Difference between revisions of "Middle Ages" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Giotto.mourning.750pix.jpg|thumb|300px|''Lamentation'', [[Giotto di Bondone]], c. 1305]]
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The '''Middle Ages''' form the middle period in a traditional [[schematic]] [[Periodization|division of European history]] into three "ages": the [[classical antiquity|classical civilization]] of Antiquity, the Middle Ages and [[Modern world|Modern]] Times.
  
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The Middle Ages are commonly dated from the [[fall of the Roman Empire|fall of the Western Roman Empire]] in the 5th century to the beginning of the [[Renaissance]] in the 15th century. These dates are approximate, and are based upon nuanced arguments; for other dating schemes and the reasoning behind them, see "[[#Periodisation issues|periodisation issues]]", below.
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The Middle Ages witnessed the first sustained [[urbanisation]] of northern and western Europe. Modern European states owe their origins to events unfolding in the Middle Ages; European political  boundaries as of 2007 are, in many regards, the result of the military and dynastic achievements in this tumultuous period.
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==Terminology==
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The Middle Ages are  referred to as the "''[[#"Middle Age"|medieval period]]''" or simply "''[[wikt:medieval|medieval]]''" (sometimes spelled "''mediaeval''" or, historically, "''mediæval''"). This spelling comes from the [[Latin]] ''medius'' (middle) and ''ævus'' (age).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=medieval&searchmode=none|title=Definition from [[Online Etymology Dictionary]]|accessdate=2007-10-09}}</ref>
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Some early historians have described non-European countries as "medieval" when those countries show characteristics of "[[feudal]]" organization. The pre-Westernisation period in the [[history of Japan]], and the pre-colonial period in developed parts of [[sub-Saharan Africa]], are also sometimes termed "mediaeval." Modern historians are far more reluctant to try to fit the history of other regions to the European model, however, and these terms have fallen out of favour.
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==Origins: The later Roman Empire==
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{{main|Roman Empire}}
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The Roman empire reached its greatest territorial extent during the [[2nd century]]. The following two centuries witnessed the slow decline of Roman control over its outlying territories. The Emperor [[Diocletian]] split the empire into separately administered eastern and western provinces in [[285]]. Under his arrangement, the [[western Roman empire]] was governed from [[Ravenna]] by a lesser emperor, and the region was considered subordinate to the wealthier [[Byzantine Empire|east]]. The division between east and west was encouraged by Constantine, who refounded the city of [[Byzantium]] as the new capital, [[Constantinople]], in [[330]].
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Military expenses increased steadily during the 4th century, even as Rome’s neighbours became restless and increasingly powerful. Tribes who previously had contact with the Romans as trading partners, rivals, or mercenaries had sought entrance to the empire and access to its wealth throughout the [[4th century]]. Diocletian’s reforms had created a strong governmental bureaucracy, reformed taxation, and strengthened the army.<ref name="Treadgold">{{cite book|title= A History of the Byzantine State and Society|author=Treadgold, Warren|date= 1997|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=0804726302|edition=first edition}}</ref> These changes bought the Empire time, but these reforms demanded money. Rome’s declining revenue left it dangerously dependent on tax revenue. Future setbacks forced Rome to pour ever more wealth into its armies, spreading the empire’s wealth thinly into its border regions. In periods of expansion, this would not be a critical problem. The defeat in [[378]] at the [[Battle of Adrianople]], however, destroyed much of the Roman army, leaving the western empire undefended.<ref name="Treadgold"/> Without a strong army in the west, and with no promise of salvation coming from the emperor in Constantinople, the western Empire sought compromise.
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Known in traditional historiography collectively as the “barbarian invasions”, the [[Migration Period]], or the ''Volkerwanderung'' ("wandering of the peoples") specifically by German historians, this migration of peoples was a complicated and gradual process. Some early historians have given this period the epithet of "[[Dark Ages]]". <ref>When the term Dark Ages is used by historians today, it is intended to be neutral, namely to express the idea that the events of the period often seem "dark" to us only because of the paucity of historical records compared with later times. William Chester Jordon. ''[[Dictionary of the Middle Ages]]'', Supplement 1, 2004. Kathleen Verdun, "Medievalism" pp. 389-397. Sections 'Victorian Medievalism', 'Nineteenth-Century Europe', 'Medievalism in America 1500-1900', 'The 20th Century'. Same volume, Paul Freedman, "Medieval Studies", pp. 383-389.</ref> Recent research and archaeology have also revealed complex cultures persisting throughout the period. Some of these "barbarian" tribes rejected the [[Culture of ancient Rome|classical culture of Rome]], while others admired and aspired to it. [[Theodoric the Great]] of the [[Ostrogoths]], as only one example, had been raised in Constantinople and considered himself an heir to its culture, employing erudite Roman ministers like [[Cassiodorus]]. Other prominent tribal groups that migrated into Roman territory were the [[Huns]], [[Bulgars]], [[Eurasian Avars|Avars]] and [[Magyars]], along with a large number of [[Germanic tribes|Germanic]], and later [[Slavic tribes|Slavic]] peoples. Some tribes settled in the empire’s territory with the approval of the Roman senate or emperor. In return for land to farm and, in some regions, the right to collect tax revenues for the state, [[foederati|federated tribes]] provided military support to the empire. Other incursions were small-scale military invasions of tribal groups assembled to gather plunder.  The most famous invasion culminated in the [[sack of Rome (410)|sack of Rome]] by the [[Visigoths]] in [[410]].
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By the end of the [[5th century]], Roman institutions were crumbling. The final independent, ethnically Roman emperor in the west, [[Romulus Augustulus]], was deposed by the barbarian king [[Odoacer]] in [[476]].<ref name="Treadgold"/> The [[Eastern Roman Empire]] (referred to as the "[[Byzantine Empire]]" after the fall of its western counterpart) maintained its order by abandoning the west to its fate. Even though Byzantine emperors maintained a claim over the territory, and no barbarian king dared to elevate himself to the position of emperor of the west, attempts to reassert Byzantine control over the west failed. For the next three centuries, the western empire would be without a legitimate emperor. It was, instead, ruled by kings who enjoyed the support of the largely barbarian armies. Some kings ruled as regents for titular emperors, and some ruled in their own name. Throughout the 5th century, cities throughout the empire declined, receding inside heavily fortified walls. The western empire, particularly, experienced the decay of infrastructure which was not adequately maintained by the central government. Where civic functions and infrastructure such as chariot races, aqueducts, and roads were maintained, the work was frequently done at the expense of city officials and bishops. [[Augustine of Hippo]] is an example of a bishop who acted as an able administrator. One scholar, [[Thomas Cahill]], has dubbed Augustine the last of the classical men and the first of medieval men.
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==Early Middle Ages==
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[[Image:Europe map 450.PNG|right|thumb|300px|Map of territorial boundaries ''ca.'' [[450]] [[Anno Domini|AD]].]]
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[[Image:Age-of-caliphs.png|300px|thumb|The [[Muslim conquests]] of the 7th and 8th centuries {{legend|#a1584e|Expansion under the Prophet Mohammad, 622-632}} {{legend|#ef9070|Expansion during the Patriarchal Caliphate, 632-661}} {{legend|#fad07d|Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661-750}}]]
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[[Image:Europe998new.png|right|thumb|300px|Map of [[Europe]] in [[998]].]]
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{{main|Early Middle Ages}}
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The end of the 8th century found the former western Roman empire an overwhelmingly rural and decentralized region that had lost its privileged position as the centre of a great power. Between the [[5th Century|5th]] and [[8th Century|8th]] centuries, new peoples and powerful individuals filled the political void left by Roman centralized government. Elite families from both Roman aristocracy and barbarian nobility established regional hegemonies within the former boundaries of the Empire, creating weak kingdoms like that of the [[Ostrogoths]] in [[Italy]], the [[Visigoths]] in [[Spain]] and [[Portugal]], the [[Franks]] and [[Burgundians]] in [[Gaul]] and western [[Germany]], and [[Saxons]] in [[England]]. The social effects of the fracture of the Roman state were manifold. Cities and merchants lost the economic benefits of safe conditions for trade and manufacture, and intellectual development suffered from the loss of a unified cultural and educational milieu of far-ranging connections.
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The breakdown of Roman society was often dramatic. As it became unsafe to travel or carry goods over any distance, there was a collapse in trade and manufacture for export. The major industries that depended on long-distance trade, such as large-scale pottery manufacture, vanished almost overnight in places like Britain.
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The [[Muslim conquests]] of the [[7th century|7th]] and [[8th century|8th]] centuries, which conquered the [[Islamic conquest of Persia|Persian Empire]], [[Muslim conquest of Syria|Roman Syria]], [[Muslim conquest of Egypt|Roman Egypt]], [[Umayyad conquest of North Africa|Roman North Africa]], [[Umayyad conquest of Hispania|Visigothic Spain and Portugal]], and other parts of the [[Mediterranean]], including [[History of Islam in southern Italy|Sicily and southern Italy]], increased localisation by halting much of what remained of seaborne commerce. Thus, whereas sites like [[Tintagel]] in [[Cornwall]] had managed to obtain supplies of Mediterranean luxury goods well into the 6th century, this connection was now lost.
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The patchwork of petty rulers was incapable of supporting the depth of civic infrastructure required to maintain libraries, public baths, arenas and major educational institutions. Any new building was on a far smaller scale than before. Roman landholders beyond the confines of city walls were also vulnerable to extreme changes, and they could not simply pack up their land and move elsewhere. Some were dispossessed and fled to Byzantine regions, others quickly pledged their allegiances to their new rulers. In areas like Spain and Italy, this often meant little more than acknowledging a new overlord, while Roman forms of law and religion could be maintained. In other areas where there was a greater weight of population movement, it might be necessary to adopt new modes of dress, language and custom.
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The Catholic Church was the major unifying cultural influence, preserving its selection from Latin learning, maintaining the art of writing, and a centralised administration through its network of [[bishop]]s. Some regions that had previously been Catholic were occupied by [[Arianism|Arians]], which raised debates over orthodoxy. [[Clovis I]] of the Franks is a well-known example of a barbarian king who chose Catholic orthodoxy over Arianism. His conversion marked a turning point for the Frankish tribes of Gaul. Bishops were central to Middle Age society due to the literacy they possessed. As a result, they often played a significant role in shaping good government. However beyond the core areas of Western Europe there remained many peoples with little or no contact with Christianity or with classical Roman culture. Martial societies such as the [[Eurasian Avars|Avars]] and the [[Vikings]] were still capable of causing major disruption to the newly emerging societies of Western Europe.
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The Early Middle Ages also witnessed the rise of [[monasticism]] within the west. Although the impulse to withdraw from society to focus upon a spiritual life is experienced by people of all cultures, the shape of European monasticism was determined by traditions and ideas that originated in the deserts of Egypt and Syria.<ref name="Lawrence">{{cite book|title=Medieval Monasticism: Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages|author=Lawrence, C.H|publisher=Longman|edition=third edition|isbn=0582404274}}</ref> The style of monasticism that focuses on community experience of the spiritual life, called [[Cenobitic|cenobitism]], was pioneered by the saint [[Pachomius]] in the 4th Century. Monastic ideals spread from Egypt to western Europe in the 5th and 6th centuries through [[Hagiography|hagiographical literature]] such as the Life of [[Anthony the Great|Saint Anthony]].<ref name="Lawrence"/> [[Saint Benedict]] wrote the definitive [[Benedictine Rule|Rule]] for western monasticism during the 6th century, detailing the administrative and spiritual responsibilities of a community of monks led by an [[abbot]].<ref name="Lawrence"/> Monks and monasteries had a deep effect upon the religious and political life of the Early Middle Ages, in various cases acting as land trusts for powerful families, centres of propaganda and royal support in newly conquered regions, bases for mission and proselytization, or outposts of education and literacy.
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[[Image:Hildesheim-St Michaels Church.outside.JPG|thumb|270px|[[Romanesque architecture]] flourished in the early '''Middle Ages''': [[Hildesheim]].]]
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Outside of Italy, building in stone was rarely attempted &ndash; until the [[8th Century]], when a new form of architecture called the [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]], based on Roman forms, gradually developed. Celtic and Germanic barbarian forms were absorbed into Christian art, although the central impulse remained Roman and Byzantine. High quality jewellery and religious imagery were produced throughout Western Europe, [[Charlemagne]] and other monarchs provided patronage for religious artworks and books. Some of the principal artworks of the age were the fabulous [[Illuminated manuscripts]] produced by monks on [[vellum]], using gold, silver and precious pigments to illustrate biblical narratives. Early examples include the [[Book of Kells]] and many Carolingian and Ottonian Frankish manuscripts.
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===Carolingians===
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{{main|Frankish Empire|Carolingian Empire|Government of the Carolingian Empire|Carolingian Renaissance}}
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A nucleus of power developed in a region of northern [[Gaul]] and developed into kingdoms called [[Austrasia]] and [[Neustria]]. These kingdoms were ruled for three centuries by a dynasty of kings called the [[Merovingians]], after their mythical founder [[Merovech]]. The history of the Merovingian kingdoms is one of family politics that frequently erupted into civil warfare between the branches of the family. The legitimacy of the Merovingian throne was granted by a reverence for the bloodline, and even after powerful members of the Austrasian court took de facto power during the 7th century, the Merovingians were kept as ceremonial figureheads. The Merovingians engaged in trade with northern Europe through [[Baltic region|Baltic]] trade routes known to historians as the Northern Arc trade, and they are known to have minted small-denomination silver pennies called [[sceattae]] for circulation. Aspects of Merovingian culture could be described as "Romanized", such as the high value placed on Roman coinage as a symbol of rulership and the patronage of monasteries and bishoprics. Some have hypothesized that the Merovingians were in contact with Byzantium.<ref name="Wood">{{cite book|title=The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751|author=Wood, Ian|publisher=Pearson Education|date=1995|isbn=0582493722}}</ref> However, the Merovingians also buried the dead of their elite families in grave mounds and traced their lineage to a mythical sea beast called the [[Quinotaur]].<ref name="Wood"/>
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The 7th century was a tumultuous period of [[civil wars]] between Austrasia and Neustria. Such warfare was exploited by the patriarch of a family line, [[Pippin I|Pippin of Herstal]], who curried favour with the Merovingians and had himself installed in the office of Mayor of the Palace at the service of the King. From this position of great influence, Pippin accrued wealth and supporters. Later members of his family line inherited the office, acting as advisors and regents. The dynasty took a new direction in [[732]], when [[Charles Martel]] won the [[Battle of Tours]], halting the advance of Muslim armies across the [[Pyrenees]]. The [[Carolingian]] dynasty, as the successors to Charles Martel is known, officially took the reigns of the kingdoms of Austrasia and Neustria in a coup of [[753]] led by [[Pippin III]]. A contemporary chronicle claims that Pippin sought, and gained, authority for this coup from the Pope.<ref name="Riché">{{cite book|title=The Carolingians: A Family Who Forged Europe|author=Riché, Pierre|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|date=1993|isbn=0812213424}}</ref> Pippin's successful coup was reinforced with propaganda that portrayed the Merovingians as inept or cruel rulers and exalted the accomplishments of Charles Martel and circulated stories of the family's great piety. At the time of his death in 783, Pippin left his kingdoms in the hands of his two sons, [[Charles|Charlemagne]] and [[Carloman, son of Pippin III|Carloman]]. When Carloman died of natural causes, Charles blocked the succession of Carloman's minor son and installed himself as the king of the united Austrasia and Neustria. This Charles, known to his contemporaries as Charles the Great or [[Charlemagne]], embarked in [[774]] upon a program of systematic expansion that would unify a large portion of Europe. In the wars that lasted just beyond 800, he rewarded loyal allies with war booty and command over parcels of land. Much of the nobility of the High Middle Ages was to claim its roots in the Carolingian nobility that was generated during this period of expansion.<ref name="Riché"/>
