Chapter 10. Europe in the Middle Ages (The High Middle Ages) 1000-1500
CHAPTER 10 – Learning Objectives I can: 10.1 1. Describe advances if farming, industry, the manorial system and the rise of cities. 10.2 Explain how the church influenced the life of women in the Middle Ages Describe the reforms made by the Church that affected the development of medieval civilization. 10.3 Explain the significance of the invention of the flying buttress in architecture. Explain how Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica reflected a changing view of the university in medieval Europe. 10.4 Identify the economic consequences of the Black Death. Explain why the Hundred Years’ War was a turning point in the ways of warfare.
Section 1. Peasants, Trade and Cities
Agricultural Revolution
After AD 1000 Climate improved
Horses replace oxen New horsecollar, shoes Faster than oxen
Heavier Plow 24
Shift from two to three field system (about 800)
More land cleared and drained
Result: more land cultivated, more food, better diet Population explosion!
Manors 25
Typical Medieval Manor 19
1. Basic economic unit of the Middle Ages 2. Everything owned by the lord (mills, ovens, churches etc.)
3. Self-contained community 16 3. Self-contained community
4. Serfs (60% of Europe by 800) and Peasants paid for use of land with service and percentage of crops
Peasant Life
June 43
Fall 43
Winter 43
At least 50 Religious holidays
Fool’s Day 43
Execution Day 43
Massacre of the Innocents 43
Diet usually adequate Lots of bread Little Meat LOTS of beer and wine (monks got 3 gallons of ale per day)
Peasant Dance 2
Trade and Finance Expanded
People went to towns to trade
Fairs broke down independence Great Fairs in Cathedral towns Local Fairs in small towns
Manors were no longer self-reliant
Montagnana, Italy 45 Towns Grew
1. Increased population 2. Serfs fled manors 3. Fair and Pilgrim centers
4. Usually walled for defense Carcassonne, France 4. Usually walled for defense
Medieval Town, France 9
Rothenburg, Germany
Townhouse 9
Period of great innovation
Waterwheels and Windmills 24
Medieval Trade 28
The Hanseatic League http://encarta.msn.com/index/conciseindex/20/MediaMax.asp?pg=3&ti=761559716&idx=461547227
Powerful trading league of German cities controlled trade in Northern Europe
Hansa Houses in Germany 4
Italian city-states controlled trade in the Mediterranean
Venice Florence
Venice
Guilds Dyer’s Guild 4
1. Regulated price, wage and quality of an occupation
2. Apprentice system 5-9 yrs. Apprentice--paid to do the dirty work Journeyman-worked for wages
Master could establish his own business Masterpiece=Sample of best work
Financial revolution 1. Business required money, loans 2. Usury (loaning for a profit) forbidden by Church
3. Only Jews could be bankers (later, changed)
Urban life reborn
Unregulated growth of towns=filth and lack of services
Medieval Sanitation 9
Towns bring a new social order 1. Serfs could be free if they lived in a town for 1 year
2. Town Charter: burghers, bourgeoisie (townspeople) bought freedom from lords for $
3. Townspeople formed a new class: The Middle Class
Digression: Crime and Punishment in the Middle Ages
Roman Law Evidence, burden of proof, face one’s accuser, Same law for all Torture to obtain a confession
Germanic Tradition No Torture. Instead…
Trial by Ordeal Hot water, cold water Hot irons, hot coals Champions
Torture chamber at Rothenburg
Punishment Stocks, Masks Flogging, bastinado Branding Amputation Hanging, Beheading
Mask worn by a “nag” 44
The Baker’s Chair
The Inquisition reintroduced torture
Showing the instruments Thumb screws The Horse, The Hot Seat Stretching on the rack, hanging by the arms
Judas Cradle
The Rack
The Iron Maiden
Capital Punishment
Beheading The Cage Drawing and Quartering
The Wheel
Breaking on the Wheel
Intermission