Middle Ages

The popular notion is that the Middle Ages were really just the Dark Ages, and that (in Europe, at least) rulers and peasants alike slogged around in the Black Plague-infected mud with bags and bags of superstition and religious oppression tied around their malnourished necks. There's some truth to those notions, but not as much as left-wing historians would have us believe.

A lot of the confusion has arisen from the goofiness of satire like Don Quixote and Monty Python and the Holy Grail. It sounds ridiculous (and it is ridiculous), but it's true: popular attitudes are often shaped by popular culture, largely because audiences are often incapable of separating the satire from the reality.

Also, the Middle Ages were pretty foreign in comparison with our own times. People back then thought differently, their worldview was closer to that of the ancients, while containing the seeds of what would become Modern thought. Their world was full of symbolism but was also more straightforward, perhaps one reason later thinkers considered them so backward.

Western Christianity came into its own during this period. A lot of missionary work was accomplished during the barbarian invasions, so that by the time nations began to assume some sort of regular shape, Christianity had largely replaced the animism and occultism of the Celts, Saxons, Gauls, Vikings, etc. By the time of the High Middle Ages, the Catholic Church ruled supreme in matters of religion, and to a great extent in secular politics.

The two were inextricably entwined, really—Church and State were not the disparate entities they are now. Kings and princes were subject to popes and cardinals in ways that would make most modern Americans squirm, and would provide enough work to keep the ACLU busy for millennia. This is yet another reason the Middle Ages are frequently considered a blighted time awash in ignorance.

To be sure, there was plenty of ignorance and superstition. "Scientists" tried to make gold from other metals (working, of course, from the theories of the Greek physicist Democritus), peasants feared ghosts and devils at every turn, and medicine had not yet progressed beyond the gory practice of bleeding to release disease and evil spirits from the ailing. The Church often overstepped its bounds, as well, and there was widespread corruption reaching as high (at times) as the Papacy itself.

But that wasn't the whole picture. There was plenty of genuine Christianity at work, plenty of great art, some important philosophical strides, and even some real scientific advancement (particularly in the realms of technology, astronomy, and cartography). The Church, though not without problems, was largely unified, and produced some of its greatest scholars and theologians during this period, like St. Anselm and Jan Hus.

Of course, it was also the Middle Ages that produced Thomas Aquinas, who should have been more of a polarizing figure than he was. His efforts to integrate Aristotelian philosophy with Christian theology, and especially his idea that the Bible was the standard for spiritual and theological knowledge while human reason covered the rest (kind of like an intellectual MasterCard), laid the foundation for the Enlightenment and theological liberalism.

There were also plenty of wars, a certain Great Schism between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches, explorations, lots of poetry, painting and music and sculpture; the usual cultural elements in any historical period. What's important to remember is that the Middle Ages weren't some epoch cut off from the rest of history, that there is a clear progression from the Classical world to the early modern period bridged by the Medieval era, and that there isn't some massive disconnect between the "dark" Middle Ages and the "enlightened" modern times.

Review by C. Hollis Crossman
C. Hollis Crossman used to be a child. Now he's a husband and father who loves church, good food, and weird stuff. He might be a mythical creature, but he's definitely not a centaur. Read more of his reviews here.

 

The Middle Ages (approximately 450-1450 A.D.) is often divided into "dark ages" and "middle" ages, but we prefer organizing it into three periods:

1. Early Middle Ages (approximately 450-1066)

  • defined by invasions and migrations
  • key elements include barbarians, monasteries, feudalism, Vikings
  • key personalities: Mohammed, Charlemagne, and others
    Note: This is the period when the Arabs conquered Palestine and controlled Jerusalem.

2. High Middle Ages (approximately 1066-1300)

  • defined by growth
  • key elements include the supremacy of the Church, the Crusades, cathedrals, development of the merchant class, trade/cities (1100's), universities (1200's), castles, the Magna Charta (1215)
  • key personalities: Canute, Genghis Khan, William the Conqueror, and others

3. Late Middle Ages (approximately 1300-1450)

  • defined by turmoil
  • key elements include the development of the nation states (as opposed to city states), the Hundred Years War, the Black Death, the Western Schism
  • key personalities: Marco Polo, Joan of Arc, and others
    Note: This period coincides with the Renaissance

—Our thanks to Allison for this breakdown.

