COMPARATIVE HISTORY OF NATIONS--Continued

IX. FROM THE TREATY OF VERDUN TO THE SIGNING OF MAGNA CHARTA BY KING JOHN, 843-1215 A. D.

Great Events of Period. 900-1000: Norse ravages and conquests continue; also private wars. 1000-1100: Increasing and beneficent power of the church exerted in the direction of order. Normans in Italy and Sicily. The Norman conquest of England; which as regards good government far surpasses all other countries. Quarrels between popes and emperors begin. 1100-1200: Quarrels between popes and emperors continue; zenith of papal power; Criticism revived. Private wars lessen; advance in power of kings and of towns at expense of the feudal baronage. The Crusades. 1200-1300: Rise of universities and of mendicant Friars. Quarrels between popes and emperors still continue. Last Crusades. English liberties recognized by the crown. Magna Charta.

A. D.SpainBritainFranceGermanyItalyChurchScandinavia and SlavsEastern EmpireSaracensChina, Japan, IndiaA. D.
850 850
855. Kingdom divided. Louis II., Emperor, obtains Italy and Rhætia till 875. Charles, Provence,till 863.

860. Separation of the Greek and LatinChurches.



862. Russia: Rurik, first grandprince.

859. Japan: Powerful Seiwa family arises.

864-1131. Kingdom of Barcelona.


866. Invasion of the Danes.



867. Pope Hadrian II., Photius, Patriarch ofConstantinople, deposed.
863-1030. Norway: Harold Harfargar to St. Olaf.


867-1057. Eastern emperors of theMacedonian line.




870-892. Muattemedre-establishes the capital at Bagdad.
871-900. ALFRED THE GREAT.
872. Pope John VIII.
875
876. Kingdom divided: Charles the Fat obtains Suabia and Alsace till887.


Louis the Younger, Saxony and Thuringia till 882.


Carloman, Bavaria, etc. till 879; becomesKing of Italy, 877.
875

885-1512. Kingdom of Navarre.
884. Charles the Fat reunites the monarchy of the Franks.


895. Hungary: Magyars under Arpadenter the Kingdom.


886-911. Leo VI., the Philosopher.
900
901-924. Edward the Elder, the first prince who takes thetitle of King of England.
Rollo, the Dane, forces Charles to confer on him the province of Normandy and becomes:

907-960. China: Period of five dynasties.
900

912-961. Abderrahman III. The greatest Arab prince ofSpain; splendid edifices built; learning encouraged; commerce flourishes.

912. Robert, Duke of Normandy; capital Rouen.



919-1024. Kings and Emperors ofthe Saxon house.
911. The Northmen in France embrace Christianity.

917. The Bulgarians besiegeConstantinople.
919-936. Henry I., the Fowler, a great prince, consolidates the empire.
925 France is now divided among the powerful barons, who exercise sovereign power in their respectivedomains.

936-973. OTHO the GREAT.

927. Odo, abbot of Cluny, establishes celebrated code ofdiscipline.



941. Russian expedition againstConstantinople, under Igor.
925
950
955. Decisive victory over the Huns, which leads to the consolidationof the margravate of Austria.
950-961. Berenger II., submitted to Otto as his suzerain.

956. Armenia and the provinces between the Black and theCaspian Sea, recovered from the Saracens.
950


961-965. Otho’s second expedition intoItaly; he dethrones Berenger; is crowned king, and emperor.
959. St. Dunstan becomes Archbishop of Canterbury and attempts to reform the church; enforcing clericalcelibacy.959-963. Romanus II.
960. China: Tai Tsoo founder of later Sung dynasty.
962. Makes Rome his capital.

966. Poland receives Christianity under Miecislas.

964-975. Cyprus, Cilicia and Antioch are captured byNicephorus; Syria is overrun, and, under Zimisces, the Greeks penetrate to the Tigris.
967. Otho II. crowned emperor.
969. The Fatimites become masters ofEgypt, with Cairo as the capital.
975

978-1016. Ethelred the Unready.
New invasion of the Danes.

976-1025. Basil II.



980. Seljuk, a Turk officer ofthe khan of Tartary, becomes a Mohammedan, and settles in Samarcand.
975
House of Capet
987-996. Hugh Capet.
France, for a longperiod before and after the accession of the Capets, has no national history; the royal authority is now restricted to the city in whichthe court resides.

