Prof. John H. Munro ECO. 301Y1: Munro5@chass - Utoronto.ca John - Munro@utoronto - Ca
Prof. John H. Munro ECO. 301Y1: Munro5@chass - Utoronto.ca John - Munro@utoronto - Ca
ca
Department of Economics [email protected]
University of Toronto http://www.economics.utoronto.ca/munro5/
9 - 16 October 2013
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Note the relationship between ‘cavalry’ and the French word for horse: le cheval , from which is
derived the term chevalier, for a cavalry horse soldier or knight. The standard Latin word for horse is equus
(hence: English equestrian); but the there was another term: caballus, which meant a pack-horse, nag, or
inferior riding horse. Why this should be source of cheval, chevalier, and of the English cavalry is not easy
to determine. But the origin of the word vassal, as a feudal knight, feudal servant, but also aristocrat, was
the Latin term vassus, which was in origin a contemptuous term for ‘boy’.
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vi) These feudal knights had formed a fully professional military aristocracy in earlier medieval
society,
(1) i.e, after gaining a monopoly of superior, virtually invincible military power:
(2) in the form of the cavalry: as horse-soldiers, acting as mounted shock combat troops,
(3) this was of course a full time profession which was extremely expensive in both training and
maintenance.
vii) It was a very high cost-profession: to be a professional horse-soldier, a member of the feudal
cavalry, was an extremely time consuming and costly occupation in these respects:
(1) It required a long period of training and it involved full time military and political service, one that
permitted the knight no free time to pursue another occupation.
(2) While most foot soldiers -- swordsmen, spear men, bowmen -- were normally only occasional and part
time soldiers and generally full time farmers, the reverse was true of the knights.
(3) Knighthood also required very costly capital equipment in the form of:
# specially bred war-horses,
# costly saddles and metal stirrups,
# heavy armour, complicated military equipment,
# finally a retinue of servants (military and non-military)
(4) Because horses could easily be killed in battle, most knights owned at least two and usually more war-
horses (as opposed to the much cheaper plough horses).
(5) Some estimates indicate that the cost of an English medieval knight’s military equipment alone
equalled the value of 20 oxen, or the plough-teams of ten peasant families (ca 1300).
(6) Therefore somebody else had to pay for all and pay the knight: and that payment came from the
people, the peasants, who lived on the manors composing his fief(s).
(7) Hence once more the vital importance of landed estates, of those fiefs, to generate the incomes to
sustain the feudal aristocracy; and the same was also true of the later medieval fief-rentes.
b) The evolution of medieval feudalism:
I cannot, unfortunately, take the time here and now to explain the origins and evolution of medieval
feudalism, except briefly to note the following salient facts:
i) Before the ‘Birth of Europe’:
(1) I had earlier noted, in the very first lecture, in citing Lopez’s article ‘The Middle Ages: a Success
Story’, that Europe as we now know it, with a distinctly new and separate society and economy, was not
born until the later 10th century (or just before the year 1000).
(2) The ‘Birth of Europe’ indeed could obviously have taken place only after:
# the civil wars, foreign invasions, chaos and insecurity had come to an end,
# to permit a renewal of demographic and economic growth
(3) But the new European economy then had to cope with the institutions that had arisen in those earlier
centuries, from the 5th to 10th centuries, to cope with that chaos or insecurity, in the absence of well
organized central rule, with its own military power.
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ii) Feudalism thus evolved slowly over several centuries of the early medieval era,
(1) from the decline of Roman Empire in the West, in the 5th century CE,
(2) to the full flowering of the later Carolingian Empire in the 8th and 9th centuries (the empire of
Charlemagne).
iii) During this early medieval era, as stressed earlier, the Germanic or Frankish kingdoms that replaced
the Roman Empire in the West (beginning with the Merovingian kingdoms):2
(1) failed to provide adequate security at the lower levels of society, because they lacked the resources and
organization to create a national or imperial army (as the Romans had done so well);
(2) in particular, they still lacked sufficient, or sufficiently overwhelming military power, which finally
came in the form of the fully developed cavalry.
