Decline of the Roman Empire, 400s AD, and the beginning of the Middle Ages, ca. 500-1500
The Western Empire
That part of the Roman Empire that existed in Western Europe
In the 400s, it was over-run by Germanic tribes and disintegrated
Political unity shattered
Disruption of communications
Population decline
Deurbanization
Result of all of this was a decline in economic activity/trade/wealth
Feudalism
A military/social/landholding system that replaced the Western Empire for nearly 1000 years
Was a means of providing land ownership and directing agricultural production to support military defense
Was based on the idea of personal loyalty to one’s lord and to one’s vassals
A feudal lord (e.g., a king) would convey land to vassals for the vassals’ upkeep
in exchange, the vassals had to provide military service/protection to the lord
The vassals themselves cold subinfeudate (i.e., convey some of their land to vassals of their own
Feudalism was in a sense private and compartmentalized
Was based on interlocking personal agreements and relationships between lord and vassal: there was no “law” or “government” as we understand the term
borders were fluid
There was less notion of ethnic unity: your loyalty was to your lord, not to your “people”
social mobility (“the chance to get ahead”) was severely limited—your role in life was determined by your status, not by your abilities
The Eastern Empire/Byzantine Empire endured
Capital of the Byzantine Empire was Constantinople (present-day Istanbul)
Became one of the major borders between Christian Europe and the Muslim world to the east and south
Norse/Viking expansion, ca. 800-1000’s
Norse were Scandinavian seafarers/raiders
Raided western Europe by sea
These raids led to the Norse venturing farther afield, e.g., to Iceland
This seafaring eventually led to discovery of Greenland
Ultimately the Norse reached the extreme northern part of North America (present-day Newfoundland/Nova Scotia) reached ca. 1000 by Leif Erikson
Norse colonies there were sporadic and short-lived; perhaps used for timber
Stories of the discovery may have circulated in a legendary/semi-mythical fashion in European seaports thereafter, perhaps influencing Christopher Columbus
The revival of Europe in the Late Middle Ages
High Middle Ages, ca. 1000-1300
Late middle Ages, ca. 1300-1500
Increasing population
Means greater production, greater surpluses, and thus greater wealth/investment
These forces were actually accelerated because of the Black Death of the mid-1300s
The Black Death killed as much as 50% of Europe’s population in a few years
This led to surpluses of land, food, and money for the survivors (same resources, fewer people to share them)—i.e., greater wealth per capita
This meant more money available for luxuries and thus an increase in trade
Scarce labor gave peasants more bargaining power with their lords and began to lead to the social mobility that the feudal world had lacked
Revival of learning: the formation of the first universities
Learning requires that a society be wealthy enough for some of its members not to have to be using their labor to produce food in the short term
This enables them to use education to increase their productivity and money-making potential in the long-term through the acquisition and use of advanced and specialized knowledge
The Renaissance; 1450-1650
A cultural movement of the Late Middle Ages/early modern period
Rediscovery of ancient writings such as Aristotle
Largely through Muslim world
led to rebirth of science and interest in geography, experimentation, and the natural world
Setting the Stage: the Transformations in Europe that led to the Age of Exploration
The religious motivations for oceanic exploration by western Europe
The Fall of Constantinople (in Byzantine Empire) to the Turks, 1453