The Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire. Louis the Pious Continued policy of monastic reform...

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The Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire

Transcript of The Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire. Louis the Pious Continued policy of monastic reform...

The Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire

Louis the Pious

• Continued policy of monastic reform– Benedict of Aniane

• Two marriages, four sons– Rebellion

• Oath of Strasbourg• Treaty of Verdun• Fragmentation of

trade networks

Disunity and Partition

• What were some of the reasons for the collapse of the Carolingian Empire?

• What were some of the consequences of that collapse?

Invasions

Vikings• Why did the Northmen

begin to prey on their neighbors at about this time?– Population pressure;

political reasons (Harald Finehair)

• How extensive was their reach? – Varangian Guard

• What made them so frightening?

• Raids led to invasions

Responses to Vikings

• Rollo, first duke of Normandy, 911

• Plate 4.1 The Jelling Monument

• Alfred the Great– Danelaw

Fragmentation and Disorder

• Magyars: horsemen from Hungary– Battle of Lechfeld, Otto the Great

• Slavs and Avars– Conversion: Slavic Orthodox Church

Byzantium under Justinian

Byzantine Empire: 10th century

Basil II’s conquests

Division and struggle

• Theme system: localized military support (7th c onward)

• Central imperial government vs. local rulers (“Dynatoi”), 10th century– Struggle for control over

resources of countryside– Cities, which had gone into

decline, had begun to experience a resurgence

• Sourcebook 4.2 Romanus Lecapenus Novel

• Iconoclasts vs. iconodules– Shifted in support

with sympathies of emperors (Irene an iconodule)

– Two outbreaks: 8th century and early 9th century

The Rus

• Originated with Scandinavian traders– Centered at

Novgorod, then south at Kiev

• Bordered by Khazars (converted to Judaism)

• Converted to Christianity through Vladimir– Marriage to

Byzantine princess, Basil II’s sister

• Conversions:– Polish to Roman

Catholicicsm– Hungary to

Catholicism– Khazars to Judaism– Bulgars to Islam– Rus to Eastern

Orthodox Christianity

• 4.11 The Russian Primary Chronicle

The Islamic World

• Abbasid Dynasty (750-1258)– Displaced Umayyads– Capital established at

Baghdad– Arabian Nights (early

10th century)– Islamic Renaissance

• Dissatisfaction, fragmentation– Fatimids in Egypt,

Shi’ites

• Attacks on Sicily, southern Italy from North Africa; also southern France, Spain

• What were the results of these attacks? (hint: not all negative!)

• Shi’ites: imams, mahdi • Toleration of Jews

The End of the World?

• Y1K: Apocalypse When

• Dhuoda’s manual to her son

• Cluny 910• Peace of God

• Characterize the mood of apocalypticism as the millenium approached. How did the corruption of the church contribute to this mood?– Takeover of church

lands by local nobles– Simony– Papal office

• John XII