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The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation crumbled into thousands of minor nations 'cause of feudalism. In the modern day this would be the United Kingdom of Great-Britain & Northern-Ireland, and only the village Laxton, Nottinghamshire because Scotland abolished feudalism in 2004, and Sark in 2008.

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Which country introduced coat of arms?

The Coat of Arms was invented in Feudal Europe before the concept of the Nation State (or country) was developed.


How did the feudal system impact western Europe?

It was the government of Europe for a 1,000 years.


How did crusades affect the government economy and culture of Europe?

It eliminated the feudal system in Europe. Which gave increased power to the king.


In Europe the crusades resulted in?

The strengthening of the feudal system


Which location did the feudal system last longer in?

Europe


Powerful landowners were called in Europe?

Feudal lords.


What is one way feudal Europe was different from feudal Japan?

One key difference between feudal Europe and feudal Japan lies in their social hierarchies and roles within the class structure. In Europe, the feudal system was characterized by a rigid class structure with kings, nobles, knights, and peasants, while in Japan, the system was more focused on the samurai warrior class, who held significant power and loyalty to their daimyo (feudal lords). Additionally, the cultural and religious influences, such as the prominence of Christianity in Europe versus Shinto and Buddhism in Japan, shaped their respective societies and governance.


Why do you think feudal systems developed in both japan and Europe?

because they had the same feudal systems at the same time


How was feudal Europe similar and different to samurai Japan?

They both used the feudal system. The feudal system is a kind of culture in which the knights (in Japan, Samurai) owned most of the land and were responsible to the King (in Japan, Emperor), and basically ruled over the peasants.


What kind of government did Europe have in the 1400s?

Europe has never had one government. Europe is a conintent made up of many countries, each with their own governments of varying types. In the 1400s the modern concept of the nation state had not yet developed. The 1400s were the feudal period in Europe. Most governments were feudal monarchies. This was a multi-layered system of government by hereditary rulers. A king did not have absolute rule, but the had 'allegiance' of lower level nobles who paid him 'dues' (taxes) and provided soldiers if needed. These feudal layers overlapped and changed, so an area could change from being a feudal subject of in one country, to being independent, to being part of another country without changing its local feudal lord. There were also a number of republics. These were mostly in what is now Italy (examples: Florence, Venice). In most cases the vote was hereditary and only a minority of the population had a vote. In the east some of the kingdoms were still of a tribal nature, feudalism not having developed yet.


What was the dominanat religion in feudal Europe?

Christianity, specifically Catholicism.


What class in feudal Europe was the land laborers?

peasant or serf