The%20Middle%20Ages - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The%20Middle%20Ages

Description:

The Middle Ages: Myth and Reality – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:281
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: kyus
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The%20Middle%20Ages


1
The Middle AgesMyth and Reality
2
The Middle Ages The Myth
  • We think of knights in shining armor, lavish
    banquets, wandering minstrels, kings, queens,
    bishops, monks, pilgrims, and glorious pageantry.
  • In film and in literature, medieval life heroic,
    entertaining romantic.

3
The Middle Ages The Reality
  • In reality, life in the Middle Ages, a period
    that extended from the 5th century to the 15th
    century in Western Europe.
  • Life could be harsh, uncertain, and dangerous.
  • Started around 500 AD, when the Roman Empire fell
    to invading Muslim armies.

4
Why call it the Middle Ages (or Dark Ages)?
  • This time period consisted of a dark moment in
    the arts there was no to minimal flourishment
    with visual art, drama, dance, and music.
  • The reasoning behind this was due to the fact
    that the Roman Catholic Church had control over
    the arts to go against them could result in
    Excommunication or death.

5
The Power of the ChurchWhy was the church so
powerful?
  • 1. It owned land. The church owned many large
    areas of farmland. People who grew crops on this
    land had to give 1/10 of everything they grew to
    the church. This was called a tithe. This was a
    lot of crops for many poor people to lose.
  • 2. It controlled peoples beliefs. The church
    told people that when they died, their souls
    lived on forever, either in Heaven or in Hell.
    Hell great pain and suffering Heaven
    wonderful beyond imagination Purgatory in
    between they would stay until any sins had been
    burnt away.

6
The Power of the Church
  • 3. It was rich. Many tried to buy their way
    into heaven, because the church said that you
    could shorten your stay in Purgatory by doing
    several things Attend church and live a good
    life go on a pilgrimage buy a special pardon.
    These pardons were also known as indulgences.
  • 4. It was not controlled by the King. Church
    Roman Catholic and led by the Pope. King could
    not tell anyone from the church what to do. If
    any crimes were committed, could not be tried in
    normal court worst punishment Excommunication
    banishment from the church.

7
The Lord of the Manor
  • For safety and defense, people in the Middle
    Ages formed small communities around a central
    lord or master.

8
The Manor
  • Most people lived on a manor, it consisted of the
    castle (or manor house), the church, the village,
    and surrounding farm land.

9
(No Transcript)
10
Self-Sufficiency
  • Each manor was self-sufficient, producing all of
    the basic items food, clothing, and shelter.
  • The manor had buildings devoted to special
    purposes, such as
  • The mill for grinding grain
  • The bake house for making bread
  • The blacksmith shop for creating metal goods.

11
Isolation
  • Manors were isolated, with occasional visits from
    peddlers, pilgrims on their way to the Crusades,
    or soldiers from other fiefdoms.

12
The Feudal System
  • Under the feudal system, kings awarded land
    grants or fiefs to nobles, barons, and bishops,
    in return for contribution of soldiers for the
    king's armies.

13
Nobles and Vassals
  • Nobles divided their land among the lesser
    nobility vassals. Many vassals became so
    powerful that the kings had difficulty
    controlling them.

14
The Magna Carta
  • In 1215, the English barons formed an alliance
    that forced King John to sign the Magna Carta. It
    limited the king's powers of taxation and
    required trials by jury. It was the first time
    that an English monarch was subject to the
    (common)law.

15
The Peasants
  • At the lowest level of society were the peasants,
    also called serfs.
  • The lord offered his peasants protection in
    exchange for living and working on his land.

16
Hard Work High Taxes
  • Peasants worked hard to cultivate the land and
    produce the goods that the lord and his manor
    needed.
  • They were heavily taxed and were required to
    relinquish much of what they harvested.

17
Bound by law and custom
  • It is the custom in England, as with other
    countries, for the nobility to have great power
    over the common people, who are serfs. --
    Jean Froissart, 1395 

18
Interesting Fact
Under Medieval law, animals could be tried and
sentenced for crimes, just as though they were
people. There are records of farm animals being
tried for injuring or killing people. Animals
were charged with smaller crimes, too. Some mice
were taken to court for stealing part of the
harvest, and, in another case, a flock of locusts
was convicted --in absentia--of eating crops
19
Interesting Fact
What kind of meal was "fit for a king"? King
Richard II of England sometimes gave feasts for
as many as 10,000 people at once. One of these
required 140 hogs, 14 oxen, 12 calves, 12 boars
and 3 tons of salted venison.
20
Women Household Chores
  • Whether they were nobles or peasants, women held
    a difficult position in society.
  • They were largely confined to household tasks
    cooking, baking bread, sewing, weaving, and
    spinning.

21
Hunting Fighting
  • They also hunted for food and fought in battles,
    learning to use weapons to defend their homes and
    castles/manors.

22
Other Occupations
  • Some medieval women held other occupations. They
    wereblacksmiths, merchants, and apothecaries.

23
Midwives, Farmers, Artists
  • Others were midwives, worked in the fields, or
    engaged in creative endeavors writing, playing
    musical instruments, dancing, and painting.
  • Wet Nurse

24
Witches Nuns
  • Some women were known as witches, capable of
    sorcery and healing. Others became nuns and
    devoted their lives to God and spiritual matters.

