Top Banner
Christianity and the Medieval Mind
16

Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Jan 20, 2016

Download

Documents

Helen Jennings
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Christianity and the Medieval Mind

Page 2: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Christianity and Europe• From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance,

Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

• Salvation controlled by the Catholic Church

• Seven sacraments of the church set by Fourth Lateran Council in 1215

• Purgatory added to the church’s theology

• Mysticism—Hildegard of Bingen

• Innocent III—Jonathan Edwards like preacher/pope

• Morality Plays—Christian education for the illiterate

Page 3: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Dante (1265-1321) wrote his Comedy…a journey from hell to heaven

Page 4: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Dante’s Divine Comedy

Page 5: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Dante’s Divine Comedy

Allegorical and literal journey carrying message of warning

Reward or punishment tied to the sin or virtue

Hammurabi–esque system of divine justice

Page 6: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Medieval Church • 1022 College of Cardinals founded—key in electing a pope

• Excommunication—exclusion from communion…therefore from heaven also

• Interdict—excommunication of a city or country

• Heresy—that which is theologically considered in error

• Crusades—multifaceted endeavor

• Inquisition—established in 1233 to keep church pure

Page 7: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Monastic Life

St. Francis adds the Franciscans to the Benedictines

Page 8: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

St. Francis’ Renunciationand

Sermon to the Birds

Page 9: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Conflict Between Church and State

Growing tension between church and state. The church became increasingly upset with the rise of the national states of Europe

Example: Philip IV and Pope Boniface

Page 10: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Power Struggleover taxes between

Philip IV and Boniface VIII

This was a harbinger of

things to come in the

Renaissance

Page 11: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Medieval University

University were the natural consequence of the old parish schools set up by Charlemagne centuries before

University of Bologna had a unique idea: students would hire their professors

Notre Dame developed out of a guild for teaching theology

Page 12: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

“Now class, we are adding threads to your butterfly net….”

Page 13: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Medieval Scholasticism

Scholasticism was the attempt to reconcile the two realms:faith and reason

Peter Abelard in his Sic et Non attempts that balance

Page 14: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Peter Abelard Sic et Non

Page 15: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologica

Page 16: Christianity and the Medieval Mind. Christianity and Europe From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance, Christianity “ran” Europe (ca. 500-1500)

Christianity and the Medieval Mind

Interesting sites:

http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hm/07/eu/hm07eu.htm

http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/History_n2/a.html