The Crowning of Charlemagne
Charlemagne and His World Objectives After viewing “Charlemagne and His World,” you should: ⇓
• Understand that Charlemagne brought Europe out of the Dark Ages and into the medieval period. ⇓ • Know that the Carolingian Renaissance was the first of three important renaissance periods in Europe. ⇓ • Recognize the importance of Charlemagne's contributions to the Europe that exists today.
Charlemagne and His World
According to Professor Hodges, what experience may have shaped Charlemagne's desire to reinvent himself as a latter-day Roman emperor? Traveling the old Roman roads in Italy, Charlemagne may have conceived of an empire based on the Roman model.
Charlemagne’s Tomb
Charlemagne and His World
What accomplishments does the Charlemagne Prize honor?
The Charlemagne Prize honors accomplishments in fostering a Europe based on shared economic and social values.
The Development of Feudalism
• Invaders posed a threat to the safety of the people, especially in the absence of a strong central government. ⇓ • Magyars, Vikings, and Muslims terrorize Europe.
• People began to turn to local landed aristocrats or nobles to protect them. ⇓ (pages 292–294)
Lief Ericson’s Route to America
Video: Feudalism – Weak Kings, Strong Nobles
The Development of Feudalism
• This change led to the new political and social system called feudalism. feudalism By the 18th century, a man who served a lord militarily was known as a vassal. vassal ⇓
• Similar systems were found in Japan (samurai & daimyo) and among the Aztec.
Video: Medieval Society Hierarchy
The Development of Feudalism
(cont.)
• By the 9th century the land the
lord granted to a vassal was known as a fief. ⇓
• Vassals had political authority in their fiefs. ⇓ • The number of separate powerful lords and vassals increased; many different people were now responsible for keeping order. • Feudalism became complicated. ⇓ •
Kings had vassals who themselves had vassals. ⇓
Feudalism came to be characterized by a set of unwritten rules known as the feudal contract. ⇓ •
(pages 292–294)
Feudal System
The Development of Feudalism
(cont.)
• These rules determined the relationship between lord and vassal. ⇓ • The major obligation of a vassal was military service, service about 40 days a year.
(pages 292–294)
Video: Castles, Liege and Lords
The Nobility of the Middle Ages and Aristocratic Women
• In the eleventh and twelfth centuries, under the influence of the Church, an ideal of civilized behavior among the nobility evolved. ⇓ • It was called chivalry. chivalry ⇓ • Knights were to defend the Church and defenseless people, treat captives as honored guests, and fight for glory and not material rewards. (pages 295–296)