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1. The Nature of Medieval Philosophy

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1. The Nature of Medieval Philosophy 2. Early Medieval Philosophy 3. Late Medieval Philosophy 4. Background Information MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY SORBORNNE-FRANCE (13TH ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1. The Nature of Medieval Philosophy


1
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY
  • 1. The Nature of Medieval Philosophy
  • 2. Early Medieval Philosophy
  • 3. Late Medieval Philosophy
  • 4. Background Information

2
Nature of Medieval Philosophy
  • History
  • Art
  • Religion
  • Politics

3
History
  • Timetable
  • Patristic Period Birth of Jesus 476 CE
    Fall of Rome
  • Dark Ages 500 CE - 1000 CE
  • Scholasticism 1000 CE - 1349 CE
  • Late Scholasticism 1400 CE 1617 CE

4
Roman Empire
  • East 600s BCE 476 CE (patristic period,
    Augustine)
  • West Late 200s CE 1400s CE

5
Roman Empire - East and West
  • Diocletian284-286 CE (splits empire, rules east)
  • Re-United Empirereunited by Constantine's defeat
    of Licinius
  • Jovian 363-364 CE (splits empire, rules east)

6
Roman Empire
  • Language
  • Geography
  • History and Leaders
  • Religion

7
The Roman Empire 44 BCE
8
The Roman Empire 14 CE
9
Roman Empire and barbaric Tribe
10
Julius Caesar
  • He was a Roman politician and general who,
    without having any orders to do so, conquered the
    vast territory of the Gauls to the north of his
    province in France.In the year 49 BCE Caesar
    crossed the small river between his province and
    Italy, called the Rubicon, and conquered Rome
    itself which he then ruled as a dictator. His
    military campaigns also took him to Egypt where
    he met the famous Cleopatra.His life though was
    ended as he was infamously murdered in the senate
    in Rome.So famous and respected was Caesar that
    a month of the year is still named after him and
    his heirs today, July (after Julius Caesar). Also
    the great English poet Shakespeare wrote a famous
    play called Julius Caesar about his famous
    murder.

11
Roman Religion and Gods
  • Pantheon
  • The Romans believed in many different gods and
    goddesses. For everything imaginable they had a
    god or goddess in charge.

12
Jupiter
  • He was the master of the gods and the main god of
    the Romans. In his hand he held thunderbolts
    which he could hurl from the sky.

13
Juno
  • She was the wife of Jupiter, the goddess of women
    and fertility. Her symbols were a pomegranate and
    a peacock.

14
Mars
  • He was the god of war, the strongest and most
    fearsome god, except for Jupiter.

15
Venus
  • She was the goddess of love and beauty.

16
Minerva
  • She was the goddess of wisdom, learning, art
    crafts and industry. Her symbol was the owl.

17
Neptune
  • He was the powerful god of the sea. His symbol
    was the trident

18
Bacchus
  • He was the god of wine and partying. Naturally,
    he was one of Rome's most popular gods.

19
Mercury
  • He was the messenger of the gods. The wings on
    his helmet and sandals allowed him to travel very
    quickly to wherever a god might send him. He was
    the god of travellers and tradesmen

20
Ceres
  • She was the goddess of the harvest, always
    depicted carrying a bundle of grain.

21
Diana
  • She was the goddess of hunting and a goddess of
    the moon.

22
Vesta
  • She was the goddess of the hearth and home. She
    was very important to Romans. In her temple a
    flame was always kept burning as in the 'hearth
    of Rome' the flame should

23
Roman Art
  • Virgil
  • Ovid
  • Seneca

24
Constantine
  • 326CE Constantine the Great was the first
    Christian emperor of the Roman empire. He
    defeated all the other would-be emperors and
    re-united the empire, which had been divided
    between many rulers. He also decided to move the
    capital of the empire from Rome to a Byzantium,
    which he renamed after himself - Constantinopolis
    (Greek for the city of Constantine).
  • He also called together Christian bishops for the
    Council of Nicaea at which the exact nature of
    the Christian religion was defined. It is known
    today as the 'Nicene Creed'.
  • For his many achievements he is known as
    'Constantine the Great' and in the Christian
    church he is known as 'Saint Constantine'.

25
The Nicene Creed
  • First Council of Constantinople (SECOND GENERAL
    COUNCIL.)
  • This council was called on May, 381, by Emperor
    Theodosius, to provide for a Catholic succession
    in the patriarchal See of Constantinople, to
    confirm the Nicene Faith, to reconcile the
    semi-Arians with the Church, and to put an end to
    the Macedonian heresy. The first canon is an
    important dogmatic condemnation of all shades
    ofArianism.

