the early middle ages a powerpoint presentation by kevin f. keiser

Download The Early Middle Ages A PowerPoint Presentation by Kevin F. Keiser

If you can't read please download the document

Upload: priscilla-mills

Post on 27-Dec-2015

222 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • The Early Middle Ages A PowerPoint Presentation by Kevin F. Keiser
  • Slide 3
  • In this unit, there are Four Developments 1. Justinians Byzantine Empire 2. The Rise of Islam 3. The Carolingian Franks 4. The Last Wave of Migrations and the Rise of Feudalism
  • Slide 4
  • This is how we left things in the last unit Visigoths Merovingian Franks Burgundians Vandals Ostrogoths Byzantine Empire Angles and Saxons and Jutes, Oh my!
  • Slide 5
  • 1. Justinians Byzantine Empire, or, The Western Empire is gone Theodoric has been the Ostrogothic king of Italy But in 526 A.D., Theodoric dies
  • Slide 6
  • Theodorics grandson is the next king, but he is too young, so his mother Amalasuntha takes over as regent. Amalasuntha doesnt like this Its highly probable someone will try to kill her or her son at some point. She needs someone to be on her side. So she reaches out to the Byzantine Empire and contacts the greatest Byzantine Emperor
  • Slide 7
  • JUSTINIAN!
  • Slide 8
  • So who is this Justinian? Justinian was a simple soldier who became co- emperor with his uncle in 527 A.D. He was married to a woman named Theodora, who was a simple circus performer
  • Slide 9
  • It was an amazing and romantic story: how two ordinary people became the emperor and empress of what was once the Roman Empire But some nobility resented the humble origins of these two young people (relatively young) Justinian and Theodora would have to prove themselves.
  • Slide 10
  • Achievements of Justinian Justinian is mainly famous for three achievements: 1. The Corpus Juris Civilis 2. The Hagia Sophia 3. The reconquest of the West.
  • Slide 11
  • The Corpus Iuris Civilis In 529 A.D., Justinian decided to collect all Roman law into one collection and make it the law of the Byzantine (i.e., Roman Empire) He commissioned a jurist (lawyer) named Trebonian to work on this project (Justinian is a great delegator).
  • Slide 12
  • The result was the Corpus Iuris Civilis, or Body of Civil Law, also called the Justinian Codex. This work is very significant to history. It became the basis of law in the Roman Empire, and EVEN TODAY, it is the main inspiration for the legal system of the countries of continental Europe and all the countries that were colonized by them The countries shaded in blue are all Civil Law countries, i.e., countries inspired by the legal system of Justinians code
  • Slide 13
  • The Corpus Juris Civilis was also the last major work written in Latin by the Roman Empire. Very few people could understand it since the common language of the Byzantine Empire was Greek. [Aine McGinns dad is translating it into English]
  • Slide 14
  • The Hagia Sophia In 532 AD, there was a problem in Constantinople: the Greens and the Blues (chariot fan factions) got into a huge argument (about sports, politics, and/or religion). This is known as the Nika riot. Justinian tried to quiet them down
  • Slide 15
  • The rioters ransacked the city and even burned down Constantines Hagia Sophia then they began to attack the imperial palace itself.
  • Slide 16
  • Justinian wanted to flee, but his wife Theodora changed his mind (and history)
  • Slide 17
  • Justinian delegated his trusty general Belisarius to crush the rebellion
  • Slide 18
  • Then, Justinian commissioned two young architects (Isidore of Miletus, a physics professor, and Anthemius of Tralles, a geometry professor) to design a new and glorious Hagia Sophia
  • Slide 19
  • The result was one of the most amazing feats and beautiful jewels of world architecture
  • Slide 20
  • When it was complete in 537 AD, Justinian entered it for the first time and said Today, the Hagia Sophia is still standing, but it is now a mosque
  • Slide 21
  • The Reconquest of the West After Belisarius success in quelling the Nika revolt, Justinian had further plans for him. Justinian felt it was his duty to get back the Western Empire, so, the year after the riots, he sent Belisarius
  • Slide 22
  • to the Vandal Kingdom, which Belisarius successfully conquered with only 18,000 soldiers. Visigoths Merovingian Franks Burgundians Vandals Ostrogoths Byzantine Empire Angles and Saxons and Jutes, Oh my! more Byzantine Empire
  • Slide 23
  • Meanwhile, remember Amalasuntha? She was murdered by her cousin in 535 AD. Justinian is mad, and he sends Belisarius to Italy next.
