the middle ages by gee yeon

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By Gee Yeon Bae

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Page 1: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

By Gee Yeon Bae

Page 2: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Castles were for defense, not for comfort The first castles were made of wood. Wood castles could burn easily. By 1100, castles were made of stones.

Page 3: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Attacking castles was not easy with these things there:

1. Moats

Moats are big holes filled with water. If the castle has a moat, it would be much easier to shoot the enemy if the enemy is swimming.

2. Ramparts

Ramparts are big hills. If the castle has a rampart, the enemy would have to climb the rampart.

3. High walls

The walls of the castle were very high because it would make climbing walls harder.

4. Strong walls

If the walls are strong, the enemy won’t be able to break the walls.

Page 4: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

5. Flanking towers

Flanking towers are from where you can fire at enemies much easier.

A good example is Richmond castle.

6. Battlements

You will see battlements at the top of walls. If the battlements are not on the castle, the person shooting would get shot by the enemy.

7. Machicolations

Machicolation is where you can drop the stones and hot oil. The wooden version of these were called hoards.

Page 5: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

8. Gateway defenses

Drawbridges could be pulled up. So, when an enemy came, you could pull up the drawbridge, and your team member could you can drop slowly, and your team member would get in.

9. Tall gate towers

If your castle has tall gate towers, it means defenders could shoot without any hit (except for guns)

10. Thick, iron-studded wooden door

If your castle has thick, iron-studded wooden door, that means an enemy will have difficultly breaking your castle’s door.

11.Murder holes

Murder holes are where you can drop the hot liquid.

Page 6: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

12. Round towers

It was very hard for attackers to break round towers.

13. Arrow and gun loops

Arrow and gun loops are where you can shoot arrows or guns more safely.

Page 7: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

King Kings must be wise and clever because a king is the most

powerful person in the kingdom A king’s word was important because he was the most powerful

person in the kingdom Queen

The Queen was a supporter of the king. A Queen could order the king, and usually the king would listen to her but the king didn’t need to listen to the queen.

Page 8: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

The Kings of England in the Middle Ages started with the Norman Invasion. From 1066 –1154, the Normans ruled the English after their victory at the Battle of Hastings when William, Duke of Normandy, was crowned King of England (William I) better known as William the Conqueror

Page 9: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Charlemagne Charlemagne was a great king He was also called Charles the Great He was brave, tall, and strong He made a kingdom called the Frankish empire He was good at organization and managing people He wanted to have rules and peace, so he wanted to unite Europe The empire grew faster, and the empire got larger and larger He died because of a high fever

Page 10: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Lords and ladiesLords There were two kinds of lords. One is great nobles and other one is

lesser nobles. How to become a lord is easy: just be a son of lords and ladies Lords’ life were playing, doing little bit work, eating, sleeping, and

a little bit of work Lords can have vassals. A Vassal is someone who guards the piece

of land.

Ladies How to become a lady is easy: just be a daughter of lords and

ladies Ladies’ life were playing, doing little bit work, eating, sleeping, and

a little bit of work

Page 11: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

The knight must be brave, strong, not scared of dying or getting hurt

Knights used mares, battleaxes, and swords, but knights depended mostly on swords

The knights practiced their knightly skills at the tournaments of the Middle Ages. If someone lost a tournament, the loser had to be the winner’s slave

The son of a knight who was seven years old was called a page Pages lived in the castle and did odd jobs

The son of a knight who was about fourteen years old were called squires

A squire would care for the knight's horse, clean the stables, polish the knight's armor and maintain his weapons

The son of a knight who was twenty-one years old were called knights, and knights usually fought

Page 12: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Events TimelineTimeline Key

DatesTimeline of Middle Ages Kings of England

Timeline of the Norman Kings of England in the Middle Ages

1066 -1154

1066-1087 King William the Conqueror

1087-1100 King William Rufus (son of William)

1100-1135 King Henry I (William Rufus brother)

1135-1154 King Stephen (nephew of Henry I)

Timeline of the Plantagenet Kings of England (Angevin Line) in the Middle Ages

1154 - 1377

1154-1189 King Henry II (grandson of Henry I)

1189-1199 King Richard I (third son of Henry II)

1199-1216 King John (fifth son of Henry II)

1216-1272 King Henry III (son of John)

1272-1307 King Edward I (son of Henry III)

1307-1327 King Edward II (son of Edward I)

1327-1377 King Edward III (son of Edward II)

Timeline of the Royal Houses of Lancaster and York - Kings of England in the Middle Ages

1377 - 1485

1377-1399King Richard II (grandson of Edward III, son of the Black Prince)

1399-1413King Henry IV (grandson of Edward III, son of John of Gaunt)

1413-1422 King Henry V (son of Henry IV)

1422-1461 King Henry VI (son of Henry V)

1461-1483King Edward IV ( youngest son of Edward III )

1483-1485 King Richard III (uncle of Edward V)

Page 13: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

• Fief = Fiefdom• Fiefdom means the property owned by a lord• Feudalism means a system of government that exchanged work or

land

Page 14: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Serf and peasant Serf Serfs’ life were almost the same as a peasant’s; the only thing

that was different was that a serf wasn’t a free man.

Peasant Peasants’ work were farming, weaving, cutting the wood into half

Peasants have to make everything themselves.

Page 15: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

By the 1100s, they began to hold weekly or monthly markets at crossroads to trade their products for goods from other manors

Boys in the Middle Ages started to learn or trade when they were about seven years old

Some girls and women learned crafts from their father or husbands, and worked with them

Craftspeople and merchants who made or sold the same kinds of goods belonged to organizations called guilds. Guilds decided how much their goods should cost, and made sure that the items sold were of a high quality

Guilds also built schools, fed the poor, and gave money to members who were sick to earn a living

Page 16: The Middle Ages by Gee Yeon

Information from http://www.middle-ages.org.uk/mid (Internet website) http://www.thefreedictionary.com/ (Internet website) Culture studies booklets My culture studies notebook

Pictures from Http://www.google.com/

The End ^_^