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Europe in The Middle
        Ages
 800 CE – 1500 CE
Section 1: Peasants, Trade &
                     Cities
   The near doubling of Europe's population, combined with more peaceful
    and settled conditions, contributed to major improvements to life in
    Europe. Reasons for the change included:
         the development of labor-saving devices,
        improvements in farming that increased food production, and a revival of trade.
   Trade, in turn, contributed to the development of a money economy, the
    resettlement of ancient cities, and the emergence of new cities.
   Many people still lived as peasants. They combined agricultural and craft
    work to provide for their families, while turning over part of what they
    produced to the lord of the manor.
   The cities, meanwhile, were crowded, dirty places that nevertheless
    provided new opportunities for men and women. In the cities, guilds
    regulated employment in many crafts and professions.
Manorialism: The Lord of the Manor
                     For safety and
                      defense, people in
                      the Middle Ages
                      formed small
                      communities around
                      a central lord or
                      master.
Manorialism: The Manor
   Most people lived
    on a manor, which
    consisted of the
    castle (or manor
    house), the church,
    the village, and the
    surrounding farm
    land.
Manorialism: Self-Sufficiency
   Each manor was largely self-
    sufficient, growing or producing
    all of the basic items needed for
    food, clothing, and shelter.
   To meet these needs, the manor
    had buildings devoted to special
    purposes, such as:
       The mill for grinding grain
       The bake house for making bread
       The blacksmith shop for creating
        metal goods.
Isolation
        These manors were
         isolated, with
         occasional visits
         from peddlers,
         pilgrims on their way
         to the Crusades, or
         soldiers from other
         fiefdoms.
The Feudal System
   Under the feudal
    system, the king
    awarded land grants or
    fiefs to his most
    important nobles,
    barons, and bishops,
    in return for their
    contribution of soldiers
    for the king's armies.
Nobles and Vassals
           Nobles were the
            highest ranked people
            on the manor. They
            divided their land
            among the lesser
            nobility, who became
            their vassals. Many of
            these vassals became
            so powerful that the
            kings had difficulty
            controlling them.
The Peasants
   At the lowest level of
    society were the
    peasants, also called
    serfs or villeins.
   The lord offered his
    peasants protection in
    exchange for living and
    working on his land.
Hard Work & High Taxes
   Peasants worked hard to
    cultivate the land and
    produce the goods that
    the lord and his manor
    needed.
   They were heavily taxed
    and were required to
    relinquish (give to the
    noble) much of what they
    harvested.
   In peasant families, the
    wife did the cooking and
    baking. The peasant diet
    consisted of breads,
    vegetables from their own
    gardens, dairy products
    from their own sheep,
    goats, and cows, and pork
    from their own livestock.




    Pantries were hung with birds and beasts,
     including swans, blackbirds, ducks, pigeons,
     rabbits, mutton, venison, and wild boar. Many
     of these animals were caught on hunts.
Women: Household Chores

    Whether they were noble or
    peasants, women held a difficult
    position in society.
   They were largely confined to
    household tasks such as cooking,
    baking bread, sewing, weaving, and
    spinning.


       However, they also hunted
        for food and fought in
        battles, learning to use
        weapons to defend their
        homes and castles.
MEDIEVAL LIFE
                                           Cooperation and
                                          Mutual Obligations

                                                     KING




                                                                                               MANORIALISM:
         FEUDALISM:                                                                           ECONOMIC SYSTEM
       POLITICAL SYSTEM                        Fief and Peasants
                                                                                    Agriculture the basis for wealth
 Decentralized, local                    Loyalty         Military Aid
                                                                                    Lands divided up into self-
                                           LORDS (VASSALS TO KING)
  government                                                                         sufficient manors
 Dependent upon the                                                                Peasants (serfs) worked the
  relationship between                                                               land and paid rent In exchange
  members of the nobility                                                            for protection
 Lord and his vassals                                                              Barter the usual form of
                               Food                Protection            Shelter
  administered justice and                                                           exchange
  were the highest authority           Homage         Military Service
  in their land                       KNIGHTS (VASSALS TO LORDS)




