Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Decline of Feudalism and the Rise of Nations in England & France

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Decline of Feudalism and the Rise of Nations in England & France"— Presentation transcript:

1 Decline of Feudalism and the Rise of Nations in England & France
Middle Ages Decline of Feudalism and the Rise of Nations in England & France

2 Rise of Nations After decline of Rome, Western Europe fell under rule of many different groups of people Fighting occurred almost constantly among these groups Feudalism emerged as a form of government that offered protection

3 Rise of Nations Except for Charlemagne, kings had very little power because their lands & power was transferred to the nobles BUT, in 1100s European monarchs (kings) began to build strong nation-states Nation-state is group of people under 1 government, with definite territorial borders, common culture & language

4 Strong Monarchies England & France were Europe’s 1st nation-states
The role of the monarchy (king) grew stronger in England & France in the 1300s The growth of nations led to the beginning of Nationalism (loyalty to a nation-state rather than feudal lord)

5 England After the collapse of the Roman Empire, England was dominated by 2 Germanic tribes: Angles & Saxons; groups combined in & kingdom became known as England (“Angleland”)

6 England Norman Invasion—William, Duke of Normandy invaded England in 1066 & became a very powerful king of England (became known as William the Conqueror)

7 England William’s grandson, Henry II, set up system of common law—using judges & courts to make sure law is obeyed Grand Juries— examined crimes Petit Juries—decided guilt or innocence of suspects

8 England Henry II’s son, John, was weak & unpopular king who upset feudal lords; forced him to sign Magna Carta in 1215 1st document to limit the power of a king (king could not collect taxes without approval of a Great Council of nobles)

9 England As middle class began to grow, they wanted representation in Great Council; 1295, king allowed middle class to join—became known as Parliament Parliament limited king by advising him on government decisions

10 Stronger Monarchies—War of the Roses
In 1455, England had a civil war as 2 royal families claimed the throne: Lancaster (red rose) & York (white) Henry Tudor was related to both families & ended the civil war—Henry was then named king

11 Stronger Monarchies—War of the Roses
Effects: Many nobles died or fled during war, which strengthened monarchy & further reduced feudalism

12 France KEY IDEA: Instead of creating a nation-state with strong king then limiting power of king like England, France creates a nation-state with strong king who got stronger

13 France After Charlemagne died, Frankish kings were very weak; nobles in France ruled as if there was no king In 987 Hugh Capet took French throne from a weak king; strengthened French monarchy Freed peasants from feudal lords; people became loyal to king not lords

14 France Created Estates-General—group of nobles, church members, peasants to help raise taxes But, Estates-General never became as powerful in France as Parliament was in England…so… The French king grew more powerful than the English king (who was limited by Parliament)

15 First Estate—Clergy (Priests) Third Estate—Commoners
Second Estate—Nobles Third Estate—Commoners

16 Middle Ages: Rise of Spain as a Nation

17 Spain The Islamic Empire controlled most of Spain since 750
BUT, Christians began to retake Spain around time of Crusades (quest known as Reconquista) By late 1400s, the Reconquista was successful; Spain was ruled by exclusively by Christian kings But Spain was divided into feudal territories—it was not unified

18

19 Islamic (Muslim) Territory

20 Islamic Territory

21

22 Spain Spain was united when Isabella of Castile married Ferdinand of Aragon in 1469 Began Spanish Inquisition—used trials, torture, imprisonment to rid Spain of all Jews & Muslims (“one king, one law, one faith”)

23 Middle Ages: Rise of Russia as a Nation

24 Byzantines Influence Slavs
Slavs—nomads migrated from Europe to Asia; warred with Byzantines Because of contact, Slavs began to convert to Christianity & adopted many Byzantine customs Cyril developed alphabet so they could read Bible—Cyrillic Alphabet Russian king was impressed with Hagia Sophia, developed Russia like Constantinople, not Rome

25 SLAVS BYZANTINES

26 Russia During 1200s, the Mongols invaded & ruled over all of Russia (& Asia and China, too!) But, in 1480 Ivan III refused to pay the Mongols tribute (taxes) & broke Russia free from Mongol control Ivan III became czar (Slavic word for king) & made Moscow capital of new empire

27

28 Russia Under Ivan IV, the power of feudal lords was weakened & Russia conquered more land from Mongols; Ivan IV married Anastasia Romanov (Romanov family will be important later!!) But, Ivan IV ruled by terror, murdered thousands of Russians, even his own son (Was Ivan IV insane?)

29 The Rise of Nations Review
For each new nation-state, use the textbox to identify the significant event(s) that led to the rise of a powerful king


Download ppt "Decline of Feudalism and the Rise of Nations in England & France"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google