The Dark Ages. Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization I: Ancient Foundations Marshall High School Unit Five AA

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1 The Dark Ages Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization I: Ancient Foundations Marshall High School Unit Five AA

2 * A Roman Pleb and a Medieval Peasant Meet Ianus the Roman pleb and John the medieval peasant. Ianus lives in a four-story apartment building in the sprawling city of Rome. John lives in a thatch hut in one of the hundreds of tiny villages scattered around medieval Europe. Ianus went to school. He can read and write. Right now, Ianus is using this skill to draw lewd graffiti, but if he so desired, he had access to thousands of pieces of literature from all over the Empire at one of Rome's many libraries. John doesn't even know what a school is, let alone a library. He's only ever heard of one book, the Bible, and at any rate, the only person in the village who can read is the priest.

3 * A Roman Pleb and a Medieval Peasant Ianus starts his day off with a trip to the baths, where he soaks in the hot tubs and then has a drink of water from a nearby fountain. John hasn't had a bath in months. In fact, he's fairly certain that baths are sinful, though he's not sure why. The closest thing John has to running water is a nearby stream. Ianus spends his day off attending one of Rome's many festivals. He catches the first play of an annual theatre competition. From there, he heads to the horse races at the Circus Maximus. Tired of the ponies, Ianus wanders around the market, where he touches silk from China, tastes olives from Greece, sees paper from Egypt, and smells spices from across three continents. Ianus finishes his day watching a nice gladiatorial fight at Rome's massive stadium, the Coliseum.

4 * A Roman Pleb and a Medieval Peasant John spends his day off attending church. After services, there'll be a market day - oh boy! - with peddlers and storytellers and maybe even a maypole! John hopes the peddlers bring some more apples from the village next door, but no such luck. The peddler caravan got waylaid by bandits. No market today! Poor John. How do we explain this disconnect? Ianus lived at the height of the Roman Empire, around 100 CE. John lived hundreds of years after Ianus, around 600 CE. So why is John's world so small and pathetic while Ianus' world is huge and interesting? The answer explains why we call The Dark Ages, well, dark!

5 * The Loss of Classical Culture Well, if we imagine the course of Western civilization like a tree, ever since its inception, it has branched out. Philosophy, literature, art, law, and religion all spread out in a hundred different directions. With the ascent of Christianity and the Dark Ages, Western civilization took a new course, and all this branching out ended. Many branches of culture died off or were cut short. The few branches that remained all turned inward, toward a central religious core. All art, all philosophy, all literature, all law, all thought became tied to Christianity. This inward-turning focus persisted for almost a thousand years. Western civilization only really began branching out again with the Renaissance and the Reformation.

6 * Causes for the Loss of Classical Culture Why did this happen? Well, there were several factors. Many of these branches died out naturally. The Roman Empire had been united by a common language. As Germanic peoples with new languages invaded the empire, this common language was lost and literacy plummeted. Very few people could read the works of the ancient world, and pretty much no one was writing anything new. The barbarians who invaded the Roman Empire had little use for poetry or philosophy. Their culture was far more primitive. With no one to appreciate or maintain these branches of culture, many of them died off simply from disuse.

7 * Causes for the Loss of Classical Culture Why did this happen? Well, there were several factors. Yet many of the branches were willfully destroyed as the early Church tried to wipe out its competition. Any idea that challenged the new order was destroyed. Religions that had persisted for centuries were wiped out overnight. Entire schools of philosophy were put to the torch. Only Church-approved beliefs were allowed to survive, and these were tightly controlled to keep them in line with Christian orthodoxy. Anyone who tried to start a new branch or explore other, non- Christian ways of thought was labeled a heretic. Their ideas were banned, and their followers faced a grisly demise.

8 * Impacts of the Loss of Classical Culture This pruning of the tree of civilization had a lasting impact on European history. In the course of a few centuries, Europe went from being the most literate, technologically advanced, cosmopolitan place on Earth to being one of the most illiterate, backward, insulated places on Earth. Literacy all but vanished from Europe. This meant that the wisdom of the ancients was lost for centuries. We only have these ancient writings today because Irish and Islamic scholars preserved them for us. It also meant that most Europeans had no way of recording new ideas. Without writing, no progress could be made. Europeans were left to spin their wheels for centuries. Technological advancement ground to a halt, while more literate cultures, like Islam, quickly outpaced Europe in technological progress.

9 * Impacts of the Loss of Classical Culture The study of human anatomy, once a respected science, was labeled as witchcraft, leading to a steady decline in medicine. The secrets behind Roman engineering were lost for centuries. Medieval Europeans could see the wonders built by the ancient Romans, like running water, highways, and domes, but they could not replicate them. In the instability that followed the collapse of the Roman Empire, trade ground to a halt. Without trade, there was no way to spread goods and ideas across Europe. As merchants vanished, so too did many craftsmen, who no longer had a market for their crafts. Cities died as their populations dispersed back to villages in the countryside.

