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THE LATE MIDDLE AGES

Social and Political Breakdown 1300-1453

BLACK DEATH, 13481350

The Black Death Precursor: overpopulation & malnutrition


agricultural improvements increase food supply; European population doubles, 10001300, thereafter outstripping food production
13151317: crop failures produce worst famine of Middle Ages

bubonic plague (Black Death) followed trade routes from Asia into Europe, probably via fleas on rats from Black Sea area

POPULAR REMEDIES

aromatic amulets
infection

Pretty necklaces that would mask the smell and protect from

temperance & moderation


A pure life would keep them safe?

promiscuity & abandon


YOLO!

flight & seclusion


GTFO of here! Stay AWAY!!

self-flagellation
ritualistic beating (popular w/ religious fanatics). They believed God would cure them. May have actually spread the disease.

ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES

dramatic labor shortage, climbing wages for laborers & artisans


falling agricultural, climbing luxury pricesnoble landowners hardest hit attempts to freeze wages & force peasants to stay on land peasant revolts cities (artisans) benefit from demand for luxury goods

POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES

Artisan guilds win some political power Kings take advantage of weakened nobility & church

HUNDRED YEARS WAR (1337 1453)

Nominal cause:
English king Edward III s claim on French throne, thwarted by accession of first Valois king, Philip VI (r. 1328 1350)

Larger cause:
English-French territorial, commercial, & cultural rivalry French weakness: larger & wealthier, but more internal discord

FIRST PHASE (EDWARD III)

Flanders allies with England, recognizing Edward as king of France, 1340 English seize Calais, 1346 English rout near Poitiers, 1356; French king John II taken captive 1360 treaty: John II ransomed, English claims in France recognized, Edward renounces claim to French throne

SECOND PHASE TREATY OF TROYES

English war effort flags due to peasant revolts Recommences with English victory at Agincourt, 1415 Duchy of Burgundy joins English Treaty of Troyes, 1420: named English Henry V successor to French Charles VI, but both soon die

THIRD PHASE JOAN OF ARC

French teenage peasant Joan of Arc declares call from God to deliver besieged Orlans from English tired English repulsed, followed by string of French victories

Joan captured 1430, tried & burned as heretic at English-held Rouen


English forced back, conclude war with Calais as only French possession (1453) Joan of Arc

SUMMARY

68 years of peace, 44 of war; France devastated, but national feeling awakened; English & French peasants suffer most from taxes & services

LATE MEDIEVAL CHURCH

Papal monarchy established by Pope Innocent III strengthened the church politically, but weakened it spirituallyundermined popular support Innocents successors: tightened & centralized church legal proceedings; elaborated clerical taxation; broadened papal powers of appointment Demise of Hohenstaufens took away galvanizing enemy of church, made it vulnerable

BONIFACE VIII (R. 12941303) VS. PHILIP THE FAIR (R. 12851314)

French & English kings raise taxes on clergy; Boniface decrees new taxes need papal consent French king Philip the Fair cuts off flow of money to Rome; Boniface concedes

BONIFACE VIII (R. 12941303) VS. PHILIP THE FAIR (R. 12851314)

Boniface issues Unam Sanctam (1302), as confrontation with Philip ramps up, asserting subordination of temporal to spiritual power French army assault & molest Boniface, who later dies Result: popes never again seriously threaten European rulers

AVIGNON PAPACY (13091377)

Pope Clement V moves papal court here to escape strife of Rome to get needed revenue, papal taxes go up, and sale of indulgences begins Pope John XXII (r. 1316 1334)most powerful Avignon pope

JOHN WYCLIFFE (D. 1384) AND JOHN HUSS (D. 1415)

Lollards: followers of Wycliffe, English spokesman for rights of royalty against popes; challenged indulgences, papal infallibility, transubstantiation anticipates Protestantism Hussites: followers of Huss, rector of University of Prague similar to Lollards

GREAT SCHISM (13781417)

THIS GETS KINDA COMPLICATED

Urban VI and Clement VII rival popes; England & allies support Urban, France & allies support Clement Conciliar Theory: idea that a representative council could regulate actions of pope Council of Pisa (1409 1410): deposed Urban & Clement (who refused to step down), elected Alexander V three contending popes Council of Constance (1414 1417): provides for regular councils every few years

Council of Basel (1431 1449): height of conciliar government of church; negotiated directly with heretics (Hussites)
results of conciliar movement: greater religious responsibility to laity & secular governments

Ummm..... explain that to me???

Meanwhile . MONGOL RULE IN RUSSIA (12431480)

Mongols, or Tatars, sweep through China, Islamic world, & Russia, 13th c. Ghengis Khan (11551227) invades Russia, 1223 Russian cities become tribute-paying principalities of part of Mongol Empire known as the Golden Horde. Russians impressed into Mongol military service, women taken as wives/concubines, some sold into slavery partial Islamization of Russian society. 1380: beginning of Mongol decline in Russia; ends 1480 under Ivan the Great.

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