MIDDLE AGES

period in Western European history that followed the disintegration of the West Roman Empire in the 4th and 5th cent. and lasted into the 15th cent., i.e., into the period of the Renaissance. The ideas and institutions of western civilization derive largely from the turbulent events of the Early Middle Ages and the rebirth of culture in the later years. The importance of the Middle Ages has been increasingly recognized as scholarship based on newly published source material, archaeological findings, and studies of demographics and migration patterns presents more accurate and detailed analyses of events and trends.

Beginnings and Cultural Developments

Although the transitions were gradual, and exact dates for the demarcation of the Middle Ages are misleading, convention often places the beginning of the period between the death of the Roman emperor Theodosius I in 395 and the fall of Rome to the Visigoths in 410. The Dark Ages, formerly a designation for the entire period of the Middle Ages, now refers usually to the period c.450–750, also known as the Early Middle Ages. In fact, the term Dark Ages may be more a judgment on the lack of sources for evaluating the period than on the significance of events that transpired.

Medieval Europe was far from unified; it was a large geographical region divided into smaller and culturally diverse political units that were never totally dominated by any one authority. With the collapse of the Roman Empire, Christianity became the standard-bearer of Western civilization. The papacy gradually gained secular authority; monastic communities, generally adhering to the Rule of St. Benedict, had the effect of preserving antique learning; and missionaries, sent to convert the Germans and other tribes, spread Latin civilization.

By the 8th cent. culture centered on Christianity had been established; it incorporated both Latin traditions and German institutions, such as Germanic laws. The far-flung empire created by Charlemagne illustrated this fusion. However, the empire's fragile central authority was shattered by a new wave of invasions, notably those of the Vikings and Magyars.

Feudalism, with the manorial system (see also tenure) as its agricultural base, became the typical social and political organization of Europe. The new framework gained stability from the 11th cent., as the invaders became Christian and settled and as prosperity was created by agricultural innovations, increasing productivity, and population expansion.

The High Middle Ages

As Europe entered the period known as the High Middle Ages, the church became the universal and unifying institution. While some independence from feudal rule was gained by the rising towns (see commune, in medieval history), their system of guilds perpetuated the Christian and medieval spirit of economic life, which stressed the collective entity, disapproved of unregulated competition, and minimized the profit motive. Strong popes, notably Gregory VII, worked for a reinvigorated Europe guided by a centralized church, a goal virtually realized under Innocent III.

Militant religious zeal was expressed in the Crusades, which also stemmed from the growing strength of Europe. Security and prosperity stimulated intellectual life, newly centered in burgeoning universities (see colleges and universities), which developed under the auspices of the church. From the Crusades and other sources came contact with Arab culture, which had preserved works of Greek authors whose writings had not survived in Europe. Philosophy, science, and mathematics from the Classical and Hellenistic periods were assimilated into the tenets of the Christian faith and the prevailing philosophy of scholasticism; Aristotle, long associated with heresy, was adapted by St. Thomas Aquinas to Christian doctrine.

Christian values pervaded scholarship and literature, especially Medieval Latin literature, but Provençal literature also reflected Arab influence, and other flourishing medieval literatures, including German literature, Old Norse literature, and Middle English literature, incorporated the materials of pre-Christian traditions. The complex currents, vitality, and religious fervor of medieval culture are evident in the classics of Dante and Chaucer. Gothic architecture developed most notably in the 12th cent., against a background of the cultural and economic ascendancy of Western Europe.

Transition to the Modern World

The transition from the medieval to the modern world was foreshadowed by economic expansion, political centralization, and secularization. A money economy weakened serfdom, and an inquiring spirit stimulated the age of exploration. Banking, the bourgeois class, and secular ideals flourished in the growing towns and lent support to the expanding monarchies. The church was weakened by internal conflicts as well as by quarrels between church and state. As feudal strength was sapped, notably by the the Hundred Years War and the Wars of the Roses, there emerged in France and England the modern nation state. A forerunner of intellectual modernity was the new humanism of the Renaissance. Finally, the great medieval unity of Christianity was shattered by the religious theories that culminated in the Protestant Reformation.

Bibliography

There is a vast body of scholarship dealing with the Middle Ages. A general bibliography to provide a helpful introduction to aspects of the period should include works by Henry Adams, Marc Bloch, P. Brown, J. B. Bury, G. Duby, F. L. Ganshof, P. J. Geary, H. Grundmann, C. H. Haskins, Johan Huizinga, E. James, F. Lot, S. Painter, Henri Pirenne, E. Power, F. M. Powicke, R. W. Southern, F. M. Stenton, J. R. Strayer, G. Tellenbach, and Lynn Thorndike. See also bibliographies under such related articles as countries, e.g., France, Germany, and peoples, e.g., Anglo-Saxons, Moors.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Middle Ages  - 31569 results