                      Food                         Protection                       Shelter

                               Farm the                                  Pay
                                 Land          PEASANTS (SERFS)          Rent
The Magna Carta
   Under Manorialism, nobles often
    became quite powerful and kings
    would have difficulty controlling
    them. As a result, the nobles would
    question the decisions of the king and
    challenge his power.
   In 1215, the English barons formed
    an alliance that forced King John to
    sign the Magna Carta. It limited the
    king's powers of taxation and
    required trials by jury.
   The powerful nobles were able to
    force the King to be subject to the law
    for the first time in European history.
Section 2: Christianity and
           Medieval Civilization
   A sign of the Church's growing role in European affairs was the
    Concordat of Worms.
        By barring monarchs from investing (nominating or creating) bishops, this document
         marked a victory for Pope Gregory VII in his bid to reform the Church and assert papal
         power.
   The importance of the sacraments for ordinary Christians gave the Church
    a central role in people's lives.
   The veneration of saints was also popular and spurred interest in a long list
    of saints who Christians believed could intercede in heaven on their behalf.
    Religious fervor prompted new monastic orders to spring up for men and
    women. The new orders developed an activistic spiritual model.
   Finally, the Inquisition gave the Church a tool for discouraging heresy.
    Those who failed to do proper penance for heresy could face execution.
The Catholic Church
The Catholic Church was the only church in
Europe during the Middle Ages, and it had its own
laws and large income.
Church leaders such as bishops and archbishops
sat on the king's council and played leading roles
in government.
The PAPACY is the office of the Pope, the head
of the Catholic church. During the middle ages,
the pope became more powerful than the kings of
their day. Corruption was rampant with this
power. Offices of the church were sold to the
highest bidder and a token was given to show this
power, known as lay investiture. Pope Gregory
VII tried to end this
Bishops
   Bishops, who were often
    wealthy and came from
    noble families, ruled
    over groups of parishes
    called dioceses.
   Many times, they were
    part of the feudal system
    and in exchange for a fief
    and peasants had to
    provide homage and
    military aid to a liege
    lord.
Parish Priests
   Parish priests, on the other
    hand, came from humbler
    backgrounds and often had
    little education.
   The village priest tended
    to the sick and indigent
    and, if he was able, taught
    Latin and the Bible to the
    youth of the village
Monasteries, Monks & Nuns
   Monasteries in the Middle Ages were
    based on the rules set down by St.
    Benedict in the sixth century. The monks
    became known as Benedictines and took
    vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience
    to their leaders.
   Monks were required to perform manual
    labor and were forbidden to own
    property, leave the monastery, or
    become entangled in the concerns of
    society.
   Daily tasks were often carried out in
    silence.
   Monks and their female counterparts, nuns, who lived in
    convents, provided for the less-fortunate members of the
    community. Monasteries and nunneries were safe havens
    for pilgrims and other travelers.
Section 3: The Culture of the
               High Middle Ages
   The first universities were established in twelfth-century Italy, France, and England
    as educational guilds.
        Most students received a liberal arts education.
        Theology was the most prestigious subject and was heavily influenced by scholasticism.
   Scholasticism sought to reconcile faith and reason and to harmonize Christian
    teachings with recently rediscovered works of Greek philosophers.
        The best-known practitioner of scholasticism was Saint Thomas Aquinas.
   Although Latin was the universal language of medieval civilization, new literature
    —mainly poetry—was appearing in regional languages, such as French, English,
    and Spanish; this is called vernacular literature because it is written in the
    everyday language of the people.
   An eleventh- and twelfth-century building boom produced many new churches.
    Innovations in architecture made it possible to build soaring Gothic cathedrals,
    one of the artistic triumphs of the High Middle Ages.
Architecture
   Early Christian: Flat roofs, and long
    rectangular shapes used in Roman
    basilicas.
   Romanesque: Replaced flat wooden
    roofs with rounded barrel vault ceilings.
   Gothic: The use of flying buttresses
    allowed architects to create a feeling of
    upward movement in the Gothic
    cathedrals.
The Canterbury Tales
   Chaucer's Canterbury
    Tales is a series of stories
    told by 30 pilgrims as
    they traveled to
    Canterbury. It is an early
    example of vernacular
    literature (literature
    written in the common
    language of the day).
Peasants Home Architecture
   Many peasant families ate,
    slept, and spent time together
    in very small quarters, rarely
    more than one or two rooms.
    The houses had thatched
    roofs and were easily
    destroyed.
   Most medieval homes were cold, damp,
    and dark. Sometimes it was warmer and
    lighter outside the home than within its
    walls.
Woolen & Linen Clothing
   Most people in the Middles Ages
    wore woolen clothing, with
    undergarments made of linen.
    Brighter colors, better materials, and
    a longer jacket length were usually
    signs of greater wealth.
   The clothing of the aristocracy and
    wealthy merchants tended to be
    elaborate and changed according to
    the dictates of fashion. Towards the
    end of the Middle Ages, men of the
    wealthy classes sported hose and a
    jacket, often with pleating or
    skirting, or a tunic with a surcoat.