989. Byzantine Christianity propagated in Russia by Vladimir theGreat.
999. Pope Sylvester II.
10001000-1035. Sancho III., the Great, King of Navarre and Castile. There existed henceforward threeChristian kingdoms in Spain: 1, Castile-Leon; 2, Navarre; 3, Aragon.
Golden age of Arabian literature in Spain.


1016-1035. Canute the Great, King of Denmark.

1002-1024. Henry, Duke of Bavaria, a just and pious king.
Continual wars with the Poles and Italy.
Venice, Genoa, and Pisa rise in power, opulence and civilization. 1000-1186. India: Supremacy of Ghazni.1000
1017-1041. Danish kings.House of Franconia


1024-1039. Conrad II., the Salic.

1019. Russia: Yaroslaff the Great.
1018. Bulgaria again reduced to a Grecian province.
1025
1026. Hixem III.


1029. Settlement of the Normans in SouthItaly.
1025-1028. Constantine IX.
Culmination point of Byzantinegreatness. Greeks greatest merchants and capitalists of the world during this century.
Golden Age of Rajput civilization in India.1025
1030. With him ends the Califate of the West.
1039-1056. HENRY III. He defeats the Bohemians andHungarians and makes both tributary. The imperial power at its highest point.

1042. The Saxon line restored.
1042-1066. Edward the Confessor. French Normans become a new source of trouble.
1041. They conquer Apulia from the Greeks; 1060, Calabria; 1060-1090, Sicily.
1042. Turks invade and conquer Persia.
The kingdom of Ghizni declines after 1032, and is confined to India; falls 1183.
1050
1056-1106. Henry IV.


1057-1185. Eastern emperors of the houses ofthe Ducas and the Comnenes. Southern Italy lost to the Normans.
1050
1059. Quarrels between the Popes and German Emperors respecting investitures and nomination to theHoly See.
1060-1108. Philip I. 1060. Robert Guiscard, first duke.
1060-1090. Sicily conqueredby Count Roger, brother of Robert.Robert invades the Greek Empire and gains the battle of Durazzo.

1072. Alfonso VI. of Castile, enlarges his dominions byconquests from the Mohammedans.
1066. Harold elected king, but is defeated and slain in the battle of Hastings, which givesEngland to William.
1066-1154. Norman Kings.
1066-1087.WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
1066. William, Duke of Normandy, invades England.

1073. POPE GREGORY VII.

Papacy attains great power.
1075

1077. Hungary: Ladislas I., the Saint.

1076. Jerusalem captured by Turks.
1075

1085. The Cid. Toledo is taken by Alfonso VI. after a threeyears’ siege.
1084. Bohemia erected into a kingdom by the Emperor Henry IV.1084. Seljuks in Asia Minor.
1086. The battle of Zalaca.
1087-1100. William II., Rufus. Revolt of the Normannobles. The feudal system established in England.


1088. Pope Urban II.



1092. The Seljuk Empire falls apart into anumber of smaller states. Iconium or Roum, Damascus, Aleppo, Kerman and Iran.

1096. The First Crusade. Peter the Hermit andWalter the Penniless.
1095-1270. The First Crusade.
1099. Pope Pascal II.1099. Foundation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Godfrey of Bouillon, elected king by the army.
1100 1100-1135. Henry I., Beauclerc. 1100-1523. Denmark: Introduction of Feudal system to Independence of Sweden.
1100-1468. Norway.
1100-1448. Sweden.
1100
1101. Robert, Duke of Normandy, invades England.
1103-1106. Henry invades and conquers Normandy.
1106-1125. Henry V., Emperor of Germany and King ofItaly.


1119. Pope Calixtus II.
1125

1139. Kingdom of Portugal.
Wars between the French and English, and rise of rivalry between these two nations, which lastsfor three centuries and a half.House of Hohenstaufen
1138-1152. Conrad I., elected emperor.


1139. The two Sicilies erected into a kingdomunder Roger.

1127. China: Kaou Tsung, Emperor.
1125

1147. The Second Crusade preached by St. Bernardand joined by the Emperor Conrad and Louis VII. of France.
Rise of the factions of Guelfs and Ghibelines.1146. The Second Crusade.

The power of thecrusaders declines.
1150

1154-1399. Plantagenets.
1154-1189. Henry II., Plantagenet.

1152-1190. Frederic I., Barbarossa, Emperor and King,one of the most heroic figures of the Middle Age.


