Chapter 15 Part 1: The Early Middle Ages

I. The Geography of Europe

-Western Europe was divided into many kingdoms after the fall of the Roman Empire.

-Europe is a large peninsula made up of smaller peninsulas. Most of Europe is within

300 miles of a coastline.

-Rivers made it easy for people to travel within Europe to trade.

-The seas and rivers offered protection from enemies.

-Europe contains many mountain ranges that made it difficult for one group to rule all

of Europe.

II. The Germanic Kingdoms

-The Visigoths in Spain and the Ostrogoths in Italy adopted Roman ways.

-In the early A.D. 400s, the Angles and Saxon invaded Britain.

-Clovis was king of the Franks who became a Catholic.

-After Clovis’s death, fights broke out.

-Charles Martel was a Frankish mayor who wanted to control all the nobles.

-Martel and the Franks defeated the Muslims, and Christianity remained the major

religion.

-Pepin became mayor after Martel’s death.

-Pepin’s son, Charles conquered Germany and Spain and earned the name

Charlemagne.

-Aachen was the capital of Charlemagne’s empire.

-After Charlemagne’s death, his son divided the empire into three kingdoms.

-The Vikings raided Europe and conquered part of western France.

-Otto I was a powerful German king who fought the Magyars and protected the

pope. Otto’s territory became known as the Holy Roman Empire.

III. The Rise of the Catholic Church

-A priest named Patrick traveled to Ireland to spread the message of Christianity.

-Gregory the Great was pope from A.D. 590 until A.D. 604.

-Monks and monasteries played an important role in education, health care, and the

preservation of knowledge.

-Gregory VII was elected pope in 1073. He issued a decree forbidding kings from

appointing high ranking Church officials.

-Henry declared that Gregory was no longer Pope. Gregory excommunicates Henry.

-In 1122, a new emperor and a new pope made an agreement called the Concordant

of Worms.

-The Catholic Church became very powerful under Pope Innocent III.

Chapter 15 Part 2: Feudalism

I. What is Feudalism?

-After Charlemagne’s empire fell, landowning nobles became more powerful, and

peasants looked to nobles for protection. This became known as feudalism.

-Nobles were both lords and vassals.

-Knights were vassals who fought in war on horseback.

-The feudal system in Japan was similar to the system in Europe.

-To gain freedom, a serf could run away and remain in a town for a year.

-New technology increased crop productivity in the Middle Ages.

II. Life in Feudal Europe

-Knights followed rules called the code of chilvary.

-Wives and daughters ran manors when the noblemen went to war.

-A castle was the center of a manor.

-Peasants lived in simple cottages with walls of plastered clay and thatched roofs.

-Peasants worked hard in the fields year round.

-Peasant women had to work the fields and raise children.

-Bread was a basic staple of the peasant diet.

III. Trade and Cities

-After the collapse of the Roman Empire, almost all trade ended.

-Feudalism and technology helped promote trade.

-In the early Middle Ages, people bartered, but later, people began using money

again.

-Eventually, towns set up their own governments, with elected members of city

councils.

-Guilds were established by craftspeople.

-A child of 10 could become an apprentice.

-Medieval cities contained crowded, wooden houses on narrow, winding streets.

-Women in cities prepared meals, raised their children, and managed their house-

hold’s money.

Chapter 15 Part 3: Kingdoms and Crusades

I. England in the Middle Ages

-Alfred the Great united the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and drove the Viking

invaders out.

-Normandy was ruled by William, a cousin of King Edward of England.

-William ordered a census called the Domesday Book.

-The Normans brought their northern French customs to England.

-Henry II was a powerful ruler of England who created the jury system to address

arguments over land.

-King John, Henry’s son and successor, angered many royals by raising taxes and

punishing people without trials.

-The nobles met with King John and forced him to sign the Magna Carta.

-In the 1200s, King Edward I gathered representatives from across England to

advise him and help him make laws. This was called a Parliament.

II. The Kingdom of France

-After Charlemagne’s empire was divided, the western part became France.

-The Frankish nobles chose Hugh Capet as king in 987.

-Philip II took the French throne and warred with England.

-French society had three classes: clergy, nobles, and townspeople and peasants.

-In 1302, King Philip IV conducted the first meeting of the Estates-General.

III. Eastern Europe and Russia

-The Slavs settled villages in Eastern Europe around A.D. 500.

-The Slavs eventually divided into three major groups: southern, western, and eastern

-In the 700s, Vikings moved into Slav territory and eventually took power.

-Oleg, a Viking ruler, created a Rus state around the city of Kiev.

-The Mongols invaded the Kievan Rus and conquered all but the city of Novgorod.

-Moscow began to grow as the Slavs recovered from the Mongol invasion.

-Ivan III, known as Ivan the Great, was the grand duke of Moscow.

-Ivan IV ended Mongol rule of Moscow and expanded its territory.

IV. The Crusades

-During the Middle Ages, Muslim Turks invaded the Byzantine Empire.

-Thousands of soldiers captured Jerusalem in the First Crusade. Conquered lands

were divided into four states.

-The Muslims fought back, and the Europeans began the Second Crusade.

-Saladin, a Muslim, became ruler of Egypt. His troops captured Jerusalem for the

Muslims.

-France, England, and the Holy Roman Empire banded together to fight the Third

Crusade against Saladin, which ended in truce.

-A Fourth Crusade began around 1200. The Byzantine Empire became weaker.

-Six more crusades were staged, but they achieved little.

-The Crusades helped break down feudalism and increased trade between Europe and

the Middle East.

Chapter 15 Part 4: The Church and Society

I. Religion and Society

-The Cistercian order were monks who farmed, worshiped, and prayed.

-Most famous Cistercian monk was Bernard of Clairvaux.

-Many women, mostly from the nobility, entered convents between A.D.

1000 and 1200.

-Francis of Assisi founded the first order of friars, who became known as

Franciscans. The Dominican order was founded by Dominic de Guzman.

-In medieval Europe, daily life revolved around the Catholic Church.

-Mary, the mother of Jesus, was the most honored saint.

-The Catholic Church tried to end heresy by establishing a court called the

Inquisition.

-Leaders of the Catholic Church persecuted Jews.

II. Medieval Culture

-Architecture of the Middle Ages reflected the importance of religion.

-Oxford University was one of the first universities established in Europe.

-Thomas Aquinas was a Dominican friar and priest. Famous for his

Contribution to scholasticism.

-Latin was the language of educated people in Europe during the Middle

Ages.

-Vernacular literature began in the Middle Ages. Two types-Troubadour

poetry and the heroic epic.

Chapter 15 Part 5: The Late Middle Ages

I. The Black Death

-The Black Death was a plague that spread throughout Europe and Asia.

-Historians believe the Mongols were partly responsible for the rapid

spread because they opened up trade.

-The first outbreak appeared in China, then in India, Muslim countries, and

Europe.

-The European outbreak began in Caffa, a city on the Black Sea.

-About 38 million Europeans died between 1347 and 1351. Damaged the

economy and weakened the feudal system.

II.A Troubled Continent

-The Hundred Years’ War began after Edward III angered the French.

-Joan of Arc, a French peasant girl, fought with the French army.

-The French finally defeated the English in 1453.

-Henry Tudor was crowned Henry VII after the War of the Roses.

-Although Muslims ruled most of Spain and Portugal, the people of the

countries were mostly Christians and some Jews.

-Princess Isabella of Castile married Ferdinand of Aragon and united their

two territories into one country called Spain.

-Ferdinand and Isabella wanted all of Spain to be Catholic.

-In 1492, Jews were given a choice of converting or leaving.