Effects of medieval wars
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What are the six categories for analysing the effects of a medieval war?
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7.3.112 cards
What are the six categories for analysing the effects of a medieval war?
Political/dynastic, territorial, growth of royal power and the state, social/economic, human cost, and peace settlements.
What are 'political and dynastic effects' of a war?
Changes of ruler and ruling dynasty, and shifts in the balance of power between states — e.g. Normans replacing the Anglo-Saxons in 1066.
What are 'territorial effects' of a medieval war?
Land gained, lost or swapped and borders redrawn — e.g. England reduced to just Calais in France by 1453.
How does a war lead to the growth of royal power and the state?
To fund fighting, rulers raise new taxes, expand administration and create standing forces, which often become permanent and centralise the crown.
Give an example of a war strengthening the medieval state.
Late in the Hundred Years' War, France created a permanent royal army funded by regular taxation — a lasting increase in royal power.
What social and economic effects can a war have?
Heavy taxation (sparking revolts like 1381), disrupted trade and farming, and social change such as peasants gaining stronger bargaining power after big losses.
What is meant by the 'human cost' of a war?
Deaths of soldiers and civilians, displacement from destroyed homes, famine from ruined crops, and whole communities being wiped out.
What was a chevauchée?
A fast raid in the Hundred Years' War that deliberately burned crops and villages, causing famine and destroying enemy revenue at once.
Why must you judge a peace settlement, not just describe it?
Because a treaty is a major effect in itself, and many medieval treaties failed — you must assess whether it ended the war or merely paused it.
How does the Treaty of Brétigny (1360) show a failed settlement?
It paused the Hundred Years' War on generous English terms, but resentment meant fighting resumed within a decade, by 1369.
Compare the effects of a war on the winner versus the loser.
Winner: gains land, prestige and a secured dynasty. Loser: loses land and status, its ruler may be deposed, and it faces debt and unrest.
What is the top-band essay move for an 'effects of war' question?
Don't just list effects — weigh the categories, argue which mattered most with specific evidence, then reach a clear judgement.
7.3.212 cards
When were the Crusader States founded, and what was the largest?
After the capture of Jerusalem in 1099. The largest was the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
What was the fall of Acre (1291)?
The fall of the last Crusader stronghold to the Mamluks, ending nearly 200 years of Crusader rule and expelling the Crusaders from the Levant.
Define the Levant.
The eastern Mediterranean coastal region — today Israel, Lebanon and Syria — that the Crusaders fought over.
What was the economic effect of the Crusades?
A boom in Mediterranean trade; the Italian city-states of Venice, Genoa and Pisa grew rich controlling eastern goods like spices, silk and sugar.
What happened when the Crusaders captured Jerusalem in 1099?
They massacred much of the city's Muslim and Jewish population — a key example of the Crusades' human cost.
How did the Crusades affect Christian–Muslim and Christian–Jewish relations?
They worsened badly, hardening mutual hostility and suspicion that lasted for centuries; Jewish communities were also massacred in the Rhineland in 1096.
What is meant by cultural exchange from the Crusades?
Eastern learning in medicine and mathematics, new foods and fabrics, and Arabic-preserved Greek texts flowed into Europe.
How did the Crusades strengthen the papacy?
By calling and blessing the Crusades, the Pope commanded all of Christendom for one cause, greatly boosting papal prestige and authority.
How did the Crusades weaken the Byzantine Empire?
The Fourth Crusade sacked Christian Constantinople in 1204; Byzantium never fully recovered and fell to the Ottomans in 1453.
Who was Saladin and why did he matter?
The Muslim leader who crushed the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin in 1187 and retook Jerusalem.
Compare the intended and unintended effects of the Crusades.
Intended: win the Holy Land (failed by 1291). Unintended: a trade boom, richer Italian city-states, a stronger papacy and a weakened Byzantium.
What is the strongest judgement about the Crusades' effects?
They failed militarily — all territory lost by 1291 — but had huge long-term economic, religious and political effects on Europe and the Levant.
7.3.312 cards
When did the Hundred Years' War begin and end?
It ran from 1337 to 1453 — a series of wars between England and France lasting 116 years.
What was the territorial outcome of the war for England by 1453?
England was expelled from France except for the port of Calais, which it held until 1558.
Why is Calais significant in the war's outcome?
It was the single English foothold left in France after 1453 — the last remnant of a once-large English territory.
How did the war grow French royal power?
Kings won permanent national taxation (the taille) and created the first standing army, freeing the crown from dependence on the nobles.
What did Charles VII create in 1445?
The first permanent standing army in medieval France — paid cavalry companies loyal to the king rather than to local lords.
Who was Joan of Arc and why does she matter?
A peasant girl who from 1429 rallied France, lifted the siege of Orléans and had Charles VII crowned; she became a symbol of French national identity.
How did the war affect national identity?
Generations of fighting a foreign enemy helped people begin to see themselves as 'French' or 'English' rather than only subjects of a local lord.
How did the war contribute to the Wars of the Roses?
Defeat discredited Henry VI, left huge debts, and sent nobles home with private armies — feeding the rivalries that became civil war from 1455.
What was the social and economic impact on France?
The fighting on French soil devastated the countryside through looting and burning, while trade was disrupted and taxation grew heavy.
What was the Treaty of Brétigny (1360)?
A settlement giving Edward III an independent Gascony in return for dropping his French throne claim; it broke down within a decade.
What was the Treaty of Troyes (1420)?
A treaty making England's Henry V heir to the French throne; it collapsed after Henry V and Charles VI died in 1422 and Joan of Arc revived French resistance.
Why did both peace treaties fail?
Each reflected only one side's temporary high point, so once the balance of power shifted the losing side rejected the terms and renewed the war.
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