Feudalism in the Middle Ages Presentation created by Robert L. Martinez Primary Content Source: Prentice Hall World History Images as cited. markville.ss.yrdsb.edu.on.ca.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Feudalism & Manor Life World History March12, 2014.
Advertisements

1 Chapter 12—Feudalism Open to Page When You Think Of Feudalism And The Middle Ages… What Do You Think Of?
Objectives Explain how feudalism shaped medieval society.
Pages  People needed protection from invasion for themselves & their homes. Due to this a new system known as feudalism emerged.  Feudalism.
Feudalism  A loosely organized system of rule between powerful local lords and lesser lords called vassals. ○ Feudal contract- vassals gave loyalty and.
Feudalism Pyramid of Power Manoralism
Feudalism in Europe. First... What are political, economic, and social systems? –Political refers to government: the way a group is governed, by whom,
THE FEUDAL SYSTEM AND THE MANOR SYSTEM: THE REASONS FOR AND CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THEM 1.
The Feudal System The Middle Ages. The Feudal System Feudal and manorial systems governed life and required people to perform certain duties and obligations.
Vocabulary Feudalism vassal feudal contract fief knight tournament
Germanic invaders raided the western half of the Roman Empire 1. Constant fighting 2. Disruptions in trade  Cities no longer economic centers 3. Downfall.
Middle Ages Notes #3. I. Feudalism A.The decline of Roman influence in Western Europe left people with little protection against invasion, so they entered.
Global 9 Mrs. Hart, Mrs. Costello, and Ms. Soddano.
The Collapse of Rome The Western Roman Empire fell in 476 C.E. Eastern Roman Empire remained intact for another 1,000 years (capital = Constantinople).
Feudalism Pyramid of Power Manoralism
Feudalism and Manorialism
THE MIDDLE AGES Essential Question: What was life like during the Middle Ages?
Homework MA #2 due tomorrow Current events article due Friday.
Introduction Feudalism. When we say the Middle Ages, what are we talking about? (Brainstorm words, things or specific time periods)
1. The time period from AD is referred to as what? 2. The leader of Frank forces who battled Muslims at Tours was whom? 3. Who were the nomadic.
World History Chapter 8 Section 2
Lein and Hannah. Manor - lord’s estate included one or more villages. Usually included a church. Serfs - peasants who worked the land. Manorialism represented.
Standard and E.Q.: SSWH7 The student will analyze European medieval society with regard to culture, politics, society, and economics. a. Explain the manorial.
Bell Ringer 8/26/15 Give a short reflection on the picture below. Tell me who you would guess the people are and how they fit in to some sort of power.
Feudalism in Europe.  In 911, a deal was made between two former enemies. Charles the Simple (King of France) Rollo (Viking Leader)  In the deal, Charles.
Benchmark Ques In English history, the Magna Carta (1215), the Petition of Right (1628) and the Bill of Rights all reinforced the concept of –A. universal.
Feudalism developed in Europe in response to the need for protection from outside invasion. Local lords divided their landholdings among vassals. These.
Middle Ages. The Middle Ages From the fall of the Roman empire until the fall of Constantinople to the Turks. Also known as the Medieval Period and the.
Chapter 7.  What marks the beginning of the Middle Ages?  Fall of Rome  After the fall we see political, social, and economic decline  Europe was.
Section 2: Feudal Society
1 Feudal Society Political Structure. 2 WHY WAS FEUDALISM NECESSARY?
The Collapse of Rome The Western Roman Empire fell in 476 C.E. Eastern Roman Empire remained intact for another 1,000 years (capital = Constantinople).
1/6 Focus: Important Terms: Do Now:
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
The Feudal and Manorial Systems
 Feudalism and the Manor Economy. Do Now:  Where do some people have more power than other people?
The Feudal and Manorial System
Clovis 486 CE King of the Franks Unites Gaul Charles Martel 732 CE Battle of Tours Defeats Muslim army in Spain.
Chapter 7.2 Feudalism and the Manor Economy
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
Europe After Rome II Middle Ages
A Violent TimeA Violent Time  Invaders threatened Western Europe from 800 to 1000  Viking invasions  From Scandinavia  700’s Began raiding monasteries.
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
 King  Vassal  Fief  Knights  Peasants  Serfs  Manor  Self Sufficient community  Tithe  Lay Investiture  Concordat of Worms  Holy Roman Empire.
Feudalism and the Manor Economy 7.2. Learning Targets  Students will understand the relationship between lords and vassals.  Students will understand.
AGENDA  “Housekeeping”  Middle Ages Game!!  “Feudalism & Manor Life” Notes  Feudalism Chart  Feudalism & Manorial System Reading & Chart  Homework:
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Feudalism and the Manor Economy.
Feudalism Pyramid of Power Manoralism
Feudalism Ch 8 sec 2.
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
Feudalism in Europe.
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
Medieval Christian Europe (330–1450)
Feudalism in Europe.
Medieval Christian Europe (330–1450)
The Rise of Europe Chapter 7.
Objectives Explain how feudalism shaped medieval society.
The Middle Ages A.D. Feudalism and Manor System
Essential question How and why did the church grow in importance during the Middle Ages?
Governance in the Middle Ages
Feudalism Ch 8 sec2.
Feudalism and the Manor Economy
European Feudalism.
Intro to the High Middle Ages
Feudalism & Manorialism Pyramid of power
Today’s Notes Charlemagne Feudalism in Europe Noble Life Peasant Life.
Feudalism.
Objectives Explain how feudalism shaped medieval society.
Chapter 13 Section 2 Feudalism in Europe.
Middle Ages.
Presentation transcript:

