Chapter 8.3
Converted people to Christianity Some women married pagan kings to convert them Clothilde persuaded husband Clovis of Franks Parish Priest: only contact that people had with the Church Administered sacraments: sacred rites of the Church Preached Gospels and teachings Guided on values and morality Assistance to sick and needy Married both peasants and nobles, baptized all children, buried all dead
Social center Gossiped and danced after church Schools Decorated Stone rather than wood Relics Churches required tithe: tax equal to 1/10 th of income Christian Calendar: marked holy days, change of seasons, honoring saints
Equal before God Daughters of Eve Weak and easily led to sin Needed guidance of men View of ideal woman Modest and pure “Mary” mother of Jesus Churches dedicated to “mother of God” and “queen of heaven” Minimum age for marriage Men fined if they seriously injured wives Punished women more harshly
Men and women withdrew from public to become monks/nuns Devoted life to God Benedict 530 organized monastic life Benedictine Rule: 3 vows Obedience to abbot or abbess Poverty Chastity/Purity Spiritual value of manual labor Work on physical tasks
Learning Monasteries and convents Preserved ancient writings Copied ancient works Kept learning alive Taught classics, wrote summaries Wrote history Introduced use of BC and AD Convents Strong-minded women could escape limits Write books, compose music Restrictions Could not preach Gospel Church frowned on learning
Controlled spiritual life Became most powerful secular (non-religious) force in Europe Pope claimed authority over all secular rulers Bishops and archbishops usually nobles Churchmen only educated people Feudal rulers appointed them to high positions Since Church administered sacraments, they had absolute power Canon law: Applied to religious teachings, clergy, marriages, morals Excommunication: If disobeyed Church law, could not receive sacraments or Christian burial- most feared penalty Powerful nobles could face interdict: Order that excommunicates whole town, region or kingdom! Even strongest rulers would give in, rather than face interdict
Church wealth and power grew/discipline weakened Wealth left to monasteries/convents…monks and nuns forgot vow of poverty Clergy lived in luxury Priests could marry, but some didn’t spend enough time in Church Treated priesthood as inheritance Cluniac Reforms: Early 900s in W Europe French monastery revived Benedictine Rule Many monasteries followed lead Pope Gregory VII extended to entire Church Outlawed marriage for priests Prohibited simony-selling of church offices Church only could choose officials (not kings)
More reform 1200s Francis of Assisi set up orders of friars Monks that did not live in monasteries Travelled around Europe preaching to poor Poverty, humility, love of God Franciscan and Dominican orders Combat heresy
Preserved oral/written tradition Spain-Conquered by Muslims Tolerant of both Christianity and Judaism Sephardim- Hebrew for Spain Sephardic Jews served as officials in Muslim royal courts Late 1000s: Persecution increased Church forbid Jews to own land or work Anti-Semitism: prejudice against Jews Illness, famine, disasters blamed on Jews Economic woes—many Jews were moneylenders because they were barred from other jobs Migrated to E Europe to escape Welcomed knowledge and skills Thrived until modern times