Name:Class:Date:
13.3 The Age of Chivalry
Knights: Warriors on Horseback
- The technology of warfare changes
- Charles Martel got the idea for mounted knights from the he fought in Tours.
- and enable knights to handle heavy weapons
- Label the diagram:
- The Warrior’s Role in Feudal Society
- By 1000’s, western Europe is a of warring nobles
- Feudal lords raise private armies of knights
- Knights rewarded with ; provides income for needed weapons
- Tried to enemy & hold knights ransom
So, You Want to be a Knight?
- One had to be “well-born” (son of a)
- A Knight’s Training:
- Age 7: - personal servant of the Lord
- Age 15: - assistant to a Knight (learn to handle sword, lance, axe, bow & arrow)
- After you ““ (around age 21), you can become a knight!
- Ceremony:
- Lord (or King) touches your shoulder 3 times with sword and says, “I dub thee knight.” (Dub means )
- Still done today!
- Tournaments
- Knights gain experience, show off, and make money in - competitions and mock battles
- Melee:
- Two groups of knights assemble in an open field
- Both parties rode toward each other and anyone who came into range
- The aim of the melee was to an opposing knight and hold him for ransom (typically the cost of a suit of armor or a horse)
- Quintain:
- Objective was to direct strokes at specified areas of a hanging post or shield
- Practice their with a lance, sword, or battle axe
- Jousting:
- ““ an opponent with a lance
Code of Chivalry
- By 1100s, knights obey a code of chivalry – a set of on how to act.
- The code includes:
- To protect the and poor
- Serve feudal lord, God, and
- Epic Poetry
- Epic poems recount a hero’s and adventures
- The is about Charlemagne’s knights fighting Muslims
- Love Poems and Songs
- Knights’ duties to ladies are as important as those to their lords
- Ideal, “chivalrous” love for one’s lord’s lady
- - traveling poet-musicians – write and sing short verses
Siege Weapons
- Castles are huge where lords/Kings live
- Protected by:
- Thick stone walls
- (water surrounding the castle)
- Designed to withstand attack for a long period of time
Defending the Castle / Attacking the Castle
Poured boiling water, hot oil, or molten lead onto enemy soldiers / Siege Tower:
Archers / Battering Ram:
Trebuchet:
Mangonel:
Role of Women in Feudal Society
- Status of Women
- According to the Church and feudal society women were to men
- Noblewomen
- Can inherit land, defend castle, send knights to war on lord’s request
- Usually confined to activities of the home or convent
- Peasant women
- Most labor in home and field, bear children, provide for family
- Poor, powerless, do household tasks at a young age
- Convents: an to married life.