1154. Pope Hadrian IV.
1150



1159. War between France andEngland.


1158. Venice a great maritime power.



1159. Pope Alexander III.

1157. Denmark: Waldemar I., the Great.
1156. Japan: War between the families of Gen and Hei.


1171-1172. Conquest of Ireland.
The French language cultivated.1166. Frederic in Italy. League of the Italian cities, 1167, to preserve their liberties.
1170. The Waldenses.


1171-1193. Saladin becomes Sultan of Egypt.Extends his dominions in Egypt, conquers Syria, Assyria, Mesopotamia and Arabia.
1175





1189-1199.Richard I., the Lion-hearted. Dreadful massacre of the Jews at his coronation.


1180-1223. Philip II., the greatest prince sinceCharlemagne.



1183. Peace ofConstance re-establishes the independence of the Italian Republics.

1177. Poland: Casimir the Just.




1185-1204. Dynasty ofAngelus.





1186-1206.India: The Afghans of Ghor rule.
1175
1189. Third Crusade led by Philip Augustus, of France; Richard, of England; and FredericBarbarossa.1189. The Third Crusade.
1190-1198. Henry VI., Emperor and King of Italy and the Sicilies.
1191. Pope Celestine III.


1193. Saladin dies; his dominionsdivided.
1195. Battle of Alarcon in which the Christians are defeated.

1199-1216. John usurps over Arthur, the son of his elderbrother, Geoffrey.

1198. Philip of Suabia and Otho of Saxony, dispute thecrown; the former supported by the Ghibelines, the latter by the Guelfs.

1198. Pope Innocent III.
1200
1201-1206. War with France; Philip espouses the cause ofPrince Arthur.



1204. Venice aggrandized by the conquest ofConstantinople.
Papal power attains its climax. It is supreme over secular power.

1202-1241. Denmark: Waldemar II., the Conqueror.



1204. New revolution. TheCrusaders return, again take Constantinople.
1204-1261. Latin Empire.


1202. The Fourth Crusade.




1206.Genghis Khan becomes emperor of the Mongols.
1200


1212. Battle of Navas de Tolosa; a victory for theChristians.
1202. The Fourth Crusade under Boniface of Montferrat.

1212-1250. Frederic II. becomes emperorand king of the two Sicilies.

1210-1212. First war of Venice and Genoa.
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI (1182-1226)
1213-1276. James I., the Conqueror in Aragon.1213-1215. War with France; the English lose Vermandois and Valois.
1214-1217. Henry I., King in Castile.
1215. Insurrection of the barons.
Magna Charta signed at Runnymede.

1215. Fourth Lateran, and twelfth general council against theAlbigenses and all heretics. The doctrines of transubstantiation and auricular confession established.


1217-1262. Norway: Haco IV.
A. D.SpainBritainFranceGermanyItaly
850
855. Kingdom divided. Louis II., Emperor, obtains Italy and Rhætia till 875. Charles, Provence,till 863.
864-1131. Kingdom of Barcelona.
866. Invasion of the Danes.
871-900. ALFRED THE GREAT.
875
876. Kingdom divided: Charles the Fat obtains Suabia and Alsace till887.


Louis the Younger, Saxony and Thuringia till 882.


Carloman, Bavaria, etc. till 879; becomesKing of Italy, 877.

885-1512. Kingdom of Navarre.
884. Charles the Fat reunites the monarchy of the Franks.
900
901-924. Edward the Elder, the first prince who takes thetitle of King of England.
Rollo, the Dane, forces Charles to confer on him the province of Normandy and becomes:
912-961. Abderrahman III. The greatest Arab prince ofSpain; splendid edifices built; learning encouraged; commerce flourishes. 912. Robert, Duke of Normandy; capital Rouen.
919-1024. Kings and Emperors ofthe Saxon house.
919-936. Henry I., the Fowler, a great prince, consolidates the empire.
925 France is now divided among the powerful barons, who exercise sovereign power in their respectivedomains.

936-973. OTHO the GREAT.
950
955. Decisive victory over the Huns, which leads to the consolidationof the margravate of Austria.
950-961. Berenger II., submitted to Otto as his suzerain.
961-965. Otho’s second expedition intoItaly; he dethrones Berenger; is crowned king, and emperor.
962. Makes Rome his capital.
967. Otho II. crowned emperor.
975
978-1016. Ethelred the Unready.
New invasion of the Danes.
House of Capet
987-996. Hugh Capet.
France, for a longperiod before and after the accession of the Capets, has no national history; the royal authority is now restricted to the city in whichthe court resides.
10001000-1035. Sancho III., the Great, King of Navarre and Castile. There existed henceforward threeChristian kingdoms in Spain: 1, Castile-Leon; 2, Navarre; 3, Aragon.
Golden age of Arabian literature in Spain.


