Intro and Chapter 9. Conquered England William of Normandy (the Conqueror.

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Intro and Chapter 9

Transcript of Intro and Chapter 9. Conquered England William of Normandy (the Conqueror.

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Intro and Chapter 9

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Conquered England

•William of Normandy (the

Conqueror

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Apostle who spread Christianity thoughout the Greek speaking

world

Paul

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First to divide the Roman Empire

•Diocletian

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Moved the Roman capital to Byzantium

•Constantine

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First to unify Europe after the fall of Rome

•Charlemagne

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Declared the independence of the Church from lay appointments

•Gregory VII

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Forced to sign the Magna Carta

•John

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Pope who issued the Unam Sanctam

•Boniface VIII

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His claim to the French throne was the spark that began the Hundred

Years’ War

•Edward III

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Relative of the deceased French king who was declared the new king (rather than Edward III of England

•Philip VI

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With Wat Tyler he began a peasant rebellion in England

•John Ball

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French king known for his piety

•Louis IX

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He was excommunicated by the Pope four times and was

defeated by his German nobles

•Frederick II

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Infant king of England and France

•Henry VI

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Young woman who inspired the French to drive the English out of

France

•Joan of Arc

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Ended Mongol rule in Russia and brought much of Russia under

Moscow’s control

•Ivan III (the Great)

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Pope of the early 13th century who promoted the doctrine of papal

Plenitude of Power

•Innocent III

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French pope who moved the headquarters of the Church to

Avignon, France

•Clement V

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French king who won the Hundred Years’ War

•Charles VII

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English scholar who criticized the wealth of the clergy and papal

infallibility; and argued for the authority of scripture over Pope or Councils

•John Wycliffe

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Victor at the Battle of Agincourt who was declared the heir to the

French throne

•Henry V

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His dispute with the pope over taxation of the clergy sparked the “Babylonian

Captivity” of the church

•Philip IV (the “Fair”)

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This Avignon pope introduced the practice of the selling of

indulgences as a way to raise funds

•Clement VI

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His criticisms of the church, emphasis on the Bible, and simpler forms of worship led to his fiery end

•John Huss

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Asian based warriors who gained control of Russia for 3 centuries

•Mongols

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Group from what is today eastern France who switched sides during

the Hundred Years’ War

•Burgundians

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Along with William of Ockham, he argued for the independence of

monarchs from Papal control

•Marsilius of Padua

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These high officials in the Church supervised a number of

congregations in their region

•bishops

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The general term for men ordained to carry on ministry in the church

•clergy

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Someone who was obligated to fight when called upon by the landowner

who had granted him land

•vassal

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Organizations of craftsmen who controlled the training, quality of

production, and employment of people in their craft

•guild

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Scholars who pursued knowledge by use of Aristotelian logic

•Scholastics

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A general term for the townspeople of the late Middle Ages

• Burghers(or bourgeoisie or

burgess)

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A general term for the people who worked the land during feudalism

•peasants

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The people of the church who are not ordained for ministry

•laity

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An agricultural worker who was not free to leave the manor upon which

he and his family worked

•serf

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Followers of Wycliffe’s teachings

•lollards

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The conflict between England and France that began early in the 14th

century

•Hundred Years’ War

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This French legislature was created during the Hundred Years’ War for

the purpose of approving taxes

•Estates General

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An anti tax revolt by French peasants

•Jacquerie

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This Papal bull declared that the Church was superior over all

secular powers

•Unam Sanctum

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The direct tax on French peasants

•taille

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Religious zealots who believed beating themselves with whips

would bring an end to the plague

•flagellants

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Treaty that ended the vassalage of the English king and gave England

sovereignty over large portions of France

•Bretigny

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Law passed by the English Parliament to keep peasant wages

to pre-plague levels

•Statute of Laborers

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Genre in art and literature that was intended to remind people of their

mortality and the need for Christian living

•Dance of Death(Danse Macabre)

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Followers of John Huss

•Hussites

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These clergymen and scholars believed key church decisions should be made by a large group rather than an individual

•conciliarists

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Where Huss was executed and where the church was restored to

one pope.

•Constance

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This 13th century group, along with the Waldensians, were declared heretical because of their call for a simplicity of religion and separation from the world.

•Cathars

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Authored by Marsilius of Padua this writing argued for the independence

of monarchs from Papal authority

•Defender of Peace

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Treaty that made Henry V the heir to the French throne

•Treaty of Troyes

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Forty-three years after the Council of Constance ended the Great Schism this

Papal bull condemned Councils as a means of making church decisions

•Execrabilis

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Key battle of 732

•Battle of Tours

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Church event of 1054

•Schism of Roman Catholic and

Eastern Orthodox

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1453

•Fall of Constantinope to Turks and End of the 100 Years’ War

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1066

• William of Normandy

Conquered England

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1215

• King John of England signed the

Magna Carta

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800

• Charlemagne crowned emperor

by the Pope

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1417

•Council of Constance

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1347

•Beginning of the Black Death

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1302

•Boniface VIII issued the Unam Sanctum

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1378

•Great Schism of the Catholic Church

began

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1337

•Beginning of the Hundred Years’ War

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1309

•Beginning of the Babylonian Captivity