   Women wore flowing gowns and elaborate headwear,
    ranging from headdresses shaped like hearts or butterflies
    to tall steeple caps and Italian turbans.
Section 4: The Late Middle Ages
   Europe's fortunes sank as bubonic plague carried by infested rats
    decimated Europe's population.
        In a wave of anti-Semitism, many people attacked Jews, accusing them of causing the
         plague by poisoning the wells.
        The plague devastated Europe's economy as well and accelerated the end of serfdom.
    Church power declined as European kings rejected papal claims of
    supremacy.
   Popular respect for the papacy was undermined by the Great Schism, a
    nearly forty-year papal crisis during which a rival papacy was set up in
    France.
   The Hundred Years' War introduced new methods of warfare, adding to
    the problems of the late Middle Ages.
   The "new monarchies" of the fifteenth century reestablished the centralized
    power of the monarchies in England, France, and Spain.
Medicine was often a risky business. Bloodletting
was a popular method of restoring a patient's health
and "humors." Early surgery, often done by barbers
without anesthesia, must have been excruciating.
Medical treatment was available mainly to the
wealthy, and those living in villages rarely had the
help of doctors, who practiced mostly in the cities
and courts. Remedies were often herbal in nature,
but also included ground earthworms, urine, and
animal excrement.
Many medieval medical manuscripts contained
recipes for remedies that called for hundreds of
therapeutic substances--the notion that every
substance in nature held some sort of power
accounts for the enormous variety of substances.

BLACK DEATH…The PLAGUE…Bubonic Plague
People did not know what caused the plague
and blamed others, like the Jews. People were
afraid to gather together or travel. This hurt the
economy.
Hundred Years’ war




The plague contributed to an economic crisis in Europe. It also contributed to
political instability (along with the end of feudalism). The Hundred Years’ War
began when King Philip VI of France seized Gascony, which had been held by the
English. The duke of Gascony – King Edward III of England – declared war
against the French. The war over English territory in France lasted until 1453.

The Hundred Years’ War changed warfare forever; it was peasant foot soldiers who
helped win the war, not the Knights who had been fighting in the Crusades.
Hundred Years’ War
   There were several major battles in the war:
       1346: Crecy; the English won because their
        archers were able to damage the French lines,
        which were in disarray
       1415: Agincourt; the French lost when their heavy
        armor-plated soldiers and horses were bogged
        down by heavy mud
       1450s – Normandy & Agincourt: The French,
        using a new weapon, the cannon, defeated the
        English (thanks to the invention of gunpowder!)
Joan of Arc
   Joan of Arc – born in 1412, she was the
    daughter of peasants; deeply religious,
    she came to believe that she was
    commanded by god to free France
   She persuaded the king to accompany the
    army to Orleans; inspired by her faith,
    they recaptured Orleans
   She was captured by the English and
    turned over to the Inquisition on charges
    of witchcraft; she was burned at the stake
   The war dragged on for another two
    years, but her death inspired the French,
    who defeated the English in Normandy
    and Aquitaine, resulting in a French
    victory in 1453
Political Recovery: France
   By the 15th century, Europe was beginning to recover
    from hundreds of years of violence and disease. After
    the Crusades, plague, and other wars, “new
    monarchies” began to reassert control over the
    European states
   After the Hundred Years’ War, France was
    exhausted, but united as a nation
       King Louis XI took advantage of this spirit to establish his
        power
       He used the taille – an annual tax on land or property, as a
        regular source of income, which helped create the
        foundations of a strong monarchy
Political Recovery: England
   The cost of the Hundred Years’ War strained the
    English economy
       The English were also vulnerable to an internal conflict –
        The War of the Roses – which was a fight over the
        monarchy
            In 1485, the Tudors won control of the monarchy and established a
             new dynasty
       Henry Tudor created a strong royal government, ended
        wars between the nobles by outlawing private armies, and
        helped refill the treasury through his saving measures and
        tax revenues
Political Recovery: Spain
   Spain also experienced the growth of a strong
    monarch
   Throughout the middle ages, Spain fought to remove
    the Muslims from their lands
       Two kingdoms rose out of the wars to remove the Muslims:
        Aragon and Castile
       Spain was united when Isabella of Castile married
        Ferdinand of Aragon
            They were strict Catholics and helped the Catholic Church run the
             Inquisition, trying to root out heretics in Spain
Central & Eastern Europe
   The Holy Roman Empire was unable to find a strong monarch;
    by the 15th century, Germany was divided into many
    independent states
   After 1438, the Holy Roman Emperor came from the
    Hapsburg dynasty, who ruled the Austrian lands along the
    Danube
   Religious differences caused problems in Eastern Europe, as
    the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches fought for
    influence in places like Poland and Hungary
   Finally, Russia was able to throw off the Mongols and a new
    Russian state was born, rules by the great prince Ivan III

