later secular music – love and adventure
- troubadours and minstrels made popular 11th/12th century
- Favorite subjects – heroic legends – knights, Roland, El Cid
- troubadours and minstrels made popular 11th/12th century
- Literature – Latin language of elite
- Poetry began being written in vernacular – local language
- More literature available to more people
- Universities
- Initially under Church influence
- Havens for learning, discussion, exchange of ideas
- Architecture
- Byzantine/Middle East methods > castle building
- Cathedrals – higher degree of skill
- Required immense amounts of money
- Could take a century to build
- Styles
- Romanesque – thick walls, small windows, square blocky building
- Gothic – tall, slender spires, ornate carvings, large stained-glass windows, flying buttresses to support weight of walls
- Similarities to Japanese feudalism
- Knights to samurai – vassals who served in lord’s military force
- Followed an honor code – chivalry
- In contrast to bushido – chivalry was two-sided contract between vassal/lord
- Started 800s after division of Holy Roman Empire vs. started in opposition to power of the Fujiwara
- King, queen, emperor vs. Emperor as puppet ruler, shogun as real power
- Hereditary/deposed length of service vs. emperor hereditary/deposed, but shogun > force/intrigue
- Ruler>Vassal>Vassal>Knight
- Emperor>provincial aristocrat>vassal warrior chief>samurai
- Large population engaged in agriculture vs. small agriculture population
- Bushido applied to both men and women of samurai class
- Chivalry only followed by knights
- East vs. West
- The division of Christendom into eastern and western Christian cultures
- Key points
- Both practiced different forms of Christianity
- Monasticism
- formation of religious communities, not ordained priests – monks/nuns
- based on Benedictine ideas of contemplation, seclusion
- Later groups – Dominicans/Franciscans – more missionary work
- Competed for supremacy
- Split in 286 – easier to administer
- 330 Constantine converts to Christianity – changes center to Constantinople
- 395 Split again – Eastern part > Constantinople
- 800 Holy Roman Empire starts in West – centered in Rome
- 1054 – Great Schism - Christianity split into Roman Catholicism and Christian Orthodoxy
- Question of control – centralized through Church or state?
- For centuries tolerated each other, but then differences too great
- Communion
- Priests should be allowed to marry
- Use of local languages in church
- Nature of God – trinity?
- Use of icons during worship
- Eastern Christian Culture
- Orthodox Christianity
- Secular rulers ran church
- Patriarch of Constantinople 1054 excommunicated pope
- Less centralized
- Russian churches conducted services in own language
- Local customs merged with Orthodox Church practices
- Secular empire with official church religion attached
- Western Christian Culture – originally Christendom, then Catholic “universal”
- Overview - Importance
- Provided Europeans with sense of religious unity
- regardless of national/linguistic differences, still united
- Preserved Latin manuscripts
- philosophical essays
- literary works
- tremendous wealth of learning
- passed on from Muslims
- Tremendous sway over secular and political affairs
- Provided Europeans with sense of religious unity
- Pope ran church – pope > cardinals > archbishops > priests
- Sacraments
- Baptism – formalized entrance
- Confirmation – passage to adulthood
- Marriage
- Communion – Lord’s Supper
- Confession – seek penance
- Ordination – consecrated life to serving God – priest
- Last Rites – Extreme Unction – given before death
- 1054 pope excommunicated patriarch of Constantinople
- Papal authority expands because of
- Refusal to pay taxes for Church land
- Sole authority of clergy over Church lands
- Lands given after death
- Though politics less centralized, religion more centralized
- Edicts from pope
- Services in Latin
- Political power blessed by the Church, under control – early centuries of Middle Ages
- Religious empire with subservient political units
- Overview - Importance
- Key points
- West
- Economic
- Restructuring of European economic, social, and political institutions
Subject:
US History [1]
Subject X2:
US History [1]