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Someone who is against icons in thier religious practice.
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- The widow of Leo IV who became the empress of Byzantium
- Was a secret iconophile.
- Her son is Constantine VI.
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- 802-811
- Emperor of W. Balkans
- expanded Byzantium empire
- Krum, Bulgarian khan, lined his skull with silver & used as a ceremonial drinking cup
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- 858-867 & 877-886
- Pope of Constantinople.
- He dictated summeries of hundereds of .
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- split in 1031
- Today's Portugal & Spain
- Taken over by Abd al-Rahman
- Rulers were hardly Muslim or Arabic.
- prince was called "emir"
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Charles Martel
"The Hammer"
(chapter 3) |
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Definition
- Gave the name Carolignian to the dynasty
- Won a battle against an army led by the Muslim governor of Al-Andalus.
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Charlemagne
"The Great"
(chapter 3) |
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Definition
Most famous king of the Carolingian dynasty.
- government is highly organized
- strong military
- Christianity
- defended the pope who crowns him
- Holy Roman empire
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missi dominici
(chapter 3) |
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- "message for the kings"- to watch over the counts on the king's behalf.
- the counts were to carry out the kings laws, give him army men, and collect taxes
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- group of people who are power based in Syria.
- Byzantium tribe
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- Moved capital to Baghdad
- defeated the Umayyads
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- died 850
- Author on a book of algebra
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St. Benedict's Rule
(chapter 3) |
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Definition
- 540
- Divided the day into discrete times of prayer, reading, and labor.
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Treaty of Verdun
(chapter 3) |
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Definition
- 843
- The split of the empire into three and became the peace after Louis's death.
- Charles the Bald 840-877 (France)
- Louis the German 840-876
- Lothar 817-855 (Fr & Grmy)
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The room of the monastery where parchment was prepared and texts where copied. |
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Charlemagne's scholar that showed his religious side. |
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Utrecht Psalter
(chapter 3) |
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A book containing all 150 Psalms & 16 other songs. |
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Byzantine Imperial Court
(chapter 4) |
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everyone is accesable to the emperor education became important enuchs-castrated men who lived with the royal family |
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Michael Psellos
(chapter 4) |
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- Orthodox Christianity in 988.
- Changed his name to Basil
- Married Anna, emperor Basil II's sister
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originaly bandits and Vladimir converted them to Orthodox Christianity in 988 |
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al-Andalus's capital (very wealthy) women where very important becasue they where doctors, teachers, librarians, and copiests |
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- Raided France, England, Scotland & Ireland.
- Traveled with families, childeren & slaves
- discovered Iceland
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- 871-899
- Wessex king
- brought time & peace
- having a taxation system called DANEGELD
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Another name for Hungarians |
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courtyly love government was nto yet organized |
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wealthy townns men high in social class |
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peasants dependants of the lords |
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the 3field system would rotate crops after each season made it able to grow more than 1 crop at a time |
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Primogeniture
(chapter 4) |
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Definition
Claims of mostly the eldest son where he got the inheritance of the familiy |
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wealthy enough to buy and own houses |
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- 1081-1152
- Abbot of Saint Denis
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- 1079-1142
- "Nothing can be believed unless it is understood"
- told his students to find the reason behind thier disagreements
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a place where monks & nuns live a life of simplicity and proverty |
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a system of religious schools that where developed by Muslims |
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getting permission from lords to control towns |
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conditions favorable to a town |
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around castles, around large cathedrals, market places, & water |
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social, & religious economic associations |
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Monastry of Cluny
(chapter 5) |
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- founded by dukes & duchess in 910
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- 1399-1413
many thought is was his duty to appoint bishops and popes to ensure the good of the church & empire together |
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- pope 1073-1085
Thought that emperors were simple laymen & should stay out of the church |
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an emperor or representitive who gives land to a bishop or archbishop |
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- 1096-1099
- 50,000 to 60,000 combatants not counting women, childeren .etc
- each authorized by the pope but different comanders
- was part of the Christian response to the Islamic conquests, as well as the first major step towards reopening international trade in the West since the fall of the Western Roman Empire
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- pope 1088-1099
- turned the enterprise into something new
- launched the 1st crusade
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- 1086
- the record of the great survey of England.