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The Imperial Coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas day of [[800]] is frequently regarded as a turning-point in mediaeval history, because it filled a power vacancy that had existed since [[476]]. It also marks a change in Charlemagne's leadership, which assumed a more imperial character and tackled difficult aspects of controlling a mediaeval empire. He established a system of diplomats who possessed imperial authority, the [[missi]], who in theory provided access to imperial justice in the farthest corners of the empire.<ref>Although the missus dominicus makes appearances during the second half of the 8th century, it is after 800 that they were institutionalized. {{cite book|title=The Carolingians: A Family Who Forged Europe|author=Riché, Pierre|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|date=1993|isbn=0812213424}}</ref> He also sought to reform the Church in his domains, pushing for uniformity in [[liturgy]] and material culture.
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===Carolingian Renaissance===
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{{main|Carolingian Renaissance}}
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Charlemagne's court in [[Aachen]] was the centre of a cultural revival that is sometimes referred to as the "[[Carolingian Renaissance]]". This period witnessed an increase of literacy, developments in the arts, architecture, jurisprudence, as well as liturgical and scriptural studies. The English monk [[Alcuin]] was invited to Aachen, and brought with him the precise classical Latin education that was available in the monasteries of [[Northumbria]]. The return of this Latin proficiency to the kingdom of the Franks is regarded as an important step in the development of mediaeval Latin. Charlemagne's chancery made use of a type of script currently known as [[Carolingian minuscule]], providing a common writing style that allowed for communication across most of Europe. After the decline of the Carolingian dynasty, the rise of the [[Saxon Dynasty]] in Germany was accompanied by the [[Ottonian Renaissance]].
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:''See also the careers of [[Charlemagne]], [[Louis the Pious]], and [[Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor]].''
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===Breakup of the Carolingian empire===
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While Charlemagne continued the Frankish tradition of dividing the ''regnum'' (kingdom) between all his heirs (at least those of age), the assumption of the ''imperium'' (imperial title) supplied a unifying force not available previously. Charlemagne was succeeded by his only legitimate son of adult age at his death, [[Louis the Pious]].
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Louis's long reign of 26 years was marked by numerous divisions of the empire among his sons and, after 829, numerous civil wars between various alliances of father and sons against other sons in an effort to determine a just division by battle. The final division was made at [[Crémieux]] in 838. The Emperor Louis recognised his eldest son [[Lothair I]] as emperor and confirmed him in the [[Regnum Italicum]] (Italy). He divided the rest of the empire between Lothair and [[Charles the Bald]], his youngest son, giving Lothair the opportunity to choose his half. He chose [[East Francia]], which comprised the empire on both banks of the Rhine and eastwards, leaving Charles [[West Francia]], which comprised the empire to the west of the Rhineland and the Alps. [[Louis the German]], the middle child, who had been rebellious to the last, was allowed to keep his subregnum of Bavaria under the suzerainty of his elder brother. The division was not undisputed. [[Pepin II of Aquitaine]], the emperor's grandson, rebelled in a contest for Aquitaine while Louis the German tried to annex all of East Francia. In two final campaigns, the emperor defeated both his rebellious descendants and vindicated the division of Crémieux before dying in 840.
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A three-year civil war followed his death. At the end of the conflict, Louis the German was in control of East Francia and Lothair was confined to Italy. By the [[Treaty of Verdun]] (843), a kingdom of [[Middle Francia]] was created for Lothair in the Low Countries and Burgundy and his imperial title was recognised. East Francia would eventually morph into the [[Kingdom of Germany]] and West Francia into the [[Kingdom of France]], around both of which the history of Western Europe can largely be described as a contest for control of the middle kingdom. Charlemagne's grandsons and great-grandsons divided their kingdoms between their sons until all of the various ''regna'' and the imperial title fell into the hands of [[Charles the Fat]] by 884. He was deposed in 887 and died in 888, to be replaced in all his kingdoms but two (Lotharingia and East Francia) by non-Carolingian "petty kings." The Carolingian Empire was destroyed, though the imperial tradition would eventually give rise to the [[Holy Roman Empire]] in 962.
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The breakup of the Carolingian Empire was accompanied by the invasions, migrations, and raids of external foes as not seen since the [[Migration Period]]. The Atlantic and northern shores were harassed by the [[Vikings]], who forced Charles the Bald to issue the [[Edict of Pistres]] against them and who [[Siege of Paris (885-886)|besieged Paris in 885&ndash;886]]. The eastern frontiers, especially Italy, were under constant [[Magyars|Magyar]] assault until their great defeat at the [[Battle of the Lechfeld]] in 955. The [[Saracens]] also managed to establish bases at [[Garigliano]] and [[Fraxinetum]] and to conquer the islands of [[Corsica]], [[Sardinia]], and [[Sicily]], and their [[pirates]] raided the Mediterranean coasts, as did the Vikings. The Christianisation of the pagan Vikings provided an end to that threat.
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==High Middle Ages==
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{{main|High Middle Ages}}
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The High Middle Ages were characterized by the urbanization of Europe, military expansion, and intellectual revival that historians identify between the 11th century and the end of the 13th. This revival was aided by the cessation of invasions by [[Scandinavians]] and [[Hungarians]], as well as the assertion of power by [[Encastellation|castellans]] to fill the power vacuum left by the Carolingian decline. The High Middle Ages saw an [[Medieval demography|explosion in population]]. This population flowed into towns, sought conquests abroad, or cleared land for cultivation. The cities of antiquity had been clustered around the Mediterranean. By 1200 the growing urban centres were in the centre of the continent, connected by roads or rivers. By the end of this period [[Paris]] might have had as many as 200,000 inhabitants.<ref name="Rosenwein">{{cite book|title=A Short History of the Middle Ages|author=Rosenwein, Barbara H|publisher=Broadview Press|year=2001|isbn=1551112906}}</ref> In central and northern Italy and in Flanders the rise of towns that were self-governing to some degree within their territories stimulated the economy and created an environment for new types of religious and trade associations. Trading cities on the shores of the Baltic entered into agreements known as the [[Hanseatic League]], and [[Medieval Italy|Italian city-states]] such as [[Venice]], [[Genoa]], and [[Pisa]] expanded their trade throughout the Mediterranean. This period marks a formative one in the history of the western state as we know it, for kings in France, England, and Spain consolidated their power during this time period, setting up lasting institutions to help them govern. The [[Pope|Papacy]], which had long since created an ideology of independence from the [[secular]] kings, first asserted its claims to temporal authority over the entire Christian world. The entity that historians call the [[Temporal power|Papal Monarchy]] reached its apogee in the early 13th century under the pontificate of [[Innocent III]]. [[Northern Crusades]] and the advance of Christian kingdoms and military orders into previously [[paganism|pagan]] regions in the [[Baltic region|Baltic]] and [[Finland|Finnic]] northeast brought the forced assimilation of numerous native peoples to the European entity. With the brief exception of the [[Mongol invasions]], major barbarian incursions ceased.
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===Crusades===
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{{main|Crusade}}
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The Crusades were, in some aspects, Europe's defense against Islamic expansion and aggression. These were armed pilgrimages intended to liberate [[Jerusalem]] from Muslim control. Jerusalem was part of the Muslim possessions won during a rapid military expansion in the 7th century through the Near East, Northern Africa, and Anatolia (in modern Turkey). The first Crusade was preached by Pope [[Urban II]] at the [[Council of Clermont]] in [[1095]] in response to a request from the [[Byzantine]] emperor [[Alexios I Komnenos]] for aid against further advancement. Urban promised [[indulgence]] to any Christian who took the Crusader vow and set off for Jerusalem. The resulting fervour that swept through Europe mobilized tens of thousands of people from all levels of society, and resulted in the capture of Jerusalem in [[1099]] as well as other regions. The movement found its primary support in the Franks; it is by no coincidence that the Arabs referred to Crusaders generically as "''Franj''".<ref>{{cite book|title=Crusades Through Arab Eyes|author=Maalouf, Amin|publisher=Schocken|year=1989|isbn=0805208984}}</ref> Although they were minorities within this region, the Crusaders tried to consolidate their conquests, as a number of [[Crusader states]] &ndash; the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]], as well as the [[County of Edessa]], the [[Principality of Antioch]], and the [[County of Tripoli]] (collectively [[Outremer]]). During the [[12th century]] and [[13th century]] there were a series of conflicts between these states and surrounding Islamic ones. Crusades were essentially resupply missions for these embattled kingdoms. Military orders such as the [[Knights Templar]] and the [[Knights Hospitaller]] were formed to play an integral role in this support.
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By the end of the Middle Ages the Christian Crusaders had captured all the Islamic territories in modern [[Spain]], [[Portugal]] and Southern [[Italy]]. Meanwhile, Islamic counter attacks had retaken all the Crusader possessions on the Asian mainland, leaving a de facto boundary between Islam and western Christianity that continued until modern times.
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Substantial areas of northern Europe also remained outside Christian influence until the [[12th century]] or later; these areas also became [[Northern Crusades|crusading venues]] during the expansionist High Middle Ages. Throughout this period the [[Byzantine Empire]] was in decline, having peaked in influence during the High Middle Ages.  Beginning with the [[Battle of Manzikert]] in [[1071]], the empire underwent a cycle of decline and renewal, including the sacking of Constantinople by the [[Fourth Crusade]] in 1204. Despite another short upswing following the recapture of Constantinople in [[1261]], the empire continued to deteriorate.
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===Science and technology===
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{{main|Medieval science|Medieval technology}}
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:''See [[Islamic Golden Age]], [[Islamic science]] and [[Muslim inventions]] for science and technology in [[al-Andalus]].''
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During the early Middle Ages and the [[Islamic Golden Age]], [[Islamic philosophy]], [[Islamic science|science]], and [[Islamic inventions|technology]] were more advanced than in Western Europe. Islamic scholars both preserved and built upon earlier traditions and also added their own inventions and innovations. Islamic [[al-Andalus]] passed much of this on to Europe. The replacement of [[Roman numerals]] with the [[decimal]] [[positional number system]] and the invention of [[algebra]] allowed more advanced mathematics. Another consequence was that the Latin-speaking world regained access to lost classical literature and [[philosophy]]. [[Latin translations of the 12th century]] fed a passion for [[Aristotle|Aristotelian]] philosophy and [[Islamic science]] that is frequently referred to as the [[Renaissance of the 12th century]]. Meanwhile, trade grew throughout Europe as the dangers of travel were reduced, and steady economic growth resumed. Cathedral schools and monasteries ceased to be the sole sources of education in the 11th century when [[medieval university|universities]] were established in major European cities. Literacy became available to a wider class of people, and there were major advances in [[art]], [[sculpture]], [[music]] and [[architecture]]. Large [[cathedral]]s were built across [[Europe]], first in the [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]], and later in the more decorative [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] style.
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During the 12th and 13th century in Europe there was a radical change in the rate of new inventions, innovations in the ways of managing traditional means of production, and economic growth. The period saw major [[technology|technological]] advances, including the invention of [[cannon]], [[glasses|spectacles]], and [[artesian aquifer|artesian wells]]; and the cross-cultural introduction of [[gunpowder]], [[silk]], the [[compass]], and the [[astrolabe]] from the east.  There were also great improvements to [[ship]]s and the [[clock]]. The latter advances made possible the dawn of the [[Age of Discovery|Age of Exploration]].  At the same time huge numbers of Greek and Arabic works on medicine and the sciences were translated and distributed throughout Europe.  Aristotle especially became very important, his rational and logical approach to knowledge influencing the scholars at the newly forming [[university|universities]] which were absorbing and disseminating the new knowledge during the 12th Century Renaissance.
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===Religious and social change===
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[[Monastic reform]] became an important issue during the 11th century, when elites began to worry that monks were not adhering to their Rules with the discipline that was required for a good religious life. During this time, it was believed that monks were performing a very practical task by sending their prayers to God and inducing him to make the world a better place for the virtuous. The time invested in this activity would be wasted, however, if the monks were not virtuous. The monastery of [[Cluny]], founded in the [[Mâcon]] in [[909]], was founded as part of a larger movement of monastic reform in response to this fear.<ref>{{cite book|title=Rhinoceros Bound: Cluny in the Tenth Century|author=Rosenwein, Barbara H|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|year=1982|isbn=0812278305|pages=40-41}}</ref> It was a reformed monastery that quickly established a reputation for austerity and rigour. Cluny sought to maintain the high quality of spiritual life by electing its own abbot from within the cloister, and maintained an economic and political independence from local lords by placing itself under the protection of the Pope.<ref name="Rosenwein"/> Cluny provided a popular solution to the problem of bad monastic codes, and in the 11th century its abbots were frequently called to participate in imperial politics as well as reform monasteries in France and Italy.
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Monastic reform inspired change in the secular church, as well. The ideals that it was based upon were brought to the papacy by [[Pope Leo IX]] on his election in [[1049]], providing the ideology of clerical independence that fuelled the [[Investiture Controversy]] in the late 11th century. The Investiture Controversy involved [[Pope Gregory VII]] and [[Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor]], who initially clashed over a specific bishop's appointment and turned into a battle over the ideas of [[investiture]], [[clerical marriage]], and [[simony]]. The Emperor, as a Christian ruler, saw the protection of the Church as one of his great rights and responsibilities. The Papacy, however, had begun insisting on its independence from secular lords. The open warfare ended with Henry IV's occupation of Rome in [[1085]], and the death of the Pope several months later, but the issues themselves remained unresolved even after the compromise of [[1122]] known as the [[Concordat of Worms]]. The conflict represents a significant stage in the creation of a papal monarchy separate from [[lay person|lay]] authorities. It also had the permanent consequence of empowering German princes at the expense of the German emperors.<ref name="Rosenwein"/>
 +
 