25
The Catholic Church
  • The Catholic Church was the only church in Europe
    during the Middle Ages, It had its own laws and
    great wealth.
  • Church leaders bishops and archbishops sat on
    the king's council and played leading roles in
    government.

26
Bishops
  • Bishops, who were often wealthy and came from
    noble families, ruled over groups of parishes
    called dioceses.
  • They were part of the feudal system and in
    exchange for a fief and peasants had to provide
    homage and military aid to a King/ Lord.

27
Parish Priests
  • Parish priests, on the other hand, came from
    humbler backgrounds and often had little
    education.
  • The village priest tended to the sick and
    indigent and, if he was able, taught Latin and
    the Bible.

28
Priests
  • Three different orders Jesuits, Dominicans,
    Franciscans
  • When scrolls were translated, they were divided
    into 1/3s among the Jesuits, Dominicans,
    Franciscans

29
Monasteries
  • Monasteries in the Middle Ages were based on the
    rules set down by St. Benedict in the 6th
    century. The monks were known as Benedictines and
    took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.

30
Monks
  • Monks performed manual labor were forbidden to
    own land, leave the monastery, or become
    entangled in the concerns of society (Lived a
    monastic life)
  • Daily tasks were carried out in silence.

31
Nuns
  • The female counterparts nuns lived in convents,
    and provided for the less-fortunate members of
    the community. Monasteries and nunneries were
    safe havens for pilgrims and other travelers.

32
Monastic Life
  • Monks and nuns went to the monastery chapel
    church 8 times for Mass. The sang, chanted, and
    recited prayers.
  • Its sole purpose was to get closer to God, to
    live spiritually 24/7.

33
The Divine Office
  • The first office, Matins, began at 2 AM and the
    next seven followed at regular intervals,
    culminating in Vespers (sunset evening prayers)
    in the evening and Compline (Prayers at the end
    of the day final night service) before the
    monks and nuns retired at night.

34
Education
  • Between prayers, the monks read or copied
    religious texts and music. Monks were often well
    educated and devoted their lives to writing and
    learning.

35
Pilgrimages
  • Pilgrimages were an important part of religious
    life in the Middle Ages. Many people took
    journeys to visit holy shrines such the
    Canterbury Cathedral in England and sites in
    Jerusalem and Rome.

36
The Canterbury Tales
  • Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a series of stories
    told by 30 pilgrims as they traveled to the
    Cathedral of Canterbury.

37
The Canterbury Tales
  • The Canterbury Tales is a snapshot of Medieveal
    life.
  • It gives a description of how people lived during
    the Middle Ages.

38
The Canterbury Tales
  • Chaucer places the 29 characters on a pilgrimage
    to the shrine of the martyr Saint Thomas a
    Becket at Canterbury Cathedral. They are from
    many stages of life they have traveled on
    horseback from London.
  • A pilgrimage is a religious journey made to a
    shrine or holy place. Most people during the
    Middle Ages took at least one pilgrimage

39
Town Life
  • After 1000, peace and order grew. As a result,
    peasants began to expand their farms and villages
    further into the countryside. The earliest
    merchants were peddlers who went from village to
    village selling their goods.

40
Peddlers
  • As the demand for goods increased--particularly
    for the gems, silks, and other luxuries from
    Genoa and Venice, the ports of Italy that traded
    with the East--the peddlers became more familiar
    with complex issues of trade, commerce,
    accounting, and contracts.

41
Businessmen
  • They became savvy businessmen and learned to deal
    with Italian moneylenders and bankers. The
    English, Belgians, Germans, and Dutch took their
    coal, timber, wood, iron, copper, and lead to the
    south and came back with luxury items such as
    wine and olive oil.

42
Tradesmen
  • With the advent of trade and commerce, feudal
    life declined. As the tradesmen became wealthier,
    they resented having to give their profits to
    their lords.

43
Boroughs
  • Arrangements were made for the townspeople to pay
    a fixed annual sum to the lord or king and gain
    independence for their town as a "borough" with
    the power to govern itself. The marketplace
    became the focus of many towns.

44
Town Governments
  • As the townspeople became "free" citizens,
    powerful families, particularly in Italy,
    struggled to gain control of the communes or
    boroughs. Town councils were formed.

45
Guilds
  • Guilds were established to gain higher wages for
    their members and protect them from competitors.
    As the guilds grew rich and powerful, they built
    guildhalls and began taking an active role in
    civic affairs, setting up courts to settle
    disputes and punish wrongdoers.

46
The Merchant Class
  • The new merchant class included artisans, masons,
    armorers, bakers, shoemakers, ropemakers, dyers,
    and other skilled workers.
  • Barber-Surgeon

47
The First Companies
  • The population of cities swelled for the first
    time since before the Dark Ages. With the new
    merchant activity, companies were formed.
    Merchants hired bookkeepers, scribes, and clerks,
    creating new jobs.

48
The Printing Press
  • Printing began in 1450 with the publication of
    the Bible by Johannes Gutenberg. This
    revolutionized the spread of learning. Other
    inventions of the time included mechanical
    clocks, tower mills, and guns.

49
Urban Life
  • Few serfs were left in Europe by the end of the
    Middle Ages, and the growing burgher class became
    very powerful. Hard work and enterprise led to
    economic prosperity and a new social order. Urban
    life brought with it a new freedom for
    individuals. 
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com