Assignment 6.1 and 6.3

Assignment 6.1 and 6.3
Typical layout of a Medieval City
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Slide 1: Slide
GeschiedenisMiddelbare schoolhavo, vwoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 31 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 40 min

Items in this lesson

Assignment 6.1 and 6.3
Typical layout of a Medieval City

Slide 1 - Slide

Read this before you start
  • Take your time to read all the textboxes, questions and answers.
  • This assigment is not for  a mark but you need a 60% score or higher to finish the assigment. If you have a lower score you have to do the assigment again.
  • If you've finished the assignment you can continue with the other homework for this week. 

Slide 2 - Slide

Goals of this assignment
At the end you understand...
  • understand the Investiture Controversy.
  • know the hightlights of the power struggle between church and state.
  • understand how a growth in population led to urbanisation.
  • understand how living in cities resulted in more people specializing.
  • know how cities worked together in the Hansaetic League.

Slide 3 - Slide

Power is divided
In the Middle Ages society was divided in three groups:
1. Clergy (church)
2. Nobility
3. Everyone else (mainly farmers)

Slide 4 - Slide

Clergy
Nobility
3rd estate
Fisherman
Bishop
Emperor
Nun
Knight
Farmer
Blacksmith
Count
Duke
Baron
Sailor
Priest

Slide 5 - Drag question

Monk
Knight 
Secular
Spiritual
Listens to King/emperor
Listens to the pope
Lives in poverty
Gets a salary
Nobility
Clergy

Slide 6 - Drag question

Slide 7 - Drag question

Two statements:
I. Secular and spiritual power were sometimes held by the same person.
II. The Papal States also functions as a secular state.
A
I & II are true
B
I & II are false
C
I= true; II=false
D
I=false; II= true

Slide 8 - Quiz

Other example of the combination
  • Bishop of Utrecht was a clergymen and had to listen to the Pope.
  • Bishop of Utrecht was also a vassal of the Holy Roman Emperor and had to listen to him as well. 

Slide 9 - Slide

Which provinces besides Utrecht were governed by the bishop of Utrecht?
A
Overijssel, Drenthe and parts of Groningen
B
Gelderland, Drenthe and Overijssel
C
Drenthe and Overijssel
D
Drenthe and Gelderland

Slide 10 - Quiz

Slide 11 - Link

Who gave Utrecht cityrights in 1122?
A
The bishop of Utrecht
B
The count of Holland
C
The Holy Roman Emperor
D
The Duke of Gelre (Gelderland)

Slide 12 - Quiz

Cityrights
Cities could get a document declaring their Independence in certain subjects: right to ask for taxes, right to build walls, rights to have a market and many more rights.
Cityrights of Utrecht from 1122

Slide 13 - Slide

Search on the internet for the moment Culemborg got its Cityrights.
A
1236
B
1302
C
1314
D
1318

Slide 14 - Quiz

Where do cities start?
  • Next to rivers
  • Where two rivers cross
  • Where rivers meet the sea
  • Where roads cross
Amersfoort

Slide 15 - Slide

Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Three field system
Field 1
Field 2
Field 3
Fallow
Summer grains
Winter grains
Fallow
Summer grains
Winter grains

Slide 16 - Drag question

What is NOT an effect of the invention of the heavy plough?
A
Less people needed for farming
B
Less time needed to plough a field
C
The Three-field system was invented
D
More people move away from farms

Slide 17 - Quiz

Specialised craftsmen united in groups called.......

Slide 18 - Open question

Guilds
Every specialised craft had its own dedicated guild.
Every city had dozens of guilds.

Slide 19 - Slide

Slide 20 - Link

Two statements:
I. Guilds had influence on the government.
II. Guilds have taken control of cities.
A
I & II are true
B
I & II are false
C
I= true; II= false
D
I= false; II= true

Slide 21 - Quiz

Gildeslagen
In Utrecht every large guild was asked to protect a certain part of the citywall.
In Utrecht 18 guilds worked together in this system

Slide 22 - Slide

What was the punishment for breaking the rules of a medieval guild?
A
Imprisonment
B
Forced labor
C
Fines or expulsion from the guild
D
Public flogging

Slide 23 - Quiz

What was the purpose of medieval guilds?
A
To protect the interests of their members
B
To overthrow the monarchy
C
To promote individualism
D
To spread the Black Plague

Slide 24 - Quiz

Slide 25 - Link

Which countries were members of the Hanseatic League?
A
Spain, Portugal, France, Italy
B
Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia
C
Germany, Sweden, Norway, Denmark
D
Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan

Slide 26 - Quiz

What was the primary goal of the Hanseatic League?
A
To increase trade and protect economic interests
B
To establish political dominance
C
To spread religious beliefs
D
To conquer new territories

Slide 27 - Quiz

What was the Hanseatic League?
A
A military alliance
B
A religious movement
C
A group of merchant guilds
D
A medieval trade organization

Slide 28 - Quiz

In 1347 Europe was devastated by the arrival of the.....
A
Black Death
B
Vikings
C
Mongols
D
Crusaders

Slide 29 - Quiz

How much percent of Europeans died from the Black Death/Plague
0100

Slide 30 - Poll

Assignment 6.1 and 6.3
Typical layout of a Medieval City

Slide 31 - Slide