remanets of the romans post classical byzantine kiev crusades

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Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

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Page 1: Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

Remanets of the Romans

Post Classical Byzantine

KievCrusades

Page 2: Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

What were the causes and consequences of the Crusades?

• Although the Crusades are popularly viewed as religiously inspired campaigns to recapture the Holy Land they were more a result of the social and economic events at that time

• Religious and secular leaders seeking to end the fighting among feudal lords seized upon the Crusades as a means of redirecting that aggression.

• Feudal knights who would not be inheriting their family properties eagerly enlisted in the Crusades as a way to win wealth or status.

• The idea of the pilgrimage was a powerful one, and the Crusades were basically armed pilgrimages to the Holy Land.

• The various Crusades ultimately failed. • The sack of Constantinople was a fitting denouncement to the whole

concept and this destruction leads to the weakening of the Byzantine Empire allowing the defeat of Constantinople by the Ottomans 250 years later.

• The interaction with the East brought to Europe not only Arabic translations of Greek texts, but also original Arabic and Iranian scientific and philosophical works.

Page 3: Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

What were the significant technological developments in the Late Middle Ages, and how were they responsible for expanding the European economy?

• Technological improvements in agriculture included plows that were better suited to cultivating the heavy northern European soils. – These plows (moldboard) cut deep and turned the soil.

• The efficiency of those horses was further increased by the development of better harnesses and horse collars.

• The three-field system of cultivation decreased farm-labor requirements, freeing workers for other pursuits. Improvements in agricultural technology and techniques provided a growing food surplus, which stimulated the return to a money-based economy and supported manufacturing and trade.

• Those improvements helped cities and regions become independent from Church and feudal control.

• Improved central administrations and consolidated power eventually led to strong national kingdoms.

Page 4: Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

How did the development of the Byzantine Empire differ from the development of Western Europe?

• The Byzantine Empire was the direct descendant of Roman imperial rule and tradition.

• It centralized control over Byzantine politics, society, and economics, whereas Western European institutions were decentralized.

• Byzantine decline was slow and not always apparent. The Byzantine emperor had control over both religious and secular affairs.

• This prevented the eastern empire from splitting into petty principalities unlike Western Europe.

• Byzantium was directly threatened by Germanic Goths, nomadic Huns, the Iranian Sasanid Empire, and ultimately by Muslim expansion.

• The Byzantine Empire shrank steadily until Constantinople itself was captured.

Page 5: Remanets of the Romans Post Classical Byzantine Kiev Crusades

Describe the process by which Vladimir I chose the religion for Kievan Russia.

• Vladimir I evaluated the three monotheistic faiths with secular rather than spiritual considerations in mind.

• The Islamic prohibition against alcohol dissuaded the adoption of Islam in Russia.

• The destruction of the Jewish kingdoms did not inspire faith and confidence in Vladimir I; therefore Judaism was not chosen either.

• Vladimir I was impressed with the splendor of the Byzantine Empire, the religion of which he adopted. – He also had a Byzantine princesses in which he had an

interest and ultimately marries