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  2. France in the Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_in_the_Middle_Ages

    The Kingdom of France in the Middle Ages (roughly, from the 10th century to the middle of the 15th century) was marked by the fragmentation of the Carolingian Empire and West Francia (843–987); the expansion of royal control by the House of Capet (987–1328), including their struggles with the virtually independent principalities (duchies and counties, such as the Norman and Angevin regions ...

  3. Neo-medievalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-medievalism

    Neo-medievalism (or neomedievalism, new medievalism) is a term with a long history [1] that has acquired specific technical senses in two branches of scholarship. In political theory about modern international relations, where the term is originally associated with Hedley Bull, it sees the political order of a globalized world as analogous to high-medieval Europe, where neither states nor the ...

  4. Economic history of Europe (1000 AD–present) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_history_of_Europe...

    In three years the ERP gave away $12.4 billion (about 5% of the 1948 American GDP of $270 billion) for modernizing the economic and financial systems and rebuilding the industrial and human capital of war-torn Europe, including Britain, Germany, France, Italy and smaller nations.

  5. Age of Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Revolution

    This led to a rapid expansion of cities that resulted in social strains and disturbances. [4] For instance, economic grievances associated with this industrialization fed later revolutions such as those that transpired from 1848. [5] New social classes emerged including those that began to reject orthodox politics. [6]

  6. History of Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Germany

    In 1800, Germany's social structure was poorly suited to entrepreneurship or economic development. Domination by France during the French Revolution (1790s to 1815), however, produced important institutional reforms, that included the abolition of feudal restrictions on the sale of large landed estates, the reduction of the power of the guilds ...

  7. James Westfall Thompson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Westfall_Thompson

    His 1939 book The Literacy of the Laity in the Middle Ages remains a classic study of the subject. Thompson's two-volume study of the social and economic history of medieval Germany , Feudal Germany , appropriated elements of Frederick Jackson Turner's famous Frontier Thesis and applied them to the colonization of Slavic central Europe by ...

  8. French–Habsburg rivalry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French–Habsburg_rivalry

    The fighting generally favoured France's armies, but by 1696 his country was in the grip of an economic crisis. The Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic) were also financially exhausted, and when Savoy defected from the Alliance, all parties were keen to negotiate a settlement.

  9. Popular revolts in late medieval Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popular_revolts_in_late...

    Richard II of England meets the rebels of the Peasants' Revolt. Popular revolts in late medieval Europe were uprisings and rebellions by peasants in the countryside, or the burgess in towns, against nobles, abbots and kings during the upheavals between 1300 and 1500, part of a larger "Crisis of the Late Middle Ages".