Abby's Western Civ Blog
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Last Day
Today was our very last western civilization class! It's pretty sad! I really enjoyed this class. I learned so much had a lot of fun this semester. Mr. Schick was a very funny and cool teacher. For our last class, got our test back and reviewed for the exam. I got a 93 on the test to that was good. For the exam, so far I've learned that there will be fifteen guns, germs, & steel questions, ten Ancient civilizations questions, fifteen Egypt, and forty-five on Greece. Trying to remember everything from the beginning of the semester was surprisingly easy. Hopefully I will do well on the exam, and enjoy western civilization next year as much as I did this year.
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Feudalism Test
Today our west civ class was shortened due to the senior awards. Mr. Schick had missed moist of the class, but showed up in time for us to vote on whether we should take it not. We voted to take it now. It wasn't too hard, I was only unsure about one, but i think I got it right.
Friday, May 24, 2013
Feudalism vocab
Today in class Mr.Schick announced that our very last west civ test would be next Wednesday. He gave us a study guide for all of the vocab words on the test.
So far I have:
Feudalism -
governmental system
and the relationship and social between landowners and warriors
feudal
compact- the official deal/contract between the vassal and the lord
fief- piece of land given to a knight
vassal- a knight that becomes a servantish
worker person for a lord, but is still highly respected
knight – warrior at the time
homage - kneeling down and taking the lord's
hand in his while speaking an oath of loyalty. Promising his loyalty
serf –Lowest on the social hierarchy. The quality of their life was not much better than a slave. They
were the lowest of the peasants.
baron- lords of large territories who usually
paid homage to the king. Barons army could outnumber that of a king. higher than a lord.
peasantry- common people
estates- there were three different estates: the
clergy-they were the ones who prayed; the nobility-fight and the common people- worked
manor- large plantations known the peasantry
farmed on. They which were owned by a lord or lady, the nobility, or a member
of the clergy
three-field-system- three sets of crops but only grew two at a time
internal
colonization
suburb
guild – groups of people who did different
things
master- person in charge of you
journeyman
apprentice –
someone learning the
ropes
masterpiece
water mill
and yes,
iron plow – a tool
they used in the middle ages for plowing the land
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Feudalism
Today in class we took notes on feudalism:
- Feudalism- governmental system and the relationships between landowners and warriors
- Warriors, or knights, would pledge his allegiance o the lord, who would in turn give that knight land
- The lord would grant a fief (property) to the knight who would then become the lords vassal /servant
- Fief is a part old the land given to a knight
- Then you became a lords vassal (servantish)
- A vassal must fight for the lord when he needs a it and attend his curt once a month
- Homage and knighthood\a vassal had to pay homage to his lord which meant kneeling down and taking the lord's hand in his while speaking an oath of loyalty
- When a knight died his fief would be given to his son
- Some clergy priests were known to fight as knights
- Barons were lords of large territories who usually paid homage to the king
- A barons army could outnumber that of a king
- Peasants and lords
- The manorial estate
- Medieval society was divided into three "estates": the clergy the nobility and the common people
- Usually the peasantry farmed on large plantations known as "manors" which were owned by a lord or lady the nobility or a member of the clergy
- They didn't really know how bad they had it because they didn't really interact with other classes of people
- People of the manor
- The lord oversaw major agricultural issues buy delegated everyday overseeing to this stewards or bailiffs
- MOST peasants were serfs
- They were bound to their lords for labor services behind the plow
- Growth o trade
- The agricultural boom after 1000 years allowed for the establishment of many town across Europe
- Farm produce and animal were sold in towns and people with the wealth bought their luxury items there
- The location and appearance of towns
- Most medieval towns were surrounded by fortified walls
- Residences also sprang up outside the walls in the suburbs
- Towns were dominated by a main church and a central marketplace buildings for the craft guilds and the center of the town
- Buildings for the craft builds and the wealthiest families would also be center of town
- Life of the townspeople
- Thought the townspeople were free unlike serfs they still had a hierarchy merchants at the top then skilled crafts man and artisan then unskilled laborers apprentices
- the guilds were their unions
- merchants, crafts man and artisans formed their own groups called guilds which regulated their trade protected its members
- craftsmen were classified as masters, journeyman and apprentices
- One became a master after spending years learning as an apprentice working as a paid journeyman for a number of years, and completing his "masterpiece"
- Guilds participated in religious feasts and festivals social organizations and usually provided well for charities
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Going over the Test
Today in class we went over the pop quiz and the test. I didn't badly on the pop quiz, but I got a 92 on the test, so that's good. On the pop Quiz, I had gotten the Hun's question and the Vandal's question wrong. On the test, not too many people knew the Byzantine answer, so everyone got 4 extra points. I still have a 90 in the class, so hopefully I maintain an A.
Friday, May 17, 2013
After Rome 500-700
Today we took some more notes on the downward spiral in Rome
After Rome 500-700
The Germanic
barbarians
- Barbarian warlords and the families who assimilated to Rome culture became nobles and aristocrats
- Germanic tribes who ruled former roman lands sought to conquer and assimilate
- other barbarian peoples who lived beyond frontiers
- The Anglosaxons invaded Britain
- Most of them converted to Christianity
- The most powerful Germanic tribe were the franks
- Eastern Europe
- The ere continued on while the west was now divided up by the barbarian tribes
- When the emperor Justinian came into power in 527, he decided to reunite the entire Roman Empire by reconquering the western territories
- Justinian succeeded for a time but the land he re took was son conquered by a new barbarian tribe and massive plague came
- Byzantine emperors aw themselves as the head of the Christian church
- Preserved Greco-Roman art architecture philosopher and writing deserter much of it being non Christian
- Justinian built a massive domed Hagia Sophia in Constantinople considered the most glorious church on earth
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Rome's Downward Spiral
Today
in class, I first went to go get my shadow from St. Joan of Ark. I actually brought in the wrong
shadow at first...so I had to go back and get the right one. Afterwards we took
some notes on the downward spiral of Rome. We took notes on things like:
•
Country dwellers are getting bankrupted by
endless tax collection. New farming system: peasants work for elite landlords
on large farms
•
Peasants can avoid paying taxes, but they are
getting hit just as hard by the landlords
•
Paying off debts and being "allowed"
to live on the land, in exchange for endless back breaking work when you can
never get ahead
•
Landowner had local power as counts and bishops,
wielding more real power than the faraway empire
•
Foreshadowing feudalism
•
Rome's power is decreasing while nomadic
barbarians gain power
•
Western empire is too poor, beings to be
neglected
•
Huns migrate from china to eastern Europe
•
Visigoths take over, Spain and actually capture
and loot Rome itself in 410
•
Vandals control Carthage and the western
Mediterranean
•
Other barbarian tribes:
•
Ostrogoth in Italy
•
Franks in Gaul
•
Anglo Saxons in Britain
•
End of an era
•
From the beginning
•
500 B.C. - the monarchy is abolished
•
450 B.C. - twelve tables are established
•
Through the glory days
•
44 BC - end of Julius C
•
27 BC- 180 AD Pax Romana
•
To bitter end
•
Constant 5th century invasions by barbarian
tribes left the western Roman Empire shattered and crumbling
•
The last emperor was a tonnages boy installed in
475 BC by his father
•
Barbarians deposed Romulus Augustulus bothering
to kill him
After we took notes we got with a partner and researched the
Huns, Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Vandals (etc)
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