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massive, weighty, arches that are rounded |
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famous for chivalry involved in teh 3rd Crusade leader of Muslims against Richard Dalinheart |
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1.1154-1189 2.king of England 3.common law- thought everyone should be under the same law |
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1170 Archbishop of Canterbury a martyr --killed because he tried to keep the church courts |
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wife of Henry II & Louis had a seperate daughter started the idea of courtly love |
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law capable throughout England to all free men & women (people of a knightly class or above) |
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system of judicial visitations |
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- also known as the Kings' Crusade
- was an attempt by European leaders to reconquer the Holy Land from Saladin
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king of England during the 3rd Crusade army fought against Saladin's army |
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tax king John forced barons to pay |
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- intended to conquer Muslim-controlled Jerusalem by means of an invasion through Egypt
- destroyed Constantinople
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1.1215 2.king John signed to show that people are equal and even kings have to follow all laws 3.no taxation without reasontation 4. jury trial applicable |
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1.powerful city state in Italy 2. |
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1.the way a knight would show his love & devotion to a lady 2. poetry, singing, winnign a battle |
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law code of how knights should act |
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stories about war- heroic deeds |
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poets, musicians, & entertainers all in once |
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1.stained glass windows, ponited arches, highty 2.tall to reach up to God |
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must attend Mass
Celibacy
marrying cousins are forbidden & secret marriages |
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1.1182-1226
2.visited leapers, did manual labor, gave to charity & poor |
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1.converted people 2.had Dominicans belive what people said |
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in Europe & conquered 4 regions |
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1.1162-1227 2. Mongols were under hie rule 3. had many ethnic groups in his army |
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where the Rus went after the Mongols conqured them |
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a standarized trade group that used coins |
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- trade group in the north
- made coins
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fear of foreigners which was mainly directed to the Jews |
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- King of England
- conquered large parts of Wales and almost succeeding in doing the same to Scotland
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Boniface VIII
(Philip the Friar) |
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- pope from 1294 to 1303
- fought with Philp IV (French King)
- said rights of the church should be handled between the church
- got kidnapped & died
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It arose due to the Pope's conflict with Philip IV of France & Boniface VIII over attempts of each to prevent the other from receiving money from taxes |
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a Christian feast day, or solemnity, commemorating the supreme gift of the institution by Jesus Christ of the Holy Eucharist |
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a method of learning taught by the academics (or school people) of medieval universities |
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- philosopher and theologian in the tradition of scholasticism
- developed the 5proofs
- all things created by motion
- things that exist come from things that exist
- cause(plan, person, material, final reason)
- classification
- orderly world
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- English Franciscan friar and scholastic philosopher
- all things should have the simpliest explanation
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- 1st humanist
- wrote Inferno, purgatory, & paradiso
- directed by Vergil
- but to parisado led by Beatrice
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- Inferno
- Purgatory
- Parisado
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is a texture consisting of two or more independent melodic voices, |
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Italian painter of the Late Middle Ages |
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- 1315-1322
- shortage of food longest in N. Europe
- casued by war, too much water & population growth
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1. 1347
2. deadliest plauge in Europe starting in china
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Ghiberti's "Doors of the Florentine baptistery" |
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Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Supper" |
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Jan Van Eyck's "Man in the Red Turban" |
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Jan Van Eyck's "Arnolfini Weeding Portrait" |
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religious and Christian decrative: bold colorful, iconophile, bold natural: soft colors, iconophile, music: way of cmmunication |
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lower social class worked for the lords |
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arithmatic, geomerty, music, astronomy |
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1.money leanding was not appicable to them
2.treated very badly |
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someone who changes texts from Latin to the local language |
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