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Europe in the middle ages (10)

  • 1. Europe in The Middle Ages 800 CE – 1500 CE
  • 2. Section 1: Peasants, Trade & Cities  The near doubling of Europe's population, combined with more peaceful and settled conditions, contributed to major improvements to life in Europe. Reasons for the change included:  the development of labor-saving devices,  improvements in farming that increased food production, and a revival of trade.  Trade, in turn, contributed to the development of a money economy, the resettlement of ancient cities, and the emergence of new cities.  Many people still lived as peasants. They combined agricultural and craft work to provide for their families, while turning over part of what they produced to the lord of the manor.  The cities, meanwhile, were crowded, dirty places that nevertheless provided new opportunities for men and women. In the cities, guilds regulated employment in many crafts and professions.
  • 3. Manorialism: The Lord of the Manor  For safety and defense, people in the Middle Ages formed small communities around a central lord or master.
  • 4. Manorialism: The Manor  Most people lived on a manor, which consisted of the castle (or manor house), the church, the village, and the surrounding farm land.
  • 5.
  • 6. Manorialism: Self-Sufficiency  Each manor was largely self- sufficient, growing or producing all of the basic items needed for food, clothing, and shelter.  To meet these needs, the manor had buildings devoted to special purposes, such as:  The mill for grinding grain  The bake house for making bread  The blacksmith shop for creating metal goods.
  • 7. Isolation  These manors were isolated, with occasional visits from peddlers, pilgrims on their way to the Crusades, or soldiers from other fiefdoms.
  • 8. The Feudal System  Under the feudal system, the king awarded land grants or fiefs to his most important nobles, barons, and bishops, in return for their contribution of soldiers for the king's armies.
  • 9. Nobles and Vassals  Nobles were the highest ranked people on the manor. They divided their land among the lesser nobility, who became their vassals. Many of these vassals became so powerful that the kings had difficulty controlling them.
  • 10. The Peasants  At the lowest level of society were the peasants, also called serfs or villeins.  The lord offered his peasants protection in exchange for living and working on his land.
  • 11. Hard Work & High Taxes  Peasants worked hard to cultivate the land and produce the goods that the lord and his manor needed.  They were heavily taxed and were required to relinquish (give to the noble) much of what they harvested.
  • 12. In peasant families, the wife did the cooking and baking. The peasant diet consisted of breads, vegetables from their own gardens, dairy products from their own sheep, goats, and cows, and pork from their own livestock.  Pantries were hung with birds and beasts, including swans, blackbirds, ducks, pigeons, rabbits, mutton, venison, and wild boar. Many of these animals were caught on hunts.
  • 13. Women: Household Chores  Whether they were noble or peasants, women held a difficult position in society.  They were largely confined to household tasks such as cooking, baking bread, sewing, weaving, and spinning.  However, they also hunted for food and fought in battles, learning to use weapons to defend their homes and castles.
  • 14. MEDIEVAL LIFE Cooperation and Mutual Obligations KING MANORIALISM: FEUDALISM: ECONOMIC SYSTEM POLITICAL SYSTEM Fief and Peasants  Agriculture the basis for wealth  Decentralized, local Loyalty Military Aid  Lands divided up into self- LORDS (VASSALS TO KING) government sufficient manors  Dependent upon the  Peasants (serfs) worked the relationship between land and paid rent In exchange members of the nobility for protection  Lord and his vassals  Barter the usual form of Food Protection Shelter administered justice and exchange were the highest authority Homage Military Service in their land KNIGHTS (VASSALS TO LORDS) Food Protection Shelter Farm the Pay Land PEASANTS (SERFS) Rent
  • 15. The Magna Carta  Under Manorialism, nobles often became quite powerful and kings would have difficulty controlling them. As a result, the nobles would question the decisions of the king and challenge his power.  In 1215, the English barons formed an alliance that forced King John to sign the Magna Carta. It limited the king's powers of taxation and required trials by jury.  The powerful nobles were able to force the King to be subject to the law for the first time in European history.
