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Introduction

Mar 13, 2016

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lilah-pratt

Introduction. 3 Crises define the period. Hundred Years War Church Corruption Black Death. Together, they destroyed the Age of Faith. And paved way for (1) European Renaissance, then (2) Protestant Reformation, then (3) The Modern World. Hundred Years War (1337-1453). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Introduction
Page 2: Introduction
Page 3: Introduction

Introduction

1. Hundred Years War2. Church Corruption3. Black Death

3 Crises define the period

Together, they destroyed the Age of Faith

And paved way for (1) European Renaissance,

then (2) Protestant Reformation, then (3) The

Modern World

Page 4: Introduction

Each Event Worsened The Others

Hundred Years War(1337-1453) Black Death (1347-1352)

Church Corruption

Page 5: Introduction

Hundred Years War (1337-1453)

•War between Kings of France and England over who should be the King of France•Actually lasted 117 years

Page 6: Introduction

Hundred Years War (1337-1453)—Causes

•KOF Charles IV died in 1328•No male heirCousin becomes king, Philip IV, the Fair•KOE Edward III believes he should be KOF•Sent letter to Philip saying he will fight for throne•Invaded France in 1337

Page 7: Introduction

Hundred Years War (1337-1453)—Course

•2 halves•English Period (1337-1429)•Final French victory (1429-1453)

•English Period•Sluys (naval)•Crecy (1346), Poitiers (1356), Agincourt (1415)•Keys to victory: Paid mercenary armies, English longbowmen

•French Period•Jeanne d’Arc motivates French •Charles VII defeats English at Orleans (1429)•Momentum shifts until English driven from France

Page 8: Introduction

Hundred Years War (1337-1453)—Effects

•Mercenaries become essential part of European warfare (question: what do unemployed mercenaries do?)•Gunpowder artillery signals end of castle and knight warfaremedieval warfare•Birth of nation-state (decline of local identity)

Page 9: Introduction

Philip IVThe Fair

(died 1314)

CharlesCount of Valois

(died 1325)

Philip III(died 1285)

Isabella(died 1358)

Charles IV(died 1328)

Philip V(died 1322)

Edward II(died 1327)

Edward III(died 1377)

Philip VI(died 1350)

Royal family tree of FranceNote:

•Women can’t inherit throne•Red=King of England•Black=King of France

Page 10: Introduction

100YW, when Edward III invaded France 100YW, after Black Death, Poitiers, Crecy

Page 11: Introduction

100YW, Just prior to Jeanne d’Arc 100YW, at end

Page 12: Introduction

Church Corruption—Causes

•Popes claimed supreme secular and spiritual power growing

•People begin to challenge Church Authortiy •Independent religious movements break out in

Europe•Only a matter of time before secular rulers

challenge Church’s authority

Page 13: Introduction

Church Corruption—Avignon Papacy

•Papacy in Avignon from 1308 to 1378•All French popes, under increasing control by

KOF•Popes spent enormous amounts on papal

palace and lavish clothing•Demanded taxes from bishops and abbeys

(who in turn demanded taxes from worshippers)•Appointed relatives to church positions

•This behavior destroyed the credibility and legitimacy of Pope for many

Page 14: Introduction

•Church Corruption—Great Schism

•In 1378, Pope Gregory XI returned Papacy to Rome, recognizing damage done to authority and credibility

•Died soon afterwards•Romans rioted, threatened papal electors to ensure a Roman

became next pope•That was Pope Urban VIsuspicious, arrogant, violent temper

•French electors decided to elect their own insteadPope Clement VII (called the anti-pope), and moved back to Avignon

•1378-14142 popes, one in Rome and one in Avignon (and at one pope one in Pisa)

•In 1414, clergy realized damage this was doing to Church’s credibility

•Council of Constance to bring an end to the schism•Deposed all popes, elected compromise Pope Martin V

Page 15: Introduction

How did the Hundred Years’ War worsen . . .

The Black Death•Destructiveness of war literally weakened

people’s ability resist the disease•Kings focused on war not helping people

•Movement of armies helped spread disease

Church Corruption•Church claimed authority over kings

•Tried to stop fighting•Could not—looked powerless (no credibility) in

eyes of many

Page 16: Introduction

How did the Black Death worsen . . .

Hundred Years’ War•Destructiveness of war literally weakened

people’s ability resist the disease•Kings focused on war not helping people

•Movement of armies helped spread disease

Church Corruption•People believed sinfulness caused Black Death

•Church failed to prevent sin•Clergy more interested in money, power than in

helping those suffering from the Black Death•Some clergymen fled rather than stay and help the

sick

Page 17: Introduction

How did Church Corruption worsen . . .

The Black Death•People believed sinfulness caused Black Death

•Church failed to prevent sin•Clergy more interested in money, power than in

helping those suffering from the Black Death•Some clergymen fled rather than stay and help the

sick

Hundred Years’ War•Church claimed authority over kings

•Tried to stop fighting•Could not—looked powerless in eyes of many

Page 18: Introduction

Analyze the impact the Black Death had on the Catholic

Church.

Page 19: Introduction

Analyze and describe the role of the Catholic Church in Medieval

Society