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The Catholic Church

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The Catholic Church. Global Studies 9 Mrs. Hart and Mrs. Bernier. The Holy Roman Empire. In 936 A.D., a German king named Otto I sent - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Catholic Church Global Studies 9 Mrs. Hart and Mrs. Bernier
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Page 1: The Catholic Church

The Catholic Church

Global Studies 9Mrs. Hart and Mrs. Bernier

Page 2: The Catholic Church

The Holy Roman Empire In 936 A.D., a German

king named Otto I sent troops to Italy to help

the Pope put down a rebellion of nobles. Like Charlemagne, Otto I was crowned emperor. His successors later took the title “Holy Roman Emperor”.

Page 3: The Catholic Church

Holy Roman Emperors

The Holy Roman Emperors claimed authority over much of Europe. However under feudalism, the real rulers of the lands were the emperor’s vassals.

Controlling the vassals was a real challenge for the emperors.

Page 4: The Catholic Church

Conflict Between Popes and Emperors Conflicts developed

between emperors and popes over the appointment of bishops

in a certain realm. The emperors said they

should, since the land was theirs. Popes said they should since bishops worked for the

Church.

Page 5: The Catholic Church

Pope Gregory VII v. Emperor Henry IV Because he believed that the pope was more powerful

than all other leaders, Pope Gregory VII banned the practice of lay investiture, which angered Emperor Henry IV. After things heated up between them, the Pope excommunicated Henry. Henry, trying to save his throne, apologized. Forgiven by the Pope, Henry later took revenge on Gregory, forcing him into exile years later.

Page 6: The Catholic Church

Concordat of Worms In 1122, after 50 years of

struggle over the issue of lay investiture, both sides agreed to a treaty called the Concordat of Worms. They agreed that the Church had the power to elect and invest bishops with spiritual authority, but the emperor had the right to invest them with their fiefs.

Page 7: The Catholic Church

The Wrath of Pope Innocent III Pope Innocent III once said, “the Pope stands between God and man,

lower than God but high than men, who judges all and is judged by no one.”

Pope Innocent clashed with all the powerful rulers of his day. Angry with King John of England, he excommunicated him. When Philip II of France tried to annul his marriage, Innocent excommunicated him too. In 1209, when the Albigensians, a group of Christians from southern France, wanted to purify the Church, Innocent launched a crusade against them, slaughtering tens of thousands of people

Page 8: The Catholic Church

The Crusades

The Crusades were a series of holy wars that began in the 1050s and continued over a two hundred year period of time. They started when the Byzantine Empire, which included Palestine and the Holy Land, came under attack by the Seljuk Turks.

Page 9: The Catholic Church

The Crusades The Byzantine emperor, unable to defend his

empire against the Turks, asked the Pope, Urban II to send Christian knights to help. The Pope agreed, and by 1096, thousands of knights were on their way to protect the Holy Land.

Page 10: The Catholic Church

Motives for the Crusades • Religious zeal • Knights hoped to win wealth and land. • Crusaders wanted adventure and to escape problems at home. • The Pope hoped to heal the schism, or split between the Catholic and Byzantine Churches. He also hoped that knights would fight the Muslim Turks instead of each other. Finally he hoped to increase his own power.

Page 11: The Catholic Church

Defeat of the Christians

By 1187, Jerusalem had been taken by the

Muslim, although after negotiations, the Holy City was open to Christian pilgrims.

Page 12: The Catholic Church

Effects of the Crusades • Slaughter and misery led to religious

hatred between Christians and Muslims. • Trade increased in places like Venice Italy,

as the Crusaders brought back new goods from the Middle and Far East. As trade increased, money reappeared.

• Feudal monarchs increased their power in order to support the Crusades.

• The split between the Catholic and Byzantine Churches did not end.

• Contacts with the Muslim world peaked the curiosity of explorers, giving Europe a wider world-view and bringing it out of the Dark Ages.


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