  • 16. Section 2: Christianity and Medieval Civilization  A sign of the Church's growing role in European affairs was the Concordat of Worms.  By barring monarchs from investing (nominating or creating) bishops, this document marked a victory for Pope Gregory VII in his bid to reform the Church and assert papal power.  The importance of the sacraments for ordinary Christians gave the Church a central role in people's lives.  The veneration of saints was also popular and spurred interest in a long list of saints who Christians believed could intercede in heaven on their behalf.  Religious fervor prompted new monastic orders to spring up for men and women. The new orders developed an activistic spiritual model.  Finally, the Inquisition gave the Church a tool for discouraging heresy. Those who failed to do proper penance for heresy could face execution.
  • 17. The Catholic Church The Catholic Church was the only church in Europe during the Middle Ages, and it had its own laws and large income. Church leaders such as bishops and archbishops sat on the king's council and played leading roles in government. The PAPACY is the office of the Pope, the head of the Catholic church. During the middle ages, the pope became more powerful than the kings of their day. Corruption was rampant with this power. Offices of the church were sold to the highest bidder and a token was given to show this power, known as lay investiture. Pope Gregory VII tried to end this
  • 18. Bishops  Bishops, who were often wealthy and came from noble families, ruled over groups of parishes called dioceses.  Many times, they were part of the feudal system and in exchange for a fief and peasants had to provide homage and military aid to a liege lord.
  • 19. Parish Priests  Parish priests, on the other hand, came from humbler backgrounds and often had little education.  The village priest tended to the sick and indigent and, if he was able, taught Latin and the Bible to the youth of the village
  • 20. Monasteries, Monks & Nuns  Monasteries in the Middle Ages were based on the rules set down by St. Benedict in the sixth century. The monks became known as Benedictines and took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience to their leaders.  Monks were required to perform manual labor and were forbidden to own property, leave the monastery, or become entangled in the concerns of society.  Daily tasks were often carried out in silence.  Monks and their female counterparts, nuns, who lived in convents, provided for the less-fortunate members of the community. Monasteries and nunneries were safe havens for pilgrims and other travelers.
  • 21. Section 3: The Culture of the High Middle Ages  The first universities were established in twelfth-century Italy, France, and England as educational guilds.  Most students received a liberal arts education.  Theology was the most prestigious subject and was heavily influenced by scholasticism.  Scholasticism sought to reconcile faith and reason and to harmonize Christian teachings with recently rediscovered works of Greek philosophers.  The best-known practitioner of scholasticism was Saint Thomas Aquinas.  Although Latin was the universal language of medieval civilization, new literature —mainly poetry—was appearing in regional languages, such as French, English, and Spanish; this is called vernacular literature because it is written in the everyday language of the people.  An eleventh- and twelfth-century building boom produced many new churches. Innovations in architecture made it possible to build soaring Gothic cathedrals, one of the artistic triumphs of the High Middle Ages.
  • 22. Architecture  Early Christian: Flat roofs, and long rectangular shapes used in Roman basilicas.  Romanesque: Replaced flat wooden roofs with rounded barrel vault ceilings.  Gothic: The use of flying buttresses allowed architects to create a feeling of upward movement in the Gothic cathedrals.
  • 23. The Canterbury Tales  Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a series of stories told by 30 pilgrims as they traveled to Canterbury. It is an early example of vernacular literature (literature written in the common language of the day).
  • 24. Peasants Home Architecture  Many peasant families ate, slept, and spent time together in very small quarters, rarely more than one or two rooms. The houses had thatched roofs and were easily destroyed.  Most medieval homes were cold, damp, and dark. Sometimes it was warmer and lighter outside the home than within its walls.
  • 25. Woolen & Linen Clothing  Most people in the Middles Ages wore woolen clothing, with undergarments made of linen. Brighter colors, better materials, and a longer jacket length were usually signs of greater wealth.  The clothing of the aristocracy and wealthy merchants tended to be elaborate and changed according to the dictates of fashion. Towards the end of the Middle Ages, men of the wealthy classes sported hose and a jacket, often with pleating or skirting, or a tunic with a surcoat.  Women wore flowing gowns and elaborate headwear, ranging from headdresses shaped like hearts or butterflies to tall steeple caps and Italian turbans.
