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International School of Central Switzerland

EDSITEment - Lesson Plan - 0 views

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    Europe in the first half of the 14th Century seemed to be preparing itself for significant changes. Cities grew in importance, though most of the population was still rural. Population increases had led to overuse of the available land. Poor harvests-also due to cooler, wetter weather-led to famines. The serf system was being undermined. Centralized political authority was becoming more powerful. Then the Black Death cut a path-both literal and figurative-through the middle of the 14th Century. The disease was caused by the bubonic plague, which was spread by rats, whose fleas carried the plague bacilli from the East along trade routes until it penetrated almost all of Europe, killing at least one out of every three people. Such a radical alteration in population in any place, at any time, would likely set off dramatic changes in society. What happened in a Europe already beginning to transform itself? In this lesson, students analyze maps, firsthand accounts, and archival documents to trace the path and aftermath of the Black Death.
International School of Central Switzerland

A cooler Pacific may have severely affected medieval Europe, North America - 0 views

  • In Europe, the study period was preceded by three years of torrential rains, which led to the Great Famine from 1315 to 1320, and marked the transition from the Medieval Warm Period to the Little Ice Age, which began in the mid 1500s. During that time, extreme weather conditions were thought to be responsible for continued localized crop failures and famines throughout Europe during the remainder of the 14th Century
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    In the time before Columbus sailed the ocean blue, a cooler central Pacific Ocean has been connected with drought conditions in Europe and North America that may be responsible for famines and the disappearance of cliff dwelling people in the American West.
International School of Central Switzerland

Euratlas Periodis Web - Maps to be Used for the History of Europe - 0 views

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    eriodis Web - A Historical Atlas and Gazetteer of Europe from Year 1 to 2000
International School of Central Switzerland

Great Battles: The First Crusade - 0 views

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    "From 1096 to 1101, over 100,000 people from all over Western Europe set off towards Jerusalem. These men and women, these warriors and pilgrims, priests and nuns, lords and laborers, didn't have a name for what they were doing-no one would use the word Crusade to describe an armed pilgrimage, or holy military expedition, until more than another century had passed. Yet the battle that preceded their march, a battle along the way to Jerusalem, and still another after that city was conquered by a tiny remnant of the original force, combined to permanently reshape the nature (both spiritual and physical) of Catholic Europe. Dr. Jessica Goldberg, Assistant Professor, Medieval History, University of Pennsylvania, speaks at this "Great Battles: Moments in Time that Changed History" series lecture program."
International School of Central Switzerland

History and Geography of Europe - 0 views

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    links to many maps and pictures of historical Europe
International School of Central Switzerland

Sacred Sites: Pilgrimage in Medieval Europe - 0 views

International School of Central Switzerland

The Great Famine and the Black Death | 1315-1317, 1346-1351 | Lectures in Medieval Hist... - 0 views

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    The 14th century was an era of catastrophes. Some of them man-made, such as the Hundred Years' War, the Avignon Papacy, and the Great Schism. These were caused by human beings, and we shall consider them a bit later. There were two more or less natural disasters either of which one would think would have been sufficient to throw medieval Europe into a real "Dark Ages": the Great Famine and the Black Death. Each caused millions of deaths, and each in its way demonstrated in dramatic fashion the existence of new vulnerabilities in Western European society. Together they subjected the population of medieval Europe to tremendous strains, leading many people to challenge old institutions and doubt traditional values, and, by so doing, these calamities altered the path of European development in many areas.
International School of Central Switzerland

Medieval Europe - 0 views

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    overview of  Medieval Europe fromVirginia Western Community College
International School of Central Switzerland

European History Primary Sources | - 0 views

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    Welcome to European History Primary Sources (EHPS), an index of scholarly websites that offer online access to digitised primary sources on the history of Europe. The websites listed on EHPS are not only meta-sources but also include invented archives and born digital sources. Each website that is listed in EHPS has a short description and is categorised according to country, language, period, subject and type of source. The portal can be searched in a variety of ways. The listed websites can be accessed for free, though sometimes a registration is required.
International School of Central Switzerland

Oldcook : cookery books in medieval Europe - 0 views

International School of Central Switzerland

Khanate of the Golden Horde - 0 views

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    It is even thought that bubonic plague spread to Europe after the Mongols laid siege to the port of Kaffa on the Crimean peninsula in 1346. After their own forces were stricken with plague, the Mongols catapulted their corpses over the walls into Kaffa. The ships that left Kaffa and returned to Italy carried the disease. 
International School of Central Switzerland

