People 1
People 2
Things 1
Things 2
Things 3
100

A Franciscan friar who made the manger scene that we use to this day.

Francis of Assisi
100

Muslim leader who recaptured Jerusalem and started the 3rd Major Crusade.

Saladin

100
The grouping of all the cardinals.

College of Cardinals 

100

The everyday language of the people in one place.

vernacular

100
Street performers who sang in the common language of the people.

Troubadours

200

A German ruler, who was part of the Saxon house, who chose churchmen to be his vassals.

Otto I

200

A scholar who is known as "The prince of schoolmen." He made the teachings of Aristotle equal to the ones of the Bible.

Thomas Aquinas 

200

The highest legislature, consisting of the House of Lords, the House of Commons, and has the power of the purse. A system of governing made by Edward I.

Parliament

200

The buying and selling of blessed goods in church/ on church grounds. This was frowned upon by the later protestants.

Simony
200

Brothers in Christ who sought poverty. Many different subcategories fit under this one.

Friars

300

English ruler who established a military class, created the English navy, built schools, made fortifications along the coast of England, created shires and wrote the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

Alfred the Great

300

An author during the middle ages, who wrote the Divine Comedy.

Dante Alighieri

300

Legal document that forced the king to be under the law; 1215; signed by John I

Magna Carta

300

Holy wars which were meant to honor God and free Jerusalem from the hands of the Muslims. Kings like Richard I fought in these.

Crusades

300

A law that made everyone under the law. Made by Henry II of England.

Common-Law

400

English ruler who, although originally from France, brought Feudalism to England, and wrote the Domesday Book.

William the Conqueror of Normandy

400

Scholar who said believed that one needs to make observations and experiments in order to make conclusions.

Roger Bacon

400

Legislative branch in France representing the nobles, clergy, and commons.

 

Estates-General

400

A disease that came upon medieval Europe and killed thousands of people. A sickness that was carried by rats and was caused by filthy towns and bad hygiene. 

Black Death/Bubonic Plague 

400

Intense questioning of Heretics. Guilty until proven not.

Inquisition

500

The English ruler who is known as the "Lion-hearted" who went on the King's crusade and ruled for approximately 10 years.

Richard I

500

The medieval author who wrote the Canterbury Tales.

Geoffrey Chaucer
500
A system of theology taught in medieval European schools. Aristotlean theories were at the same value as the Bible. Thomas Aquinas and Roger Bacon were great advocates for it.

Scholasticism

500

The war between the French and the Engish which lasted about 100 years. Edward III and Joan of Arc fought in this war.

Hundred Year's War

500

An arrested person is required to be brought under a trial before a judge or into court.

Habeas Corpus