McGraw-Hill OnlineMcGraw-Hill Higher EducationLearning Center
Student Center | Instructor Center | Information Center | Home
Animated Maps
PowerWeb
Western Civilization Exercises
Who Am I?
Chapter Outline
Chapter Overview
Multiple Choice Quiz
Essay Quiz
Problems for Analysis
Interactive Maps
Indentification
Audio Pronunciation Guide
A Closer Look
Book Maps
Chronology Exercises
Guide To Documents
Significant Individuals
Web Links
Feedback
Help Center


The Western Experience book cover
The Western Experience, 8/e
Mortimer Chambers, University of California - Los Angeles
Barbara Hanawalt, Ohio State University
Theodore Rabb, Princeton University
Isser Woloch, Columbia University
Raymond Grew, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

The Empires of the Early Middle Ages (800-1000): Creation and Erosion

Chapter Overview

1. The Byzantine Empire survived by becoming a Greek-speaking bastion of Orthodox Christianity defended by free peasant-soldiers, enriched by trade and manufacturing, and governed by an elaborate bureaucracy.

2. In the seventh and eighth centuries Islam expanded rapidly, conquering and converting vast areas and developing an advanced urban civilization.

3. Charlemagne created a Frankish empire that encompassed present-day France, western Germany, and northern Italy that fostered a brief but significant revival of cultural life.

4. The first East Slavic civilization was organized around the Principality of Kiev, a sophisticated but relatively short-lived state.

5. From the late ninth to the eleventh century, new incursions by Asiatic nomads in the east and Scandinavian raiders from the north challenged these expansive but unstable states, causing them to crumble into smaller political units more capable of managing local defense.