26
The Nicene Creed
  • We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty,
    maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen
    and unseen. We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ,
    the only Son of God, eternally begotten of the
    Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God
    from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being
    with the Father. Through him all things were
    made. For us and for our salvation he came down
    from heaven by the power of the Holy Spirit he
    became incarnate from the Virgin Mary, and was
    made man. For our sake he was crucified under
    Pontius Pilate he suffered death and was buried.
    On the third day he rose again in accordance with
    the Scriptures he ascended into heaven and is
    seated at the right hand of the Father. He will
    come again in glory to judge the living and the
    dead, and his kingdom will have no end. We
    believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver
    of life, who proceeds from the Father and the
    Son. With the Father and the Son he is worshiped
    and glorified. He has spoken through the
    Prophets. We believe in one holy catholic and
    apostolic Church. We acknowledge one baptism for
    the forgiveness of sins. We look for the
    resurrection of the dead, and the life of the
    world to come. Amen.

27
After the Roman Empire
  • The Fall of the Eastern Roman Empire 476 A.D.
  • Charlemagne (King of the Franks)
  • The Power of the Catholic Church
  • The Crusades
  • Universities
  • The Building of Nation States
  • The Hundred Years War (1337-1453)

28
Pope Leo III
  • Date of birth unknown died 816. He was elected
    on the very day his predecessor was buried (26
    Dec., 795), and consecrated on the following day
  • Leo was a Roman, the son of Atyuppius and
    Elizabeth. At the time of his election he was a
    Cardinal-Priest of St. Susanna, and seemingly
    also vestiarius, or chief of the pontifical
    treasury, or wardrobe.
  • With the letter informing Charlemagne that he had
    been unanimously elected pope, Leo sent him the
    keys of the confession of St. Peter, and the
    standard of the city.
  • This he did to show that he regarded the Frankish
    King as the protector of theHoly See.
  • In return he received from him letters of
    congratulation and a great part of the treasure
    which the king had captured from the Avars.
  • The acquisition of this wealth was one of the
    causes which enabled Leo to be such a great
    benefactor to the churches and charitable
    institutions of Rome.

29
Coronation of Charlemagne 800 CE Christmas Day
30
The Crusades
  • The year was 1095 CE, William the Conqueror had
    united England under one crown 30 years earlier.
    The French had been dividing properties amongst
    their sons for generations, causing bloodshed
    between brothers over small pieces of real
    estate. In reaction, Pope Urban II expanded "The
    Truce of God", which outlawed fighting from
    Sunday to Wednesday, and banned fighting
    involving priests, monks, women, laborers and
    merchants on any day of the week. Italy was a
    collection of city-states, constantly being
    overrun by invading hordes, the latest of which
    were the Normans, who had just started to become
    "civilized".
  • There was also the Byzantine empire, ruling from
    Constantinople, whose emperor at this time was
    Alexius Comnenus. To his East, the Turks were
    rapidly encroaching on his empire, and had begun
    attacking pilgrims on their way to - and in -
    Jerusalem, causing him great distress. He wrote
    to his friend Robert, the Count of Flanders, in
    1093, telling him about supposed atrocities
    committed by the Turks on the Christian pilgrims,
    and Robert passed this letter on to Pope Urban
    II. Urban, an opportunist, saw this as a perfect
    way to solve some of his local problems. He
    personally promoted a Holy Crusade to reclaim the
    Holy Lands from the barbarian Turks.
  • Thus, the First Crusade was launched in 1096 CE.

31
Universities
  • Salamanca (Spain)
  • Bologna (Italy)
  • Oxford (England)
  • Sorbonne (Paris)

32
University of Salamanca - Spain
  • The Universidad de Salamanca is the oldest
    university in Spain, and one of the oldest in
    Europe. It was founded by Alfonso IX in the 13th
    century.

33
Oxford University-England (11th Cent)
  • As the oldest English-speaking university in the
    world, it can lay claim to nine centuries of
    continuous existence. There is no clear date of
    foundation, but teaching existed at Oxford in
    some form in 1096 and developed rapidly from
    1167, when Henry II banned English students from
    attending the University of Paris.

34
Sorbornne-France (13th Century)
  • THE SORBONNE. Its name comes from its founder,
    Robert de Sorbon, chaplain and confessor of Saint
    Louis, king of France.
  • Throughout the centuries its history has been so
    interwoven with that of the University of Paris
    that it has become its symbol.
  • The University was born in the 13th century of
    the corporative organization of Paris masters and
    scholars

35
Religious Orders
  • Benedictines 529CE
  • Franciscans 1209
  • Dominicans 1216
  • Jesuits 1540
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