10 * Impacts of the Loss of Classical Culture And before you knew it, Ianus' world had turned into John's world. Europe would have to wait almost a thousand years to regain its former glory. * The Foreigners If you recall from our unit on the empire, one of the causes of the fall of the Roman Empire, that lead to these Dark Ages, was the invasion of large masses of foreigners pushed out of their land through a combination of; Attacks by the Huns forcing them to move west The introduction of agriculture causing a population boom that forced people to look for land in the west The riches of the Roman Empire, and the possibility of sharing in that wealth if one moved west So, let s take a look at some of the major groups of these foreigners

11 The Visigoths The Visigoths were a tribe of people from the southern part of Scandinavia. They were the first Germanic tribe to settle in the Roman Empire. They assimilated (the process by which one people take on the language and culture of another) into Rome by adopting native cultural activities. When the Visigoths were allowed to enter the Empire to escape the Huns, however, they were unhappy with bad treatment received from imperial officials, and they began battling against Rome. After the Emperor was killed, the new Emperor Theodosius offered the Visigoths land and money to make peace. When Theodosius died and the Empire was left to be split between his two sons, things between the Romans and the Visigoths got worse. When the Visigoths had received land and payment from Theodosius, they had agreed to provide recruits for the Roman army.

12 The Visigoths The Ostrogoths The leader of the Visigoths was named Alaric. He was angry that his people were required to provide military service to Rome and wanted to fight against them. Alaric captured the city of Rome in 410. He died soon after the capture of Rome and the Visigoths moved to Southern France and Spain to settle. Closely related to the Visigoths was another tribe called the Ostrogoths. Ostrogoths were a group of people who settled in eastern parts of Europe. The leader of the Ostrogoths was named Theodoric.

13 The Ostrogoths Theodoric had been a prisoner in Constantinople, the current capital of Rome, for a decade. While in captivity, he learned a lot about the culture. Theodoric invaded the Empire and took control of Northern Italy. He ruled the area by allowing his people to follow gothic laws while Romans could follow Roman law. Out of respect for the Roman culture he had developed in captivity, he even helped rebuild ruined monuments. After Theodoric's death in 526, the Ostrogoths lost control in Rome and were driven out. They moved north, settling above the Alps and did not seek control in Rome afterwards.

14 The Vandals While the Goths were invading and settling in Rome, another Germanic tribe was also attempting to take control of the Empire. The Vandals were a Germanic tribe that had a habit of looting the cities they invaded. The Vandals first settled in areas of Spain until they were pushed out by the Visigoths. They then expanded to gain control over areas in North Africa. In 455, they became powerful enough to take over Rome. The Vandals held power over Rome until they were defeated by the Romans under the Emperor Justinian in 533. This tribe was not very artistic and left little in the area of art and artifacts.

15 The Vandals The Franks This is why they are mostly remembered for their acts of plundering and looting, leading to our modern English word vandalism. Although the Visigoths and Ostrogoths were forces to be reckoned with for a short while in the Roman Empire, both groups fell into obscurity. Other groups, like the Franks and the Saxons, hold a stronger place in history. The Franks were originally from the area between the North Sea and upper Rhine River in Germany. The historic founder of this tribe was said to have descended from a Sea Goddess, hence his name Merovin. They expanded into France in the fifth century. The Frankish leader Clovis converted to Catholicism and began battling against pagan barbarian tribes.

16 The Franks He was the first of the Merovinigian dynasty of Kings As they took control of France, the Germanic tribesmen began a cultural fusion with Romans in France. By allowing the two cultures to join together, the Franks created a new culture and became a part of the area's existence, rather than perpetually trying to hold a dominant control and eventually being driven out. The Anglo-Saxons The Anglo-Saxons were a group made up of tribes called Angles, Saxons and Jutes from Germany and Denmark. The Anglo-Saxons had invaded mainly in what we now know as England. Rather than assimilating and fusing cultures as the Franks did in France, the Anglo-Saxons found little of Rome's culture that they saw fit to absorb.

17 The Anglo-Saxons They ignored Rome's legal system and followed only a Germanic tribal governmental structure. They replaced Roman buildings made of stone with wooden structures. Many Anglo-Saxons kept their pagan religious beliefs despite the popularity of Christianity in Rome. They also kept their own language dominant, which would eventually develop into modern English through a process of bastardization, or blending of grammatical elements from several languages. You can see this in the copious amounts of Latin, that English, while a Germanic language at its root, contains. There is also a great deal of Celtic elements within the language, which makes sense given the Romano-Celts were who the Anglo-Saxons had to drive out in order to establish on the island of Great Britain a southern Angleland, or England.

18 The Anglo-Saxons In the late 4th and early 5th centuries, the Roman Empire could no longer defend itself against either internal rebellion or the external threat posed by expanding Germanic tribes in northeastern Europe. This situation and its consequences governed the separation of Roman Britain from the rest of the Empire. In the late 4th century, the empire was controlled by members of a dynasty that included the Emperor Theodosius I. This family retained political power within itself and formed alliances by intermarriage with other dynasties, at the same time engaging in internecine power struggles and fighting off outside contenders (called "usurpers") attempting to replace the ruling dynasty with one of their own. These internal machinations drained the Empire of both military and civilian resources.