  • Slide 24
  • Belisarius moved his army to Italy, and began a long, hard, destructive war (535-552) to take Italy back for the Byzantine Empire and ultimately won. Visigoths Merovingian Franks Burgundians Ostrogoths Byzantine Empire Angles and Saxons and Jutes, Oh my! and even more Byzantine Empire
  • Slide 25
  • but the victory came at great cost. The Italian peninsula was ravaged, and it would take a long time to recover
  • Slide 26
  • But Justinian died a satisfied emperor (in 565 AD). Under him, the Byzantine Empire reached the greatest extent it ever would and, through talented individuals, Justinian had a great list of achievements.
  • Slide 27
  • Unfortunately, three years later, the Lombards invaded and conquered Italy (except Ravenna) Visigoths Merovingian Franks Burgundians Angles and Saxons and Jutes, Oh my! Byzantine Empire Lombard Kingdom
  • Slide 28
  • and shortly after that, a new force would arise from Arabia
  • Slide 29
  • Second Development in the Early Middle Ages: The Rise of Islam Before we talk about Islam, we have to talk about Arabia. The Arabian peninsula is mostly desert. There is some fertile land in the Southwest, which, in the Early Middle Ages, was occupied by the Christian kingdom of Saba, allies of Justinian (against the Sassanids). Saba Byzantine Empire Sassanid Empire
  • Slide 30
  • The peninsula was mostly inhabited by nomads. No major empire ever bothered to conquer it it just didnt seem to be worth it. However, the peninsula was very important for the Silk Road. Whenever the Sassanids would not let the Byzantines through their land (which was almost all the time), merchants had to travel to the sea down the west side of Arabia. Saba Byzantine Empire Sassanid Empire Key resting points along this route became important and wealthy trading posts And the most important of these were Yathrib and Mecca Yathrib Mecca
  • Slide 31
  • Mecca had particular importance. This was because the Arabian people considered themselves the children of Ishmael, the first son of Abraham, sent away by Abraham to live in the desert
  • Slide 32
  • According to the book of Genesis, God revealed a well to Hagar to save her and her thirsty son. The Arabians believed, and still believe, that this well is in Mecca, the well of Zamzam.
  • Slide 33
  • Mecca was also important because it contained a shrine that drew a lot of pilgrims from all over Arabia: a large, cube like structure called the Kaaba. According to Muslim belief, Abraham and Ishmael built this Kaaba when Abraham came down to visit Ishmael.
  • Slide 34
  • The Kaaba originally housed the Black Stone on its eastern corner. This was a stone that, according to Muslim belief, God gave to Adam as a white stone, but the sinfulness of mankind turned it black. But in pre-Islamic Mecca, the Black Stone was treated a bit like an idol and people who came to Mecca for trade purposes often brought their own idols to the Kaaba. Eventually, the Kaaba had 360 idols inside of it, and it became a popular pagan shrine. This was bad for monotheism, but good for business in the trade city of Mecca.
