middle ages

listen to the pronunciation of middle ages
Englisch - Türkisch
ortaçağ

Birçok Roma teknolojisi ortaçağ sırasında kaybedildi. - Many Roman technologies were lost during the Middle Ages.

Pek çok kişinin düşündüğünün aksine, Ortaçağ'da insanların çoğu dünyanın düz değil, küresel olduğuna inanıyordu. - Contrary to what many people think, during the Middle Ages most people believed that the world was spherical, not flat.

orta çağ
middle age
orta yaş
middle age
orta çağ
high middle ages
(Tarih) Avrupa tarihinin 11, 12 ve 13. yüzyıllarını kapsayan dönemi (1000-1300 arası). Erken Orta Çağ ile Geç Orta Çağ arası

The surviving music of the High Middle Ages was primarily religious in nature.

the middle ages
ortaçağ
philosophy in the middle ages
(Eğitim) ortaçağ da felsefe
Englisch - Englisch
The period of time in Europe between the decline of the Roman Empire and the revival of letters (the Renaissance) or, according to Henry Hallam, the period beginning with the sixth and ending with the fifteenth century

She could see the town below her, nestled on top of a low hill, surrounded by a crenellated wall from the Middle Ages.

The Middle Ages form the middle period in a traditional schematic division of European history into three "ages": the classical civilization of Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Modern Times
period in European history which began after the collapse of the West Roman Empire in the 4th and 5th centuries and continued until the Renaissance in 15th century
In European history, the Middle Ages was the period between the end of the Roman Empire in 476 AD and about 1500 AD, especially the later part of this period. The period in European history between antiquity and the Renaissance, often dated from 476 to 1453. the Middle Ages the period in European history between about 1100 and 1500 AD. Period in European history traditionally dated from the fall of the Roman Empire to the dawn of the Renaissance. In the 5th century the Western Roman Empire endured declines in population, economic vitality, and the size and prominence of cities. It also was greatly affected by a dramatic migration of peoples that began in the 3rd century. In the 5th century these peoples, often called barbarians, carved new kingdoms out of the decrepit Western Empire. Over the next several centuries these kingdoms oversaw the gradual amalgamation of barbarian, Christian, and Roman cultural and political traditions. The longest-lasting of these kingdoms, that of the Franks, laid the foundation for later European states. It also produced Charlemagne, the greatest ruler of the Middle Ages, whose reign was a model for centuries to come. The collapse of Charlemagne's empire and a fresh wave of invasions led to a restructuring of medieval society. The 11th-13th centuries mark the high point of medieval civilization. The church underwent reform that strengthened the place of the pope in church and society but led to clashes between the pope and emperor. Population growth, the flourishing of towns and farms, the emergence of merchant classes, and the development of governmental bureaucracies were part of cultural and economic revival during this period. Meanwhile, thousands of knights followed the call of the church to join the Crusades. Medieval civilization reached its apex in the 13th century with the emergence of Gothic architecture, the appearance of new religious orders, and the expansion of learning and the university. The church dominated intellectual life, producing the Scholasticism of St. Thomas Aquinas. The decline of the Middle Ages resulted from the breakdown of medieval national governments, the great papal schism, the critique of medieval theology and philosophy, and economic and population collapse brought on by famine and disease
The period of Western history from the fall of the Roman empire (476 A D ) until the fall of Constantinople to the Turks (1453 A D ) Also known as the Medieval Period and the "Dark Ages " The Middle Ages were characterized by feudalism (rule by independent war-lords and a subjected peasantry) and the dominance of the Catholic Church Preceded by Antiquity and followed by the Renaissance
Time period between ancient GRECO-ROMAN history and modern history Establish by chronologist during the Renaissance as having the value of about a thousand years, the true annual value of the MIDDLE AGES is much less than a thousand years in length
The thousand years before the Renaissance Encompassing the "Dark Ages" in the Early Middle Ages, and the "Gothic" period and the "Age of Chivalry"
The period roughly from the fifth to the fifteenth centuries A D , that is, from the fall of Rome in 476 A D to the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, the invention of the printing press by Johann Gutenberg (1400?-?1468) and the discovery of America in 1492 by Christopher Columbus (1451-1506) During most of this period the leaders of the Roman Church considered the taking of interest (usury) unjust This period, particularly the earlier part of it, is also known as the Dark Ages because of its intellectual and economic stagnation
the period in European history between classical antiquity and the Renaissance, usually regarded as extending from the downfall of Rome, in 476, to about 1450-1500
period of European history that follows antiquity, conventionally regarded as beginning with the fall of Rome to Odoacer in 476 and ending (in Germany) with the death of Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian I in 1519 The use of a single label for this entire thousand-year period conceals a great deal of chronological change and regional variation, yet certain generalizations do apply to the entire period, which is set apart from antiquity and from the modern era by, among other things, the generally unquestioned belief in transcendence (specifically in the Christian religion), the total dominance of the Christian Church (specifically the Roman Catholic) over spiritual and intellectual life, the limited literacy of the laity, the textuality of the culture, the reliance on authority, rather than observation, experience, or human reason as a truth-source, and the emergence and development of the feudal system
Generally the period of time from Augustine to Gutenberg (350-1450)
European historical period between roughly A D 500 and 1450
the period of history between classical antiquity and the Italian Renaissance
The period in European history between antiquity and the Renaissance, often dated from A D 476 to 1453
Early Middle Ages
The period of the Middle Ages from about the fifth to the eleventh centuries that followed the decline of the Roman Empire
High Middle Ages
The period of European history, between the Early Middle Ages and the Late Middle Ages, that saw great social and political change
Late Middle Ages
The period of European history between the High Middle Ages and the Early Modern period
middle age
the period of life between youth and old age; midlife
middle age
the time of life between youth and old age e
high middle ages
The High Middle Ages was the period of European history in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries (AD 1000–1300). The High Middle Ages were preceded by the Early Middle Ages and followed by the Late Middle Ages, which by convention end around 1500
in the Middle Ages
during the Middle Ages, in Medieval times
middle age
transitional age, middle point of one's life, mid-life
middle age
Middle age is the period in your life when you are no longer young but have not yet become old. Middle age is usually considered to take place between the ages of 40 and
middle age
Also called midlife. the period of your life between the ages of about 40 and 60, when you are no longer young but are not yet old
middle age
between 40 and 60 years of age
middle age
the time of life between youth and old age (e g , between 40 and 60 years of age)
middle age
Men tend to put on weight in middle age. The time of human life between youth and old age, usually reckoned as the years between 40 and
middle age
critical age
middle ages

    Silbentrennung

    mid·dle ages

    Türkische aussprache

    mîdıl eycız

    Aussprache

    /ˈmədəl ˈāʤəz/ /ˈmɪdəl ˈeɪʤəz/

    Videos

    ... So, back in the Middle Ages, for example, people read the works of Aristotle.  And ...
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