warm-up: compare & contrast use a table like the one below to compare and contrast the...
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Warm-up: Compare & ContrastWarm-up: Compare & ContrastUse a table like the one below to compare and contrast the Romanesque style of architecture to the Gothic style of architecture. How did the churches in these
two styles differ? (Refer to pg.332 in your textbook.)
Romanesque Gothic
Warm-up: The Spanish InquisitionWarm-up: The Spanish InquisitionKing Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain were extremely devout Catholics. They were referred to as “Their Catholic Majesties.” In their desire to seek out people who were secretly practicing Judaism or Islam, the monarchs received a license from the pope to operate the Spanish Inquisition as an arm of the state. Under the dreaded chief inquisitor Torquemada, the court was ruthless. Victims were often chosen for their political views as well as religious heresy. Although the inquisition operated as a court of law and some people were released because the charges were not proven, hundreds were tortured and burned at the stake, usually in a public display.
What was the result of this for Spain?
Warm-up: The Black DeathWarm-up: The Black DeathIt started with aching joints, a fever, and swollen lymph nodes, which might turn black. Sometimes the lungs were affected and the victim coughed and sneezed. Whatever the symptoms, the disease progressed quickly, death was almost always swift, and it spread rapidly from person to person. This was the bubonic plague, or Black Death. It swept through Europe in the mid-fourteenth century, killing one-third to one-half of the population. In many cases, bodies lay in the streets, with no one to perform burials. Since medical and scientific knowledge was too primitive to explain the disease rationally, people sought strange remedies. They often took revenge on the innocent in their quest to get rid of the plague. People known as flagellants whipped themse3lves to appease God. Others persecuted the Jews to find a scapegoat for their misery.
What were the economic results of the number of people killed by the plague?
Education, Architecture, & The Black Death
10.3 – Culture of the High Middle Ages
10.4 – The Late Middle Ages
The Development of ScholasticismThe Development of Scholasticism• Scholasticism – wanted to
harmonize Christian teachings with Greek philosophy (Aristotle)
• Saint Thomas Aquinas attempted to reconcile Aristotle’s works with the Scripture– Summa Theologica: proposed
questions and answers that reconciled philosophy and theology An excerpt from Summa Theologica about
heretics: “They deserve not only to be separated from the Church by
excommunication, but also to be severed from the world by death.”
Literature & ArchitectureLiterature & Architecture• Latin was the universal language
of medieval civilization• 12th c., new literature was written
in the vernacular – every day language of particular regions
• Romanesque Churches: dark and resembled a fortress
• Gothic Churches: light and artistic– Barrel vault– Flying Buttress– Gothic cathedrals testified to an
age when most people believed in a spiritual world
The Black DeathThe Black Death• Bubonic plague: black rats
infested w/fleas carrying deadly bacterium– Italian merchants brought it
from the Black Sea; Followed trade routes
• 1347-1351: 38 million died out of 75 million– Italian cities lost 50-60% of its
population
• Many believed it was a punishment from God
Effects of the Black DeathEffects of the Black Death• Led to an outbreak of
anti-Semitism: hostility towards Jews
• Economic Consequences– Trade declined– Shortage of workers
made price of labor rise – end of serfdom
– Lowered demand for food resulted in falling prices
Decline of Church PowerDecline of Church Power Pope Boniface VIII vs. King Philip IV of FrancePope Boniface VIII vs. King Philip IV of France
European kings grew unwilling to accept the papal claims of supremacy over both religious and secular matters
1. Philip claimed right to tax clergy
3. Philip refused this and sent troops to bring Boniface to trial
5. Philip engineered to have a Frenchman, Clement V, elected pope
6. Moves pope to Avignon, in France not, Rome
2. Pope says clergy would need Pope’s consent to pay taxes
4. Pope is held captive for 3 days, escapes and one month later commits suicide
The Great SchismThe Great Schism• Two popes called each other
the AntiChrist• Lasted from 1378 to 1417• Divided Europe politically• Damaged the church• Finally agreed to a new
pope in 1417• Crisis called for an end to
papacy’s corruption and excessive power– Protesters were accused of
heresy and burned at the stake (John Hus)
The Eastern SchismThe Eastern Schism• Excommunication: being
deprived or suspended membership in a religious community
• Eastern Church could not accept the pope as the head of the Christian faith
• 1054 Pope Leo IX and Patriarch Michael Cerularius excommunicated each other
• The Great Schism: separation between the two branches of the Christianity
The Hundred Years’ War, 1337-1453The Hundred Years’ War, 1337-1453• Start: King Philip IV of France
tried to take a piece a land back from England; King Edward II of England declared war on France– Began with an explosion of
enthusiasm– New weapon: longbow – long range,
rapid fire and great striking power• New king, Henry V, was eager to
conquer all of France – did not have the resources• Battle of Agincourt (Oct. 25th,1415):
1,500 French nobles died; English were masters of northern France
Shakespeare’s TakeShakespeare’s Take From this day to the ending of the world, From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remembered- But we in it shall be remembered- We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; For he to-day that sheds his blood with me For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, This day shall gentle his condition; This day shall gentle his condition;
And gentlemen in England now-a-bed And gentlemen in England now-a-bed Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here, Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here, And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day. That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day. - Shakespeare, Henry V- Shakespeare, Henry V
Joan of ArcJoan of Arc• French peasant woman, deeply
religious and experienced visions• Believed her favorite saints
commanded her to free France• Convinced weak King Charles to
allow her to accompany the troops to Orléans
• Inspired by her faith, the French troops capture the city
• She was captured in 1430, tried for witchcraft and executed
• French win war
Political RecoveryPolitical Recovery• After the Hundred Years’ War there is a
resurgence of nationalism and the power of the monarchy in England, France, and Spain– France: King Louis XI strengthened the use of the
taille (a direct tax on property) which gave him the money to create a strong monarchy
– England: War of the Roses; two noble factions fought to control the monarchy
– Spain: United the two strongest kingdoms of Aragon and Castile with the marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand
– They expelled all the Jews and “encouraged” the Muslims to convert to Catholicism
– Within a few years, all professed Muslims were also expelled from Spain
– To be Spanish was to be Catholic
Their Catholic Majesties… Ferdinand & Isabella