 +
The High Middle Ages was a period of great religious movements. The Crusades, which have already been mentioned, have an undeniable religious aspect. Monastic reform was similarly a religious movement effected by monks and elites. Other groups sought to participate in new forms of religious life. Landed elites financed the construction of new parish churches in the European countryside, which increased the Church's impact upon the daily lives of peasants. Cathedral [[Canon (priest)|canons]] adopted monastic rules, groups of peasants and laypeople abandoned their possessions to live like the [[Apostles]], and people formulated ideas about their religion that were deemed heretical. Although the success of the 12th century papacy in fashioning a Church that progressively affected the daily lives of everyday people cannot be denied, there are still indicators that the tail could wag the dog. The new religious groups called the [[Waldensians]] and the [[Humiliati]] were condemned for their refusal to accept a life of cloistered monasticism. In many aspects, however, they were not very different from the [[Franciscans]] and the [[Dominican Order|Dominicans]], who were approved by the papacy in the early 13th century. The picture that modern historians of the religious life present is one of great religious zeal welling up from the peasantry during the High Middle Ages, with clerical elites striving, only sometimes successfully, to understand and channel this power into familiar paths.
 +
 
 +
==Late Middle Ages==
 +
{{main|Late Middle Ages}}
 +
[[Image:Plague victims blessed by priest.jpg|thumb|250px|A priest blesses victims of the Black Death.]]
 +
 
 +
The Late Middle Ages was a period initiated by calamities and upheavals. During this time, agriculture was affected by a climate change that has been documented by climate historians, and was felt by contemporaries in the form of periodic famines, including the [[Great Famine of 1315-1317]]. The [[Black Death]], a bacterial disease that spread among the malnourished populace like wildfire, killed as much as a third of the population in the mid-14th century, in some regions the toll was as high as one half of the population. Towns were especially hard-hit because of the crowded conditions. Large areas of land were left sparsely inhabited, and in some places fields were left unworked. As a consequence of the sudden decline in available labourers, the price of wages rose as landlords sought to entice workers to their fields. Workers also felt that they had a right to greater earnings, and [[Popular revolt in late medieval Europe|popular uprisings]] broke out across Europe. This period of stress, paradoxically, witnessed creative social, economic, and technological responses that laid the groundwork for further great changes in the Early Modern Period. It was also a period when the Catholic Church was increasingly divided against itself. During the time of the [[Western Schism]], the Church was led by as many as three popes at one time. The divisiveness of the Church undermined papal authority, and allowed the formation of national churches. The [[Fall of Constantinople]] to the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Turks]] in [[1453]] had a great effect upon the European economy and intellectual life.
 +
 
