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Published byLucy Franklin Modified over 6 years ago
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Carolingian Intellectual Renewal and the Role of the Family
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Carolingian Renaissance
“Rebirth” of learning Charlemagne needed educated clergy and government officials Partially appropriate Not known for creative, original ideas. Revival of classical studies Preserve Latin and early Christian culture
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Carolingian Renaissance
Major goal of monasteries Benedictine monks copied manuscripts Scriptoria – writing rooms for monks Frankish monasteries produced bound books using parchment or sheepskin rather than papyrus and put jewels on the cover Carolingian miniscule – small print, not cursive, easy to read
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Carolingian Renaissance
Impact 90% of the ancient Roman texts exist because of Carolingian monks Allowed for Renaissance in 12th, 14th, 15th centuries
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Carolingian Renaissance
Charlemagne established a palace school Invited European scholars to his court Alcuin – “greatest scholar of the day” Taught classical Latin and “liberal arts”
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Family and Marriage Marriages arranged by fathers, uncles to meet family needs Wives expected to be faithful Many aristocratic men had concubines Charlemagne had several
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Family and Marriage Church attempted to influence marriage
Add blessings to the civil ceremony Weddings should be public Girl over 15 must consent to her guardian’s choice
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Family and Marriage Marriage (cont.) Emphasize monogamy and permanence
Condemned concubinage and “easy divorce” – adultery of wife or impotence of husband Shortly after Charlemagne’s reign, church completely prohibits divorce 13th century – divorce largely eliminated
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Family and Marriage Changes in Family life Nuclear over extended
Conjugal over kin Leads to the growth of urban life Role of women Extended family – eldest woman controlled all other female members Nuclear family – wife dominated by husband, has control of children
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