The Middle Ages, PAL-SCH
The Middle Ages comprise the period in European history that began with the collapse of Roman civilization in the 5th century CE and lasted until the dawn of the Renaissance in the 13th, 14th, or 15th century. This interval of time saw the development of the Gothic style of art and architecture, flying buttresses and all. It was also the era of the Crusades and of papal monarchy, and it was during this period that the idea of Europe as a distinct cultural unit emerged.
The Middle Ages Encyclopedia Articles By Title
palatine, any of diverse officials found in numerous countries of medieval and early modern Europe. Originally......
Palestine, area of the eastern Mediterranean region comprising parts of modern Israel and the Palestinian territories......
- Introduction
- Ancient, Conflict, Borders
- Iron Age, Canaanites, Philistines
- Alexander, Roman, Jewish
- Hasmonean, Priest, Princes
- Roman Rule, Jewish Revolts, Crusades
- Crusades, Holy Land, Conflict
- British Mandate, Zionism, Conflict
- The Arab Revolt
- Occupation, Refugees, Conflict
- Nationalism, Intifada, Occupation
- International Recognition, Conflict, Resolution
- Intifadah, Occupation, Conflict
- Split Admin, West Bank, Gaza Strip
papacy, the office and jurisdiction of the bishop of Rome, the pope (Latin papa, from Greek pappas, “father”),......
Gottfried Heinrich, count zu Pappenheim was a German cavalry commander conspicuous early in the Thirty Years’ War.......
Paris Codex, one of the very few texts of the pre-Conquest Maya known to have survived the book burnings by the......
Siege of Paris, Viking siege of Paris that lasted from November 885 to October 886. It was notable as the first......
Treaty of Paris, (1856), treaty signed on March 30, 1856, in Paris that ended the Crimean War. The treaty was signed......
Treaty of Passarowitz, (July 21, 1718), pact signed at the conclusion of the Austro-Turkish (1716–18) and Venetian-Turkish......
Pastoureaux, (French: “Shepherds”), the participants in two popular outbreaks of mystico-political enthusiasm in......
Paul IV was an Italian Counter-Reformation pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between......
Fernando Francesco de Avalos, marquis di Pescara was an Italian leader of the forces of the Holy Roman emperor......
Peter was briefly Latin emperor of Constantinople, from 1217 to 1219. The son of Peter of Courtenay (died 1183)......
Peter Des Roches was a Poitevin diplomat, soldier, and administrator, one of the ablest statesmen of his time,......
St. Peter Martyr ; canonized 1253; feast day April 29) was an inquisitor, vigorous preacher, and religious founder......
Peter Of Castelnau was a Cistercian martyr, apostolic legate, and inquisitor against the Albigenses, most particularly......
Phanariote, member of one of the principal Greek families of the Phanar, the Greek quarter of Constantinople (Istanbul),......
Philikí Etaireía, (Greek: Friendly Brotherhood), Greek revolutionary secret society founded by merchants in Odessa......
Philip was a German Hohenstaufen king whose rivalry for the crown involved him in a decade of warfare with the......
Philip II was the king of the Spaniards (1556–98) and king of the Portuguese (as Philip I, 1580–98), champion of......
Philip VI was the first French king of the Valois dynasty. Reigning at the outbreak of the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453),......
Philippicus Bardanes was a Byzantine emperor whose brief reign (711–713) was marked by his quarrels with the papacy......
Phocas was a centurion of modest origin, probably from Thrace, who became the late Roman, or Byzantine, emperor......
Photian Schism, a 9th-century-ce controversy between Eastern and Western Christianity that was precipitated by......
Ottavio Piccolomini-Pieri, duca d’Amalfi was a general and diplomat in the service of the house of Habsburg during......
Pietro Della Vigna was the chief minister of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick II, distinguished as a jurist, poet,......
Pippin I was a councillor of the Merovingian king Chlotar II and mayor of the palace in Austrasia, whose lands......
Pippin II was the ruler of the Franks (687–714), the first of the great Carolingian mayors of the palace. The son......
Pippin III was the first king of the Frankish Carolingian dynasty and the father of Charlemagne. A son of Charles......
