Highlands Ranch High School - Mr. Sedivy
              Highlands Ranch, Colorado
              
              
            
            - 
              World History -
              High Middle Ages / National Monarchies
            
            Agricultural Revolution 
              New inventions (heavy plow, water wheel, windmill). The horse collar 
              let horses do the work. Horses are faster and have more stamina 
              than oxen - the old yokes choked horses. New inventions increase 
              the food supply, increasing the population. Now, there were not 
              as many serfs.
            Trade and Commerce
              The increase in population meant an increase in trade. Trade was 
              mostly controlled by Italian city states of Milan, Venice, and Florence. 
              There were new business methods: merchants pooled resources to finance 
              large-scale trading. Moneychangers led to banking. They had "strong 
              boxes," the people thought it was safe, and moneychangers would 
              lend out money. This led to an increase in banking and guilds. There 
              was growth of towns and cities because of more trade and the greater 
              food supply.
            Middle Class
              The Middle Class grew because now there was a new group of people 
              who were not tied to the land. They had no obligations to a lord. 
              This led to an increase in specialized trade. The middle class grew 
              quickly and prospered.
            

              Left: Medieval Illuminated Manuscript.
              Right: Artists at work at a manuscript and a panel painting.
              From the pattern book of the Reun Monastery - 1200.
              Before the printing press, books were copied and decorated by hand.
            Universities
              The increase in population and increase in trade led to a revival 
              in learning. Universities developed as young men went to study with 
              renowned scholars. University curriculum was based on the study 
              of translations of Latin and Greek words.
            
            Strong National Monarchies
            
            England
              England now had stronger kings with centralized authority. England 
              became the first truly unified state under William the Conqueror. 
              In 1066 he brought the Normans, descendents of the Vikings, across 
              and conquered Harold, the Saxon King.
            
              Scene from the Bayeux Tapestry 1066.
              The tapestry is the historical record of William the Conqueror. 
              
              Click the tapestry to view the entire 
              Bayeux Tapestry.
            Twenty years after the Norman Conquest, William the 
              Conqueror ordered a great survey of property owners in England. 
              This was called the "Domesday Book" (or doomsday), because 
              it spared no one and there was no appeal. William wanted to find 
              out how much land people held so that he could be sure that he was 
              getting all the taxes that were due him. The doomsday book recorded 
              who owned land, how much land they owned, how many people worked 
              the land, how many animals they owned, and how many pastures, mills, 
              and fish ponds they had. The survey was completed in 1086.
             
 
              
              The Domesday Book can be seen at the Public Record 
              Office in London.
            Magna Charta (1215)
              English Lords forced King John to grant them certain rights, including:
            Taxation with representation.
               Trial 
              by a jury.
 Trial 
              by a jury.
               The 
              king had to rule according to law. These rights only applied to 
              the lords, only one-sixth of the population.
 The 
              king had to rule according to law. These rights only applied to 
              the lords, only one-sixth of the population.
            
            
            France
              King Philip II established power over the French lords in 1202 by 
              beating King John of England and taking his land. Louis IX (St. 
              Louis is named for him) established a uniform code of laws for all 
              of France, 1226 - 1270.
            
              Aware of his position as spiritual and political 
              leader of France, 
              Louis IX guarded his royal prerogatives in his dealings with the 
              bishops.
            Italy and Germany
              Italy and Germany both remained divided. In Italy, the Pope, various 
              city-states, and local rulers divided power. In Germany, power was 
              shared by numerous princes. 
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