Unit 4 history

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5 religions

1.Christianity 2.Hinduism (last polytheism) 3. Buddhism 4. Judaism 5.Islam 1,3-5; monotheism

King John signs the Magna Carta

1215

What is the Canterbury Tales about?

A group of pilgrims telling stories as they travel written by Geoffrey Chaucer

Neo-Confucianism was

Accepted by the state government from the Song Dynasty and throughout the dynastic system

Three European emperor who led the third crusade

King Philip Augustus of France, King Richard I of England, and Frederick Barbarossa

King of France; organized the Seventh Crusade

Louis IX

recognized between Kings and vassals as well as the limited powers of the monarch

Manga Carta

Agricultural estate that a lord ran and peasants worked

manor

Crusades

military expeditions carried out by European Christians in the Middle Ages to regain the Holy Land from the Muslims

Khanate

one of several separate territories into which Genghis Khan's empire was split, each under the rule of one of his sons

Sacrament

a Christian rite

Porcelain

a ceramic made of fine clay baked at very high temperatures

Interdict

a decree by the pope that forbade priests from giving the sacraments of the Church to the people

Neo-Confucianism

a revised form of Confucianism that evolved as a response to Buddhism and held sway in China from the late Tang dynasty to the end of the dynastic system in the twentieth century

chanson de geste

a type of vernacular literature, this heroic epic was popular in medieval Europe and described battles and political contests

Common law

a uniform system of law that developed in England based on court decisions and on customs and usage rather than on written law codes; replaced law codes that varied from place to place

Taille

an annual direct tax, usually on land or property, that provided a regular source of income for the French monarchy

Chivalry

Code of ethics guiding nobility

Cultural advances in China reached their height beginning with

The Tang Dynasty

Scholasticism

A medieval philosophical and theological system that tried to reconcile faith and reason

Knights

Armed cavalry

the middle class, including merchants, industrialists, and professional people

Bourgeoisie

a heavy, wheeled plow with an iron plowshare

Carruca

Code of Chivalry

Chivalry, or the chivalric code, is an informal, varying code of conduct developed between 1170 and 1220, never decided on or summarized in a single document, associated with the medieval institution of knighthood; knights' and gentlewomen's behaviours were governed by chivalrous social codes

Three factors of

Economic, religion, politic

Vikings

Germanic people from Scandinavia

How were Italy and Germany unlike England and France during the Middle Ages?

Germany and Italy consisted of small independent states, but England and France were ruled by a monarch.

What did Pope Urban II promise to any Christians willing to take up weapons

Immediate remission of sims

What two problems did Western Europe faced after the death of Charlemagne

Invasions from northern people and internal division

What religion did the Seljuk Turks follow

Islam

Another word for infidel

Nonbeliever

Viking who founded of present-day Kyjv

Oleg

Saxon king gained a title not used since the time of Charlemagne

Otto I

What started the Crusades?

Pope Urban II made a speech issuing a call for Christians to gain control of the Holy Land

Hanseatic League was instrumental in

Protecting trade and promoting the economy in Northern Europe

Difference between Romanesque and Gothic art

Romanesque: barrel balls,long stone walls, columns Gothic: flying buttresses, rib valets, pointed arch's

Where did the Mongols increase their empire and trade

Silk Road

During which dynasty was printing invented?

Tang Dynasty

Which dynasty is viewed as the great age of Chinese poetry

Tang Dynasty

Why did Constantinople become instaniople

The Muslims took over it to prove a point

The Croats were considered outsiders among the southern Slavs because

They converted to Roman Catholicism

How did foreign trade affect the dynasty

They traded culture, religion,music,poetry,language,art,governments styles

an expectation of knights under the chivalric code

To treat prisoners with respect and dignity

What word is derived from the Latin word for "corporation"

University

Serves both lords and kings

Vassals

Relic

bones or other objects connected with saints; considered to be worthy of worship by the faithful

Merchants and artisans living in walled cities came to be called

burghers or bourgeoisie, from the German word burg, meaning "a walled enclosure."

Anti-Semitism

hostility toward or discrimination against Jews

New Monarchies

in the 15th century, government in which power had been centralized under a king or queen, i.e., France, England, and Spain

Parliament

in thirteenth-century England, the representative government that emerged; it was composed of two knights from every county, two people from every town, and all the nobles and bishops throughout England

Patricans

powerful landowners who were wealthy

Feudalism

relationship between lords and vassals

lord-vassal relationship

required military service

Explain the mutual obligations of each feudal class

serf/peasants: Since most people in the Middle Ages were peasants, peasants formed the majority of the feudal system. Though they didn't have a relationship like vassals and lords, they were necessary in the entire feudal structure by helping work out the land. Their labor freed lords and knights to spend their time preparing of war or fighting. They also were not allowed to marry without the permission of their lords. There were two kinds of peasants: free and unfree. Free peasants rented land to farm and owed only their rent to the lord. Unfree peasants, also called serfs, farmed the lords' fields and weren't allowed to leave the lords' manor. However, in return for their labor, they received their own small land to farm and place to live. Knight/Vassals:Knights were usually vassals of more powerful lords. A vassal was the second-in-command to their feudal lord. They had to live their life following a stringent code of behavior called a chivalry. This idea of chivalry showed what actions the knights were expected to follow, especially to the benefits of the lord. Some of these promises included being loyal to the Church and lord, be just and right, and to protect the helpless. Chivalry also included showing helpful and kind acts to women. Lords/Vassals:Lords, also called the Lord of the Manor, were members of the nobility, known as the highest class in the medieval society. It was the lord's job to manage and defend his land and the people who worked it. The lord appointed officials to make sure villagers and peasants carried out their duties, such as farming his land and paying rent in the form of crops and other foods. Some lords held posts in the king's government and assisted the king in acting as the advisory. In return of the land the lords got from their king, they were given certain responsibilities and roles in order for the feudal system to work out: They had to serve the royal council. They had to provide the King with knights to defeat any kind of war. They had to provide food and other necessities to the king. They had to pay taxes and fees to the king if he needed them. King: Medieval monarchs filled out the role at the top of the feudal system. The king/queen had total power over all the assets and determined how much land he would provide his lords and vassals. The monarchs were expected to help support the vassals below and provide protection/order for them. To fulfill this expectation, monarchs provided money to his lords in exchange for loyalty and service.

Estate

social class

Heresy

the denial of basic church doctrines

Fief

the grant of land made to a vassal

lay investiture

the practice by which secular rulers both chose nominees to church offices and gave them the symbols of their office

Theology

the study of religion and God

Feudal contract

under feudalism, the unwritten rules that determined the relationship between a lord and his vassal

the language of everyday speech in a particular region

vernacular


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