19 The Anglo-Saxons In 383, the Roman general then assigned to Britain, Magnus Maximus, launched his successful bid for imperial power, crossing to Gaul with his troops. He killed the Western Roman Emperor Gratian and ruled Gaul and Britain as Augustus (i.e., as a "sub-emperor" under Theodosius I). 383 is the last date for any evidence of a Roman presence in the north and west of Britain, perhaps excepting troop assignments at some small ports and frontier assignments. These outposts may have lasted into the 390s, but they were a very minor presence.

20 He was then executed by Theodosius * The Foreigners The Anglo-Saxons In the De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, written c. 540, Saxon historian, Gildas, attributed an exodus of troops and senior administrators from Britain to Maximus, saying that he left not only with all of its troops, but also with all of its armed bands, governors, and the flower of its youth, never to return. Raids by Saxons, Picts, and the Scoti (Latin word for pirates) of Ireland had been ongoing in the late 4th century, but these increased in the years surrounding 383. In 388, Maximus led his army into Italy in an attempt to gain additional political power within the Roman Empire. The effort failed when he was defeated in Pannonia at the Battle of the Save (in modern Croatia) and at the Battle of Potoevio(at Ptuj in modern Slovenia).

21 The Anglo-Saxons When Theodosius died in 395, his 10-year-old son Honorius would succeed him as Western Roman Emperor. The real power behind the throne, however, was Stilicho, the sonin-law of Theodosius' brother and the father-in-law of Honorius. Sometime between 396 and 398, Stilicho ordered a campaign against the Picts, to prevent their frequent raids. This would be the last Roman campaign in Britain of which there is any record. In 401 or 402 Stilicho faced wars with the Alaric and the Ostrogothic king Radagaisus. Needing military manpower, he stripped Hadrian's Wall of troops for the final time.

22 The Anglo-Saxons is the last date of any Roman coinage found in large numbers in Britain, suggesting either that Stilicho also stripped the remaining troops from Britain, or that the Empire could no longer afford to pay the troops who were still there. Meanwhile the Picts, Saxons and Scoti continued their raids, which may have increased in scope In 405, for example, Niall Niagalach (Niall of the Nine Hostages from who the O Neill family is descended) is described as having raided along the southern coast of Britain. On the last day of December 406, the Alans, Vandals, and Suebi living east of Gaul crossed the frozen Rhine River and began a widespread devastation of the country.

23 The Anglo-Saxons On the last day of December 406, the Alans, Vandals, and Suebi living east of Gaul crossed the frozen Rhine River and began a widespread devastation of the country. As there was no effective Roman response, the remaining Roman military in Britain feared that a Germanic crossing of the Channel into Britain was next, and dispensed with imperial authority An action perhaps made easier by the high probability that the troops had not been paid for some time. Their intent was to choose a commander who would lead them in securing their future but their first two choices, Marcus and Gratian, did not meet their expectations and were killed. Their third choice was the soldier Constantine, III

24 The Anglo-Saxons In 407 Constantine rallied the remaining troops in Britain, led them across the Channel into Gaul, rallied support there, and set himself up as Western Roman Emperor. The Roman Empire south of the Alps was preoccupied with fending off the Visigoths and was unable to put down the rebellion, giving Constantine the opportunity to extend his new empire to include Spain. In 409 Constantine's control of his empire fell apart. Part of his military forces were in Spain, making them unavailable for action in Gaul, and some of those in Gaul were swayed against him by loyalist Roman generals. The Germans living west of the Rhine River rose against him, perhaps encouraged by Roman loyalists, and those living east of the river crossed into Gaul.

25 The Anglo-Saxons Britain, now without any troops for protection and having suffered particularly severe Saxon raids in 408 and 409, viewed the situation in Gaul with renewed alarm. Perhaps feeling they had no hope of relief under Constantine, both the Romano-Britons and some of the Gauls expelled Constantine's magistrates in 409 or 410. The Byzantine historian Zosimus directly blamed Constantine for the expulsion, saying that he had allowed the Saxons to raid, and that the Britons and Gauls were reduced to such straits that they revolted from the Roman Empire, rejected Roman law, reverted to their native customs, and armed themselves to ensure their own safety.

26 The Anglo-Saxons A later appeal for help by the British communities was, according to Zosimus, rejected by the Emperor Honorius in 410 AD. In the text called the Rescript of Honorius, the Western Emperor Honorius tells the British civitates (Roman cities outside of Italy) to look to their own defense. Historian Christopher Snyder wrote that protocol dictated that Honorius address his correspondences to imperial officials, and the fact that he did not implies that the cities of Britain were now the highest Roman authority remaining on the island.

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