(3) Furthermore, these Germanic-Frankish kingdoms – first the Merovingians and then their successors,
the Carolingians – created further chaos, by subdividing their kingdoms by inheritance, i.e., by dividing
them up amongst their surviving sons.
(4) those sons and heirs inevitably quarrelled, so that, as a consequence, these kingdoms in the former
western zone of the Roman empire were continually plagued by civil wars, rebellions, and anarchy –
indeed up to the 10th century.
(5) and, of course, also by wars with their neighbours
iv) Even the Carolingian Empire, which witnessed the full flowering of feudalism, failed to provide
adequate security, and, as noted earlier, was beset by a three-pronged invasion during the 8th, 9th, and
10th centuries:3
(1) by the Vikings or Norsemen from the north (Scandinavia), who seized the territory called Normandy;
(2) by the Hungarians or Magyars from the east, chiefly via the Danube River basin (i.e., the heartland of
2
Some authorities contend that the Merovingian era commenced in 465-66, when the Frankish leader
Clovis (b. 466 - d. 511) displaced Roman rule in Gaul. In 481, he became King of the Salian Franks, and
then king of all the Franks in 509, shortly before his death in 511. The first recognized Merovingian king,
ruling over all of Gaul, was Childebert I (511-558); and the last was Childeric III (743-752) – as explained
in the next note. The word ‘Frank’ – from which is derived the name of France – means ‘free’. Note that
from ‘Clovis’ is derived the name ‘Louis’, a name for many subsequent French kings (including the last,
Louis XVI, at the time of the French Revolution).
3
The Carolingian Empire was first established, in effect, by Charles Martel (688-741), who had
halted the Muslim invasions at the Battle of Poitiers in 732. He was the last ‘mayor of the palace’ for the final
Merovingian king of the Franks (Childeric III); and became the effective ruler of the Franks, though never
crowned king. He left the Frankish kingdom to his sons Carloman and Pepin III (the Short); and the latter
was anointed the first Carolingian king in 751 (but not effectively displacing Childeric III until 752). His son,
known as Charlemagne (Carolus Magnus, or Charles the Great) became King of the Franks in 771, and
Emperor in 800, governing much of what became western Europe. Only one son survived him to rule the
Empire, Louis I the Pious, who ruled as Emperor from 814 to 840. But with his death, his Empire was divided
into three, and was beset then with civil wars and foreign invasions. In 987, Hugh Capet (d. 996) displaced
the last Carolingian king (Louis V the Sluggard, 986-87) to become King of France, an entirely new kingdom,
and thus founder of the Capetian dynasty. From the Treaty of Verdun in 843, Germany had become a
separate kingdom as well, though lacking in any centralized rule (and thus failing to control Italy and what
became the Low Countries).
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modern Hungary);
(3) and by the Muslims or Saracens -- chiefly Arabs and Berbers – from the south, originally from
Muslim Spain and later by their maritime attacks along the coasts of France and Italy.
v) Thus powerful landed lords, operating at the local village level, who could command bands of
armed followers and then knights by providing them land, did provide that protection;
(1) but in many instances they provided peasant villages with protection not from foreign invaders
(2) but from other military lords or indeed -- Mafia style -- from themselves.
vi) In this fashion, more or less, early-medieval feudalism spread by absorbing peasant villages,
either by conquest or by willing agreement of villages trading liberty for protection.
c) Carolingian Feudalism, the Cavalry, and Technological Innovation: the Lynn White Debate
i) Technological innovation in the form of the metal and leather stirrup:4
(1) The American medievalist and historian, Lynn White, a specialist in the history of technology,
contended that the true emergence of cavalry-based feudalism came in the 8th century with the introduction
(from Asia) and diffusion of the metal stirrup attached to the leather saddle.