Did you find this review helpful?
28 Items found Print
Active Filters: History Spines & Surveys
1066: The Year of the Conquest
by David Howarth
from Penguin Putnam
for 9th-Adult
in History for Adults (Location: ADU-HIS)
$16.00 $8.00 (1 in stock)
Builders of the Old World
by Gertrude Hartman
Second Edition from D. C. Heath and Company
for 4th-8th grade
in Vintage Readers & Textbooks (Location: VIN-READ)
Castle with Many Rooms
by Lorene Lambert
from Simply Charlotte Mason
for 1st-12th grade
in History Spines & Surveys (Location: HISRF-SPINE)
Christian Survey of World History - Compact Disc Set
by R. J. Rushdoony
from Chalcedon / Ross House Books
for 10th grade-Adult
in History Conferences & Lectures (Location: HISRF-CONF)
$90.00
Discovery of New Worlds
Story of the World Series #2
by M. B. Synge
from Yesterday's Classics
History Reference for 4th-8th grade
in History Spines & Surveys (Location: HISRF-SPINE)
$13.95
Discovery of New Worlds
Story of the World Series #2
by M. B. Synge
from Living Book Press
History Reference for 4th-8th grade
in History Spines & Surveys (Location: HISRF-SPINE)
Famous Men of the Middle Ages
by John Haaren & A. B. Poland
Revised and Updated from Greenleaf Press
for 4th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$9.00 (2 in stock)
Famous Men of the Middle Ages (old)
by John Haaren & A. B. Poland
1st edition from Greenleaf Press
for 4th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$4.00 (3 in stock)
Great Britain to 1688 / Great Britain Since 1688
by Maurice Ashley and K.B. Smellie
from University of Michigan Press
for Adult
in Vintage History & Biographies (Location: VIN-HIS)
$16.00 (1 in stock)
Heroes of the Middle Ages
by Eva March Tappan
from Yesterday's Classics
Historical Fiction for 6th-9th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$12.95
History of the Medieval World
by Susan Wise Bauer
1st edition from W. W. Norton and Co.
for Adult
in Story of the World (Location: HISCUR-SoW)
$35.00 $22.00 (1 in stock)
How the West Won
by Rodney Stark
from Intercollegiate Studies Institute
for 12th-Adult
in History for Adults (Location: ADU-HIS)
$18.00
Magna Charta
Landmark Series
by James Daugherty
from Beautiful Feet Books
Non-Fiction for 5th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$14.95
Russia Under the Czars
by Henry Moscow
from Harper & Row
for 4th-8th grade
in Horizon Caravel Books (Location: VIN-HOR)
Search for King Arthur
by Christopher Hibbert
1st edition from Harper & Row
for 4th-8th grade
in Horizon Caravel Books (Location: VIN-HOR)
Stories from the Crusades
by Janet Harvey Kelman
from Yesterday's Classics
for 4th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$9.95
Story of Europe
by H. E. Marshall
from Yesterday's Classics
European History Reference for 8th-10th grade
in History Spines & Surveys (Location: HISRF-SPINE)
$15.95
Story of Europe
by H. E. Marshall
from Ostara Publications
European History Reference for 8th-10th grade
in History Spines & Surveys (Location: HISRF-SPINE)
Story of Islam
by Suzanne Strauss Art
from Pemblewick Press
for 7th-10th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$17.50
Story of Islam
by Suzanne Strauss Art
2nd edition from Pemblewick Press
for 7th-10th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
Story of Liberty
by Charles Coffin
from Maranatha Publications
Historical Reference for 10th-Adult
in America's Christian Heritage (Location: HISA-CH)
$19.97 $10.00 (3 in stock)
Story of the Middle Ages
by Christine Miller & Helene Guerber
from Nothing New Press
for 3rd-8th grade
Cathy Duffy's 100 Top Picks
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
Story of the Middle Ages
by Samuel B. Harding
from Yesterday's Classics
History Reference for 4th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$12.95 $7.50 (1 in stock)
Story of the Middle Ages
Early Times
by Suzanne Strauss Art
from Wayside Publishing
for 6th-10th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$21.48
Story of the Middle Ages
Early Times
by Suzanne Strauss Art
2nd edition from Wayside Publishing
for 6th-10th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
Two Churches
by Robert Brentano
from Princeton University Press
for 10th-Adult
in Clearance: Christian Books (Location: XCLE)
$2.00 (1 in stock)
Vikings
Landmark Series
by Elizabeth Janeway
from Beautiful Feet Books
Non-fiction for 5th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$9.95
What Really Happened in Medieval Times
by Terri Johnson, editor
2017 Revision from Knowledge Quest
Biographies for 4th-8th grade
in Middle Ages (Location: HISW-MID)
$11.00 (1 in stock)