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The Middle Ages 476-1500 A.D. The Middle Ages 476-1500 A.D.

The Middle Ages 476-1500 A.D. - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Middle Ages 476-1500 A.D. - PPT Presentation

Feudalism and Manor System The Rise of the Catholic Church The Crusades The Feudal and Manorial System Main Idea In Europe during the Middle Ages the feudal and manorial systems governed life and required people to perform certain duties and obligations ID: 691502

feudal system peasants church system feudal church peasants manor lords social middle land knights people castles warfare feudalism siege

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Slide1

The Middle Ages476-1500 A.D.

Feudalism and Manor SystemThe Rise of the Catholic ChurchThe Crusades Slide2

The Feudal and Manorial System

Main Idea- In Europe during the Middle Ages, the feudal and manorial systems governed life and required people to perform certain duties and obligations.

Feudalism

-

A loosely organized political system of rule in which powerful local lords divided their landholdings among lesser lords into manors

Manorial System

-

Economic system in Europe during the Middle ages, based on large estates owned by lords and worked by peasants called

SerfsSlide3

The Feudal SystemSlide4
Slide5

Feudal Social PyramidSlide6

QuestionsWhy do you think powerful lords divided their land amongst lesser lords?

What were three dominate social groups of the middle ages? What was each groups’ task?Slide7

Fiefs and Vassals

Knights were usually paid for their services with landLand given to knights for service was called a

fief

Fiefs included peasants to work the land, as well as any town or buildings on it

Anyone accepting a fief from a noble was concerned a

Vassal

It came from Germanic society, where warriors swore an oath to their leader. Slide8

The Feudal System

Feudal Contract- An establishment of customs and tradition based on an exchange of oaths and obligations

Origins of Feudalism

Feudalism originated partly as result of Viking, Magyar, Muslim invasions After the collapse of the Carolingian Empire

Kings were unable to defend their lands

Built castles, often on hills as place of shelter in case of attack

Knights and Lords

Nobles needed trained soldiers to defend castles

Knights

- heavily armored soldiers mounted on horses

Being a knight was expensive; they had to maintain weapons, armor, horses.Slide9

The Feudal System

Medieval feudal system classifies people into three social groups –those who fight: nobles and knights –those who pray: monks, nuns, leaders of the Church

–those who work: peasants

• Social class is usually inherited and the majority of people are

peasants Slide10

Terry Jones- BBCMedieval Lives

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhWFQtzM4r0Terry Jones- BBC- The Peasant - 2-4 Minutes

- 8-

20 minutes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yg3YDN5gTX0

VideoSlide11

Economic System- Lord/ Knight rules land and peasants work land for protection

- Lord’s word was law, peasants were almost like slaves

Life on the ManorSlide12

A Self-Sufficient World

Each manor included fortified house for noble family, village for peasants and serfs

Goal to make manor self-sufficient

They produced almost everything they needed. The manor had a bakery, winery, church, blacksmith, orchards, forests, and fields for harvestSlide13

Three-Field Rotation

Most of manor

s land were occupied by fields for crops, pastures for animals

Middle Ages farmers learned that leaving one-third of their field empty for year improved soil, the practice developed into

three-field systemSlide14

QuestionsWhy was it the goal of the manor to be self-sufficient? (think of what happened to society when the Roman Empire fell)Slide15

The Three Field SystemSlide16

Medieval Warfare

Castles were also fortresses, designed for defense.

Castles were fortified with massive stone walls and guard towers.

Many large scale battles took place at these castles.

This type of warfare is known as

siege warfare

.

These battles were usually very bloody. Slide17

Siege WarfareTypically, siege warfare took place with an army surrounding a castle and cutting off food and supplies in attempt to capture it

If the people refused to surrender, they would assault the castle using a variety of weapons, such as catapults, battering rams, and siege towers.

Defensively, the people in the castle would shoot arrows , pour scalding hot water or tar onto the attackers as well as launching projectiles of their own.Slide18

The Village Church

The center of village affairs and social lifeDaily life and holidays revolved around the Christian calendarThe church required Christians to pay a

Tithe

or tax equal to 1/10th of their income.

Baptism marked the entrance into the community and the dead were buried in the church yards.Slide19

Rise of the Church

After Fall of Roman Empire, the Catholic Church was the guiding force of the new civilizationCentered in Rome, it was the only remaining institution that offered unity, guidance, and education in EuropeSlide20