  • Slide 35
  • As a matter of fact, pre-Islamic Arabia in general, and Mecca in particular, was a mish-mash of many religious beliefs. Whoever did not believe in orthodox Christianity (Byzantine Empire) or Zoroastrianism (Sassanid Empire) often ended up in Arabia. There were: Polytheists (belief in many gods) Animists (belief in the forces of nature) Monotheists (belief in one God). Saba Byzantine Empire Sassanid Empire Among the Monotheists, there were: Jews The Hanifa: Arabians who turned from polytheism to belief in one God Heretical Christians. Among the heretical Christians, there were: Arians (believed Jesus is not God) Monophysites (believed Jesus was one nature) Nestorians (believed Jesus was two persons) Docetists (believed Jesuss human nature was just an illusion and that he did not really die on the cross) Collyridians (worshipped the Virgin Mary) This was the environment that Muhammad would be born into.
  • Slide 36
  • Then, there was Muhammad Born in around the year 570 AD (five years after Justinian died). His father was already dead at his birth, and his mother and grandfather died by the time he was about 7. Muhammad was raised by his uncle, a merchant named Abu Talib
  • Slide 37
  • Once, when Abu Talib needed to make a business trip to Syria, Muhammad (now about 12) stayed with some Nestorian monks. He watched how they prayed seven times a day, with several prostrations. One of the monks, named Bahira, told Muhammad he would be a great prophet some day, as long as he avoided all polytheism.
  • Slide 38
  • In 595, Muhammad married Khadija, his first wife. She was a moderately wealthy merchant. Muhammad worked in her trade caravan. They lived in Mecca. Muhammad was also in the habit of making a spiritual retreat in the mountains once a year. In 610 AD, while making this retreat on Mt. Hira, Muhammad claims to have suddenly heard the words Recite!, and then was given words by the angel Gabriel.
  • Slide 39
  • The message was simple: Reject all idolatry Avoid all shirk: association of the Godhead. God is only one: ALLAH; no one else is God (Islam would not accept the idea that one God can subsist in three persons) Believers must care for the poor Muhammad began to preach his message. First, Khadija converted, then other family members, and finally, Abu Bakr, the first non- relative convert to Islam.
  • Slide 40
  • But Mecca does not appreciate Muhammad. He is bad for business First, because he preaches giving to the poor specifically, 2.5% of ones profits Second, because if people turn to monotheism, they might stop coming to visit the Kaaba, which is what brings a lot of people to Mecca and that would mean less money
  • Slide 41
  • One of the controlling families of Mecca, the Umayyad family, begins a smear campaign against Muhammad. They even make an attempt on his life So in the year 622 AD, Muhammad flees from Mecca to Yathrib. Yathrib welcomes him with open arms they have already heard about him from traders going north on the Silk Road. Saba Byzantine Empire Sassanid Empire Yathrib Mecca Due to this event, Yathrib becomes known as the city of the prophet, or in Arabic, Madinat Al- Nabi. This is why today, it is called Medina This event is called the Hijra, or the Flight and it marks year one on the Muslim calendar (we are now in the year 1434 A.H., anno Hegiraein the year of the Flight) Medina
  • Slide 42
  • While in Medina, Muhammad continues to receive revelations and gather more followers. They begin to write his revelations down in a book called the Recitation, or the Quran. The Five Pillars of Islam also begin to be developed. These are the five central practices essential to receiving bliss from Allah for a Muslim. They are
  • Slide 43
  • 1. Shahadah: The Profession of Faith There is one God Allah, and Muhammad is his prophet. Saying this three times in the presence of Muslim witnesses is how one converts to Islam
  • Slide 44
  • 2. Salah: Pray five times a day facing Mecca Originally, Muhammad had his followers face Jerusalem, but later, when he wanted to return to Mecca, he said Allah commanded his followers to face that city instead. On Fridays at noon, the Muslims say their prayers in common at a mosque. Muslim buildings often have an arrow pointing the direction to Mecca In Islam, bells are not allowed. The call to prayer is shouted from minarets. Many prostrations are involved in Muslim prayers.
  • Slide 45
  • 3. Zakat: 2.5% of your profits must be given to the poor/for the welfare of the community In many Muslim countries, this Zakat is a tax to the government.
