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Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom
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Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Jan 16, 2016

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Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom. Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom. I. Europe during the Time of the Muslim Expansion II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages. I. Europe during the Time of the Muslim Expansion. A. Decline and Isolation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Page 2: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

I. Europe during the Time of the Muslim Expansion

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

Page 3: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

I. Europe during the Time of the Muslim Expansion

A. Decline and Isolation

1. Decline of Trade and Industrya. How would one conduct long-distance trade at this

time?b. Vikings (“nomads of the sea”) as response

2. Decline of Culture and Learninga. Did Charles Martel save “Western civilization” at

the Battle of Tours in 732?b. Baptistry at Poitiers

3. Dissolution of Centralized Government

Page 4: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Viking Activity 8th to 10th Centuries

Page 5: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

A. Manorial Self-Sufficiency

1. Estates: Division by Function

a. 1st Estate: Those Who Pray (clergy)

b. 2nd Estate: Those Who Fight (nobility)

c. 3rd Estate: Those Who Work (peasants)

Page 6: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Medieval Manor

Page 7: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

B. Feudalism — A Stage in Every Nation’s Development or Historiographic Ghost?

1. Standard Textbook View

2. Use of the Term by Researchers

Page 8: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Roland pledges his fealty to Charlemagne

from a manuscript of a chanson de geste, c.14th.c.(?)

Page 9: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom
Page 10: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Idealized view of “Feudal” system

Page 11: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Idealized view of “Feudal” system

Page 12: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

B. Feudalism — A Stage in Every Nation’s Development or Historiographic Ghost?

3. Question about Its Origins

a. Montesquieu (18th cent.) — German tribal comitatusb. George Waitz (1880s) — Roman clientage and patronagec. Heinrich Brunner (1890s) — fusion of comitatusand clientaged. Lynn White (1964) — importance of stirrup

Page 13: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

B. Feudalism — A Stage in Every Nation’s Development or Historiographic Ghost?

4. Another Possibility — Muslim iqtā‛

Page 14: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

C. Charlemagne (768–814)

1. Political Significance

a. Crowned Roman Emperor in the West—“Holy Roman Empire”

b. Impact on Western institutions?c. Lands divided among grandsons—Treaty of

Verdun (843)

Page 15: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Spread of Christianity 400-700

Page 16: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Carolingian Empire

Page 17: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Division of the Carolingian Empire, 843

Page 18: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

C. Charlemagne (768–814)

2. Education and the Revival of Learning

a. Alcuin of York (735–804)b. Trivium (represents argument) Grammar

Rhetoric—“the open fist”Logic—“the shut fist”

Page 19: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Carolingian manuscript, Fuldense, ca. 831/40Raban Maur (left) supported by Alcuin (middle) dedicates his work to Archbishop Otgar of Mainz

Page 20: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

C. Charlemagne (768–814)

2. Education and the Revival of Learning

c. Quadrivium (represents mathematics)Arithmetic—numbers in themselvesGeometry—numbers having taken formAstronomy—numbers in motionMusic—numbers in relationship to each other

Page 21: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

C. Charlemagne (768–814)

3. Carolingian Renaissance (Aachen [Aix-la-Chapelle])

a. Miniscule—Preservation of Ancient Latin Texts

b. Einhard—The Life of Charlemagne

Page 22: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Carolingian Gospel book written in miniscule

British Library, MS Add. 11848

Page 23: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

Majuscule in Book of Kells

Page 24: Charlemagne and the Origins of Christendom

II. Political, Social, and Economic Relations in the Middle Ages

D. The End of the Millennium? The Year 1000.