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Civ IN- prep sheet for the Final Exam (early version) Part I- Reading: Spielvogel Chapters 7-8 and 10-12. Part II- Possible essays: I will select two of the following four questions for the final exam, and you will be expected to answer one of them in an informative, well-organized essay. 1) “The collapse of the Roman Empire during the fifth century A.D. cast European society and culture into a thousand-year ‘Dark Age,’ marked by the near-extinction of Western civilization.” Do you agree or disagree? Why? 2) Does the papacy deserve its reputation as the single dominant institution of the Middle Ages? 3) What do the Middle Ages teach us about the relationship between religious and political authority? 4) Discuss the image of the Christian (Catholic) Church as a monolithic, unchanging institution during the second half of the medieval period (i.e., 1000-1500 AD). Part III) IDs: Lecture 9A: Barbarians! I) The “Fall” (?) of Rome II) Conquest III) Resettlement IDs: Gibbon Huns Sacking of Rome Ataulf Clovis the Merovingian Lecture 9B: Byzantines I) Eastern Supremacy II) Expansion IDs: Cities and trade Theodora Justinian’s Code Iconoclasm “Dark Ages” Visigoths Pope Leo I Conversions feudalism City of God Adrianople Vandals Franks Constantinople Monophysites Slavs Justinian Imperial church Sassanids Lecture 9C: Islam I) Arab Culture II) Muhammad’s Life III) Islamic Expansion IDs: Bedouins Monotheism Hegira Abu-Bakr Kabbah Abrahamic tradition Umma conversion? Lecture 10A: Islamic Empire and the West I) Islamic Empire (con’d) II) Western Empire IDs: “Peoples of the Book” Ali Sunni Pope Leo I Monastic learning Great Schism Lecture 10B: The Franks I) The Franks II) Vikings! IDs: Counts “Mayor of the Palace” Pepin III (“The Short”) Coronation castles Lecture 10C: The German Empire I) Monastic Reform II)Investiture Crisis IDs: Otto I Simony Chivalry Leo IX Gregory VII (Hildebrand) Canossa Qu’ran “The Prophet” Caliph Islamic academies Shia (Shi’ite) Pope Gregory I “white martyrdom” Merovingians Charles Martel Charlemagne Investiture Partible inheritance Poitiers (Tours) “Carolingian Renaissance” Vikings Patrician authority Celibacy Peace of God College of Cardinals Henry IV Lay investiture Cluny Henry III Great Schism Interdict Lecture 11A: The High Middle Ages I) Papal Monarchy II) New Religious Orders III) 13th-Century Renaissance IDs: 1st Crusade indulgences Children’s Crusade Decretum 4th Lateran Council Cathars Friars Aquinas Order of Friars Minor Mendicants Universities 4th Crusade Innocent III Dominicans populo grosso Third Order Regular Lecture 11B: (More) High Middle Ages I) The Liberal Arts II) Trade IDs: 13th-Century Renaissance Averroes liberal arts Cities Universities cash nexus Lecture 11C: The Rise of Kingdoms I) Empire vs. Kingdom II) France III) England IDs: Imperial claims primo genitur William the Conquerer Joan of Arc Hugh Capet Normans Hundred Years’ War nationalism royal limitations Parlement Magna Carta Henry V Lecture 12: The Avignon Papacy (not presented during lecture) Celestine V Boniface VIII Clericis Laicos Unam Sanctum Gallicanism Lecture 12A: The Black Death I) Climate Change II) The Bubonic Plague III) Social/Religious Effects IDs: “Little Ice Age” cause of the plague Desertion clerical effect famine mortality rates Providentialism confraternities Philip IV Avignon Mongol Empire Recurrence Antisemitism Thomas á Kempis Lecture 12B: The Western Schism I) Return to Rome II) Papal Woes IDs: Urban VI Western Schism Martin V Jan Hus French Cardinals Council of Pisa Conciliarism Gallicanism Avignon Papacy (again) Council of Constance Lollardy Lecture 12C: Humanism I) Classical Humanism II) Civic Humanism III) Christian Humanism IDs: “Renaissance” Petrarch Patronage Humanism and religion Antiquarianism Machiavelli humanism vs. scholasticism “New Learning” Christian Humanism