  • Slide 46
  • 4. Sawm: Fasting furing the month of Ramadan Ramadan is the month during which Muhammad first received his revelations in 610. A Muslim is not supposed to take any food or water during the say. From sundown to sunrise, they may eat what they need.
  • Slide 47
  • 5. The Hajj: Every adult, able-bodied Muslim must make a pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in their life The focal point of the Hajj is the circling of the Kaaba
  • Slide 48
  • While in Medina, Muhammad receives the revelation that he is allowed to perform raids on the caravans from Mecca in order to gain what he needs to feed and supply his followers. So he begins organizing and successfully implementing raids. He is very successful. This gains him more followers. The city of Mecca has had enough, so they send a large force to defeat Muhammad.
  • Slide 49
  • But Muhammad and his men win, in the Battle of the Ditch (627 AD). Thousands of Arabians are impressed with Muhammad, and they join him. Eventually, Muhammad has enough leverage to negotiate with Mecca the permission to visit the Kaaba once a year. Each time he goes, Muhammad gains more and more followers. Finally, in 630 AD, Muhammad returns to Mecca in triumph to stay.
  • Slide 50
  • Muhammad cleans the Kaaba of all of its idols, and repairs it, giving the Black Stone a good cleaning as well. Then, he becomes the political and spiritual ruler of Islam. Almost all of Arabia follows him.
  • Slide 51
  • But then, he dies. In the year 632, Muhammad died in the house of Abu Bakr (first non-relative convert and father of Muhammads preferred wife, Aisha) The problem was: who would succeed him? Who would be his Khalifa, his caliph, his successor?
  • Slide 52
  • The Expansion of Islam: The first Rightly-Guided Caliph The companions of Muhammad chose Abu Bakr to be the successor of the prophet. Abu Bakr is known in the Sunni tradition as the first Rightly-guided caliph. Abu Bakr spends most of his two year reign reconquering Arabia. Most Arabians had ceased paying zakat after the death of Muhammadwhat was the point of Islam if the prophet was gone? But Abu Bakr manages to bring them all back. He dies in 634.
  • Slide 53
  • The Second Rightly Guided Caliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab The companions of Muhammad chose Umar ibn Al-Khattab as the second caliph. Umar sees expansion and jihad (holy struggle) as a duty of Islam. Thus, he begins conquering lands outside of Arabia
  • Slide 54
  • Umar was very successful in his mission. During his reign, he fought a two-front war. First Damascus (Syria) fell to the Muslims, then Jerusalem (Israel), then Ctesiphon (Sassanids), then Alexandria (Egypt). The Byzantine Empire tries to stop them, but their forces are crushed. Byzantine Empire Lombards Merovingian Franks Sassanid Empire Burgundians Visigoths Rashidun Caliphate
  • Slide 55
  • Umar was poisoned by a Persian slave in 644 AD. Because of his expansion of Islam, he is known as Umar the Great. The next caliph chosen was Uthman. He was a member of the wealthy Meccan Umayyad family.
  • Slide 56
  • Byzantine Empire Merovingian Franks Lombards Visigoths Rashidun Caliphate Burgundians Uthman continued the tradition of jihad. Under him, Armenia, Asia Minor, and Bactria were conquered. The caliphate reached all the way from Cyrene to India.
  • Slide 57
  • But Uthman was not like Umar. Uthman was less focused on discipline and rigor, and more focused on economy and wealth (he was, after all, an Umayyad). Some rebels from Egypt came to Medina and killed him. The next caliph (the Fourth Rightly-Guided Caliph) was Ali, Muhammeds cousin and son-in-law (he was the son of Abu Talib, who took care of Muhammad, and the husband of Muhammads daughter Fatima).
