Let's Get Medieval
Let's go to Church
Let's Get Artistic
Let's Get Reformed
Let's Talk Islam
Let's go to the New World
100

This period from about 500 to 1500 saw cities decline, learning decrease, and much knowledge of Greek language and culture nearly disappear in Western Europe.

The Middle Ages

100

This set of Church laws governed all medieval Christians and regulated matters such as marriage and religious practices.

Canon law

100

This “rebirth” of art, writing, and learning began in northern Italy and lasted from about 1300 to 1600.

The Renaissance

100

In 1517, this German monk posted his 95 Theses criticizing the sale of indulgences, helping launch the Protestant Reformation.

Martin Luther

100

These three major Muslim empires ruled during the Renaissance era.

Ottoman, Mughal, and Safavid

100

Funded by Ferdinand and Isabella, this explorer reached the Americas in 1492 while mistakenly believing he had arrived in the East Indies.

Christopher Columbus

100

This political system that emerged in Western Europe between 850 and 950 was based on land ownership, where lords granted fiefs to vassals in exchange for services.

Feudalism

100

These two disasters in the 1300s devastated Europe—one caused by failed harvests from severe weather, and the other a deadly disease spread through trade routes that killed about one-third of the population.

The Great Famine and the Black Death

100

This playwright, often considered the greatest in history, wrote famous plays that were performed at London’s Globe Theatre.

Shakespeare

100

This movement for religious reform challenged the authority of the pope and led to the creation of Protestant churches.

The Protestant Reformation

100

This empire conquered most of northern India and later opened major ports such as Bombay and Madras to expand trade with the outside world.

Mughal Empire

100

These Spanish explorers and soldiers were sent to the Americas to explore, search for gold, and conquer empires like the Aztec and Inca.

Conquistadors

100

In 800, this Frankish ruler was crowned “Roman Emperor” by Pope Leo III after defending the pope and expanding his empire across much of Western Europe.

Charlemagne

100

This term refers to a “holy war” fought by Christians to gain control of the Holy Land, the region of Palestine where Jesus lived.

The Crusades

100

This Renaissance figure was a painter, sculptor, inventor, and scientist best known for creating the Mona Lisa.

Leonardo Da Vinci

100

This reformer taught predestination in his 1536 work Institutes of the Christian Religion, leading to the development of Calvinism.

John Calvin

100

This empire of Mongol origin ruled much of India, where Muslim rulers governed a largely Hindu and Buddhist population, leading to ongoing religious conflict.

The Mughal Empire

100

This trans-Atlantic trading system moved goods from Europe to Africa to the Americas, involving enslaved people and raw materials in a three-part exchange.

Triangular Trade

200

In 1054, this major event occurred when the pope and the patriarch excommunicated each other, officially splitting the Christian Church into the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox branches.

The Great Schism

200

This 1215 document limited the power of the English king and guaranteed certain basic political rights to his subjects.

Magna Carta

200

This intellectual movement of the Renaissance focused on human achievements and the study of classical texts, history, literature, and philosophy.

Humanism

200

This is a pardon issued by the Church that releases a person from the penalty for sin.

Indulgence

200

This Muslim empire conquered Persia, was ruled by shahs, followed Shiite Islam, and used Persian (Farsi) as its language.

The Safavid Empire

200

Under Ferdinand and Isabella, this European kingdom began global exploration to spread Catholicism and gain wealth.

Spain

200

This four-part legal system included The Code, The Digest, The Institutes, and The Novellae, organizing and preserving Roman law for the Byzantine Empire.

The Justinian Code

200

These two religious reformers challenged the authority of the Catholic Church, arguing that the Bible—not the pope—should be the highest religious authority.

John Wycliffe and Jan Hus

200

Around 1440, this German inventor developed the printing press, making books quicker and cheaper to produce.

Johann Gutenberg

200

This 1542 Church court was established to enforce religious uniformity and combat Protestantism by targeting heretics and converts.

The Roman Inquisition

200

This Muslim empire, once a major power in Europe and the Middle East, collapsed after being defeated alongside Germany at the end of World War I in 1918.

The Ottoman Empire

200

This Portuguese explorer found a sea route around Africa to India, though the journey was long and dangerous.

Vasco da Gama

200

In 719, this major domo, or “mayor of the palace,” became more powerful than the king in the Frankish kingdom.

Charles "The Hammer" Martel

200

This crisis beginning in 1378 involved rival popes in Rome and Avignon each claiming authority, creating a major split in the Church.

The Great Schism

200

This term, meaning “no place” in Greek, has come to describe an ideal society or perfect place.

Utopia

200

These followers of John Calvin in France were persecuted and killed in events such as the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre.

Huguenots

200

This empire helped develop the Hindi language to unify communication and make governing India’s many language groups easier.

The Mughal Empire

200

This brutal middle leg of the Triangular Trade carried enslaved Africans across the Atlantic to the Americas and the West Indies.

Middle Passage

300

Through trade with Byzantium, these people living north of the Black Sea blended their traditions with Greek influences to help form early Russian culture.

The Slavs

300

This medieval scholar blended ideas from ancient Greek philosophy with Christian theology, helping shape Western thought.

Thomas Aquinas

300

This artistic technique, widely used during the Italian Renaissance, created the illusion of three dimensions on a flat canvas.

Perspective

300

This Catholic Church council (1545–1563) clarified doctrine during the Counter-Reformation, affirming tradition, faith and works for salvation, and the validity of indulgences.

The Council of Trent

300

In 1453, this empire conquered Constantinople, renamed it Istanbul, and converted the Hagia Sophia into a mosque.

The Ottoman Empire

300

This idea describes a world where the discovery of the New World led to increased worldwide trade and greater interconnection between regions.

Globalism

400

In the feudal system, these peasants were legally tied to the land they were born on and were required to give most of what they produced to their lord.

Serfs

400

In 1187, this Muslim leader and Kurdish warrior recaptured Jerusalem from the Crusaders.

Saladin

400

These Renaissance thinkers promoted social reform while combining classical learning with Judeo-Christian values.

Humanists

400

This religious order founded by Ignatius of Loyola emphasized prayer, study, and education, and played a major role in Catholic reform and missionary work.

The Jesuits

400

This Persian Shiite empire, known for its artistic achievements like rugs, tiles, and paintings, also experienced a cultural “renaissance” during its rule.

The Safavid Empire

400

This line, drawn by the pope to divide the non-European world between Spain and Portugal, was established to avoid war.

Line of Demarcation

500

This medieval code of conduct guided knights to protect the weak, serve their lord and God, and act honorably toward a chosen lady.

Chivalry

500

This English king, known as “the Lion-Hearted,” led forces during the Third Crusade and later made peace with Saladin in 1192.

Richard the Lion-hearted

500

This questioning attitude of the Renaissance encouraged people to doubt accepted beliefs and helped lead to the development of the scientific method.

Skepticism

500

This movement, also called the Counter-Reformation, aimed to reform the Catholic Church from within in response to Protestantism.

The Catholic Reformation

500

This Mughal ruler built the Taj Mahal in Agra as a grand mausoleum for his wife Mumtaz Mahal.

Shah Jahan

500

This Spanish colonial system forced Native Americans to work while Spanish settlers and missionaries controlled their labor in exchange for supposed protection and conversion to Christianity.

Encomienda System

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