 +
===State resurgence===
 +
The Late Middle Ages also witnessed the rise of strong, royalty-based [[nation-state]]s, particularly [[England]], [[France]], and the Christian kingdoms of the [[Iberian Peninsula]]. The long conflicts of this time, such as the [[Hundred Years' War]] fought between England and France, actually strengthened royal control over the kingdoms, even though they were extremely hard on the peasantry. Kings profited from warfare by gaining land. France shows clear signs of a growth in royal power during the 14th century, from the active persecution of heretics and [[lepers]], expulsion of the [[Jews]], and the dissolution of the [[Knights Templar]]. In all of these cases, undertaken by [[Philip IV of France|Philip IV]], the king confiscated land and wealth from these minority groups.<ref name="Rosenwein"/> The conflict between Philip and [[Boniface VIII]], a conflict which began over Philip's unauthorized taxation of clergy, ended with the violent death of Boniface and the installation of [[Clement V]], a weak, French-controlled pope, in Avignon. This action enhanced French prestige, at the expense of the papacy. England, too, began the 14th century with warfare and expansion. [[Edward I of England|Edward I]] waged war against [[Wales]] and [[Scotland]], with mixed success, to assert what he considered his right to the entire island of Britain. Both of these kings presided over effective states administered by literate bureaucrats and sought baronial consent for their decisions through early versions of parliamentary systems, called the [[French States-General|Estates General]] in France and the [[Parlement]] in England. Towns and merchants allied with kings during the 15th century, allowing the kings to distance themselves further from the territorial lords. As a result of the power gained during the 14th and 15th centuries, late mediaeval kings built truly sovereign states, which were able to impose taxes, declare war, and create and enforce laws, all by the will of the king.<ref name="KOT">{{cite book|last=Kagan|first=Donald|title=The Western Heritage: Since 1300|coauthors=Ozment, Steven, Turner, Frank M.|publisher=Prentice Hall|year=1993|edition=eighth edition|isbn=0131828835}}</ref> Kings encouraged cohesion in their administration by appointing ministers with broad ambitions and a loyalty to the state.<ref name="KOT"/> By the last half of the 15th century, kings like Henry VII and Louis XI were able to rule without much baronial interference.
 +
 
 +
===Hundred Years' War===
 +
{{main|Hundred Years' War}}
 +
 
 +
The Hundred Years' War was a conflict between France and England, lasting 116 years from 1337 to 1453. It was fought primarily over claims by the English kings to the French throne and was punctuated by several brief and two lengthy periods of peace before it finally ended in the expulsion of the English from France, with the exception of the Calais Pale. Thus, the war was in fact a series of conflicts and is commonly divided into three or four phases: the Edwardian War (1337-1360), the Caroline War (1369-1389), the Lancastrian War (1415-1429), and the slow decline of English fortunes after the appearance of [[Joan of Arc]], (1429-1453). Though primarily a dynastic conflict, the war gave impetus to ideas of both French and English nationality. Militarily, it saw the introduction of new weapons and tactics, which eroded the older system of feudal armies dominated by heavy cavalry. The first standing armies in Western Europe since the time of the Western Roman Empire were introduced for the war, thus changing the role of the peasantry. For all this, as well as for its long duration, it is often viewed as one of the most significant conflicts in the history of mediaeval warfare.
 +
 
 +
===Controversy within the Church===
 +
The troubled 14th century saw both the [[Avignon Papacy]] of 1305–1378, also called the ''Babylonian Captivity'', and the so-called [[Western Schism]] that lasted from 1378–1418. The practice of granting papal [[indulgence]]s, fairly commonplace since the 11th century, was reformulated and explicitly monetized in the 14th century.<ref name="Rosenwein"/> Indulgences came to be an important source of revenue for the Church, revenue that filtered through parish churches to bishoprics and then to the pope himself. This was viewed by many as a corruption of the Church. In the early years of the 15th century, after a century of turmoil, ecclesiastical officials convened in [[Council of Constance|Constance]] in [[1417]] to discuss a resolution to the Schism.<ref name="Rosenwein"/> Traditionally, councils needed to be called by the Pope, and none of the contenders were willing to call a council and risk being unseated. The act of convening a council without papal approval was justified by the argument that the Church was represented by the whole population of the faithful. The council deposed the warring popes and elected [[Martin V]]. The turmoil of the Church, and the perception that it was a corrupted institution, sapped the legitimacy of the papacy within Europe and fostered greater loyalty to regional or national churches. [[Martin Luther]] published objections to the Church. Although his disenchantment had long been forming, the denunciation of the Church was precipitated by the arrival of preachers raising money to rebuild the [[Basilica of Saint Peter]] in Rome. Luther might have been silenced by the Church, but the death of the Holy Roman Emperor [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]] brought the imperial succession to the forefront of concern. Lutherans' split with the [[Church]] in [[1517]], and the subsequent division of [[Catholicism]] into [[Lutheranism]], [[Calvinism]], and [[Anabaptism]] put a definitive end to the unified Church built during the Middle Ages.
 +
 
 +
<div align="center">
 +
<gallery>
 +
Image:Europein1328.png|Europe in [[1328]]
 +
Image:Europe in 1430.PNG|Europe in the [[1430s]]
 +
Image:Europe in 1470.png|Europe in the [[1470s]]
 +
</gallery>
 +
</div>
 +
 
 +
==Historiography==
 +
===Middle Ages in history===
 +
{{main|Middle Ages in history}}
 +
 
 +
After the Middle Ages ended subsequent generations imagined, portrayed and interpreted the Middle Ages in different ways. Every century has created its own vision of the Middle Ages; the 18th century view of the Middle Ages was entirely different from the 19th century which was different from the 16th century view. The reality of these images remains with us today in the form of film, architecture, literature, art and popular conception.
 +
 
 +
===Medieval and Middle Ages===
 +
===="Middle Age"====
 +
The term "Middle Age" ("medium ævum") was first coined by [[Flavio Biondo]], an Italian [[Humanism|humanist]], in the early [[15th Century]]. Until the [[Renaissance]] (and some time after) the standard scheme of history was to divide history into [[Six Ages of the World|six ages]], inspired by the biblical six days of creation, or [[four monarchies]] based on Daniel 2:40. The early [[Renaissance]] historians, in their glorification of all things classical, declared two periods in history, that of Ancient times and that of the period referred to as the "[[Dark Age]]". In the early 15th Century it was believed history had evolved from the [[Dark Age]] to a Modern period with its revival of things classical so scholars began to write about a middle period between the Ancient and Modern, which became known as the Middle Age. This is known as the three period view of history.
 +
 
 +
The plural form of the term, Middle ''Ages'', is used in [[English language|English]], [[Dutch language|Dutch]], [[Russian language|Russian]], [[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]] and [[Icelandic language|Icelandic]] while other [[European languages]] use the singular form ([[Italian language|Italian]] ''medioevo'', [[French language|French]] ''le moyen âge'', [[German language|German]] ''das Mittelalter''). This difference originates in different Neo-Latin terms used for the Middle Ages before ''media aetas'' became the standard term. Some were singular (''media aetas'', ''media antiquitas'', ''medium saeculum'' and ''media tempestas''), others plural (''media saecula'' and ''media tempora''). There seem to be no simple reason why a particular language ended up with the singular or the plural form.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Medieval, the Middle Ages|journal=Speculum|author=Robinson, F.C.|volume=59|issue=4|year=1984|month=October|pages=p. 745-56}}</ref> The term "mediaeval" (American: medieval) was first contracted from the Latin ''medium ævum'', or more precisely "middle epoch", by Enlightenment thinkers as a pejorative descriptor of the Middle Ages.
 +
 
 +
The common subdivision into [[Early Middle Ages|Early]], [[High Middle Ages|High]] and [[Late Middle Ages]] came into use after World War I. It was caused by the works of [[Henri Pirenne]] (in particular the article "Les periodes de l'historie du capitalism" in ''Academie Royale de Belgique. Bulletin de la Classe des Lettres'', 1914) and [[Johan Huizinga]] ([[The Autumn of the Middle Ages]], 1919).
 +
 
 +
[[Dorothy Sayers]], a noted scholar in medieval literature as well as a famous writer of detective books, strongly objected to the term. In the [[foreword]] to her translation of ''[[The Song of Roland]]'', she writes  "That new-washed world of clear sun and glittering colour, which we call the Middle Age (as though it were middle-aged), has perhaps a better right than the blown summer of the Renaissance to be called the Age of Re-Birth."
 +
 
 +
=== Periodisation issues ===
 +
{{see also|Periodisation}}
 +
 
 +
It is difficult to decide when the Middle Ages ended; in fact, scholars assign different dates in different parts of Europe. Most scholars who work in [[15th century]] [[Italy|Italian]] history, for instance, consider themselves [[Renaissance]], while anyone working elsewhere in Europe during the early 15th century is considered a mediaevalist. Others choose specific events, such as the [[Fall of Constantinople|Turkish capture of Constantinople]] or the end of the Anglo-French [[Hundred Years' War]] (both [[1453]]), the invention of printing by [[Johann Gutenberg]] (around [[1455]]), the fall of Muslim [[Spain]] or [[Christopher Columbus]]'s voyage to [[the Americas|America]] (both [[1492]]), the [[Protestant Reformation]] starting [[1517]], or the [[Battle of Lepanto (1571)]] to mark the period's end. In England the change of monarchs which occurred on [[22 August]] [[1485]] at the [[Battle of Bosworth]] is often considered to mark the end of the period, [[Richard III of England|Richard III]] representing the old mediaeval world and the [[Tudor dynasty|Tudors]], a new royal house and a new historical period.<ref>Prudames, David. [http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/nwh_gfx_en/ART25761.html Lottery cash kicks off search for the real Bosworth battlefield], [http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/etc/about/aboutindex_gfx_en.html 24 Hour Museum] [[20 January]] 2005.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Similar differences are now emerging in connection with the start of the period. Traditionally, the Middle Ages is said to have begun when the West Roman Empire formally ceased to exist in [[476]]. However, that date is not important in itself, since the West Roman Empire had been very weak for some time, while Roman culture was to survive at least in Italy for yet a few decades or more. Today, some date the beginning of the Middle Ages to the division and [[Christianisation]] of the Roman Empire ([[4th century]]); others, like [[Henri Pirenne]], see the period to the rise of Islam ([[7th century]]) as "late Classical". Another argument for a late beginning to the Middle Ages was presented by [[Peter Brown]]. Brown championed the idea of [[Late Antiquity]], a period that was culturally distinct from both the preceding Empire and from the rest of the Middle Ages.  Brown’s argument rests less on the economic changes within the Mediterranean than on social and religious change within the Empire between 300 and 750. To Brown, the slow collapse of the Empire allowed a period of great creativity and expressiveness in which Christianity flourished and became institutionalized.
 +
 
