![]() ![]() When Jews open any Torah commentary today, much of what they read will have been written by medieval Ashkenazic Jews.” “This diaspora is critically important to understand. “If you were to look at a map of that time, you would see Jewish communities spreading and growing across what is now Germany, northern France and England,” says investigator Elisheva Baumgarten, professor of Jewish History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel. This was a period that also witnessed the expansion of Jewish communities across northern Europe, a diaspora known as the Jews of Ashkenaz. Many people sought salvation by paying to have prayers said for them in chantry chapels, and undertaking pilgrimages.From around 1100 to 1350, medieval Europe was a place of relative calm and plenty. Yet still religion remained all-pervasive in daily life, though the focus of piety changed from monasteries to parish churches. For the first time in English history, the doctrines as well as the actions of the Church were being attacked, by John Wycliffe and the Lollards. The feudal system was not the only institution being challenged. In 1381 simmering grievances erupted into the Peasants’ Revolt. Attempts to fix wages and prices at pre-plague rates only increased resentment.Įdward III’s grandson and successor, Richard II (r.1377–99), inherited a bankrupt treasury and discontent over reverses in the conflicts with France. Survivors demanded higher wages and bond men refused to do unpaid ‘service’ for feudal masters. ![]() The most immediate of its many effects was an acute labour shortage. Then, in 1348–9, the established order and the population were struck a devastating blow by the Black Death, which killed between a third and a half of England’s population. His armies included archers using longbows, which became the dominant English weapon of the later Middle Ages. Edward was forced to renounce the throne in favour of his 14-year-old son, and was almost certainly brutally murdered at Berkeley Castle in Gloucestershire.Īlthough Isabella and Mortimer initially governed, Edward III (r.1327–77) assumed control in his own right in 1330, ousting his mother and executing her lover.Įdward was a great warrior king, winning victories in France at Crécy (1346) and Poitiers (1356) during the early years of what was later known as the Hundred Years War (1337–1453). ![]() So when Edward’s spurned wife, Isabella, and her lover, Roger Mortimer, invaded from France in 1326, they quickly gained support. The king’s devotion to his low-born ‘favourites’, Piers Gaveston and then the Despenser family, enraged his barons. His Scottish policy proved disastrous for his less warlike son Edward II (r.1307–27), though, whose defeat at Bannockburn (1314) was followed by Scots raids far south of the border. This was a time when chivalric ‘heraldry’ blossomed, enhanced by the craze for legends of King Arthur.Įdward I (r.1272–1307), another great castle-builder, united his barons behind the conquest of Wales (1277–84) and his attempts on Scotland. But after de Montfort’s death at the Battle of Evesham (1265) and the long siege of Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire, rebellion was finally suppressed. The long reign of Henry III (r.1216–72) saw further baronial unrest, from the late 1250s headed by Simon de Montfort. When he died in France in 1189 he was at war with his eldest son, Richard, who had joined forces against him with the French king. Henry’s later reign was clouded by his fraught relationship with his sons and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine. The many fortresses he raised included Dover Castle, which was rebuilt partly as a splendid stopover on the road to Canterbury and the shrine of his ‘turbulent’ priest, St Thomas Becket, murdered in his cathedral by Henry’s knights in 1170. A monarch of boundless energy and ungovernable rages, he travelled constantly through his vast dominions, stretching from the Scottish border to the Pyrenees. Order was restored by Matilda’s son, Henry II (r.1154–89), the first of the Angevin or Plantagenet kings. But the country descended into chaos and civil war when Henry’s nephew Stephen (r.1135–54) was crowned king, despite the rival claim of Henry’s daughter Matilda. William’s youngest son, Henry I (r.1100–35), brought peace and administrative and legal reform. However, baronial revolts plagued the Conqueror and his son, William Rufus (r.1087–1100). ![]()
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