Henri Pirenne was a Belgian educator and scholar, one of the most eminent scholars of the Middle Ages and of Belgian......
Pierre Pithou was a lawyer and historian who was one of the first French scholars to collect and analyze source......
Pius II was an outstanding Italian humanist and astute politician who as pope (reigned 1458–64) tried to unite......
Saint Pius V ; canonized May 22, 1712; feast day April 30) was an Italian ascetic, reformer, and relentless persecutor......
Francisco Pizarro was a Spanish conqueror of the Inca empire and founder of the city of Lima in Peru. Pizarro was......
Siege of Pleven, (July 20–Dec. 10, 1877), in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, the Russian siege of the Turkish-held......
Poitiers, city, capital of Vienne département, Nouvelle-Aquitaine région, west-central France, southwest of Paris.......
Battle of Poitiers, catastrophic defeat sustained by the French king John II on September 19, 1356, at the end......
Popol Vuh, Maya document, an invaluable source of knowledge of ancient Mayan mythology and culture. Written in......
Portugal, country lying along the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula in southwestern Europe. Once continental......
- Introduction
- Atlantic Coast, Algarve, Azores
- Madeira Islands, Atlantic, Autonomous Region
- Mediterranean, Atlantic, Temperate
- Wildlife, Flora, Fauna
- Coastal, Rural, Urban
- Economy, Agriculture, Tourism
- Resources, Power, Economy
- Parliamentary Democracy, Autonomous Regions, EU Member
- Politics, Constitution, Elections
- Cuisine, Music, Traditions
- Architecture, Moorish, Gothic
- Museums, Castles, Monasteries
- Age of Discovery, Reconquista, Iberian Peninsula
- Reconquista, Iberian Peninsula, Atlantic
- House of Aviz, 15th Century, Age of Discovery
- Medieval, Social, Economic
- Sea Trade, Exploration, Colonization
- Enlightenment, Revolution, Empire
- Constitutionalism, Autonomy, Sovereignty
- Exploration, Colonization, Trade
- Revolution, Republic, Autonomy
- Revolution, Autocracy, Dictatorship
- Atlantic, EU, Tourism
- Sovereign Debt, Eurozone, Crisis
Battle of Poson, (863), attack launched by Byzantine forces against the Arab armies of ʿUmar, the emir of Melitene......
Prester John, legendary Christian ruler of the East, popularized in medieval chronicles and traditions as a hoped-for......
Procopius was a Byzantine historian whose works are an indispensable source for his period and contain much geographical......
pronoia system, Byzantine form of feudalism based on government assignment of revenue-yielding property to prominent......
Michael Psellus was a Byzantine philosopher, theologian, and statesman whose advocacy of Platonic philosophy as......
Qatar, independent emirate on the west coast of the Persian Gulf. The small country has tremendous influence as......
Quattrocento, the totality of cultural and artistic events and movements that occurred in Italy during the 15th......
Quinisext Council, council that was convened in 692 by the Byzantine emperor Justinian II to issue disciplinary......
Qutaybah ibn Muslim was an Arab general under the caliphs ʿAbd al-Malik and ʿAbd al-Walīd I whose conquests in......
Ragnar Lothbrok was a Viking whose life passed into legend in medieval European literature. Ragnar is said to have......
Rainald Of Dassel was a German statesman, chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire, and archbishop of Cologne, the chief......
Gilles de Rais was a Breton baron, marshal of France, and man of wealth whose distinguished career ended in a celebrated......
Ramiro II was the king of Leon and Asturias in Christian Spain from 931 to 951. The second son of King Ordoño II,......
Ramon Berenguer III was the count of Barcelona during whose reign (1097–1131) independent Catalonia reached the......
Ramon Berenguer IV was the count of Barcelona from 1131 to 1162, regent of Provence from 1144 to 1157, and ruling......
David Randall-MacIver was a British-born American archaeologist and anthropologist. Randall-MacIver was educated......
treaties of Rastatt and Baden, (March 6 and Sept. 7, 1714), peace treaties between the Holy Roman emperor Charles......