 +
The Middle Ages in [[Western Europe]] are often subdivided into three intervals. This includes an early period (sometimes called the "[[Dark Ages]]", at least from the [[5th century|fifth]] to [[8th century|eighth centuries]]) of shifting polities, a relatively low level of economic activity and successful incursions by non-Christian peoples ([[Slavs]], [[Arabs]], [[Scandinavia]]ns, [[Magyars]]). The middle period (the [[High Middle Ages]]) follows, a time of developed institutions of lordship and [[vassal]]age, [[castle]]-building and mounted warfare, and reviving urban and commercial life. The last span is a later period of growing royal power, the rise of commercial interests, and weakening customary ties of dependence, especially after the [[14th century|14th-century]] plague.
 +
 
 +
==Religion==
 +
{{Portal}}
 +
* [[Holy Roman Empire]]
 +
* [[Crusade|The Crusades]]
 +
* [[Pilgrimage]]
 +
* [[Pope|Papacy]]
 +
* [[Medieval Inquisition]]
 +
* [[Christian heresy|Heresy]] (for example, [[Arianism|Arian]]; [[Cathar]]; [[John Wyclif]]; [[Hussites]])
 +
* [[Christian monasticism|Monastic orders]]
 +
** [[Benedictine]]s
 +
** [[Carthusian]]s
 +
** [[Cistercians]]
 +
* [[mendicant order|Mendicant friars]]
 +
** [[Franciscan]]s
 +
** [[Dominican Order|Dominicans]]
 +
** [[Carmelite]]s
 +
** [[Augustinians]]
 +
* [[Judaism]]
 +
* [[Islam in Europe|Islam]] (Western Europe): [[Al-Andalus]]; [[History of Islam in southern Italy|Emirate of Sicily]]
 +
* [[Islam]] (Eastern Europe): [[Golden Horde]]; [[Crimean Khanate]]; [[Sultanate of Rûm]] & [[Ottoman Empire]]
 +
* [[Reconquista]]
 +
* [[Ottoman wars in Europe]]
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
{{col-begin}}
 +
{{col-3}}
 +
* [[List of basic medieval history topics]]
 +
*[[Medieval art]]
 +
*[[Medieval architecture]]
 +
*[[Medieval climate optimum]]
 +
*[[commune (medieval)|Medieval communes]]
 +
*[[Medieval chronological timeline]]
 +
*[[Medieval cuisine]]
 +
*[[Medieval demography]]
 +
*[[List of famines]]
 +
*[[Middle Ages in film]]
 +
 
 +
{{col-3}}
 +
*[[Medieval gardening]]
 +
*[[guild|Medieval guilds]]
 +
*[[Horses in the Middle Ages]]
 +
*[[Medieval hunting]]
 +
*[[Islamic Golden Age]]
 +
*[[Jews in the Middle Ages|History of the Jews in the Middle Ages]]
 +
*[[Medieval literature]]
 +
*[[Medieval medicine]]
 +
**[[Plague of Justinian]]
 +
**[[Black Death]]
 +
{{col-3}}
 +
*[[Medieval music]]
 +
*[[Neo-medievalism]]
 +
*[[Medieval poetry]]
 +
*[[History of science in the Middle Ages|Medieval science]]
 +
** [[Alchemy]]
 +
*[[Medieval ships]]
 +
*[[Medieval theatre]]
 +
*[[tournament (medieval)|Medieval tournament]]
 +
*[[Slave trade in the Middle Ages]]
 +
*[[Tatar invasions]]
 +
{{col-end}}
 +
 
 +
==Notes== 
 +
{{reflist}}
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
*''[[Dictionary of the Middle Ages]]'' (1989) Joseph R. Strayer, editor in chief, ISBN 0-684-19073-7
 +
 
 +
==External links==
 +
*[http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ Internet Medieval Sourcebook Project] Primary source archive of the Middle Ages.
 +
*[http://www.the-orb.net/ The Online Reference Book of Medieval Studies] Academic peer reviewed articles.
 +
*[http://www.medievalknights.com/ Medieval Knights] Medieval Knights is a medieval educational resource site geared to students and medieval enthusiests.
 +
*[http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/ The Labyrinth] Resources for Medieval Studies.
 +
*[http://www.netserf.org/ NetSERF] The Internet Connection for Medieval Resources.
 +
*[http://www.themiddleages.net The Middle Ages] - an informational site for teachers and students
 +
*[http://www.bl.uk/learning/histcitizen/medieval/medievalrealms.html Medieval Realms] Learning resources from the British Library including studies of beautiful medieval manuscripts
 +
*[http://www.medieval-period.com Information of the Medieval Period.]
 +
*[http://www.deremilitari.org De Re Militari: The Society for Medieval Military History]
 +
 
 +
{{Middle Ages by region}}
 +
 
 +
{{History of Europe}}
 +
 
 +
{{DEFAULTSORT:*}}
 +
[[Category:History]]
 +
 
 +
{{credits|166233726}}

Revision as of 15:00, 22 October 2007

File:Giotto.mourning.750pix.jpg
Lamentation, Giotto di Bondone, c. 1305

The Middle Ages form the middle period in a traditional schematic division of European history into three "ages": the classical civilization of Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Modern Times.

The Middle Ages are commonly dated from the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century to the beginning of the Renaissance in the 15th century. These dates are approximate, and are based upon nuanced arguments; for other dating schemes and the reasoning behind them, see "periodisation issues", below.

The Middle Ages witnessed the first sustained urbanisation of northern and western Europe. Modern European states owe their origins to events unfolding in the Middle Ages; European political boundaries as of 2007 are, in many regards, the result of the military and dynastic achievements in this tumultuous period.

Terminology

The Middle Ages are referred to as the "medieval period" or simply "medieval" (sometimes spelled "mediaeval" or, historically, "mediæval"). This spelling comes from the Latin medius (middle) and ævus (age).[1]

Some early historians have described non-European countries as "medieval" when those countries show characteristics of "feudal" organization. The pre-Westernisation period in the history of Japan, and the pre-colonial period in developed parts of sub-Saharan Africa, are also sometimes termed "mediaeval." Modern historians are far more reluctant to try to fit the history of other regions to the European model, however, and these terms have fallen out of favour.

Origins: The later Roman Empire

Main article: Roman Empire

The Roman empire reached its greatest territorial extent during the 2nd century. The following two centuries witnessed the slow decline of Roman control over its outlying territories. The Emperor Diocletian split the empire into separately administered eastern and western provinces in 285. Under his arrangement, the western Roman empire was governed from Ravenna by a lesser emperor, and the region was considered subordinate to the wealthier east. The division between east and west was encouraged by Constantine, who refounded the city of Byzantium as the new capital, Constantinople, in 330.

Military expenses increased steadily during the 4th century, even as Rome’s neighbours became restless and increasingly powerful. Tribes who previously had contact with the Romans as trading partners, rivals, or mercenaries had sought entrance to the empire and access to its wealth throughout the 4th century. Diocletian’s reforms had created a strong governmental bureaucracy, reformed taxation, and strengthened the army.[2] These changes bought the Empire time, but these reforms demanded money. Rome’s declining revenue left it dangerously dependent on tax revenue. Future setbacks forced Rome to pour ever more wealth into its armies, spreading the empire’s wealth thinly into its border regions. In periods of expansion, this would not be a critical problem. The defeat in 378 at the Battle of Adrianople, however, destroyed much of the Roman army, leaving the western empire undefended.[2] Without a strong army in the west, and with no promise of salvation coming from the emperor in Constantinople, the western Empire sought compromise.

Known in traditional historiography collectively as the “barbarian invasions”, the Migration Period, or the Volkerwanderung ("wandering of the peoples") specifically by German historians, this migration of peoples was a complicated and gradual process. Some early historians have given this period the epithet of "Dark Ages". [3] Recent research and archaeology have also revealed complex cultures persisting throughout the period. Some of these "barbarian" tribes rejected the classical culture of Rome, while others admired and aspired to it. Theodoric the Great of the Ostrogoths, as only one example, had been raised in Constantinople and considered himself an heir to its culture, employing erudite Roman ministers like Cassiodorus. Other prominent tribal groups that migrated into Roman territory were the Huns, Bulgars, Avars and Magyars, along with a large number of Germanic, and later Slavic peoples. Some tribes settled in the empire’s territory with the approval of the Roman senate or emperor. In return for land to farm and, in some regions, the right to collect tax revenues for the state, federated tribes provided military support to the empire. Other incursions were small-scale military invasions of tribal groups assembled to gather plunder. The most famous invasion culminated in the sack of Rome by the Visigoths in 410.

By the end of the 5th century, Roman institutions were crumbling. The final independent, ethnically Roman emperor in the west, Romulus Augustulus, was deposed by the barbarian king Odoacer in 476.[2] The Eastern Roman Empire (referred to as the "Byzantine Empire" after the fall of its western counterpart) maintained its order by abandoning the west to its fate. Even though Byzantine emperors maintained a claim over the territory, and no barbarian king dared to elevate himself to the position of emperor of the west, attempts to reassert Byzantine control over the west failed. For the next three centuries, the western empire would be without a legitimate emperor. It was, instead, ruled by kings who enjoyed the support of the largely barbarian armies. Some kings ruled as regents for titular emperors, and some ruled in their own name. Throughout the 5th century, cities throughout the empire declined, receding inside heavily fortified walls. The western empire, particularly, experienced the decay of infrastructure which was not adequately maintained by the central government. Where civic functions and infrastructure such as chariot races, aqueducts, and roads were maintained, the work was frequently done at the expense of city officials and bishops. Augustine of Hippo is an example of a bishop who acted as an able administrator. One scholar, Thomas Cahill, has dubbed Augustine the last of the classical men and the first of medieval men.

