Essay renaming era
Medieval
Medium aevum→middle age
Good things before and after, middle not so good
Germanic period, Germans disliked by French
Axial age
Everything revolves around it
About 800 BCE→200 CE
Era humans started to realize difference from animals
Social hierarchies developed, more urban
Religious and philosophical thinking
Greek philosophy, Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, Confucianism, etc.
Hinduism and Judaism predate Axial age
Judaism
Monotheistic
Oldest of three major
Other monotheisms branch off of it
Ethical monotheism
Requires following set of codes in Torah
Main ideas;
Monotheism
Importance of Torah
Significance of Israel and its people
Origins
Came from ancient Hebrew people, second millennium BCE
Important figures
Abraham (originally Abram)
Lived in ancient Mesopotamia
Considered to be first Jew (about 1800 BCE), also first monotheist
Believed to be first to receive direct revelations from God
Made pact (covenant) with God, in return for his trust and loyalty, he would be rewarded with homeland for descendants (become known as chosen people), and prosperity
New name Abraham means father of many nations
Wife Sarah
Wandered through eastern Mediterranean→fertile crescent, best place to live+most urban at time
Children and grandchildren enslaved in Egypt; book of Genesis
More loyal to God than anything
Willing to sacrifice son (Issac in Judeo-Christian, Ishmael in Islam)
Moses
About 1300 BCE
Prophet
Led Israelites out of enslavement in Egypt
Known as the Exodus; Book of Exodus
Traveled through Sinai peninsula to promised land (Canaan/Israel)
Guided by revelations from God
Formed commandments for for Jewish faith; ritual practice and ethics
Accepted Tablets of the Law (included Ten Commandments) on Mt. Sinai
Seen as single most important event in foundation of Judaism
Talked to by burning bush, told to free Jewish people, parts sea to escape (Exodus)
Great lawgiver of Jewish people
Dies right before reaching holy land again
Joshua
Became leader after Moses’ death
Captured Israel
King David
Established kingdom of Israel
Son Solomon took throne after death, David built Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem
David died before temple could be finished→got woman's husband killed on purpose, lust tragic flaw
Wailing/western wall→only part left of temple
Used to have priests, when temple destroyed had to turn to local scholars→rabbis
Solomon led golden age→represents justice (baby cut in half to find real mother), morality, model monarch
After King Solomon death, Israel split into northern kingdom of Israel and southern of Judah
Both captured by Assyrian and Babylonian empires
Israel
Promised land
Led by King David→founded
Taken over by son Solomon who built Temple of Solomon
Destroyed in 587 BCE by Babylonians
Split into two kingdoms after death of Solomon, Israel in north and Judah in south
Both conquered and controlled by Assyrians and Babylonians
Sixth century BCE→Babylonians sent Jews into exile three times
Many Jews deported to Babylon
Known as Babylonian Captivity of the Hewbrews
Scattered Jews throughout empire→spread out, hoped they would absorb into general population
539 BCE Persian king Cyrus the Great invaded Babylon, freed captive Jews
Returned to Jerusalem, rebuilt Temple of Solomon
Later came under Greek and Roman rule
Revolted against Romans, Romans burnt down Temple of Solomon, exiled all Jews throughout Mediterranean area
Three sects/interpretations
Orthodox
Conservative
Reformed
Medieval/Renaissance
Because of spread of Christianity, seen as inferior and dangerous
Exiled, persecuted, sometimes forced to convert, or killed
Golden Age for Jews
Muslim dynasties in medieval Spain
Sephardic Jews trace ancestry to Spain
Ashkenazim Jews trace to Germany
14th century; Spain under Christian rule, if didn’t convert would be exiled
Torah
Means Law or Teaching
First five books of Bible (Pentateuch, or Five Books of Moses)
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy
Contains creation of world, stories of early prophets, enslavement and liberation in Egypt, Moses receiving commandments, journey to Israel (Exodus)
Migrated to Egypt, and were enslaved
Other sacred texts include Misnah and Talmud; legal and ritual obligations, Midrash commentary on ancient Hebrew writing
Talmud and Midrash do not carry over to Christianity
Practices
Following rules of Kosher food
Going to synagogue for communal prayer and readings from Torah
Observing holy day on Saturday (Sabbath)
Also observing holidays like Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Hanukkah
Egypt
Jews enslaved, pharaoh refused to let them go
Lamb's blood over door keeps angel of death from killing oldest son in Jewish house→Passover (liberation from slavery)
Last of plagues
Locust swarms
Eat grain
Nile River run red
Rains frogs
Hale
Liberated by Moses
After Exodus, at Mt. Sinai, built golden calf to scare the Egyptians
Moses throws rocks at the calf, breaks it
Philistines
Want to invade ancient Hebrews
Hebrews so bad at fighting, decided to have a one on one fight→David (Hebrew) and Goliath (Philistine soldier)
David defeated Goliath with a sling
David punished to be shepard→have to protect sheep, so became very good with sling
Becomes savior for people→messiah (translates to christos in Greek)
Leads Jews to peak of power
