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The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe

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Chapter 10. The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe. Germanic Successor States. Germanic kingdoms: Visigoths, Ostrogoths , Lombards , Burgundians , Angles/Saxons The Franks: center of gravity shifted from Italy to northern lands. The Franks and Empire. Clovis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe Chapter 10
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Page 1: The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe

The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe

Chapter 10

Page 2: The Foundations of Christian Society in Western Europe

Germanic Successor States

▪Germanic kingdoms: Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Lombards, Burgundians, Angles/Saxons ▪The Franks: center of gravity shifted from Italy to northern lands

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The Franks and Empire

▪ Clovis ▪Led the Franks and wiped out the last vestiges of Roman authority in Gaul ▪Military campaigns against other Germanic peoples

▪ Clovis's conversion ▪Many other Germanic peoples converted to Arian Christianity ▪The Franks converted to Roman Christianity ▪Alliance with the Roman church greatly strengthened the Franks

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▪ The Carolingians ▪Carolingians, an aristocratic clan, asserted authority in the early eighth century ▪Charles Martel's son claimed the throne for himself, 751

▪Charlemagne (reigned 768-814 C.E.) ▪Grandson of Charles Martel, founder of Carolingian empire ▪Control extended to northeast Spain, Bavaria, north Italy

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▪Administration ▪Capital city at Aachen (in modern Germany) ▪Relied on aristocratic deputies, known as counts ▪Used missi dominici to oversee local authorities

▪Charlemagne as emperor ▪Pope Leo III proclaimed Charlemagne emperor, 800 ▪The coronation strained relations with Byzantine emperors

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Decline and Dissolution of the Carolingian Empire

▪ Louis the Pious (reigned 814-840) ▪Charlemagne's only surviving son; lost control of the counts ▪His three sons divided the empire into three kingdoms, 843

▪ Invasions ▪Muslims raided south, seized Sicily, parts of northern Italy and southern France ▪Magyars invaded from the east ▪Vikings invaded from the north

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Vikings▪ Norse expansion; Scandinavian homelands were Norway, Denmark, and Sweden ▪Motives: population pressure, resisting Christian missionaries ▪Most were merchants and migrants ▪Some mounted raids in many European regions from Russia to Spain ▪Outstanding seafarers; even established a colony in Canada about 1000 ▪Fleets could go to interior regions via rivers, attacking towns and villages

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Establishment of Regional Authorities▪ In England small kingdoms merged into a larger realm

against Scandinavian raids ▪ King Alfred (reigned 871-899) expanded to the north ▪ Alfred's successors controlled all England about the mid-tenth century

▪ Germany: after Carolingian empire, local lords took matters into their own hands ▪ King Otto I (reigned 936-973) defeated Magyars in 955 ▪ Imposed authority in Germany; led armies to support the papacy in Italy ▪Otto's coronation by the pope in 962 made him the Holy Roman Emperor

▪ In France counts and other local authorities became local lords

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Feudalism

▪ After Carolingian empire dissolved, local nobles built decentralized states ▪ Lords and vassals (retainers) ▪ Lord provided vassal with a grant known as a benefice (usually land, called fief) ▪Enabled vassal to devote time and energy to serve the lord ▪Provided resources to maintain horses and military equipment ▪Vassals owed lord loyalty, obedience, respect, counsel, and military service ▪ Lord/vassal relationships become stronger; vassal status became hereditary

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▪ Potential for instability ▪Multi-tiered network of lord-retainer relationships ▪Sometimes conflicting loyalties led to instability ▪But powerful states were built on foundation of lord-retainer relationships

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Manorialism

▪ Serfs ▪Slaves and peasants took agricultural tasks and frequently intermarried ▪ Free peasants often turned themselves and their lands over to a lord for protection ▪Serfs as an intermediate category emerged about the mid-seventh century

▪ Serfs' obligations ▪ Labor service and rents in kind ▪Could not move to other lands without permission ▪Once their obligations were fulfilled, serfs had right to work on land and pass it to heirs

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▪Manors were a principal form of agricultural organization ▪A manor was a large estate, controlled by the lord and his deputies ▪Manors were largely self-sufficient communities

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The Economy of Early Medieval Europe▪ Agriculture production suffered from repeated

invasions ▪ Heavy plows ▪Heavy plows appeared in the sixth century; could turn heavy northern soils ▪Became common from the eighth century; production increased ▪Cultivation of new lands; watermills; and rotating crops

▪ Rural society--agricultural surplus not enough to support large cities ▪ Mediterranean trade--Italian and Spanish merchants

trade with Muslims

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▪ Norse merchant mariners in North and Baltic Seas ▪Followed routes of Vikings ▪Traded actively with Byzantine and Abbasid empires ▪ Imported Abbasid silver used in European coinage

▪ Population: 36 million in 200; down to 26 million in 600; back up to 36 million in 1000

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Age of Faith• Every aspect of life was dominated by

the Church• All answers to questions were dictated

largely by faith• Popes, clergy held enormous power• Social Hierarchy of the Church• Symbols of the Post-Classical Age of

Faith• The Cathedral• The Crusades• The Pilgrimage• The Monastery

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The Politics of Conversion

The politics of conversion ▪ The Franks and the Church ▪Frankish rulers viewed themselves as protectors of the papacy ▪Charlemagne also worked to spread Christianity in northern lands

▪ The spread of Christianity ▪Charlemagne's military campaigns forced the Saxons to accept Christianity ▪Pagan ways did not disappear immediately ▪By 1000 C.E., all western Europe had adopted Roman Christianity

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The Papacy

▪ Pope Gregory I (590-604 C.E.) ▪Organized defense of Rome against Lombards' menace ▪Reasserted papal primacy over other bishops ▪Strongly emphasized the sacrament of penance--confession and atonement

▪ The conversion of England--by 800, England in the Roman church

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Monasticism▪ Origin ▪Devout Christians practiced asceticism in deserts of Egypt, second and third century ▪Monastic lifestyle became popular when Christianity became legal, fourth century

▪ Monastic rules ▪ St. Benedict (480-547 C.E.) provided a set of regulations ▪ Virtues of Benedictine monks: poverty, chastity, and obedience

▪ St. Scholastica (482-543 C.E.) ▪ St. Benedict's sister, a nun ▪ Adapted the Rule, and provided guidance for religious life of women

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▪ The roles of monasteries ▪Became dominant feature in social and cultural life of western Europe ▪Accumulated large landholdings ▪Organized much of the rural labor force for agricultural production ▪Provided variety of social services: inns, shelters, orphanages, hospitals, schools ▪Libraries and scriptoria became centers of learning


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