The rise of banking was one of the things that happened as the Middle Ages drew to an end. There were possibly banks in some market places at the end of the Middle Ages, but there certainly would have been none during most of the Middle Ages.
Three characteristics of the Scandinavians during the high Middle Ages was the rise of Christian monotheism, powerful rulers such as Charlemagne, and theologians including St. Augustine.
The rise of the middle class in England with the industrial revolution made the Monarchs have to work harder to keep favor.
No. The increase in the power of the Church happened in the Roman Empire at a time when the economic and political power was mostly in the hands of the military. In the Middle Ages, the aristocracy gained military power, and the rise of the middle class only happened during the Middle Ages after that.
There are two different ways of looking at the Middle Ages. Most common, perhaps, is the idea that the Middle Ages are between the fall of the West Roman Empire and the Fall of Constantinople to the Turks. This puts the Middle Ages as begin from about 476 to 1453, and the immediately preceding age is ancient times. The other way English speaking people regard the Middle Ages is that they are the time between the Norman conquest and the rise of the Tudor Dynasty. The dates given for this are 1066 to 1485, and the immediately preceding time is the Dark Ages. There are many other ways of dating the Middle Ages, and how they are dated often depends on the language of the historian. For example, in Finland, the Middle Ages are the time between prehistory and the modern age. Since Finland was prehistoric until the beginning of the 11th century, this dating about 1000 to 1500.
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AnswerIt didn't. This is a modern concept and didn't happen until the industrial revolution and even then the middle class idea is more recent to the 20th century. AnswerThe middle class developed with the rise of towns, and was one of the really important things going on in the middle ages. There was always a class of people who were free, throughout the entire middle ages, and there were always towns and cities. But as the middle ages passed, the increases in agricultural efficiency and the gradual increase in stability made the numbers of people living in the towns and cities grow. Part of the increase came from serfs being freed, and part of it came from the younger children of nobility who had no inheritance. The middle class included all free people who were not nobles. A number of these people were brewers, butchers, bakers, innkeepers and seamstresses. But there were also merchants of various types, people who sold imported cloth and spices. And there were physicians, stewards, and lawyers.With the rise of the guilds, a number of cities in the Holy Roman Empire took on republican forms of government. These banded together to produce the Hanseatic League, which had powers to rival a nation. At the same time, the fall of the Knights Templar produced a power vacuum that gave rise to banking families, such as the Medicis. And the Italian republican city states, which had been around from the beginning, took on new power.The rise of the universities and schools also fueled these changes, as did the understanding of the broader world that started with the crusades.
One economic revolution of the Middle Ages was the rise of banking, which resulted in large part from the destruction of the Knights Templar.
The rise of banking was one of the things that happened as the Middle Ages drew to an end. There were possibly banks in some market places at the end of the Middle Ages, but there certainly would have been none during most of the Middle Ages.
I think it was not a matter of Europe being ready for change. The Middle Ages did not suddenly end and a new age begin. The dates used for the end of the Middle Ages range from 1400 to as late as 1517. The dates for the beginning the Renaissance range back as far as about 1300, with some historians giving dates related to the life of Dante, who lived from 1265 to 1321. The end of the Middle Ages was not a revolutionary event, but an evolutionary process. The rise of Italian communes and republican city states, the rise of guilds, the growing importance of towns and cities, the rise of the Hanseatic League, and the rise of the middle class all preceded the end of the Middle Ages, as did a long list of technological advances. These things contributed to the beginning of the Renaissance, and gradually brought the Middle Ages to an end. Clearly there were events that contributed, such as the destruction of the Knights Templar, which created a demand for banks, and the Black Death, but the general trends that brought the Middle Ages to an end can be seen going back for centuries. Guilds existed at the very beginning of the Middle Ages. There was at least one school in Wales, Cor Tewdws, that opened before the Middle Ages started and closed after it ended, and other primary and secondary schools were being opened from the sixth century at the latest. The universities started opening in the eleventh century, with the opening of the University of Bologna, but it was clear that the opening of universities was merely a formalization of something that had been going on for at least decades. Venice was a republic from the seventh century. The world started to move past the Middle Ages, I think, before Charlemagne was even born.
Three characteristics of the Scandinavians during the high Middle Ages was the rise of Christian monotheism, powerful rulers such as Charlemagne, and theologians including St. Augustine.
Originated - to take its origin or rise; begin; start; arise: The practice originated during the Middle Ages.
to take its origin or rise; begin; start; arise: The practice originated during the Middle Ages
The rise of the middle class in England with the industrial revolution made the Monarchs have to work harder to keep favor.
the rise of the middle class help the government of ancient Greece become more democratic because of the dark ages and farming was not good either because they fought for it
No. The increase in the power of the Church happened in the Roman Empire at a time when the economic and political power was mostly in the hands of the military. In the Middle Ages, the aristocracy gained military power, and the rise of the middle class only happened during the Middle Ages after that.
The rise in the production of fecal matter in the Germanic Areas made the Franks and surrounding tribes to migrate around due to the smell and polution.