  • Slide 58
  • Alis reign was not a happy one. It saw the first tensions withing the Muslim community (Ummah) itself. Muawiya, the cousin of Uthman (the former caliph) was dissatisfied that Ali had not avenged the death of Uthman. Thus, Muawiya set himself up as a sort of anti-caliph in Damascus. This of course was rebellion. Ali decided to fight Muawiyah. But Muawiyah beat him at the battle of Siffin by placing pages of the Quran on his mens spears (this led Ali to make a treaty with Muawiyah, rather than risk desecrating the Quran)
  • Slide 59
  • But thats not the end of Alis problems. Some Muslims (known as Kharijites) are mad at Ali for making a treaty with Muawiyahe seems to be a sellout by yielding to the demands of the impious Umayyad family. Thus, in 661 AD, Ali is assassinated by a Kharijite with a poisoned dagger. Muawiya becomes the 5 th caliph of Islam, and the first caliph of the Umayyad Dynasty.
  • Slide 60
  • The Umayyad Caliphate The first problem that Muawiya has to take care of is the sons of Ali. Ali had two sons, Hasan and Husayn. Muawiya at first makes peace with Hasan, the older son. But eventually, he is murdered. Husayn flees into the desert of Iraq and lives as an outlaw
  • Slide 61
  • But many years later, in 680 AD, Umayyad soldiers found Husayn in Karbala and accused him of starting a rebellion. They kill him and cut off his head and send it to Yazid (Muawiyas son) in Damascus.
  • Slide 62
  • The Sunni-Shiite split-680 AD The killing of Husayn started a major rift in Islam. The followers of Husayn all broke off and formed the Shiat Ali, or faction of Ali. They are known as the Shiites. Their basic belief is that Ali and Alis descendants in the direct line (the imams) are the only true leaders of Islam. They claim that Muhammad said this while he was still alive. The Shiites do not accept the legitimacy of the first three caliphs, nor of the Umayyad dynasty. Shiites make up about 9-15% of Islam. Sunnis, who accept the Rashidun caliphs, make up about 90%. They are called Sunnis because the accept the sunnah, the traditions of Islam. Shiites and Sunnis tend to be violent toward one another, and they are still fighting today.
  • Slide 63
  • But the Umayyad Caliphate continued as strong as ever. It continued to expand to become the largest empire up to that time, and the fifth largest empire in history. They conquer all the way up to China in the East, and large portions of North Africa and Spain in the West. In the process, the Visigothic Kingdom is destroyed. The next step is to attack the Franks and the in the West and Constantinople in the East. Umayyad Caliphate Lombards Merovingian Franks Umayyad Caliphate
  • Slide 64
  • But thats when the expansion stopped. In the East, Constantinople stopped the Muslim advance, due to their new and mysterious weapon: Greek Fire. This was in 718 AD.
  • Slide 65
  • [artists conceptions of Greek fire]
  • Slide 66
  • And in the West, the mayor of the palace of the Merovingian kingdom of Austrasia, Charled Martel (the Hammer) roundly defeated the Muslims at the Battle of Tours (732 AD)
  • Slide 67
  • Thus, the advance was stopped on both sides. Tours Constantinople
  • Slide 68
  • Third Development of the Early Middle Ages: The Carolingian Franks Charles Martel was not a Frankish King. He was just a mayor of the palace for one of the three Frankish kings. But he had more power than any of the kings, because he alone managed to unite all the Franks and stop the Muslim advance at Tours. Thats the way it stayed. When Charles Martel died in 741, he was the leader of all the Frankish armies, but still not a king.
  • Slide 69
  • Charles was succeeded by his son Pepin the Short. Pepin got a bit annoyed with this situation. So he wrote a letter to the Pope, asking: Is it right that one who has the power be denied the title. The pope basically said, No that doesnt sound right besides, I need you Franks to get your act together to help me against the Lombards.
  • Slide 70
  • So Pepin the Short took the army and deposed the Merovingian kings. Thus he became the first Carolingian King of all Franks.