Christianity
Began under Roman Empire as form of Judaism
Became large and powerful in late ancient/medieval times
Important figures
Jesus (of Nazareth)
Lived in time of Augustus, province called Judaea
King Herod had all newborn babies killed→Jesus not because in stable rather than inn
Escapes massacre of innocents because had to go to Roman Census→Augustus Caesar ordered census
Became carpenter
Cleansed of sins by John the Baptist→wash away original sin
Many Jewish sects looking for prophet to lead them
Taught form of Judaism with focus on ethical+moral purity
Jesus not Christian
Teachings got him in trouble with Jewish and Roman leaders→seen by Jews to challenge social and religious order, Romans saw as disturbing the Jews; not seen by most as prophet
Arrested and crucified in 33 CE as enemy to Roman state→rose from the dead three days later, appeared to followers, then ascended to heaven
Believed to be son of God→came to earth to redeem sins of humans
Miracles; walks on water, heals the blind, replicates bread/fish, water into wine, healed leprosy, raises the dead
Very eloquent speaker, gives very good sermons→Sermon on the Mount, most popular ideas, “love thy neighbour as thyself”, poorer/more generous people>rich people
12 apostles, at Last Supper, split bread and wine (communion), “love one another as I have loved you” →Holy Thursday
Arrested and interrogated by Roman governor Pailet (thought messiah meant like David), decided to execute Jesus, had someone else do it
Execution became public spectacle→took clothes, made him carry cross, put crown of thorns on his head→execution on cross uses own body weight to slowly strangle you, weight pulls on lungs→ “Forgive them Father, they know not what to do” said when being nailed to cross→earthquake+eclipse when he dies, became martyr
After death, disciples spread through Roman Empire and told story
Saint Peter and Saint James
Led early Jewish/Christian movement in Jerusalem
Peter would deny Jesus three times→nickname for Simon, popularly believed he was chosen to be successor→seen by Catholics as most important apostle→denied being follower of Jesus three times, became bishop of Rome/Pope→killed on upside down cross
Saint Paul
Converted non-Jews (Gentiles) to Christianity
Very few Jews converted in beginning
Poor, enslaved, and women most interested in Christianity→mothers taught religion in Roman households
During time of Pax Romana
Wrote letters to people in different parts of area/Mediterranean
Improves God’s image→emphasized forgiveness
Constantine
Legalized Christianity in 300 BC
Moved capital of Rome to Byzantium (Constantinople) →birthplace of Orthodox Christianity
Judas
Betrayed Jesus to Romans
Took thirty pieces of silver→threw it away and hung himself
One of twelve apostles→still twelve after him, replaced him
Mary Magdalene
Supposed to have committed adultery, forgiven by Jesus→story used to discredit women in Catholic church; only men become clergy
Actually rich widow who sponsored early Christians
Her and Mary (Jesus mom) find Jesus empty tomb→Easter
The Good Samaritan
Rich person and priest keep going past hurt person
Stopped to help them
Samaritans usually bad people
Main ideas
Belief in Jesus as son of God+redeemer of human sins
Love your neighbor
Practice kindness
Central text
Bible→Old and New Testament
Old→Jewish text
New→arose in third century CE
First four books about Jesus life→Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, called four Gospels (God Spell)
Not part of Judaisim at all
Persecution
Romans interpreted belief as them being atheist and disloyal→wouldn’t worship state gods
Those who died and were tortured called martyrs→believed to go straight to heaven+were God’s favorites
Spread
Constantine--Roman emperor--converted to Christianity
Started to pay Christian communities, made pagan gods less important
Crusades
Called to by Pope Urban II→1095
Redirect aggression to be army under Pope
Goal→capture Holy Land from Muslims
Greek Orthodox faced most brutality
Rise in literacy
Cathedral schools+universities
Better access to scripture→people made opinions, increased fear of heresy (people called heretics)
Did not like all the money collected by the churches→led to many smaller crusades
Seven sacred rituals/sacraments
Baptism
John the Baptist baptized Jesus
Communion
Bread and wine→body and blood, recreation of Last Supper
Reconciliation/penance
Admit sins, forgiveness in return
Conformation
Become adult in church
Marriage
Extreme unction/last rites
Anointed for the last time
Holy orders
Becoming a priest
Government/politics
Lots of invading groups in Europe
Visigoths, Franks
Frankish empire
France did not exist; neither did Germany, but same ethnicity
Clovis→first Frankish leader to convert to Christianity; encouraged others to convert
Married non-Frank when converted; marrying Germans to Roman expanded his subjects→removes people from previous groups, trying to fuse together, remove divided loyalties
Tutored by Aristotle
Battle of Tours/Poitier →732
Moors try to invade Spain/Gaul
Franks painted themselves as protects of innocent to promote Christianity over Islam
Charles Martel (hammer)
Led battle
Charlemagne (Charles the Great)
Both French and German political lineage→Emperor of both
Makes deal with pope→in exchange for promoting church, 12/25/800 Pope crowns Charlemagne emperor of Romans
