ebook img

Europe - World of Middle Ages PDF

625 Pages·1977·36.369 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Europe - World of Middle Ages

j ■'.■J r:-'*'..' ■ 1 |iKi% ' ■ jfy H \ -jnaa Woodmere Public Library Hewlett Vnrk 11557 - (516) FR 4-1667 Hewlett, Ne\ EDWARD PETERS EUROPE The World of the Middle Ages A distinctively European civilization emerged from the worlds of Mediterranean antiquity, the nomadic cultures of western and central Eurasia, and forms of early technology and communications. The set¬ tlement of Europe and the formation of a material and spiritual culture that lasted, at least in some respects, until the nine¬ teenth and early twentieth centuries, are the subjects of this book. This enduring culture had profound and lasting effects upon the shaping of the-Modern World. The history of any civilization is a vast and intricate subject. The chapters in this volume are selected and designed to clari¬ fy and highlight the complex, interwoven factors that produced the first European civilization. One of the most interesting periods in European intellectual history lies in the shifting meaning of the term “Middle Ages” as it applies to the early settlement and culture of Europe. For this volume, the world of the Middle Ages is bounded by Greenland and the Urals, Norway and the Northern Sahara, and the valleys of the Shannon and the Euphrates. Its time span is between the establishment of Roman colonies in southern Gaul and Spain in the late second century B.C. and the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries A.D. (continued on back flap) of the Middle Ages EDWARD PETERS University of Pennsylvania PRENTICE-HALL, INC., ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, NEW JERSEY 07632 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Peters, Edward (date) Europe, the world of the Middle Ages. Bibliography: p. 586 Includes index. 1. Middle Ages—History. 2. Civilization, Medieval. I. Title. D118.P45 940.1 76-20673 ISBN 0-13-291898-6 © 1977 by Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 10 987654321 Prentice-Hall International, Inc., London Prentice-Hall of Australia Pty. Limited, Sydney Prentice-Hall of Canada Ltd., Toronto Prentice-Hall of India Private Limited, New Delhi Prentice-Hall of Japan, Inc., Tokyo Prentice-Hall of Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd., Singapore TO MY CHILDREN Nicole Marie Peters Moira Anne Peters Edward Murray Peters III CONTENTS Preface xiii Introduction: The Discovery and invention of the Middie Ages 1 1 PART ONE; EUROPE AND THE ANCIENT WORLD 9 A Map of the Medievai Environment: The Geography and Ciimate of Mediterranean and North Temperate Europe 11 Physical Europe: Lands and Waters 11 The Climate of North Temperate and Mediterranean Europe, 500 B.C.-1850 A.D. 16 2 Society and Environment in Early Europe 18 The First Europeans 23 The Celtic World 23 Mediterranean Societies to the Second Century A.D. 27 3 The Early Germans 31 The Transformation of the Eurasian Worid, 200-400 A.D. 34 The Imperial Crisis of the Third Century 34 The World beyond the Empire, 150-375 A.D. 42 The Intellectual and Spiritual Worlds of Late Antiquity 47 4 viii CONTENTS The Fourth Century 56 The Empire and the Triumph of Christianity 56 The Structure of the Church in the Fourth Century 59 Paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century: Learned and Popular Culture 65 The Second Rome and the Old Empire, 330-395 74 PART TWO; THE LEGACY OF MEDITERRANEAN ANTIQUITY 77 5 East and West Rome and the invasions, 395-530 79 Emperors and Churchmen 79 The World of Galla Placidia: Visigoths and Romans in the West 86 The Breaching of the Rhine Frontier: Vandals, Burgundians, and Huns 89 Romania: The Impact of the Invasions on East and West Rome 81 6 The Barbarian West 96 The Tragedy of the “Good” Barbarians: Ostrogothic Italy 96 The Franks in Gaul 102 From Frontier Provinces to Barbarian Kingdoms: Britain, Spain, and Africa, 450-550 106 Monasticism and Culture in the Barbarian West 110 7 The Making of Byzantium 117 The Emperor Who Never Sleeps 117 Constantinople: The Eye of the World 125 After Justinian: Avars, Slavs, and the Flowering of Sasanid Persia 129 Heraclius and the Defense of the Empire 132 8 Germanic Kingdoms and the Church in the West, 565-700 135 Lombard Italy and the First Rome 135 God’s Consul 139 Roman and Celtic Christianity in Anglo-Saxon England 145 Visigothic Spain 148 Frankish Gaul under the Successors of Clovis, 511-683 151 9 The New Mediterranean World: The Rise of Islam 158 The Imperial African Provinces 158 The Arab World and the Revelations of Mohammed 160 Mohammed’s Successors and the Spread of Islam to 750 163 