Raymond VII was the count of Toulouse from 1222, who succeeded his father, Raymond VI, not only in the countship......
Reconquista, in medieval Spain and Portugal, a series of campaigns by Christian states to recapture territory from......
Reichskammergericht, supreme court of the Holy Roman Empire. The court was established by Maximilian I in 1495......
In late July and early August 1914, the great powers of Europe embarked on a course of action that would claim......
Saint Remigius of Reims ; feast day October 1) was a bishop of Reims who greatly advanced the cause of Christianity......
Mustafa Reşid Paşa was an Ottoman statesman and diplomat who was grand vizier (chief minister) on six occasions.......
Led by Süleyman the Magnificent, the Siege of Rhodes in June–December 1522 was the second attempt by the Ottoman......
Rhodian Sea Law, body of regulations governing commercial trade and navigation in the Byzantine Empire beginning......
Richard was the king of the Romans from 1256 to 1271, aspirant to the crown of the Holy Roman Empire. He was the......
Arthur, constable de Richemont was the constable of France (from 1425) who fought for Charles VII under the banner......
Robert was the Latin emperor of Constantinople from 1221 to 1228. He was so ineffective that the Latin Empire (consolidated......
The following article was written for the 1982 Britannica Book of the Year (events of 1981) by Robert Mugabe, who......
Roman law, the law of ancient Rome from the time of the founding of the city in 753 bce until the fall of the Western......
Romania, country of southeastern Europe. The national capital is Bucharest. Romania was occupied by Soviet troops......
- Introduction
- Carpathians, Danube, Black Sea
- Rivers, Danube, Black Sea
- Rural, Urban, Transylvania
- Farming, Livestock, Fisheries
- Trade, Agriculture, Industry
- Politics, Constitution, Elections
- Traditions, Cuisine, Culture
- Cultural Institutions
- Ethnicity, Culture, History
- Transylvania, Romanians, History
- Transylvania, Carpathians, Danube
- Communist Rule, Securitate, Ceausescu
- National Communism, Dictatorship, Securitate
- Constitution, Politics, Reforms
Romanus I Lecapenus was a Byzantine emperor who shared the imperial throne with his son-in-law Constantine VII......
Romanus II was a Byzantine emperor from 959 to 963. The son of Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, Romanus was a politically......
Romanus III Argyrus was the Byzantine emperor from 1028 to 1034. Of noble family, he was a prefect of Constantinople......
Romanus IV Diogenes was a Byzantine emperor (January 1, 1068–1071), a member of the Cappadocian military aristocracy.......
Sack of Rome, an attack on the city of Rome on May 6, 1527, by the forces of the Holy Roman Emperor and King of......
The story told by Romans of their forefathers’ resistance to a siege by Etruscan tyrants in 508 bce was repeated......
Battle of Rouen, (31 July 1418–19 January 1419). In his campaigns to capture Normandy during the Hundred Years’......
Roxelana was a Slavic woman who was forced into concubinage and later became the wife of the Ottoman sultan Süleyman......
Rudolf II was the Holy Roman emperor from 1576 to 1612. His ill health and unpopularity prevented him from restraining......
Runnymede, borough (district) in the northwestern part of the administrative and historic county of Surrey, southeastern......
Russia, country that stretches over a vast expanse of eastern Europe and northern Asia. Once the preeminent republic......