Early Middle Ages

Map of territorial boundaries ca. 450 C.E.
The Muslim conquests of the 7th and 8th centuries ██ Expansion under the Prophet Mohammad, 622-632 ██ Expansion during the Patriarchal Caliphate, 632-661 ██ Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661-750
Map of Europe in 998.


The end of the 8th century found the former western Roman empire an overwhelmingly rural and decentralized region that had lost its privileged position as the centre of a great power. Between the 5th and 8th centuries, new peoples and powerful individuals filled the political void left by Roman centralized government. Elite families from both Roman aristocracy and barbarian nobility established regional hegemonies within the former boundaries of the Empire, creating weak kingdoms like that of the Ostrogoths in Italy, the Visigoths in Spain and Portugal, the Franks and Burgundians in Gaul and western Germany, and Saxons in England. The social effects of the fracture of the Roman state were manifold. Cities and merchants lost the economic benefits of safe conditions for trade and manufacture, and intellectual development suffered from the loss of a unified cultural and educational milieu of far-ranging connections.

The breakdown of Roman society was often dramatic. As it became unsafe to travel or carry goods over any distance, there was a collapse in trade and manufacture for export. The major industries that depended on long-distance trade, such as large-scale pottery manufacture, vanished almost overnight in places like Britain.

The Muslim conquests of the 7th and 8th centuries, which conquered the Persian Empire, Roman Syria, Roman Egypt, Roman North Africa, Visigothic Spain and Portugal, and other parts of the Mediterranean, including Sicily and southern Italy, increased localisation by halting much of what remained of seaborne commerce. Thus, whereas sites like Tintagel in Cornwall had managed to obtain supplies of Mediterranean luxury goods well into the 6th century, this connection was now lost.

The patchwork of petty rulers was incapable of supporting the depth of civic infrastructure required to maintain libraries, public baths, arenas and major educational institutions. Any new building was on a far smaller scale than before. Roman landholders beyond the confines of city walls were also vulnerable to extreme changes, and they could not simply pack up their land and move elsewhere. Some were dispossessed and fled to Byzantine regions, others quickly pledged their allegiances to their new rulers. In areas like Spain and Italy, this often meant little more than acknowledging a new overlord, while Roman forms of law and religion could be maintained. In other areas where there was a greater weight of population movement, it might be necessary to adopt new modes of dress, language and custom.

The Catholic Church was the major unifying cultural influence, preserving its selection from Latin learning, maintaining the art of writing, and a centralised administration through its network of bishops. Some regions that had previously been Catholic were occupied by Arians, which raised debates over orthodoxy. Clovis I of the Franks is a well-known example of a barbarian king who chose Catholic orthodoxy over Arianism. His conversion marked a turning point for the Frankish tribes of Gaul. Bishops were central to Middle Age society due to the literacy they possessed. As a result, they often played a significant role in shaping good government. However beyond the core areas of Western Europe there remained many peoples with little or no contact with Christianity or with classical Roman culture. Martial societies such as the Avars and the Vikings were still capable of causing major disruption to the newly emerging societies of Western Europe.

The Early Middle Ages also witnessed the rise of monasticism within the west. Although the impulse to withdraw from society to focus upon a spiritual life is experienced by people of all cultures, the shape of European monasticism was determined by traditions and ideas that originated in the deserts of Egypt and Syria.[4] The style of monasticism that focuses on community experience of the spiritual life, called cenobitism, was pioneered by the saint Pachomius in the 4th Century. Monastic ideals spread from Egypt to western Europe in the 5th and 6th centuries through hagiographical literature such as the Life of Saint Anthony.[4] Saint Benedict wrote the definitive Rule for western monasticism during the 6th century, detailing the administrative and spiritual responsibilities of a community of monks led by an abbot.[4] Monks and monasteries had a deep effect upon the religious and political life of the Early Middle Ages, in various cases acting as land trusts for powerful families, centres of propaganda and royal support in newly conquered regions, bases for mission and proselytization, or outposts of education and literacy.

Romanesque architecture flourished in the early Middle Ages: Hildesheim.

Outside of Italy, building in stone was rarely attempted – until the 8th Century, when a new form of architecture called the Romanesque, based on Roman forms, gradually developed. Celtic and Germanic barbarian forms were absorbed into Christian art, although the central impulse remained Roman and Byzantine. High quality jewellery and religious imagery were produced throughout Western Europe, Charlemagne and other monarchs provided patronage for religious artworks and books. Some of the principal artworks of the age were the fabulous Illuminated manuscripts produced by monks on vellum, using gold, silver and precious pigments to illustrate biblical narratives. Early examples include the Book of Kells and many Carolingian and Ottonian Frankish manuscripts.

Carolingians

Main articles: Frankish Empire, Carolingian Empire, Government of the Carolingian Empire, and Carolingian Renaissance

A nucleus of power developed in a region of northern Gaul and developed into kingdoms called Austrasia and Neustria. These kingdoms were ruled for three centuries by a dynasty of kings called the Merovingians, after their mythical founder Merovech. The history of the Merovingian kingdoms is one of family politics that frequently erupted into civil warfare between the branches of the family. The legitimacy of the Merovingian throne was granted by a reverence for the bloodline, and even after powerful members of the Austrasian court took de facto power during the 7th century, the Merovingians were kept as ceremonial figureheads. The Merovingians engaged in trade with northern Europe through Baltic trade routes known to historians as the Northern Arc trade, and they are known to have minted small-denomination silver pennies called sceattae for circulation. Aspects of Merovingian culture could be described as "Romanized", such as the high value placed on Roman coinage as a symbol of rulership and the patronage of monasteries and bishoprics. Some have hypothesized that the Merovingians were in contact with Byzantium.[5] However, the Merovingians also buried the dead of their elite families in grave mounds and traced their lineage to a mythical sea beast called the Quinotaur.[5]

The 7th century was a tumultuous period of civil wars between Austrasia and Neustria. Such warfare was exploited by the patriarch of a family line, Pippin of Herstal, who curried favour with the Merovingians and had himself installed in the office of Mayor of the Palace at the service of the King. From this position of great influence, Pippin accrued wealth and supporters. Later members of his family line inherited the office, acting as advisors and regents. The dynasty took a new direction in 732, when Charles Martel won the Battle of Tours, halting the advance of Muslim armies across the Pyrenees. The Carolingian dynasty, as the successors to Charles Martel is known, officially took the reigns of the kingdoms of Austrasia and Neustria in a coup of 753 led by Pippin III. A contemporary chronicle claims that Pippin sought, and gained, authority for this coup from the Pope.[6] Pippin's successful coup was reinforced with propaganda that portrayed the Merovingians as inept or cruel rulers and exalted the accomplishments of Charles Martel and circulated stories of the family's great piety. At the time of his death in 783, Pippin left his kingdoms in the hands of his two sons, Charlemagne and Carloman. When Carloman died of natural causes, Charles blocked the succession of Carloman's minor son and installed himself as the king of the united Austrasia and Neustria. This Charles, known to his contemporaries as Charles the Great or Charlemagne, embarked in 774 upon a program of systematic expansion that would unify a large portion of Europe. In the wars that lasted just beyond 800, he rewarded loyal allies with war booty and command over parcels of land. Much of the nobility of the High Middle Ages was to claim its roots in the Carolingian nobility that was generated during this period of expansion.[6]

The Imperial Coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas day of 800 is frequently regarded as a turning-point in mediaeval history, because it filled a power vacancy that had existed since 476. It also marks a change in Charlemagne's leadership, which assumed a more imperial character and tackled difficult aspects of controlling a mediaeval empire. He established a system of diplomats who possessed imperial authority, the missi, who in theory provided access to imperial justice in the farthest corners of the empire.[7] He also sought to reform the Church in his domains, pushing for uniformity in liturgy and material culture.

Carolingian Renaissance

Charlemagne's court in Aachen was the centre of a cultural revival that is sometimes referred to as the "Carolingian Renaissance". This period witnessed an increase of literacy, developments in the arts, architecture, jurisprudence, as well as liturgical and scriptural studies. The English monk Alcuin was invited to Aachen, and brought with him the precise classical Latin education that was available in the monasteries of Northumbria. The return of this Latin proficiency to the kingdom of the Franks is regarded as an important step in the development of mediaeval Latin. Charlemagne's chancery made use of a type of script currently known as Carolingian minuscule, providing a common writing style that allowed for communication across most of Europe. After the decline of the Carolingian dynasty, the rise of the Saxon Dynasty in Germany was accompanied by the Ottonian Renaissance.

See also the careers of Charlemagne, Louis the Pious, and Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.

Breakup of the Carolingian empire

While Charlemagne continued the Frankish tradition of dividing the regnum (kingdom) between all his heirs (at least those of age), the assumption of the imperium (imperial title) supplied a unifying force not available previously. Charlemagne was succeeded by his only legitimate son of adult age at his death, Louis the Pious.

Louis's long reign of 26 years was marked by numerous divisions of the empire among his sons and, after 829, numerous civil wars between various alliances of father and sons against other sons in an effort to determine a just division by battle. The final division was made at Crémieux in 838. The Emperor Louis recognised his eldest son Lothair I as emperor and confirmed him in the Regnum Italicum (Italy). He divided the rest of the empire between Lothair and Charles the Bald, his youngest son, giving Lothair the opportunity to choose his half. He chose East Francia, which comprised the empire on both banks of the Rhine and eastwards, leaving Charles West Francia, which comprised the empire to the west of the Rhineland and the Alps. Louis the German, the middle child, who had been rebellious to the last, was allowed to keep his subregnum of Bavaria under the suzerainty of his elder brother. The division was not undisputed. Pepin II of Aquitaine, the emperor's grandson, rebelled in a contest for Aquitaine while Louis the German tried to annex all of East Francia. In two final campaigns, the emperor defeated both his rebellious descendants and vindicated the division of Crémieux before dying in 840.

A three-year civil war followed his death. At the end of the conflict, Louis the German was in control of East Francia and Lothair was confined to Italy. By the Treaty of Verdun (843), a kingdom of Middle Francia was created for Lothair in the Low Countries and Burgundy and his imperial title was recognised. East Francia would eventually morph into the Kingdom of Germany and West Francia into the Kingdom of France, around both of which the history of Western Europe can largely be described as a contest for control of the middle kingdom. Charlemagne's grandsons and great-grandsons divided their kingdoms between their sons until all of the various regna and the imperial title fell into the hands of Charles the Fat by 884. He was deposed in 887 and died in 888, to be replaced in all his kingdoms but two (Lotharingia and East Francia) by non-Carolingian "petty kings." The Carolingian Empire was destroyed, though the imperial tradition would eventually give rise to the Holy Roman Empire in 962.

