World History Ch. 13 Section 4 Notes

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The Early Middle Ages Section 4 Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The English Monarchy Faces of History: Eleanor of Aquitaine Other European Monarchies Map: The Holy Roman Empire The Growth of Monarchies

Transcript of World History Ch. 13 Section 4 Notes

Page 1: World History Ch. 13 Section 4 Notes

The Early Middle Ages Section 4

Preview

• Main Idea / Reading Focus

• The English Monarchy

• Faces of History: Eleanor of Aquitaine

• Other European Monarchies

• Map: The Holy Roman Empire

The Growth of Monarchies

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Reading Focus

• How did the power of the English monarchy grow and change?

• How did kings increase their powers in the other monarchies of Europe?

Main Idea

1. The power of kings grew and the nature of monarchy changed across Europe in the early Middle Ages.

The Growth of Monarchies

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Alfred drove the Viking forces north of London to what became the Danelaw, a territory under Viking control.

2. England was one of the first countries in Europe to develop a strong central monarchy. Under the Anglo-Saxons, who first unified the country, and then under the Normans, who conquered the Anglo-Saxons, the English kings exercised considerable power.

• Anglo-Saxon rulers descendants of Angles, Saxons who invaded in 400s

• For most of period, England divided into seven small kingdoms

• Each had own laws, customs

Anglo-Saxon England

The English Monarchy

• 800s, Danish Vikings invaded, conquered several Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, not all of England

• 878, Viking campaign cut short by Alfred the Great, king of Wessex in southern England

Danish Vikings

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• Alfred’s descendants ruled England for most of next two centuries

• 1066, king died without heir; two men claimed throne: Harold, Anglo-Saxon nobleman from England; William, duke of Normandy in France

• Supported by English nobility, Harold named new king

• William decided to take crown by force; gathered army, sailed for England where Harold met him

• Two armies fought in Battle of Hastings; William won

• Became King William I of England, known as William the Conqueror

William

• William stronger king than Anglo-Saxon rulers

• Claimed all English land as personal property

• Divided land into fiefs for his Norman soldiers; new nobility created, all owing loyalty to king

Strong King

The Norman Conquest

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French Culture

• William, Normans introduced elements of French culture into England

• Most of England’s new nobles born in France, spoke French, practiced French customs

• Most of lower classes kept old Anglo-Saxon language, habits

Domesday Book

• William ordered survey taken to learn more about kingdom

• Wanted to know who lived in each part of England, what they owned, how much they could afford to pay in taxes

• Resulting in Domesday Book, used to create central tax system for England

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• Even more territories in France added when Henry married powerful French duchess, Eleanor of Aquitane

• Together they ruled England, half of France

• In theory, French holdings made English kings vassals of king of France

• In practice, kings of England stronger than kings of France, ignored feudal obligations

More Territories

• Kings following William gained even more power as time passed

• New power came from acquisition of new lands, many in France

• Descendants inherited position as duke of Normandy; great-grandson Henry II also son of a French duke

• Henry inherited father’s lands in France, which became part of England

More Lands

The English in France

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By about 1200 the power of the English king started to worry some nobles. They feared kings would abuse their powers.

• Nobles concerned their rights would be taken away

• 1215, concerns reached crisis point under King John

• John caught in war with France, lost almost all of England’s French holdings

• Tried to raise money with new tax on nobility

• Nobles refused tax, took up arms against king

Nobles’ Concerns• Rebellious nobles forced John

to accept document outlining their rights, Magna Carta

• Restricted king’s power; even kings not above the law

• King had to obtain consent of nobles before raising taxes

• Ended king’s ability to arrest, punish people without cause or take property illegally

New Rights

Magna Carta

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Dissatisfaction

• Magna Carta addressed many concerns, but some nobles still not satisfied

• King constantly asked for approval to raise taxes of which they disapproved

• 1260s, nobles began another rebellion to obtain say in how kingdom was run

Powers

• For several years the powers of Parliament remained undefined

• Edward I one of first kings to clarify role of Parliament, work effectively with governing body