1016-1035. Canute the Great, King of Denmark.

1002-1024. Henry, Duke of Bavaria, a just and pious king.
Continual wars with the Poles and Italy.
Venice, Genoa, and Pisa rise in power, opulence and civilization.
1017-1041. Danish kings. House of Franconia
1024-1039. Conrad II., the Salic.
1025
1026. Hixem III.


1029. Settlement of the Normans in SouthItaly.
1030. With him ends the Califate of the West.
1039-1056. HENRY III. He defeats the Bohemians andHungarians and makes both tributary. The imperial power at its highest point.

1042. The Saxon line restored.
1042-1066. Edward the Confessor. French Normans become a new source of trouble.
1041. They conquer Apulia from the Greeks; 1060, Calabria; 1060-1090, Sicily.
1050
1056-1106. Henry IV.
1059. Quarrels between the Popes and German Emperors respecting investitures and nomination to theHoly See.
1060-1108. Philip I. 1060. Robert Guiscard, first duke.
1060-1090. Sicily conqueredby Count Roger, brother of Robert.
Robert invades the Greek Empire and gains the battle of Durazzo.

1072. Alfonso VI. of Castile, enlarges his dominions byconquests from the Mohammedans.
1066. Harold elected king, but is defeated and slain in the battle of Hastings, which givesEngland to William.
1066-1154. Norman Kings.
1066-1087.WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
1066. William, Duke of Normandy, invades England.
1075
1085. The Cid. Toledo is taken by Alfonso VI. after a threeyears’ siege.
1086. The battle of Zalaca.
1087-1100. William II., Rufus. Revolt of the Normannobles. The feudal system established in England.
1096. The First Crusade. Peter the Hermit andWalter the Penniless.
1100 1100-1135. Henry I., Beauclerc.
1101. Robert, Duke of Normandy, invades England.
1103-1106. Henry invades and conquers Normandy.
1106-1125. Henry V., Emperor of Germany and King ofItaly.
1125

1139. Kingdom of Portugal.
Wars between the French and English, and rise of rivalry between these two nations, which lastsfor three centuries and a half.House of Hohenstaufen
1138-1152. Conrad I., elected emperor.


1139. The two Sicilies erected into a kingdomunder Roger.
1147. The Second Crusade preached by St. Bernardand joined by the Emperor Conrad and Louis VII. of France.Rise of the factions of Guelfs and Ghibelines.
1150

1154-1399. Plantagenets.
1154-1189. Henry II., Plantagenet.

1152-1190. Frederic I., Barbarossa, Emperor and King,one of the most heroic figures of the Middle Age.

1159. War between France andEngland.
1158. Venice a great maritime power.

1171-1172. Conquest of Ireland.
The French language cultivated.1166. Frederic in Italy. League of the Italian cities, 1167, to preserve their liberties.
1175


1189-1199.Richard I., the Lion-hearted. Dreadful massacre of the Jews at his coronation.

1180-1223. Philip II., the greatest prince sinceCharlemagne.


1183. Peace ofConstance re-establishes the independence of the Italian Republics.
1189. Third Crusade led by Philip Augustus, of France; Richard, of England; and FredericBarbarossa.
1190-1198. Henry VI., Emperor and King of Italy and the Sicilies.
1195. Battle of Alarcon in which the Christians are defeated.

1199-1216. John usurps over Arthur, the son of his elderbrother, Geoffrey.

1198. Philip of Suabia and Otho of Saxony, dispute thecrown; the former supported by the Ghibelines, the latter by the Guelfs.
1200
1201-1206. War with France; Philip espouses the cause ofPrince Arthur.


1204. Venice aggrandized by the conquest ofConstantinople.


1212. Battle of Navas de Tolosa; a victory for theChristians.
1202. The Fourth Crusade under Boniface of Montferrat.

1212-1250. Frederic II. becomes emperorand king of the two Sicilies.

1210-1212. First war of Venice and Genoa.
1213-1276. James I., the Conqueror in Aragon.1213-1215. War with France; the English lose Vermandois and Valois.
1214-1217. Henry I., King in Castile.
1215. Insurrection of the barons.
Magna Charta signed at Runnymede.
A. D.ChurchScandinavia and SlavsEastern EmpireSaracensChina, Japan, India
850

860. Separation of the Greek and LatinChurches.


862. Russia: Rurik, first grandprince.
859. Japan: Powerful Seiwa family arises.

867. Pope Hadrian II., Photius, Patriarch ofConstantinople, deposed.
863-1030. Norway: Harold Harfargar to St. Olaf.
867-1057. Eastern emperors of theMacedonian line.


