Posts Tagged ‘Mittelalter’
Flavio Biondo, an Italian humanist, in the early 15th Century, first coined the term “Middle Age” (”medium ævum”) to designate the period between the Classical and the enlightened Renaissance revival of classical ideas, philosophies, aesthetics. In English, Dutch, Russian and Icelandic, the plural form of the term, Middle Ages, is used, however, other European languages use the singular form (Italian medioevo, French le moyen âge, German das Mittelalter.) The popular word we use commonly today, “medieval”, is a contraction of the Latin medium ævum or “middle epoch”. Enlightenment thinkers used it as a pejorative descriptor of the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages would come to be viewed as a Dark Age during which many of the advances and achievements of the Greeks and Romans would be eclipsed by warfare and the gradual disintegration of institutions and culture that the Europeans had inherited from the Classical era.
The beginning of the Medieval period is introduced with the fall of the Roman Empire, when in 476 C.E., the emperor was driven from his throne by barbarian invaders. The dissolution of the once expansive and powerful Roman Empire allowed for the formation of tiny kingdoms throughout Europe vying for territory. There was great instability as a result of such fragmentation and ongoing invasions and infighting bewteen tribes such as the Vikings, Visigoths, and Gauls, as well as the Moors began to change the nature of European life.
A lack of centralized political power in the greater region gave the Catholic Church tremendous power and civilian life - in terms of cultural growth, education, literacy, political involvement, and commerce - was in many ways truncated by an era of conflict and unenlightened dogma. With lawlessness and warfare widespread, community became focused around small powers, nobles or kings, who established control of land and created feudal systems by which to garner work from the peasant-class in exchange for access to land and protection from marauding tribes.
Only towards the first millennium did a level of stability and security permit the Medieval fiefdoms to evolve into viable commercial centers which would allow for further growth and independence among village-dwellers. With increased security and increased trade relations came the increase in wealth for individuals living in the feudal system. The economic growth in turn would spur political changes and eventual release from the highly dependent system of the fiefdoms, opening the doors to an era of greater individual independence, educational growth, political reform, and cultural diffusion.
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Tags: 15th century, 476 C.E., Black Prince Decorative Shield - Armaduras Medievales, Catholic Church in the Middle Ages, Classic Medieval Sword, Crusader Helmet, cultural diffusion, Dark Ages, educational growth, Fall of Rome, feudal system, flavio biondo, Gauls, italian humanism, kings, le moyen âge, Long Medieval Tunic, Medieval fiefdoms, Medieval History, medieval period, Medieval Store, medioevo, medium ævum, middle ages, middle epoch, Mittelalter, nobles, peasant class, political reform, Sack of Rome, Vikings, village-dwellers, Visigoths