Parliament

• As part of agreement to end rebellion, king agreed to meet with members of nobility, clergy, middle class to discuss key issues facing country

• Resulting council developed into English governing body, Parliament

Parliament

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Central Government Strengthened

1295, Parliament summoned by Edward included nobles, clergy, representatives from every English county, town

• Had power to create new taxes, advise king on lawmaking, royal policy

• Edward strengthened England’s central government, reformed system of laws

• Saw Parliament as tool for strengthening monarchy, not limiting it; kept Parliament in secondary role to power of king

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Summarize

How did Magna Carta and Parliament change the English monarchy?

Answer(s): reduced the king's power, formed a council (Parliament) that would create new taxes and advise the king on lawmaking

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3. The changes in the English monarchy were unique. During the Middle Ages, kings in other European countries also worked to gain more power, but their experiences were different from those of he English rulers.

• After Charlemagne, kings of France did not rule much territory

• Limited to area around Paris, Orleans

• Rest in hands of powerful nobles

France

• Mid-900s, one noble family rose to power when one member elected king

• Hugh Capet, successors extended power throughout France

Capetians

• Sometimes Capetians fought local nobles for power

• Other times created allegiances

• By 1300, ruled almost all of modern France

Power

Other European Monarchies

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Empire Split• Emperor Charlemagne had unified most of western Europe into one empire

• After his death, the empire split into two parts

• Western part became France; eastern part became known as Germany

Otto• Worked to unite German lands, conquered parts of northern Italy

• 962, aided Pope John XII, rewarded by being named Emperor of the Romans

• Territories united under Otto became known as Holy Roman Empire

Germany• France remained somewhat unified under one king

• Germany separated into several small states, each with own ruler, or duke

• 936, Otto the Great gained enough support to become king of the Germans

Holy Roman Empire

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Holy Roman Empire

• Called holy because empire had pope’s support

• Called Roman because Charlemagne had title Emperor of the Roman People

Emperors Elected

• 1100s, Holy Roman emperors did not inherit position, were elected upon death of emperor

• Group of electors—dukes, archbishops—chose successor

Holy Roman Emperors

• Made decisions, passed laws with help of dukes

• Dukes maintained full authority on own lands

Crowned by Pope

• Person chosen by electors had to travel to Rome

• Pope had to crown new emperor before his power fully recognized

Description of Empire

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• Growth of monarchy in Spain, Portugal coupled with religious struggles

• Today the two countries share Iberian Peninsula, which had been conquered by Muslims in early 700s

• Muslims, called Moors by Christians, built powerful state centered in city of Cordoba.

• Christians ruled only few kingdoms in far northern part of peninsula

• 722, Christian rulers began to fight Moors, drive them out of Europe

• Christian rulers continued westward push, little success until 1000s

• Civil war had broken out in Muslim Spain, weakening Moorish leadership

Fighting Moors• Christian states began series of

campaigns to retake Iberian Peninsula, called the Reconquista

• 1085, king of Castile won great victory over Moors, inspired rulers of two other Christian kingdoms to join in the Reconquista

Campaigns

Spain and Portugal

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Victories• Together three Iberian kingdoms won victory after victory over Moors

• Early 1100s, Portuguese drove Moors completely out of their lands, established Kingdom of Portugal

Modern Spain• Modern Spain has origins in late 1400s

• Royal marriage between rulers of Aragon and Castile united two kingdoms

• Combining countries and power, they ruled one of strongest countries in Europe

Pushing South• Rulers of Aragon and Castile continued to push south, captured Cordoba

1236

• Christians pushed Moors almost all the way out of Spain within a few years

• Moors not driven completely off Iberian Peninsula until 1492

Victory over Moors

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Analyze

How did rulers in France, the Holy Roman Empire, and Spain gain power?

Answer(s): by acquiring new land and territories through alliances, marriage, and conquest