(2) While certainly a cavalry existed before then, and while certainly many soldiers of the Roman and
early medieval eras (and those of the Muslim world) had fought on horseback, their military effectiveness
had been limited by the absence of the stirrup:
(3) so that, without this device, they could quite easily be knocked off their horses by a blow from an
enemy spear or axe.
(4) Lynn White even argued that many or most of the soldier who rode to battle on horses, then
dismounted to fight as infantrymen in the ensuing battle itself.
(5) The metal-and leather stirrup provided far greater resistance or resilience against such blows, allowing
the mounted soldiers to remain on horseback: to act as ‘mounted shock-combat troops’.
(6) the evolution of effective shields and chain-mail armour, to protect the cavalry soldier, may have been
just as important.
(7) The key point, however, was his argument, based on many literary and archaeological sources, that
the diffusion of the metal stirrup (from Persia - Iran or Central Asia) came only in the 8th centuries (but
some contend its introduction was in the 7th , or even the 6th century)
(8) As a consequence, he argued, the Frankish armies underwent a significant shift from:
# those essentially based on infantry-foot soldiers
# to those based essentially on cavalry,
# with all of the economic and social consequences discussed above.
(9) He maintained (with dubious proof) that the first Frankish military use of the cavalry, with this stirrup,
came in the Battle of Poitiers-Tours, in October 732
# Charles Martel (‘The Hammer’, 688?–741), Frankish ruler of Austrasia (715-41), and ‘Mayor
4
Lynn White, ‘Stirrup, Mounted Shock Combat, Feudalism, and Chivalry’, as chapter I in his
Medieval Technology and Social Change (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962), pp. 1-38.
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the Palace’ (virtually ‘prime minister) of the Merovingian kingdom,
# defeated a Moorish (Muslim) army, at the aforesaid Battle of Tours-Poitiers (south of Paris): one
that seemed on the verge of conquering what is now France.
# Some historians contend that if the Moors had won that battle, Europe today would be Muslim
and Arabic speaking! That seems, however, very doubtful.
# whether or not Charles Martel used the cavalry in this way to defeat a Muslim infantry army has
never been proved.
# Furthermore, other historians contend that Muslim armies also used the horse stirrup
# Charles Martel was the father of Pepin III: who became the first Carolingian king, in 751-52
# and he was also the grandfather of Pepin’s eldest son: Carlemagne (Charles the Great: 742 or 747
- 814): crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 800.
# certainly the later Carolingian empire was based on this form of cavalry
ii) The White thesis soon encountered some fierce attacks in the literature:5 from those
(1) who argued that an effective cavalry had emerged well before this period, and did not need the stirrup,
and from
(2) those who argued that the fully-fledged form of cavalry, linked to feudalism, came much later: that the
early Carolingians, and Charlemagne himself, still depended on essentially infantry-based armies (i.e.,
with foot soldiers)
iii) Bernard Bacharach provided the most effective criticism against Lynn White, 6
(1) sought to refute White’s chief evidence: both the dating and the validity of his literary and
archaeological sources, those for the 8th century,
(2) Contended as well that the stirrup was not necessary for cavalry: quoting from Answers.Com:
# In 1970, opposing Lynn White Jr.'s ideas, Bernard S. Bachrach's article titled ‘Charles Martel,
Mounted Shock Combat, the Stirrup, and Feudalism’, in Studies in Medieval and Renaissance
History, pointed out that stirrups are actually no advantage in shock warfare, but are useful only
in allowing a rider to lean to the left and right on the saddle without falling off. [Munro: That
seems to me to be a useful advantage!!]
# Therefore, they are not the reason for the switch from infantry to cavalry in Medieval militaries,
and not the reason for the emergence of Feudalism.
(2) thus joining those who believed that the cavalry emerged later as the fundamental military force
(3) But, for another academic opinion in Answers.Com
# Braced against the stirrups, a knight could deliver a blow with a lance that employed the full
weight and momentum of horse and rider together.
