HI 101 Test 4 Lecture Notes (PCC)
falconry
A Medieval sport of hunting with falcons
jousting
Armed combat between knights who fought each other on horseback with a lance; kept the knights ready to fight
1212
Children's Crusade
Children's Crusade
Crusade in which 30,000 9-12-year-olds were enslaved
1096
First Crusade
Gutenburg
Invented the printing press
1099
Siege of Jerusalem
barons, dukes
The king gives the land he supposedly own to his highest ranking vassels, who are the ______________ or ____________
renaissance
rebirth of learning
squire
this was the second stage of knight training; a boy would be about 15, and would get his own spear, shield and horse; he still served under a knight
William the Conqueror
won the Battle of Hastings in AD 1066
Machiavelli
wrote "The Prince": The end justifies the means
Petrarch
wrote Humanities and Letter's to Ancient Authors
Chaucer
wrote the Canterbury Tales
knight
the third and final stage of knight training; at around age 21, after going through lengthy and religious and superstitious ceremony, a squire would finally become one of these
Knights Hospitalers, Knights Templars
the two classes of knights that rose out of the crusades
silk
this fabric came to Europe after Justinian monks were sent to the orient to smuggle out the secrets of making it
Medici Family
this family essentially owned Florence Italy
Medici Family
this powerful banking family started paper currency or checks
Frederick Barbarossa, Phillip Augustus, Richard I
three kings of the King's Crusade
burgs
tradesmen towns
page
training to become a knight started a this stage; a boy start around 7 years old, and would watch and pay close attention to learn from example from the knights
John Wycliffe
translated entire Bible into English for the first time
castles
usually dark and dank, used as fortresses of protection during the Middle Ages; the elaborate ones we think of now were not prevalent until the end of the period
Oath of Fealty
vassel pledges loyalty to their lord; it carries on so that his children are loyal to the lords children and so on
one third to one half
what fraction of Europes population died of Bubonic plague?
Salerno
where was the first university?
knights
Barons or dukes give some of the land from the king to their ______________, who oversee the commoners and make sure the work gets done
chivalry
Code of conduct for knights during the Middle Ages; emphasized careful and kind treatment of women
Dante
Divine Comedy
stagnant
During the Middle Ages, the economy was ______________
agricultural setting
During the medieval ages, it was very much an ________________ _____________; people are tied to the land that they work (there is little industry or trade)
decentralized
Feudalism had a _______________ power base
1202
Fourth Crusade
1440
Gutenberg invents movable-type printing press
Plantagenet
Henry II established this line of kings in England
25,000,000
How many people died of Bubonic Plague (the Black Death)?
1215
King John signs the Magna Carta
Third Crusade
Kings Crusade
Edessa
Louis VII of France and Conrad III of Germany tried to reclaim this city during the second crusade
the Crusades
One of the main factors the led to the end of feudalism
indulgence
Pope declared this for people who fought in the second crusade; basically salvation
Peace of God
Ruling passed by the Pope that threatened excommunication to people who robbed o didn't follow the church
Rapheal
School of Athens
page, squire, knight
The three stages of knighthood training
1189
Third Crusade
Feudalism weakened, trade increased, church weakened
Three main results of the crusades
the middle class
What was the most influential class that rose during the Middle Ages?
Medici family
What was the powerful banking and political family from 1300-1700 in Europe
the king
Who owns all the land (in theory) under the feudal system?
John Wycliffe
Who was the "Morning Star of the Reformation?"
Act of Investiture
a physical remembrance of the Oath of fealty; an item given from the lord to the vessel that could be used in court to prove the promise
Truce of God
a ruling by the Pope that forbid fighting first from Friday to Sunday, but later it was extended to Wednesday to Monday
fief
a small piece of land exchanged from a lord to a vessel in exchange for services
Feudalism
a way of life based upon the ownership and use of land
quadrivium
arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music
35
average lifespan in the Middle Ages
Stonehenge
built by ancient Celts; most likely a time-keeping device of sorts
heraldry
certain colorful and unique symbols, emblems, and designs displayed on armor, shields, and banners; a family's coat of arms
bailiff
collected taxes; was the supervisor of the peasants
Celts
earliest inhabitants of the British Isles
Scholasticism
educational philosophy that combined Roman Catholic teachings with Aristotle's
Alfred the great
first great king of England; compiled Anglo-Saxon chronicles
trivium
grammar, logic, rhetoric
Peasants Crusade
happed before the first crusade; thousands of commoners tried to reclaim Jerusalem, all died
Knights Hospitalers
healer knights
minstrals
keepers of stories and legends when there was little writing available
Knights Templars
knights who protected holy sites; were disbanded by King Phillip
guilds
like a trade union; tradesmen worked together to keep prices and other things fair
steward
looked over peasants day to day
Lord-Vassel relationship
lord relies on vassel for service on land he owns; vassel then works land
tournaments
mock battles with no horses; just knights against knights
Beowulf
oldest piece of English literature
Saracens
other name for the Seljuk Turks
Giotto
painted The Last Judgement; first to try to make things look realistic (realism)
Leonardo Da Vinci
painted the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper; most famous figure of the Italian renaissance
Patronage
payment for artwork so artist's didn't have to find other work
Angles, Saxons, Jutes
people groups that invaded and took over England from the Celts in the 5th century
burghers
people who lived in tradesmen towns
leather to chainmail to metal plates
progression of different kinds of armor throughout the middle ages
lollards
poor preachers who followed in Wycliffe's footsteps and preached in people's own languages
Pope Urban II
pope who called for the first crusade to reclaim Jerusalem from the Muslims
Hanseatic League
powerful guild (85 cities part of it); powerful enough to hire armies
William of Ockham
"Ockham's razor; "it is pointless to do with more what can be done with little"
three motivations for the peasants crusade
religious enthusiasm, spirit of adventure, hope that people could carve out new estates in the east
Thomas Aquinas
said sacraments are necessary for salvation; believed that mind was the ideal realm and not affected by sin
Michelangelo
sculpted David; took 3 years to paint Sistine Chapel
gothic
the Notre Dame cathedral exemplifies this architectural style
Fourth Crusade
the crusade in which Constantinople was raided; the men went home without even trying to take back Jerusalem
church
the establishment during the Middle Ages that enforced ignorance and the philosophy that people didn't need to know for themselves, they just needed to listen
Edessa, Antioch, Tripoli, Jerusalem
the first crusade set these 4 cities in the east as centers for christianity
Forfeiture
the oath of fealty is broken, anyone who broke their oath was looked down upon
The First Crusade
the only crusade to accomplish it's missions