Closest in 400 years to uniting Europe like Romans
Forced all other Germans to convert to Christianity
Killed if refused to convert
Controlled political/military power as well as Christianity
Sword and ball with cross in photo
Revived trade and literacy
Built schools
Invaded, but did not conquer, Spain
Conquered around Barcelona→modern day Catalan speaking people
Did not pass land/titles to one kid, his son decided to split empire into three parts for each of his three kids
Charles and Louis split up land of younger brother Lothair
Norse (vikings)
Scandinavians from North
Germanic people
Very cold in their land, cannot grow stuff easily
Had to trade, but didn’t have much to trade
Turned into raids
Made longboats to trade
Sinked less, went faster
Could still carry a large amount of items
Could roll to different rivers on trees
Conquered Normandy, England
Normans later conquered England too
Built Dublin→trading port
Discovered Greenland and possibly North America
High Middle Ages
Feudalism
Political and military
Count pronounces Dukes to fight in army, gives them fief (land)
Dukes keep some land to become their manors, give rest to their own vassals, end up with much larger army
Lowest noble still landlord
Dukes follow code of horseman (chivalry, from cheval), good fighters and Christian
Ladies→only upper class women
Similarity to chess
Squares like fiefs
Serfs like pawns→smallest, but support community
Bishops→connection to Catholic church, don’t fight so move diagonally
Fortresses→very powerful can move anywhere
Knights→move same way they would in combat, break through enemy lines and turn back around them
Queen→do not marry because of love if noble, political alliance, could be great political power if right wife was chosen
Checkmate from Persian term shamat which means king is dead
Manorialism→medieval manors
Economic and social
Most people peasants→serfs
Few specialized skills
Work on land they rent and the lord’s unrented land→called the lord’s domain
Farming→made advancements for horses (collars), later began to use oxen, could plow with animals to grow more food (moldboard/carruca plow), people decided to pool resources and work together to get equipment and produce more
Get strips of land when rent from lord, all work together in one field
One strip fallow, animals graze and re fertilize, rotate crops grown each year so only need to be fallow every two years→different crops use different nutrients from soil, so much grain now they need to sell it, value goes down, people leave and move to new towns
Primogeniture
First male in family inherits all wealth and titles
Not much economic advancement at the time
Hegemony
Leadership or dominance by one group/person over another
Church hierarchy
Believers (parish) > priests/monks > bishop, oversees multiple parishes/priests (dioceses) > archbishops > cardinals (archbishops, wear all red, vote fo Pope) > religious ruler (Pope) > God
Lay investiture
Investiture→ power to appoint bishop
Common people could choose bishop
Gregory VII used excommunication on emperor Henry IV→out of church=out of communication with God, kicked out of church, cannot receive sacraments, start to build up sins but can’t receive penance, becoming unholy
Interdict
Churches shut down, no sacraments, mass excommunication
Innocent III imposed on all of England
King John suspected to be stealing tithe (10% of income goes to church), later became vassal of Innocent III→ Pope ruled over king of England
Most represents power of Pope in Middle Ages
Called crusade of his own
First Crusade→1095
Called by Urban II
Created an argument for why there should be holy war
Byzantine empire about to collapse, Turks to invade
Scholasticism
Religion as light in a superstitious would
Bring back ancient Greek logic
Saint Thomas Aquinas→wrote Summa Theologica 1274; uses summa (device used by Aristotle, pro/con list), used Greek logic to show how Christianity could be logical→wanted church to trust people to think for themselves, church could not discount him because he wrote most logical reason God is real
End of Middle Ages
Monarchs triumph over nobles
Replaced feudalism with system that doesn’t require nobles
Hire more peasants
Firearms and longbows→made knights obsolete
Agriculture revolution→lots of food, don’t need as many serfs, migrated to cities, nobles don’t have control over cities
100 years war
Monarchs had succeeded in taking power from nobles
⅓ of French nobility wiped out in one battle→longbows
Joan of Arc (Joan D’Arc) →peasant, had vision, talked to king of France, got sent out with army to be sort of cheerleader, inspired people and they won, captured by English, tortured, burned at stake, even they believed she was telling the truth, became symbol of French patriotism
Black Death
Wiped out ⅓ to ¼ of people, ruined vassal/lord relationships
Spread by fleas on cargo ships
Not much money left in agriculture→manorial system let go of ⅓ to ¼ of people living on manors, so collapsed, followed by feudalism
Rising middle class
Problems in Catholic church
Middle Ages PRIMES
P+M: Feudalism
System between nobles who own land
King or queen give fief to vassal
Break it up, keep part, give fief to knight, continue passing on
On land will be one or more manors, become lords in manorial system
E+S: Manorialism
R: Catholic church