5
For a summary of the debate and its wide-ranging literature, see Kelly De Vries, Medieval Miliary
Technology (Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 1992), pp. 95-122.
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Bernard Bacharach, ‘Charles Martel, Mounted Shock Combat, the Stirrup, and Feudalism’, Studies
in Medieval and Renaissance History, 7 (1970), 47-75. See also the previous note.
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# Reacting to a sudden and urgent demand for cavalry, Charlemagne ordered his poorer vassals to
pool their resources and provide a mounted and armed knight.
# The addition of stirrups also allowed a rider to use a longer (and vastly more powerful) bow by
standing up on the stirrups.
iv) the role of the stirrup itself remains unresolved: was it the vital ingredient to ensure that the cavalry
horse-soldiers were truly invincible ‘mounted shock combat troops’.7
v) The iron horse shoe: an issue involving far less debate:
1) Another impediment to the use of horses in either warfare or agriculture was the danger of injuring or
damaging their sensitive hooves (easily chipped or torn)
(2) The solution came, perhaps in the 8th or 9th centuries, in fastening U shaped iron horse shoes to the
hooves, thus preventing such damages.
d) The High Costs of Cavalry warfare: a far more expensive form of warfare (a theme to be
elaborated more fully in the following lecture on manorialism:
i) A cavalry horse soldier was a full-time professional, devoted singly and solely to warfare – in
contrast to infantry, who were part time soldiers only and full time peasants (or urban militias)
ii ) High costs of learning and training over many years
iii) High costs of war horses:
# were especially bred, for speed and strength, for warfare
# as noted earlier, given the likelihood of the animal’s death in combat, most knights possessed at
least two such warhorses.
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See also this entry in Answers.com: “The stirrup was invented surprisingly late in history,
considering that horses were used for bareback riding and to pull carts or war chariots since the fourth
millennium BC. They are mentioned in early Chinese literature and examples which must be earlier than the
7th century A.D. have been found in Japan; the true stirrup was apparently invented in northern China by the
nomadic Turkic tribes in the first few centuries AD, although a simple loop through which the rider placed
his big toe was already to be seen in India either by 4th century BC (Desmond Morris, Horse Watching 1998),
or the 2nd century BC. It was invented at first as a single mounting stirrup only used in gaining the saddle;
the first dependable representation of a rider with paired stirrups is in a Jin tomb of about 322 AD. The stirrup
was spread throughout Eurasia by the great horsemen of the central Asian steppes. It is uncertain when it was
first adopted by the nomads. The first attested use is by the Alans. The Greeks and Romans did not use them
but mounted by vaulting or from a mounting block. Some historians believe the Huns must have used them
to enable their conquests, but there is no evidence for this. Stirrups reached Sweden in the 6th century,
leading to the establishment of mounted Thegns during the Swedish Vendel Age. From this period have been
found rich graves of mounted elite warriors, which include stirrups [2]. The importance of the horse during
this time is reflected in the later Norse sagas, where the 6th century Swedish king Adils is said to have been
a great lover of horses and to have had the best horses of his days. Interestingly, all accounts of this king's
warfare describe him as fighting on horseback, although the later Vikings never or rarely did so. To add a 6th
century source, Jordanes claimed that the Swedes had the best horses beside the Thuringians, reflecting the
importance of the horse during this time (see also the Battle on the Ice). Stirrups were first indirectly
documented in Central Europe during the reign of Charles Martel in the 8th century, when verbs scandere
and descendere among the Franks replace verbs denoting "leaping" upon a horse. A pair of stirrups have been
found in an 8th century burial in Holiare, Slovakia. The stirrup of the early Middle Ages seems to have been
light and semicircular or triangular in shape. By the 14th century the footplate became broader and the sides
heavier and ornamented. By the 16th century this ornamentation increases and open metal-work is used.”
