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Analyze The Changes In The Latin West

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Analyze The Changes In The Latin West
Changes in The Latin West Reading the title of this essay, many may ask, what is the Latin West? The Latin West was the Historians' name for the Territories of Europe that believed in the Latin rite of Christianity and the use of the Latin language for intellectual exchange in 1200 through 1500. In 1454, a year after Ottoman Turks seized the city of Constantinople, Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini showed doubts as to whether anyone could convince the rulers of Christian Europe to take arms together against the Muslims. Many other events occurred in the Latin West like the French and English that have been fighting for over a century, lack of unity , and plague. Although with all these disasters, wars, and diseases, historians see the period as a time of unusual progress. Even though wars …show more content…
The improvement of crossbows had the ability to pierce helmets and light body armor, which was highly dangerous. As soon as they took notice of the ability the crossbow offered, professional crossbowmen were then hired for wages. These men were feared until the Christian Church outlawed the crossbow. “The arrival in Europe of firearms based on the Chinese invention of gunpowder further transformed the medieval army” (417).
The Great Western Schism was a division in the Latin Christian Church between 1378 and 1416 due to rival claimants to the papacy existing in Rome and Avignon. Eventually, the papacy regained its independence and returned to Rome. The effect it had was it broke the pope’s ability to challenge the rising power of monarchies.
The Magna Carta was a document signed by King John of England in 1215 because of a negotiation. “[it] affirmed that monarchs were subject to established law, confirmed the independence of the church and the city of London, and guaranteed the nobles’ hereditary rights” (419). Basically the monarchies were not above the law: they had to obey

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