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...in Arnauds Band, in Queering the Middle Ages, ed. Burger and Kruger, 175 86...Cultures, and Crossings from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance, ed. Josiah...Persecution of Minorities in the Middle Ages (Princeton, NJ, 1996), 150...
...study of the Bible in the Middle Ages 2nd ed., Oxford, 1951...lexegese latine au moyen age Paris, 1944 ; G. B...PLATO AND ARISTOTLE IN THE MIDDLE AGES: R. Klibansky, Continuity...tra dition during the Middle Ages London, 1939 ; H...
...that now separating the Middle Ages from Modern Times, and...made at the so-called Age of Enlightenment, which...then naturally add to the Middle Ages. The purpose of this...characterization of the Middle Ages. After the crumbling...
...points between performance at age 25 (represented as 0 on the...performance at six subsequent ages: 32, 39, 46, 53, 60, and...the six abilities studied, middle-aged individuals are functioning...higher level than they did at age 25. Improvement from young adulthood to peak performance in middle age is on the order of .30...
...Organisation in the Later Middle Ages 1947 W. A. Pantin...Thought, and Education The Age of Chaucer ed. B. Ford...Literature at the Close of the Middle Ages 1945 G. Leff, Medieval...Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages ed. F. M. Powicke...
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journal articles on: Middle Ages  - 18438 results

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...until the Modern Age. As Kemps (1996...matters during the Middle Ages, or what was said...three historical "ages"). These writers...past (e.g., the Middle Age), as well as to...Ancient World or Age of Antiquity...no friend to the Middle Ages, and as Tierney...
...ORDINATION OF WOMEN IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES. by GARY MACY IN HER PROVOCATIVE...ordinare continued throughout the Middle Ages as even a cursory glance at any...all, been applied in the high Middle Ages to kings, abbots, abbesses...
...unreflective images of the Middle Ages as an "Age of Faith," questioned...sources du moyen age occidental. Turnhout...Religion in the Middle Ages: Western Europe...populaire au moyen age. Turin, 1975...the Dead in the Middle Ages. Ithaca, 1994...
...over adulthood until old age, as we found in the Mills Study participants from ages 27 to 61, but that affect...complexity reaches a peak in middle age and then declines. This...increase in Flexibility from ages 52 to 61 than did women...investment in work at age 52. Personality change over middle age in the Mills sample...
...inauthentic to their age. Barnhouse looks...modern values. In the Middle Ages most learning was...Unlike our modern age, where we read for...of literacy in the Middle Ages was for prayer...authentic to the age. However, Cushman...literature about the Middle Ages may have a didactic...
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...the spike right in the middle of town so that all of...day parallels with the Middle Ages are concerned, he could...inhabit the Information Age. We proclaim the Era...its a place" The Middle Ages, one might add, art...
...entertaining, Inventing the Middle Ages will rattle lots of cages...influence their view of the Middle Ages - and modern concerns...closing pages of Inventing the Middle Ages Cantor expands on this vision...and confusion - a new Dark Age - he believes fresh concepts...
...Manuscripts: Colorful Mirrors of the Middle Ages. by Fred Stern Side by side, they...Much of what we know about the Middle Ages comes from these old, leather...Pen and Parchment: Drawing in the Middle Ages." Creating small masterpieces...
...Strange but Widely Held Belief in the Middle Ages, That Alexander the Great Had Conquered...great snake curled up, and in the middle of the snake a tiny circle like...popular story was familiar in the Middle Ages and was versified by Chaucer in...
Britain in the Middle Ages: An Archaeological History. by Nicholas Orme Britain in the Middle Ages An Archaeological History Francis...work and his theories. Britain in the Middle Ages confesses to not being a complete...
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Middle Ages Redux? Byline: Arnaud de Borchgrave, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Three years...reconstituted the obscurantist movement that took Afghanistan back to the Middle Ages in the 1990s. "They are brutalizing the population," said the generals...
...Central, which runs down the middle of the nation. Auvergne once...Place du Jaude. During the Middle Ages, Clermont and Montferrand...Crusade. The heritage of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance are visible...around the town. The golden age of Vichy was the belle epoque...
...Thrill Crowds; Show-Goers in for a Middle Ages Experience ... Byline: Jannette...art display originating from the Middle Ages. Full Tilt knights wear historically...will yank the show crowd from the Middle Ages to a post-apocalyptic battle...
...WINDSORS; So What If Prince Philip Broke Wind? in the Middle Ages It Would Have Been Seen as a Compliment. Byline: By...Philip was responsible, wheres the problem? In the Middle Ages, loudly breaking wind was something to be proud of...
Oath to Queen Would Take Us Back to the Middle Ages; WALES REJECTS BACKWARD ALLEGIANCE PLAN WALES. Byline...cannot see it being adopted. It is something from the Middle Ages and a backward step." Rural pressure group Cymuned...
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encyclopedia articles on: Middle Ages  - 644 results

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MIDDLE AGES period in Western European history that...and population expansion. The High Middle Ages As Europe entered the period known as...vast body of scholarship dealing with the Middle Ages. A general bibliography to provide a...
DARK AGES see Middle Ages . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
IRON AGE period in the development of...it was preceded by the Bronze Age . It did not begin in the Americas...spreading through S Europe and the Middle East insured the rapid transmission...introduced earlier from the Middle East. Ox-drawn plows and...
BRONZE AGE period in the development of...is sometimes called the Copper Age. The earliest use of cast metal...certainly established in the Middle East by 3500 b.c. Following...laid the foundations of the Iron Age civilization, which was to follow...
...biblical episodes, was popular throughout the Middle Ages in England. The morality play , an allegorical...J. W. Wells, Manual of the Writings in Middle English (1916 51); R. M. Wilson, Early Middle English Literature (3d ed. 1968); M...
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