The Abbasid Dynasty and the Divisions of the Islamic World 165 CONTENTS ix PART THREE: THE BOOK AND THE SWORD, 650-950 169 10 The World of Bede and Boniface, 650-750 171 Bede: “The Light Within the Church” 171 The English Continental Mission and Saint Boniface, Exul Germanicus 176 Ecclesiastical Reform and the New Rulers of the Eranks 177 From Frankish Kingdom to Christian Empire 182 Erankish Kingship, the Church, and the Institutions of Royal Governance under Pepin and Charlemagne, 751-800 182 The Expansion of Erankish Power in the Eighth and Ninth Centuries 195 Byzantium, Lombard Italy, and the Papacy 199 The Carolingian Renaissance 204 .Frankish King and Imperator Romanorum 210 Politics, Society, and Economy in Ninth-Century Europe 220 ■^From Respublica Christiana to Separate Kingdoms, 814-888 220 Population and Forms of Settlement 226 The Distribution of Wealth and Power 230 Trade and Communication 231 Byzantium and the Crisis of the West, 802-950 235 Central and Eastern Europe to 900 235 Crisis and Recovery in Byzantium, 802-904 238 The New Invasions of Europe: Arabs, Magyars, and Vikings 241 The Macedonian Dynasty and the Flowering of Byzantine Civilization 247 Rome, the Papacy, and the Fragments of the Carolingian Ideal 249 PART FOUR: CHRISTENDOM: MATERIAL CIVILIZATION AND CULTURE, 950-1150 255 The Social and Economic Transformation of the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 257 Population Growth and New Patterns of Settlement 257 Sustenance and Surplus: European Agriculture 262 Market, Town, and City in an Agricultural World 268 Communication and Trade, Technology and Industry 276 X CONTENTS 15 Power and Society 282 Lordship and Political Communities 282 The New German Monarchy and the Imperial Revival 287 Christendom and the East: The Byzantine Sphere and Kievan Russia 292 Royal Lordship in the Eleventh Century 297 16 Spiritual Reform and the Concept of Christendom 306 Lordship: Power and Culture in the Eleventh Century 306 Imperial Reform and the Eleventh-Century Papacy 315 The Pontificate of Gregory VII and the Imperial Conflict 322 Christianitas: The Consequences of Reform and Conflict 327 17 Christendom East and West, 1025-1150 330 Christianitas: The Acculturation of an Idea 330 The Crisis of the Byzantine Empire in the Eleventh Century 335 Holy War and Sinful Society: Pope Urban II and the “Pilgrimage” to Jerusalem 339 Byzantium, Islam, and the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1144 345 PART FIVE: CHRISTENDOM: AUTHORITY AND ENTERPRISE, 1150-1300 351 18 The Materials of a New Learning 353 Schools, Curricula, and Objects of Study 353 Readers, Books, and Libraries: The Materials of Literacy 358 Language and Culture 362 The Market for Learning and Letters: Education and Careers in the Twelfth Century 369 19 The Content of the New Learning 374 Anselm and Abelard: Erom Dialectic to Philosophy 374 The Invention of Theology 379 The Professions: Law 383 The Medieval University 388 20 The Church and the World, 1098-1250 392 Monasticism and Civilization 392 New Eorms of Devotion, Order, and Dissent 397 The New Pastoralism, Heretics, and Jews 410 Christendom as Polity: Papacy and Empire, 1123-1250 418 CONTENTS xi The Road to the World 431 Courtly Society and Secularization 431 The Flowering of Vernacular Literature 434 Arsitotle, Aquinas, and the Place of Nature 439 Secularization of the Active Life 442 Temporal Authority: From Territorial Principality to Territorial Monarchy 448 The King and the Kingdom 448 Traditional Status in a Changing Political World 463 The Conflict between Spiritual and Temporal Authority 466 Latin Christendom and Beyond 475 Byzantium, Outremer, and the Latin West, 1144-1261 475 Kingdom and Community in Central and Eastern Europe 480 The Alongol Empire, 1227-1350 487 Geography, Travel, and Commerce: The Opening of China and the Atlantic 491 PART SIX: THE HUMAN CONDITION 495 The Individual and Society in the Thirteenth Century 497 Birth and Death, Diet, Sickness and Health 497 Marrying and Giving in Marriage, Friendship, Love, and Plate, 501 5 Ceremony and Festival: The Human Year 506 The World of Dante 512 Italy and the Italian City-Republics 512 Civic Culture 516 6 Exul Immeritus 520 Material Civilization in Crisis: The Fourteenth Century 523 Famine, Plague, and Warfare 523 The Financial Crisis 530 The Problems of the Social Order 541 The Roots of Traditional Europe 546 Spirituality and Secularism 546 Power and Order 558 The Shape of Europe and the New World 574 The Frames of Time: Visions of a New Past and Present 582 Bibliography I General Bibliographies 587 H Selective Bibliography 601 Index 617

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.