All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Europe in 1300: An Introduction

    • March 22, 1996

    Professor Ruiz sets the geographical, linguistic, and historiographical contexts for the course. Understanding how medieval men and women imagined their society and saw themselves provides insight on how they responded to the imminent crises.

  • S01E02 Europe in 1300: Rural Society

    • March 22, 1996

    Peasants were the group most dramatically affected by late medieval crises. We look at their difficult daily lives and crucial, but lowly, roles in society.

  • S01E03 Europe in 1300: Urban Society

    • March 22, 1996

    Focusing on the rise of towns and cities, we examine the sources of so much inspiring art and great learning that shaped society in the Middle Ages and years to come. The character of the bourgeoisie and state of popular culture are reflected in fundamental changes in value systems and religious beliefs.

  • S01E04 Europe in 1300: Church, State and Learning

    • March 22, 1996

    As the power of the papacy is envied and emulated throughout Europe, changes occur in the relationship between church and state. Professor Ruiz describes those changes while tracing the origin of political organizations and a political point of view that emphasized the state over the church.

  • S01E05 An Age of Crises: Hunger

    • March 22, 1996

    We study the great famines of 1315–1317 and their impact on European society in succeeding decades. Medieval governments are unable to deal with the consequences of widespread hunger—rising violence, crimes against property, high mortality rates, and a reduced population.

  • S01E06 An Age of Crises: War

    • March 22, 1996

    We discuss the Hundred Years War and its affect on social, economic, political, and cultural structures. We deal with the impact of military technology on society, the role of war, the rise of knightly orders, and the contradictions of war's savagery and chivalry's ideals.

  • S01E07 An Age of Crises: The Black Death

    • March 22, 1996

    The Black Plague had an enormous impact on Europeans in the mid-14th century. We consider the development of the church after the plague, violence against Jews and lepers following the spread of the plague, and the reaction of authorities to its onslaught.

  • S01E08 An Age of Crises: Popular Rebellions

    • March 22, 1996

    Many peasant and urban uprisings occurred as individuals at the top of society sought to maintain their positions in a time of vast economic and social dislocation. Those below, and those caught in the middle, often reacted with violence.

  • S01E09 Late Medieval Society: Politics

    • March 22, 1996

    Professor Ruiz introduces new political concepts formed in the late Middle Ages, including first steps toward the genesis of the nation state. Centralized monarchies emerged at the end of the 15th century in France and England as a result of crises that pushed thinkers and rulers to develop concepts of sovereignty.

  • S01E10 Late Medieval Society: Castile in the Fifteenth Century

    • March 22, 1996

    We see how the ideas and practices of government were put into service in the kingdom of Castile in Spain, and how age-old medieval institutions were utilized by the Castilian monarchy to organize the nation state.

  • S01E11 Late Medieval Society: Culture and Mentality, Part I

    • March 22, 1996

    We examine the birth of Renaissance culture in Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries and its spread to other parts of western Europe. Beginning with Dante, we consider the transforming factors of Renaissance humanism and art.

  • S01E12 Late Medieval Society: Culture and Mentality, Part II

    • March 22, 1996

    Continuing the examination of the birth of Renaissance culture in Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries, we consider new artistic models, aesthetic sensibilities, and a new spirit.

  • S01E13 Late Medieval Society: Love, Sexuality, and Misogyny, Part I

    • March 22, 1996

    Professor Ruiz discusses how concepts of love, sexuality, the body, and marriage were transformed by the crises of the late Middle Ages. Boccaccio's Decameron and Chaucer's Canterbury Tales are studied for statements on love and sexuality.

  • S01E14 Late Medieval Society: Love, Sexuality, and Misogyny, Part II

    • March 22, 1996

    against specific groups in its midst.

  • S01E15 Late Medieval Society: The Blending of High and Popular Culture

    • March 22, 1996

    We see how festivals, royal entries, and carnivals were used to expand the power and influence of nation states. The mix of certain elements of high and popular cultures in jousts, pas d'armes (passage of arms), and other public festivals were of great benefit to rulers of the day.

  • S01E16 The Beginnings of Modernity

    • March 22, 1996

    Professor Ruiz gives a rousing summation and provides a peek into the next era. The fall of Constantinople and subsequent reception of Greek Classical knowledge in the West, the disruption of trade routes in the East, and the voyages of discovery are all treated as dramatic transforming factors in European lives.