The Middle Ages

by National Geographic Book Service

Paper Book, 1977

Status

Available

Publication

National Geographic Society (1977), 378 pages

Description

Go back to medieval times when the church was the most powerful influence on society, cities and towns were developing, and a new type of economy was emerging. Follow the Crusades, travel the Silk road to Constantinople, and join in as King John signs the Magna Carta.

Original publication date

1969

Language

ISBN

0870440756 / 9780870440755

Rating

(22 ratings; 3.4)

User reviews

LibraryThing member TrysB
True to the tradition of Natl Geogr Society books, The Age of Chivalry has beautiful color illustrations on nearly every page. There's even a 16-page fold-out showing the entire Bayeux Tapestry! The story begins with the classic gigantic face of Constantine, the first Christian emperor in 324 AD
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founding his great city, Constantinople as the new Rome to replace what the barbarians were destroying. And from here, on we go through the history of the Byzantine empire and emperors such as Justinian to Carolus Magnus, Charlemagne in 800 AD. Most of our classic Latin literature came to us through Charlemagne's establishment of scriptoria where monks laboriously hand-copied the ancient texts--even inventing a new form of script called Carolingian minuscule. Although Christianity had spread considerably since the death of Jesus, the old pagan religions of the Vikings, the Celts and the Saxons still flourished. The days of the Anglo Saxons were numbered, however, and the year 1066 as we all know marked the beginning of their conquest as the Normans led by William of Poitiers poured into Britain. The battles and intrigues between Harold, the last Saxon king, and William of Normandy epitomized by the unique record of the Bayeux Tapestry have provided poets, minstrels and writers with songs and stories for centuries. Some 900 years ago in 1112 lived a monk who was destined to be one of the greatest shapers of the Middle Ages, Bernard of Clairvaux. His contemplative mind and need for discipline naturally led him to become a monk in the austere Cistercian order, started by St Benedict. But Bernard went on to spread the ideals of fruitful labor as a way of praising the God, founding many more monasteries. Now the book takes you into the realms of what most people think of as chivalry--the exploits of true-hearted knights and the pageants of medieval jousting and the court of the king. The authors of the various sections in this book traveled to France and England and other countries to see firsthand the places where Medieval events took place. Illustrated by the wonderful NatGeo photographers, we are treated to a visual narrative of this spirited era that would require many weeks of travel and expense to see. It serves as a wonderful historical document, but also as a guide to the places we may want to visit like the Cathedral of Chartres, Mont St Michel or Campostela.
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LibraryThing member sanjuanslim
glitzy book. illustrations hard to follow
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