- Introduction
- Ural Mountains, Natural Resources, Climate
- Climate, Continental, Arctic
- Forests, Biodiversity, Taiga
- Orthodoxy, Paganism, Islam
- Energy, Manufacturing, Agriculture
- Manufacturing, Industry, Resources
- Federalism, Autonomy, Diversity
- Justice, Law, Courts
- Housing, Urbanization, Architecture
- Culture, Traditions, Arts
- Culture, Traditions, Cuisine
- Folk, Classical, Choral
- Art, Architecture, Iconography
- Film Industry, Cinema, Movies
- Sports, Recreation, Culture
- Soviet Union, Tsardom, Revolution
- Kiev Decline, Slavic Tribes, Mongol Invasion
- Novgorod, History, Culture
- Tatar Rule, Mongol Invasion, Golden Horde
- Rurikid, Muscovy, Expansion
- Ivan IV, Tsardom, Expansion
- Time of Troubles, Ivan IV, Dynastic Crisis
- Romanov, Muscovy, Tsardom
- The Great Schism, Orthodoxy, Autocracy
- The Petrine state
- Peter's Reforms, Tsars, Expansion
- Catherine II, Enlightenment, Expansion
- Administration, Reforms, Expansion
- Russia from 1801 to 1917
- Expansion, Tsars, Revolution
- From Alexander II to Nicholas II
- Russification, Policies, Imperialism
- Tsardom, Revolution, Soviet Union
- Revolution, Tsarism, Autocracy
- Soviet Union, Cold War, Eurasia
- Civil War, War Communism, Revolution
- Stalinism, Soviet Union, Cold War
- Khrushchev, Soviet Union, Cold War
- Perestroika, Glasnost, Reforms
- Post-Soviet Russia
- Ethnic Diversity, Near Abroad, Post-Soviet States
- Politics, Economy, Geography
- Politics, Economy, Geography
- Tsars, Soviets, Putin
Russo-Turkish wars, series of wars between Russia and the Ottoman Empire in the 17th–19th century. The wars reflected......
Battle of Río Salado, (October 30, 1340), battle fought by the allied Castilian and Portuguese Christian forces......
Arthur M. Sackler was an American physician, medical publisher, and art collector who made large donations of money......
Sacsayhuamán, large Inca fortress overlooking Cuzco, Peru, from a hilltop 755 feet (230 m) above the city. It was......
Hoca Sadeddin was a Turkish historian, the author of the renowned Tac üt-tevarih (“Crown of Histories”), which......
Agreement of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, (April 1917), pact concluded at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, on the French-Italian......
Salian Dynasty, royal and imperial line that came to power with the election of a Salian Frank, Conrad of Swabia,......
Thomas de Montagu, 4th earl of Salisbury was an English military commander during the reigns of Henry IV, Henry......
Samuel was the tsar (997–1014) of the first Bulgarian empire. Samuel began his effective rule in the 980s in what......
Conference of San Remo, (April 19–26, 1920), international meeting convened at San Remo, on the Italian Riviera,......
Treaty of San Stefano, (March 3 [February 19, Old Style], 1878), peace settlement imposed on the Ottoman government......
Sancho Ramírez was the king of Aragon from 1063 to 1094 and of Pamplona (or Navarre; as Sancho V Ramírez) from......
sankin kōtai, system inaugurated in 1635 in Japan by the Tokugawa shogun (hereditary military dictator) Iemitsu......
Sasanian dynasty, ancient Iranian dynasty that ruled an empire (224–651 ce), rising through Ardashīr I’s conquests......
Saudi Arabia, arid, sparsely populated kingdom of the Middle East that in the 20th century became one of the world’s......
- Introduction
- Desert, Arid, Climate
- Islam, Sunnis, Shiites
- Oil, Trade, Investment
- Manufacturing, Oil, Refining
- Monarchy, Sharia, Tribes
- Politics, Processes, Reforms
- Housing, Urbanization, Deserts
- Culture, Traditions, Customs
- Wahhabi, Islam, Arabian Peninsula
- Faysal's Legacy, Reforms, Oil
- Deserts, Oil, Religion
- Foreign Affairs, GCC, Oil
- Persian Gulf War, Aftermath
- Gulf War, Foreign Policy, Middle East
- Monarchy, Reforms, Oil
- Crown Prince, MBS, Reforms
Gene Savoy was an American explorer and amateur archaeologist who discovered and explored more than 40 Inca and......
Saxon Dynasty, ruling house of German kings (Holy Roman emperors) from 919 to 1024. It came to power when the Liudolfing......
Schmalkaldic Articles, one of the confessions of faith of Lutheranism, written by Martin Luther in 1536. The articles......
Schmalkaldic League, during the Reformation, a defensive alliance formed by Protestant territories of the Holy......
Scholasticism, the philosophical systems and speculative tendencies of various medieval Christian thinkers, who,......