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. | Spain | Britain | France | Germany | Italy | Church | Scandinavia and Slavs | Eastern Empire | Saracens | China, Japan, India | A. 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. | ||||||||||
| 1000 | 1000-1035. 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. | Spain | Britain | France | Germany | Italy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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. | |||||
| 1000 | 1000-1035. 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. | Church | Scandinavia and Slavs | Eastern Empire | Saracens | China, 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. | |||||
| 1200 | 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. |
| 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. | ||||