the barbarianization of the west and the dawn of the early middle ages, 400 - 900 ad

26
The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

Upload: sybil-morrison

Post on 12-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early

Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

Page 2: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

I. Barbarians and the Transformation of the Classical

WorldA. West Germanic Revolution, 200 - 400 AD

Historical Dialectic at Work

Thesis Antithesis

Synthesis

Page 3: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

B. Origins

1. Indo-European

Page 4: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

2. Cosmology

animistic

trees, nature, tricentric

Page 5: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

3. Warrior-based society

a. status based on cattle-raising,

fighting Odin

b. households, clans, tribes

“bloodfeuds”

c. WEREGELD

- manipulated by Romans

Page 6: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

B. Imperial Germans

1. Role in Roman politics, society

2. Comitatus

Hermann Arminius

3. West Germanic Revolution

Page 7: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

C. The Germanic West

Page 8: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

1. Germans take over

a. Early 400s, Roman generals German

b. 487, Ostrogoths occupy Italy

2. Germans use Roman aristocracy

a. Gallo-Romans

b. Germanic chieftains sought

Roman titles

Page 9: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

By 500 AD, the western half of the Roman Empire was under the control of Germanic chieftains…

…but at the local level society still governed by

Roman laws and aristocrats

Page 10: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

II. Germanic Kingdoms, 500 - 900

Page 11: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

A. The Frankish Kingdom

Page 12: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

1. Clovis kills last Gallo-Roman general, 486

2. Appointed “patrice” by Byzantine Emperor

3. Married a Christian woman and converted

4. Established “Merovingian” Dynasty

Page 13: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

B. Living in the Early Middle Ages

1. Roman slavery disappears

a. Manses, manorial system

2. Single family household

- marriage depended on permission

- economic, not “sacred”

Page 14: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

3. Peasant culture gradually becomes Christian

a. prior to 500, Christianity was urban

b. Venerable Bede, (600-700s)

blending pagan/Christian rituals

Page 15: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

C. the new Aristocracy

1. Land (Roman) and warfare (German)

2. Liege-lord grants fiefs

* origins of Germanic loyalty

a. vassal serves lord in exchange for fief

Page 16: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

3. Love-hate relationship with Germanic kings

4. Status of women

Page 17: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

4. Constant need to pursue honor

“Quest” myths popular in medieval Europe

Beowulf - 6th Century Nordic; pagan mysticism

oral tradition, oldest epic in vernacular Old English

Page 18: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

Arthurian Legend

Celtic King who fought Anglo Saxons

Might does not make right

Quest for the Holy Grail

Page 19: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

Between 500 - 700, Germanic tribes establish Kingdoms in the West based on Roman land-use patterns and Germanic customs

…as these kingdoms solidify, powerful Germanic kings try to reconstitute the Roman Empire under their rule

Page 20: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

III. The Carolingian Achievement

Page 21: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

A. Carolingian power

1. 700s, rebellious nobles

2. Charles Martel

Battle of Tours, 732 AD

Saved the West? Christianity?

3. Gregory III declares Charles “Protector of the Church”

Page 22: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

4. Martel’s son, Pippin, named “King of the Franks”

Frankish Kings and Church relying on each other to establish legitimacy

Page 23: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

B. Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire

“The Holy Roman Empire was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire…discuss.”

Page 24: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

1. Reformed the clergy

church feared pagan influences

2. Forcibly converted non-Christians

Einhard, The Life of Charlemagne

Page 25: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

C. Christmas Day, 800

1. Pope declares Charlemagne the Holy Roman Emperor

the Empire Restored?

Page 26: The Barbarianization of the West and the Dawn of the Early Middle Ages, 400 - 900 AD

2. The Carolingian Renaissance, post 800 AD

Charlemagne established universities, monasteries

Unifies Europe long enough to withstand new invasions

Desire to centralize Europe (Roman) contends with tendency to resist centralization (Germanic)