  • 26. Section 4: The Late Middle Ages  Europe's fortunes sank as bubonic plague carried by infested rats decimated Europe's population.  In a wave of anti-Semitism, many people attacked Jews, accusing them of causing the plague by poisoning the wells.  The plague devastated Europe's economy as well and accelerated the end of serfdom.  Church power declined as European kings rejected papal claims of supremacy.  Popular respect for the papacy was undermined by the Great Schism, a nearly forty-year papal crisis during which a rival papacy was set up in France.  The Hundred Years' War introduced new methods of warfare, adding to the problems of the late Middle Ages.  The "new monarchies" of the fifteenth century reestablished the centralized power of the monarchies in England, France, and Spain.
  • 27. Medicine was often a risky business. Bloodletting was a popular method of restoring a patient's health and "humors." Early surgery, often done by barbers without anesthesia, must have been excruciating. Medical treatment was available mainly to the wealthy, and those living in villages rarely had the help of doctors, who practiced mostly in the cities and courts. Remedies were often herbal in nature, but also included ground earthworms, urine, and animal excrement. Many medieval medical manuscripts contained recipes for remedies that called for hundreds of therapeutic substances--the notion that every substance in nature held some sort of power accounts for the enormous variety of substances. BLACK DEATH…The PLAGUE…Bubonic Plague People did not know what caused the plague and blamed others, like the Jews. People were afraid to gather together or travel. This hurt the economy.
  • 28. Hundred Years’ war The plague contributed to an economic crisis in Europe. It also contributed to political instability (along with the end of feudalism). The Hundred Years’ War began when King Philip VI of France seized Gascony, which had been held by the English. The duke of Gascony – King Edward III of England – declared war against the French. The war over English territory in France lasted until 1453. The Hundred Years’ War changed warfare forever; it was peasant foot soldiers who helped win the war, not the Knights who had been fighting in the Crusades.
  • 29. Hundred Years’ War  There were several major battles in the war:  1346: Crecy; the English won because their archers were able to damage the French lines, which were in disarray  1415: Agincourt; the French lost when their heavy armor-plated soldiers and horses were bogged down by heavy mud  1450s – Normandy & Agincourt: The French, using a new weapon, the cannon, defeated the English (thanks to the invention of gunpowder!)
  • 30. Joan of Arc  Joan of Arc – born in 1412, she was the daughter of peasants; deeply religious, she came to believe that she was commanded by god to free France  She persuaded the king to accompany the army to Orleans; inspired by her faith, they recaptured Orleans  She was captured by the English and turned over to the Inquisition on charges of witchcraft; she was burned at the stake  The war dragged on for another two years, but her death inspired the French, who defeated the English in Normandy and Aquitaine, resulting in a French victory in 1453
  • 31. Political Recovery: France  By the 15th century, Europe was beginning to recover from hundreds of years of violence and disease. After the Crusades, plague, and other wars, “new monarchies” began to reassert control over the European states  After the Hundred Years’ War, France was exhausted, but united as a nation  King Louis XI took advantage of this spirit to establish his power  He used the taille – an annual tax on land or property, as a regular source of income, which helped create the foundations of a strong monarchy
  • 32. Political Recovery: England  The cost of the Hundred Years’ War strained the English economy  The English were also vulnerable to an internal conflict – The War of the Roses – which was a fight over the monarchy  In 1485, the Tudors won control of the monarchy and established a new dynasty  Henry Tudor created a strong royal government, ended wars between the nobles by outlawing private armies, and helped refill the treasury through his saving measures and tax revenues
  • 33. Political Recovery: Spain  Spain also experienced the growth of a strong monarch  Throughout the middle ages, Spain fought to remove the Muslims from their lands  Two kingdoms rose out of the wars to remove the Muslims: Aragon and Castile  Spain was united when Isabella of Castile married Ferdinand of Aragon  They were strict Catholics and helped the Catholic Church run the Inquisition, trying to root out heretics in Spain
  • 34. Central & Eastern Europe  The Holy Roman Empire was unable to find a strong monarch; by the 15th century, Germany was divided into many independent states  After 1438, the Holy Roman Emperor came from the Hapsburg dynasty, who ruled the Austrian lands along the Danube  Religious differences caused problems in Eastern Europe, as the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic Churches fought for influence in places like Poland and Hungary  Finally, Russia was able to throw off the Mongols and a new Russian state was born, rules by the great prince Ivan III