Feudalism in the Middle Ages Presentation created by Robert L. Martinez Primary Content Source: Prentice Hall World History Images as cited. markville.ss.yrdsb.edu.on.ca

In the face of invasions by Vikings, Muslims, and Magyars, kings and emperors were too weak to maintain law and order. People needed protection for themselves, their homes, and their lands. historyfiles.co.uk

In response to this basic need for protection, a new system evolved, known as feudalism. Feudalism was a loosely organized system of rule in which powerful local lords divided their landholdings among lesser lords. In exchange, these lesser lords, or vassals, pledged service and loyalty to the greater lord. dgjlt2011-middleages.blogspot.com

The relationship between lords and vassals was established by custom and tradition and by an exchange of pledges known as the feudal contract. A lord granted his vassal a fief, or estate. buzzle.com

Fiefs ranged from a few acres to hundreds of square miles. In addition to the land itself, the fief included peasants to work the land, as well as any towns or buildings on the land. users.moscow.com

As part of the feudal contract, the lord promised to protect his vassal. In return, the vassal pledged loyalty to his lord. He also agreed to provide the lord with 40 days of military service each year, certain money payments, and advice. clas.ufl.edu

Everyone had a place in feudal society. Below the monarch were powerful lords, such as dukes and counts, who held the largest fiefs. mandy0717mandy0717.blogspot.com

Each of these lords had vassals, and these vassals in turn had their own vassals. In many cases, the man was both vassal and lord – vassal to a more powerful lord above him and lord to a less powerful vassal below him. glogster.com

Because vassals often held fiefs from more than one lord, feudal relationships grew very complex. A vassal who had pledged loyalty to several lords could have serious problems if his overlords quarreled with each other. stosyth.gov.uk

For feudal nobles, warfare was a way of life. Rival lords battled constantly for power. Many nobles trained from boyhood for a future occupation as a knight. imperialteutonicorder.com

During the early Middle Ages, powerful lords fortified their homes to withstand attack. Their strongholds included a keep, or wooden tower, ringed by a fence. The keep was separated from the surrounding area by a moat, or water-filled ditch. en.wikipedia.or g

By the 1100s, monarchs and nobles owned sprawling stone castles with high walls, towers, and drawbridges over wide moats. Wars often centered on seizing castles that commanded strategic river crossings, harbors, or mountain passes. castlessk.blogspot.com

Castle dwellers stored up food and water so that they could withstand a long siege. If attackers failed to starve the defenders into submission, they might try to tunnel under the castle walls. the-spearhead.com

The heart of the medieval economy was the manor, or lord’s estate. Most manors included one or more villages and the surrounding lands. Peasants, who made up the majority of the population in medieval society, lived and worked on the manor. markville.ss.yrdsb.edu.on.ca

Most peasants on a manor were serfs, bound to the land. Serfs were not slaves who could be bought and sold. Still, they were not free. They could not leave the manor without the lord’s permission. cookit.e2bn.org

Peasants and their lords were tied together by mutual rights and obligations. Peasants had to work several days a week farming the lord’s lands. They also repaired his roads, bridges, and fences. hpanwo.blogspot.com

Peasants paid the lord a fee when they married, when they inherited their father’s acres, or when they used the local mill to grind grain. Other payments fell due at Christmas and Easter. Because money had largely disappeared from medieval Europe, they paid with products such as grain, honey, eggs, or chickens. polizeros.com

In return for a lifetime of labor, peasants had the right to farm several acres for themselves. They were also entitled to their lord’s protection from Viking raids or feudal warfare. Although they could not leave the manor freely, they also could not be forced off it. mahan.wonkwang.ac.kr

The manor was generally self-sufficient. Peasants produced almost everything they needed, from food and clothing to simple furniture and tools. harewood.or g

Most peasants never ventured more than a few miles from their village. They had no schooling and no knowledge of a larger world outside. robyngioia.wikispaces.com

For most peasants, life was harsh. Men, women, and children worked long hours. During planting season, a man might guide an ox-drawn plow through the fields while his wife walked alongside, guiding the ox. Children helped plant seeds, weeded, and took care of pigs or sheep. forumromanum.org

The peasant family ate a simple diet of black bread with vegetables. They seldom had meat unless they poached wild game on their lord’s manor, at the risk of harsh punishment. Few peasants lived beyond the age of rf.com