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iv) High costs of the other military equipment: the armour – broadswords, axes, lances – helmets and
chain mail, etc.
e) Post Carolingian Feudalism: from 843 CE: Treaty of Verdun, splitting the Carolingian Empire
into three kingdoms (France, Germany, Lotharigina – including Italy, Low Countries)
i) The real heartland of European feudalism was the heartland of the Carolingian Empire itself: that
territory between the Loire River in France, as the southern frontier, and the Rhine River in Germany,
as the eastern and northern frontier (see the map on the screen).
ii) From that Carolingian heartland, feudalism spread by conquest and colonization, or by example,
# eastwards into eastern Germany;
# and southwards into Italy (whose northern part belonged to the Carolingian Empire), into Spain
and Portugal;
# and then westward, by the Norman Conquest (1066), into England.
iii) In England, Norman feudalism flowered even more effectively than within Normandy itself:
which was the conquered land of the free-born and freedom loving Norsemen who adapted ill to true
feudalism;
iv) but elsewhere, feudalism was never as strong as within its original Carolingian heartland; and you
must thus remember that this model of feudalism applies to only a small part of medieval Europe.
v) In the Mediterranean regions --- in Europe south of the Loire and south of the Danube rivers,
medieval society differed considerably from that found in the north:
(1) this southern region had been the true heartland of the old Roman Empire,
(2) it thus better maintained urban societies, with the heritage of Roman civil law and of Roman customs
and institutions,
(3) and together those surviving institutions created a firm bedrock that northern feudalism found difficult
to penetrate.
vi) We shall see the significance of that difference: in contrasting agrarian institutions and farming
methods in northern and southern Europe.
vii) Another related factor: the northern advantage in producing horses, the vital ingredient for the
cavalry and thus for full-fledged feudalism.
(1) When we come to examine regional agrarian systems, we will discover that northern agriculture was
able to produce a very important, relatively cheap fodder crop in feeding horses: namely oats
(2) For reasons of climate and topography, oats cultivation was virtually impossible in southern and
Mediterranean agriculture, virtually eliminating the use of horses as a source of animal power in
agriculture: i.e., in pulling ploughs and carts
(3) That problem may also have restricted the supply of horses (which could be fed by other means) for
military power as well in Mediterranean Europe
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Lübeck, founded on a Slavic site in the 12th century, was destroyed by fire in 1138, but refounded
in the 1143, and then acquired by Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, in 1158, who gave the city a charter,
which served as the model for hundreds of East Elbian towns in the next two centuries. In 1226, Emperor
Frederick II made it an Imperial Free City, a status it kept until 1937, in the Nazi era.
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i) first, new forms of infantry formations: armed with:
(1) pikes or long spears set in the ground: from the late 1290s
# Scotland: William Wallace and Robert the Bruce, 1297 - 1314: from the Battle of Sterling Bridge
to the final battle of Bannockburn
# Flanders: Battle of Kortrijk (Courtrai): 1302: ‘Battle of the Golden Spurs’
(2) bows and arrows: from the 1330s:
# the English long-bows and
# Genoese cross-bows (firing bolts)
ii) second, artillery (from the 1330s):
(1) iron (wrought iron) and then bronze cannons, both on land and sea (warships)
(2) artillery proved so effective in battering down castles and knocking the cavalry off their horses.
iii) then from handguns (muskets and pistols), i.e., mobile small arms: if not so accurate, very often
quite deadly (and again effective against cavalry).
d) Feudal political and social powers nevertheless remained important in later medieval and even
early modern Europe:
i) the feudal nobility were by no means excluded from government and from political power in
Europe, west or east; and in subsequent centuries they made some remarkable comebacks, even in the
18th century.
ii) Indeed the feudal nobility, especially by virtue of their still enormous landed wealth, remained a
powerful force in European society up to (and even beyond) the French Revolution -- in Russia indeed
until the Bolshevik revolution of 1917.