870-892. Muattemedre-establishes the capital at Bagdad.
872. Pope John VIII.
875

895. Hungary: Magyars under Arpadenter the Kingdom.
886-911. Leo VI., the Philosopher.
900
907-960. China: Period of five dynasties.
911. The Northmen in France embrace Christianity.
917. The Bulgarians besiegeConstantinople.
925
927. Odo, abbot of Cluny, establishes celebrated code ofdiscipline.


941. Russian expedition againstConstantinople, under Igor.
950
956. Armenia and the provinces between the Black and theCaspian Sea, recovered from the Saracens.
959. St. Dunstan becomes Archbishop of Canterbury and attempts to reform the church; enforcing clericalcelibacy. 959-963. Romanus II.
960. China: Tai Tsoo founder of later Sung dynasty.

966. Poland receives Christianity under Miecislas.
964-975. Cyprus, Cilicia and Antioch are captured byNicephorus; Syria is overrun, and, under Zimisces, the Greeks penetrate to the Tigris.
969. The Fatimites become masters ofEgypt, with Cairo as the capital.
975
976-1025. Basil II.


980. Seljuk, a Turk officer ofthe khan of Tartary, becomes a Mohammedan, and settles in Samarcand.
989. Byzantine Christianity propagated in Russia by Vladimir theGreat.
999. Pope Sylvester II.
1000 1000-1186. India: Supremacy of Ghazni.

1019. Russia: Yaroslaff the Great.
1018. Bulgaria again reduced to a Grecian province.
1025 1025-1028. Constantine IX.
Culmination point of Byzantinegreatness. Greeks greatest merchants and capitalists of the world during this century.
Golden Age of Rajput civilization in India.
1042. Turks invade and conquer Persia.
The kingdom of Ghizni declines after 1032, and is confined to India; falls 1183.
1050
1057-1185. Eastern emperors of the houses ofthe Ducas and the Comnenes. Southern Italy lost to the Normans.
1059. Quarrels between the Popes and German Emperors respecting investitures and nomination to theHoly See.
1073. POPE GREGORY VII.

Papacy attains great power.
1075

1077. Hungary: Ladislas I., the Saint.

1076. Jerusalem captured by Turks.
1084. Bohemia erected into a kingdom by the Emperor Henry IV. 1084. Seljuks in Asia Minor.
1088. Pope Urban II.
1092. The Seljuk Empire falls apart into anumber of smaller states. Iconium or Roum, Damascus, Aleppo, Kerman and Iran.
1095-1270. The First Crusade.
1099. Pope Pascal II. 1099. Foundation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Godfrey of Bouillon, elected king by the army.
1100 1100-1523. Denmark: Introduction of Feudal system to Independence of Sweden.
1100-1468. Norway.
1100-1448. Sweden.
1119. Pope Calixtus II.
1125
1127. China: Kaou Tsung, Emperor.
1146. The Second Crusade.

The power of thecrusaders declines.
1150
1154. Pope Hadrian IV.


1159. Pope Alexander III.

1157. Denmark: Waldemar I., the Great.
1156. Japan: War between the families of Gen and Hei.
1170. The Waldenses.
1171-1193. Saladin becomes Sultan of Egypt.Extends his dominions in Egypt, conquers Syria, Assyria, Mesopotamia and Arabia.
1175
1177. Poland: Casimir the Just.


1185-1204. Dynasty ofAngelus.



1186-1206.India: The Afghans of Ghor rule.
1189. The Third Crusade.
1191. Pope Celestine III.
1193. Saladin dies; his dominionsdivided.
1198. Pope Innocent III.
1200Papal power attains its climax. It is supreme over secular power.
1202-1241. Denmark: Waldemar II., the Conqueror.


1204. New revolution. TheCrusaders return, again take Constantinople.
1204-1261. Latin Empire.

1202. The Fourth Crusade.



1206.Genghis Khan becomes emperor of the Mongols.
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI (1182-1226)
1215. Fourth Lateran, and twelfth general council against theAlbigenses and all heretics. The doctrines of transubstantiation and auricular confession established.
1217-1262. Norway: Haco IV.