The breakup of the Carolingian Empire was accompanied by the invasions, migrations, and raids of external foes as not seen since the Migration Period. The Atlantic and northern shores were harassed by the Vikings, who forced Charles the Bald to issue the Edict of Pistres against them and who besieged Paris in 885–886. The eastern frontiers, especially Italy, were under constant Magyar assault until their great defeat at the Battle of the Lechfeld in 955. The Saracens also managed to establish bases at Garigliano and Fraxinetum and to conquer the islands of Corsica, Sardinia, and Sicily, and their pirates raided the Mediterranean coasts, as did the Vikings. The Christianisation of the pagan Vikings provided an end to that threat.

High Middle Ages

The High Middle Ages were characterized by the urbanization of Europe, military expansion, and intellectual revival that historians identify between the 11th century and the end of the 13th. This revival was aided by the cessation of invasions by Scandinavians and Hungarians, as well as the assertion of power by castellans to fill the power vacuum left by the Carolingian decline. The High Middle Ages saw an explosion in population. This population flowed into towns, sought conquests abroad, or cleared land for cultivation. The cities of antiquity had been clustered around the Mediterranean. By 1200 the growing urban centres were in the centre of the continent, connected by roads or rivers. By the end of this period Paris might have had as many as 200,000 inhabitants.[8] In central and northern Italy and in Flanders the rise of towns that were self-governing to some degree within their territories stimulated the economy and created an environment for new types of religious and trade associations. Trading cities on the shores of the Baltic entered into agreements known as the Hanseatic League, and Italian city-states such as Venice, Genoa, and Pisa expanded their trade throughout the Mediterranean. This period marks a formative one in the history of the western state as we know it, for kings in France, England, and Spain consolidated their power during this time period, setting up lasting institutions to help them govern. The Papacy, which had long since created an ideology of independence from the secular kings, first asserted its claims to temporal authority over the entire Christian world. The entity that historians call the Papal Monarchy reached its apogee in the early 13th century under the pontificate of Innocent III. Northern Crusades and the advance of Christian kingdoms and military orders into previously pagan regions in the Baltic and Finnic northeast brought the forced assimilation of numerous native peoples to the European entity. With the brief exception of the Mongol invasions, major barbarian incursions ceased.

Crusades

Main article: Crusade

The Crusades were, in some aspects, Europe's defense against Islamic expansion and aggression. These were armed pilgrimages intended to liberate Jerusalem from Muslim control. Jerusalem was part of the Muslim possessions won during a rapid military expansion in the 7th century through the Near East, Northern Africa, and Anatolia (in modern Turkey). The first Crusade was preached by Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont in 1095 in response to a request from the Byzantine emperor Alexios I Komnenos for aid against further advancement. Urban promised indulgence to any Christian who took the Crusader vow and set off for Jerusalem. The resulting fervour that swept through Europe mobilized tens of thousands of people from all levels of society, and resulted in the capture of Jerusalem in 1099 as well as other regions. The movement found its primary support in the Franks; it is by no coincidence that the Arabs referred to Crusaders generically as "Franj".[9] Although they were minorities within this region, the Crusaders tried to consolidate their conquests, as a number of Crusader states – the Kingdom of Jerusalem, as well as the County of Edessa, the Principality of Antioch, and the County of Tripoli (collectively Outremer). During the 12th century and 13th century there were a series of conflicts between these states and surrounding Islamic ones. Crusades were essentially resupply missions for these embattled kingdoms. Military orders such as the Knights Templar and the Knights Hospitaller were formed to play an integral role in this support.

By the end of the Middle Ages the Christian Crusaders had captured all the Islamic territories in modern Spain, Portugal and Southern Italy. Meanwhile, Islamic counter attacks had retaken all the Crusader possessions on the Asian mainland, leaving a de facto boundary between Islam and western Christianity that continued until modern times.

Substantial areas of northern Europe also remained outside Christian influence until the 12th century or later; these areas also became crusading venues during the expansionist High Middle Ages. Throughout this period the Byzantine Empire was in decline, having peaked in influence during the High Middle Ages. Beginning with the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, the empire underwent a cycle of decline and renewal, including the sacking of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade in 1204. Despite another short upswing following the recapture of Constantinople in 1261, the empire continued to deteriorate.

Science and technology

See Islamic Golden Age, Islamic science and Muslim inventions for science and technology in al-Andalus.

During the early Middle Ages and the Islamic Golden Age, Islamic philosophy, science, and technology were more advanced than in Western Europe. Islamic scholars both preserved and built upon earlier traditions and also added their own inventions and innovations. Islamic al-Andalus passed much of this on to Europe. The replacement of Roman numerals with the decimal positional number system and the invention of algebra allowed more advanced mathematics. Another consequence was that the Latin-speaking world regained access to lost classical literature and philosophy. Latin translations of the 12th century fed a passion for Aristotelian philosophy and Islamic science that is frequently referred to as the Renaissance of the 12th century. Meanwhile, trade grew throughout Europe as the dangers of travel were reduced, and steady economic growth resumed. Cathedral schools and monasteries ceased to be the sole sources of education in the 11th century when universities were established in major European cities. Literacy became available to a wider class of people, and there were major advances in art, sculpture, music and architecture. Large cathedrals were built across Europe, first in the Romanesque, and later in the more decorative Gothic style.

During the 12th and 13th century in Europe there was a radical change in the rate of new inventions, innovations in the ways of managing traditional means of production, and economic growth. The period saw major technological advances, including the invention of cannon, spectacles, and artesian wells; and the cross-cultural introduction of gunpowder, silk, the compass, and the astrolabe from the east. There were also great improvements to ships and the clock. The latter advances made possible the dawn of the Age of Exploration. At the same time huge numbers of Greek and Arabic works on medicine and the sciences were translated and distributed throughout Europe. Aristotle especially became very important, his rational and logical approach to knowledge influencing the scholars at the newly forming universities which were absorbing and disseminating the new knowledge during the 12th Century Renaissance.

Religious and social change

Monastic reform became an important issue during the 11th century, when elites began to worry that monks were not adhering to their Rules with the discipline that was required for a good religious life. During this time, it was believed that monks were performing a very practical task by sending their prayers to God and inducing him to make the world a better place for the virtuous. The time invested in this activity would be wasted, however, if the monks were not virtuous. The monastery of Cluny, founded in the Mâcon in 909, was founded as part of a larger movement of monastic reform in response to this fear.[10] It was a reformed monastery that quickly established a reputation for austerity and rigour. Cluny sought to maintain the high quality of spiritual life by electing its own abbot from within the cloister, and maintained an economic and political independence from local lords by placing itself under the protection of the Pope.[8] Cluny provided a popular solution to the problem of bad monastic codes, and in the 11th century its abbots were frequently called to participate in imperial politics as well as reform monasteries in France and Italy.

Monastic reform inspired change in the secular church, as well. The ideals that it was based upon were brought to the papacy by Pope Leo IX on his election in 1049, providing the ideology of clerical independence that fuelled the Investiture Controversy in the late 11th century. The Investiture Controversy involved Pope Gregory VII and Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, who initially clashed over a specific bishop's appointment and turned into a battle over the ideas of investiture, clerical marriage, and simony. The Emperor, as a Christian ruler, saw the protection of the Church as one of his great rights and responsibilities. The Papacy, however, had begun insisting on its independence from secular lords. The open warfare ended with Henry IV's occupation of Rome in 1085, and the death of the Pope several months later, but the issues themselves remained unresolved even after the compromise of 1122 known as the Concordat of Worms. The conflict represents a significant stage in the creation of a papal monarchy separate from lay authorities. It also had the permanent consequence of empowering German princes at the expense of the German emperors.[8]

The High Middle Ages was a period of great religious movements. The Crusades, which have already been mentioned, have an undeniable religious aspect. Monastic reform was similarly a religious movement effected by monks and elites. Other groups sought to participate in new forms of religious life. Landed elites financed the construction of new parish churches in the European countryside, which increased the Church's impact upon the daily lives of peasants. Cathedral canons adopted monastic rules, groups of peasants and laypeople abandoned their possessions to live like the Apostles, and people formulated ideas about their religion that were deemed heretical. Although the success of the 12th century papacy in fashioning a Church that progressively affected the daily lives of everyday people cannot be denied, there are still indicators that the tail could wag the dog. The new religious groups called the Waldensians and the Humiliati were condemned for their refusal to accept a life of cloistered monasticism. In many aspects, however, they were not very different from the Franciscans and the Dominicans, who were approved by the papacy in the early 13th century. The picture that modern historians of the religious life present is one of great religious zeal welling up from the peasantry during the High Middle Ages, with clerical elites striving, only sometimes successfully, to understand and channel this power into familiar paths.

Late Middle Ages

A priest blesses victims of the Black Death.

The Late Middle Ages was a period initiated by calamities and upheavals. During this time, agriculture was affected by a climate change that has been documented by climate historians, and was felt by contemporaries in the form of periodic famines, including the Great Famine of 1315-1317. The Black Death, a bacterial disease that spread among the malnourished populace like wildfire, killed as much as a third of the population in the mid-14th century, in some regions the toll was as high as one half of the population. Towns were especially hard-hit because of the crowded conditions. Large areas of land were left sparsely inhabited, and in some places fields were left unworked. As a consequence of the sudden decline in available labourers, the price of wages rose as landlords sought to entice workers to their fields. Workers also felt that they had a right to greater earnings, and popular uprisings broke out across Europe. This period of stress, paradoxically, witnessed creative social, economic, and technological responses that laid the groundwork for further great changes in the Early Modern Period. It was also a period when the Catholic Church was increasingly divided against itself. During the time of the Western Schism, the Church was led by as many as three popes at one time. The divisiveness of the Church undermined papal authority, and allowed the formation of national churches. The Fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453 had a great effect upon the European economy and intellectual life.

State resurgence

The Late Middle Ages also witnessed the rise of strong, royalty-based nation-states, particularly England, France, and the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula. The long conflicts of this time, such as the Hundred Years' War fought between England and France, actually strengthened royal control over the kingdoms, even though they were extremely hard on the peasantry. Kings profited from warfare by gaining land. France shows clear signs of a growth in royal power during the 14th century, from the active persecution of heretics and lepers, expulsion of the Jews, and the dissolution of the Knights Templar. In all of these cases, undertaken by Philip IV, the king confiscated land and wealth from these minority groups.[8] The conflict between Philip and Boniface VIII, a conflict which began over Philip's unauthorized taxation of clergy, ended with the violent death of Boniface and the installation of Clement V, a weak, French-controlled pope, in Avignon. This action enhanced French prestige, at the expense of the papacy. England, too, began the 14th century with warfare and expansion. Edward I waged war against Wales and Scotland, with mixed success, to assert what he considered his right to the entire island of Britain. Both of these kings presided over effective states administered by literate bureaucrats and sought baronial consent for their decisions through early versions of parliamentary systems, called the Estates General in France and the Parlement in England. Towns and merchants allied with kings during the 15th century, allowing the kings to distance themselves further from the territorial lords. As a result of the power gained during the 14th and 15th centuries, late mediaeval kings built truly sovereign states, which were able to impose taxes, declare war, and create and enforce laws, all by the will of the king.[11] Kings encouraged cohesion in their administration by appointing ministers with broad ambitions and a loyalty to the state.[11] By the last half of the 15th century, kings like Henry VII and Louis XI were able to rule without much baronial interference.