The Effects of The Black Death on the Economic and Social Life of Europe :: European Eu... - 0 views

  • So much death could not help but tear economic and social structures apart. Lack of peasants and laborers sent wages soaring, and the value of land plummeted. For the first time in history the scales tipped against wealthy landlords as peasants and serfs gained more bargaining power. Without architects, masons and artisans, great cathedrals and castles remained unfinished for hundreds of years. Governments, lacking officials, floundered in their attempts to create order out of chaos.
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    So much death could not help but tear economic and social structures apart. Lack of peasants and laborers sent wages soaring, and the value of land plummeted. For the first time in history the scales tipped against wealthy landlords as peasants and serfs gained more bargaining power. Without architects, masons and artisans, great cathedrals and castles remained unfinished for hundreds of years. Governments, lacking officials, floundered in their attempts to create order out of chaos.
International School of Central Switzerland

Black death › Dr Karl's Great Moments In Science (ABC Science) - 0 views

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    The Black Death of the Middle Ages was a truly devastating pandemic - a pandemic being the Military-Industrial Full Blown Version of an epidemic. In the mid-1300s, the Black Death killed at least one third of the European population, so it was truly horrible. So most people think that the Black Death began in Europe - but it didn't.
International School of Central Switzerland

Black death 'discriminated' between victims › News in Science (ABC Science) - 0 views

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    The Black Death that decimated populations in Europe and elsewhere during the middle of the 14th century may not have been a blindly indiscriminate killer as previously believed. An analysis of 490 skeletons from a London cemetery for Black Death victims shows the infection did not affect everyone equally, researchers say.
K Epps

The 10 greatest changes of the past 1,000 years | Books | theguardian.com - 0 views

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    "In Europe, the last millennium has been shaped by successive waves of change, but which shifts, in which centuries, have really shaped the modern world? Historian Ian Mortimer identifies the 10 leading drivers of change"
K Epps

State Formation in Europe in the First Millenium AD - 0 views

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    "Introduction: This essay is concerned not with the formation of all European states of the first millenium A.D., but to highlight and then briefly explore a recurring pattern of historical development on the fringes of the great empires of the era. In the Germanic world beyond the frontiers of the Roman state in the first half of the period, and later in the Slavic world bordering the Carolingian and Ottonian states in the second, there emerged, over time, even more substantial political entities. This paper will compare the processes of development in each case, to establish that they were indeed parallel, and then concentrate upon causation. Wht should history have repeated itself in this way?"
International School of Central Switzerland

How parasites went on Crusade - 0 views

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    "The crusades were arguably the greatest migration event that took place in medieval Europe. In the 12th and 13th centuries, hundreds of thousands of Europeans travelled to the eastern Mediterranean on military campaigns, pilgrimage and to trade. "The crusades are often blamed for the spread of disease during the medieval period," explained Mitchell, whose work was funded by the British Academy. "But only limited research has investigated which diseases might have been spread, in which direction, eastwards or westwards, and what impact this may have had upon the endemic patterns of disease.""
International School of Central Switzerland

Les possessions des Ordres Religieux et Militaires en Europe et au Proche-Orient - 0 views

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    Google map of Knights Templar possesions View this page in Firefox - it has a peculiar mouse action. Mode d'emploi de la carte : Vous pouvez utiliser celle-ci exactement de la même façon que vous utilisez Google Earth® ou Google Maps®. Placez votre souris sur la carte à n'importe quel endroit, ensuite double-cliquez et la carte fera un zoom sur l'endroit que vous avez sélectionné. Pour faire défiler la carte, il suffit de faire un clic droit sur celle-ci et de déplacer votre souris tout en maintenant le bouton droit enfoncé. Lorsque vous cliquerez sur unsymbole (croix ou épées croisées), une petite info-bulle apparaitra avec un lien vers la page présentant l'endroit que vous venez de sélectionner.
K Epps

The Western Tradition by Eugen Weber: 52 Video Lectures | Open Culture - 0 views

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    "The Western Tradition is a free series of videos that traces the arc of western civilization. Starting in Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome, the survey proceeds to cover the Byzantine Empire and Medieval Europe,..."
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