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Culture of the Middle Ages
How did the Church influence political and cultural changes in medieval Europe? How did both innovations and disruptive forces affect people during the Middle Ages?
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Architecture Guiding Question: How did innovations change the architecture of churches and cathedrals in the High Middle Ages? 11th and 12th centuries witnessed a dramatic building of churches in Europe. cathedrals were built in the Romanesque style. Romanesque churches normally followed the basilica shape of churches built in the late Roman Empire. Romanesque builders replaced the basilica's flat wooden roof with a long, round, arched vault made of stone (called a barrel vault) or with a cross vault, in which two barrel vaults intersected. Because stone roofs were extremely heavy, these churches required massive pillars and walls to hold them up. left little space for windows, so Romanesque churches were dark inside.
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Gothic Style appeared in the 12th century and was brought to perfection in the 13th. The Gothic cathedral remains one of the greatest artistic triumphs of the High Middle Ages. Two basic innovations made Gothic cathedrals possible. the replacement of the round barrel vault with a combination of ribbed vaults and pointed arches. Builders could now make Gothic churches higher, giving a sense of upward movement, as if the building is reaching to God. Another technical innovation was the flying buttress—a heavy, arched support of stone built onto the outside of the walls. Flying buttresses made it possible to distribute the weight of the church's vaulted ceilings outward and down. This eliminated the heavy walls needed in Romanesque churches to hold the weight of the massive barrel vaults. Gothic cathedrals were built, then, with relatively thin walls filled with stained glass windows. These windows depict religious scenes and scenes from daily life. The colored glass windows create a play of light inside the cathedral that varies with the sun at different times of the day.
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Universities Guiding Question: How did universities reflect the intellectual revival that occurred in Europe during the High Middle Ages? The university of today, with faculty, students, and degrees, was a product of the High Middle Ages. first European university appeared in Bologna (buh • LOH • nyuh), Italy. Students, men only, came from all parts of Europe to learn law The University of Paris was the first university in northern Europe. In the late 1300s, many students and masters (teachers) left Paris and started a university at Oxford, England. Kings and popes thought it was honorable to found universities. By 1500, Europe had 80 universities.
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Students began their studies with the traditional liberal arts—grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. Teachers lectured by reading from a basic text and adding explanations. After four to six years, students took oral examinations to earn a bachelor of arts degree and later a master of arts. After about ten more years, students earned a doctor of law, medicine, or theology. The most highly regarded subject was theology—the study of religion and God. study of theology was strongly influenced by a philosophical system known as scholasticism. Scholasticism tried to reconcile faith and reason—to show that faith was in harmony with reason. chief task was to harmonize Christian teachings with the works of the Greek philosophers. Aristotle reached his conclusions by rational thought, not by faith, and his ideas sometimes contradicted Church teachings.
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Vernacular Literature
Guiding Question: Why was the development of vernacular literature important during the High Middle Ages? Latin was the universal language of medieval civilization. However, in the 12th century, new literature was being written in the vernacular— the language of everyday speech in a particular region, such as Spanish, French, English, or German. market for vernacular literature appeared in the 12th century when educated people at courts and in the cities took an interest in new sources of entertainment. Poetry becomes popular, this poetry told of the love of a knight for a lady, who inspires him to become a braver knight and a better poet.
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