answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How did changes in warfare in the 1300s help to change euporen?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Natural Sciences

What was the most devastating natural disaster in Europe during the late 1300s?

Black death


What was used for transportation in 1300s?

Well, I looked this up somewhere else and it said that they had more advanced ships and that they were lighter and a little bit faster. It didn't say anything else about transportation though. I'm assuming they didn't just use ships, haha.


What factors led to the breakdown of feudalism and the growth of towns?

There were a number of reasons for the gradual decline of feudalism. Among them were the fact that Europe began to experience a period of stability. This upset the feudal hierarchy: there was no longer a need for a large number of knights to protect their lord, and gradually, the control the lord had over these men weakened. Another factor that contributed to the decline of feudalism was the bubonic plague-- the Black Death, which killed so many people during the mid to late 1300s that workers were in short supply, and the nobles no longer had enough serfs to rely on. In fact, some laborers were able to hire themselves out and negotiate a salary, rather than being in a position where the noble forced them to work. Further, there was an expansion of exploration and trade in the world, leading to the rise of a merchant class. More merchants meant more goods to be sold, and cities and towns were established, as centers of commerce. Trade, especially trade with other countries, required the use of money, rather than just bartering out goods on a small, local scale as had been done during the height of feudalism. Even some serfs began to produce goods they could sell, and they were eventually able to buy their own land (and their freedom). Other serfs revolted, demanding better treatment; some left rural areas to move closer to centers of trade and commerce. These changes further eroded the total control the nobles once had, and ultimately led to the end of the feudal system.


What infectious disease kills the most humans every year?

Hello there fellow user! The virus that has killed the most people was the Type A H1N1 influenza virus that caused the pandemic in 1918 or the 1918 Spanish Flu. It has been recorded that it killed 50-100 million people or even more. Hopefully, this was the answer you were looking for! 😄


What is the absolute magnitude of Spica?

Most of the particularly bright stars have several names; a Chinese name, and Indian name, a polynesian name, and so on. In the Middle East, the Egyptians and Babylonians had their own names, which were interpreted or modified by first the Greeks, then the Romans. The first document that we might call a star catalog was compiled by Claudius Ptolemy, a Greek who lived and worked in Alexandria, Egypt. This book survived the collapse of the Roman Empire, and was translated into Arabic, when it got the name we still use, the "Almagest". A great number of Greek and Roman books that did not survive the fall of Rome were preserved in the Library of Alexandria in Egypt, and many of these were recopied and carried to other parts of the Persian empire. In the 1300s and 1400s, when the Spanish conquered the Arabic province of Andalusia (which we know as "southern Spain") Spanish and Christian scholars were able to obtain, and retranslate into Latin, much of what we now think of as "Roman" and Greek documents. The Almagest, Ptolemy's star catalog, was among them. So if you're thinking about a bright or distinctive star, the name probably came from the Greek or Phoenician language, translated into Arabic, and translated back into Latin. In many cases, the name we use today is the Arabic name. Small or dim stars are generally referred to by a catalog number, or by a Greek letter prefix and the name of the constellation in which it appears. So, "Alpha Orionis" is the brightest star in the constellation Orion. Since it is a bright and distinctive star, it has its own name; "Betelgeuse".

Related questions

How did changes in warfare in the 1300s help change European society?

The humble peasant could be used as an archer to take out the traditional aristocratic heavy cavalry knight.


How did changes in warfare in the 1300s helped change European society?

The humble peasant could be used as an archer to take out the traditional aristocratic heavy cavalry knight.


What caused European society to change after the 1300s?

church differences


The Renaissance was a cultural change in Europe beginning in the 1300s?

Yes, it was.


Was the Renaissance a cultural change in Europe beginning in the 1300s?

Yes, it was.


How was warfare in America different from warfare in Europe?

well see warfare in the early 1300s was different because of the types of weapons used and the different types of techniques. The European settlers used pitch forks and rocks to fight away their enemies and used the printing press as a source to all of the other enemies war plans. Today we just bomb everything and erbody we dont like! but do to unfortunate and unplanned attacks sometimes it backfires but more then less our plans are thought out very well and normally works. But that is how America warfare differs from European warfare in the 1300s


What was invented in the 1300s?

wat is some inventions from 1300s


What people lived in NZ in the 1300s?

Maoris people lived in NZ in 1300s


Who is Jye Ricole?

he invented the drums in the late 1300s he invented the drums in the late 1300s


How do you think the black death impacted government business and social order in the 1300s?

black death caused huge changes in government. It also changed trade methods and businesses.


Who was the first Roman Catholic Pope in the 1300s?

The first Pope who started (and ended) his Pontificate in the 1300s was Pope Benedict XI.


What state did the vikings from Scandinavia visit in the 1300s?

Vikings were no longer around during the 1300s, as their reign ended in the early 1000s.