Hundred Years' War

Main article: Hundred Years' War

The Hundred Years' War was a conflict between France and England, lasting 116 years from 1337 to 1453. It was fought primarily over claims by the English kings to the French throne and was punctuated by several brief and two lengthy periods of peace before it finally ended in the expulsion of the English from France, with the exception of the Calais Pale. Thus, the war was in fact a series of conflicts and is commonly divided into three or four phases: the Edwardian War (1337-1360), the Caroline War (1369-1389), the Lancastrian War (1415-1429), and the slow decline of English fortunes after the appearance of Joan of Arc, (1429-1453). Though primarily a dynastic conflict, the war gave impetus to ideas of both French and English nationality. Militarily, it saw the introduction of new weapons and tactics, which eroded the older system of feudal armies dominated by heavy cavalry. The first standing armies in Western Europe since the time of the Western Roman Empire were introduced for the war, thus changing the role of the peasantry. For all this, as well as for its long duration, it is often viewed as one of the most significant conflicts in the history of mediaeval warfare.

Controversy within the Church

The troubled 14th century saw both the Avignon Papacy of 1305–1378, also called the Babylonian Captivity, and the so-called Western Schism that lasted from 1378–1418. The practice of granting papal indulgences, fairly commonplace since the 11th century, was reformulated and explicitly monetized in the 14th century.[8] Indulgences came to be an important source of revenue for the Church, revenue that filtered through parish churches to bishoprics and then to the pope himself. This was viewed by many as a corruption of the Church. In the early years of the 15th century, after a century of turmoil, ecclesiastical officials convened in Constance in 1417 to discuss a resolution to the Schism.[8] Traditionally, councils needed to be called by the Pope, and none of the contenders were willing to call a council and risk being unseated. The act of convening a council without papal approval was justified by the argument that the Church was represented by the whole population of the faithful. The council deposed the warring popes and elected Martin V. The turmoil of the Church, and the perception that it was a corrupted institution, sapped the legitimacy of the papacy within Europe and fostered greater loyalty to regional or national churches. Martin Luther published objections to the Church. Although his disenchantment had long been forming, the denunciation of the Church was precipitated by the arrival of preachers raising money to rebuild the Basilica of Saint Peter in Rome. Luther might have been silenced by the Church, but the death of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I brought the imperial succession to the forefront of concern. Lutherans' split with the Church in 1517, and the subsequent division of Catholicism into Lutheranism, Calvinism, and Anabaptism put a definitive end to the unified Church built during the Middle Ages.

Historiography

Middle Ages in history

After the Middle Ages ended subsequent generations imagined, portrayed and interpreted the Middle Ages in different ways. Every century has created its own vision of the Middle Ages; the 18th century view of the Middle Ages was entirely different from the 19th century which was different from the 16th century view. The reality of these images remains with us today in the form of film, architecture, literature, art and popular conception.

Medieval and Middle Ages

"Middle Age"

The term "Middle Age" ("medium ævum") was first coined by Flavio Biondo, an Italian humanist, in the early 15th Century. Until the Renaissance (and some time after) the standard scheme of history was to divide history into six ages, inspired by the biblical six days of creation, or four monarchies based on Daniel 2:40. The early Renaissance historians, in their glorification of all things classical, declared two periods in history, that of Ancient times and that of the period referred to as the "Dark Age". In the early 15th Century it was believed history had evolved from the Dark Age to a Modern period with its revival of things classical so scholars began to write about a middle period between the Ancient and Modern, which became known as the Middle Age. This is known as the three period view of history.

The plural form of the term, Middle Ages, is used in English, Dutch, Russian, Bulgarian and Icelandic while other European languages use the singular form (Italian medioevo, French le moyen âge, German das Mittelalter). This difference originates in different Neo-Latin terms used for the Middle Ages before media aetas became the standard term. Some were singular (media aetas, media antiquitas, medium saeculum and media tempestas), others plural (media saecula and media tempora). There seem to be no simple reason why a particular language ended up with the singular or the plural form.[12] The term "mediaeval" (American: medieval) was first contracted from the Latin medium ævum, or more precisely "middle epoch", by Enlightenment thinkers as a pejorative descriptor of the Middle Ages.

The common subdivision into Early, High and Late Middle Ages came into use after World War I. It was caused by the works of Henri Pirenne (in particular the article "Les periodes de l'historie du capitalism" in Academie Royale de Belgique. Bulletin de la Classe des Lettres, 1914) and Johan Huizinga (The Autumn of the Middle Ages, 1919).

Dorothy Sayers, a noted scholar in medieval literature as well as a famous writer of detective books, strongly objected to the term. In the foreword to her translation of The Song of Roland, she writes "That new-washed world of clear sun and glittering colour, which we call the Middle Age (as though it were middle-aged), has perhaps a better right than the blown summer of the Renaissance to be called the Age of Re-Birth."

Periodisation issues

It is difficult to decide when the Middle Ages ended; in fact, scholars assign different dates in different parts of Europe. Most scholars who work in 15th century Italian history, for instance, consider themselves Renaissance, while anyone working elsewhere in Europe during the early 15th century is considered a mediaevalist. Others choose specific events, such as the Turkish capture of Constantinople or the end of the Anglo-French Hundred Years' War (both 1453), the invention of printing by Johann Gutenberg (around 1455), the fall of Muslim Spain or Christopher Columbus's voyage to America (both 1492), the Protestant Reformation starting 1517, or the Battle of Lepanto (1571) to mark the period's end. In England the change of monarchs which occurred on 22 August 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth is often considered to mark the end of the period, Richard III representing the old mediaeval world and the Tudors, a new royal house and a new historical period.[13]

Similar differences are now emerging in connection with the start of the period. Traditionally, the Middle Ages is said to have begun when the West Roman Empire formally ceased to exist in 476. However, that date is not important in itself, since the West Roman Empire had been very weak for some time, while Roman culture was to survive at least in Italy for yet a few decades or more. Today, some date the beginning of the Middle Ages to the division and Christianisation of the Roman Empire (4th century); others, like Henri Pirenne, see the period to the rise of Islam (7th century) as "late Classical". Another argument for a late beginning to the Middle Ages was presented by Peter Brown. Brown championed the idea of Late Antiquity, a period that was culturally distinct from both the preceding Empire and from the rest of the Middle Ages. Brown’s argument rests less on the economic changes within the Mediterranean than on social and religious change within the Empire between 300 and 750. To Brown, the slow collapse of the Empire allowed a period of great creativity and expressiveness in which Christianity flourished and became institutionalized.

The Middle Ages in Western Europe are often subdivided into three intervals. This includes an early period (sometimes called the "Dark Ages", at least from the fifth to eighth centuries) of shifting polities, a relatively low level of economic activity and successful incursions by non-Christian peoples (Slavs, Arabs, Scandinavians, Magyars). The middle period (the High Middle Ages) follows, a time of developed institutions of lordship and vassalage, castle-building and mounted warfare, and reviving urban and commercial life. The last span is a later period of growing royal power, the rise of commercial interests, and weakening customary ties of dependence, especially after the 14th-century plague.

Religion

Portal Middle Ages Portal

See also

  • List of basic medieval history topics
  • Medieval art
  • Medieval architecture
  • Medieval climate optimum
  • Medieval communes
  • Medieval chronological timeline
  • Medieval cuisine
  • Medieval demography
  • List of famines
  • Middle Ages in film

  • Medieval gardening
  • Medieval guilds
  • Horses in the Middle Ages
  • Medieval hunting
  • Islamic Golden Age
  • History of the Jews in the Middle Ages
  • Medieval literature
  • Medieval medicine

  • Medieval music
  • Neo-medievalism
  • Medieval poetry
  • Medieval science
  • Medieval ships
  • Medieval theatre
  • Medieval tournament
  • Slave trade in the Middle Ages
  • Tatar invasions

Notes

  1. Definition from Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2007-10-09.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Treadgold, Warren (1997). A History of the Byzantine State and Society, first edition, Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804726302. 
  3. When the term Dark Ages is used by historians today, it is intended to be neutral, namely to express the idea that the events of the period often seem "dark" to us only because of the paucity of historical records compared with later times. William Chester Jordon. Dictionary of the Middle Ages, Supplement 1, 2004. Kathleen Verdun, "Medievalism" pp. 389-397. Sections 'Victorian Medievalism', 'Nineteenth-Century Europe', 'Medievalism in America 1500-1900', 'The 20th Century'. Same volume, Paul Freedman, "Medieval Studies", pp. 383-389.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lawrence, C.H. Medieval Monasticism: Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages, third edition, Longman. ISBN 0582404274. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Wood, Ian (1995). The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. Pearson Education. ISBN 0582493722. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Riché, Pierre (1993). The Carolingians: A Family Who Forged Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812213424. 
  7. Although the missus dominicus makes appearances during the second half of the 8th century, it is after 800 that they were institutionalized. Riché, Pierre (1993). The Carolingians: A Family Who Forged Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812213424. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Rosenwein, Barbara H (2001). A Short History of the Middle Ages. Broadview Press. ISBN 1551112906. 
  9. Maalouf, Amin (1989). Crusades Through Arab Eyes. Schocken. ISBN 0805208984. 
  10. Rosenwein, Barbara H (1982). Rhinoceros Bound: Cluny in the Tenth Century. University of Pennsylvania Press, 40-41. ISBN 0812278305. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Kagan, Donald and Ozment, Steven, Turner, Frank M. (1993). The Western Heritage: Since 1300, eighth edition, Prentice Hall. ISBN 0131828835. 
  12. Robinson, F.C. (October 1984). Medieval, the Middle Ages. Speculum 59 (4): p. 745-56.
  13. Prudames, David. Lottery cash kicks off search for the real Bosworth battlefield, 24 Hour Museum 20 January 2005.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Dictionary of the Middle Ages (1989) Joseph R. Strayer, editor in chief, ISBN 0-684-19073-7

External links

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