Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
of the later Crusades, but both were failures, and he met
his death during an invasion of North Africa.

PHILIP IV AND THE ESTATES-GENERAL One of Louis’s suc-
cessors, Philip IV the Fair (1285–1314), was particu-
larly effective in strengthening the French monarchy.
The machinery of governmentbecame even more special-
ized. French kings going back to the early Capetians had
possessed a household staff for running their affairs.
Over time, however, this household staff was enlarged
and divided into three groups to form three major
branches of royal administration: a council for advice, a
chamber of accounts for finances, and theParlement

(par-luh-MAHNH) or royal court (the French Parlement
was not the same as the English Parliament). By the be-
ginning of the fourteenth century, the Capetians had
established an efficient royal bureaucracy.
Philip IV also brought a French parliament into being
by summoning representatives of the three estates, or
classes—the clergy (First Estate), the nobles (Second
Estate), and the townspeople (Third Estate)—to meet
with him. They did so in 1302, inaugurating the Estates-
General, the first French parliament, although it had lit-
tle real power. By the end of the thirteenth century,
France was the largest, wealthiest, and best-governed
monarchical state in Europe.

SCOTLAND

North
Sea

ENGLAND

IRELAND

FLANDERS

London

Englis
h^

Cha

nn
el^

Atlantic
Ocean

ÎLE-
DE-
FRANCE

GASCONY

MAINE

AQUITAINE

POITOU

ANJOU

BRITTANY

NORMANDY

TOURAINE

BOURBON

BURGUNDY

CHAMPAGNE
BLOIS
Bourges

Paris

Bordeaux

Poitiers

HOLY
ROMAN
EMPIRE

LANGUEDOC
TOULOUSE

Lyons

Toulouse
SPAIN

NAVARRE Avignon

0 100 200 Miles

0 100 200 300 Kilometers

French royal domain, 1180
French royal acquisitions:
1180–1223
1223–1337
English lands

SCOTLAND

ENGLAND

IRELAND

Atlantic
Ocean

ÎLE-
DE-
FRANCE

HOLY
ROMAN
EMPIRE

Englis
h^
Ch

an
ne
l^

MARCHE

PERIGORD AUVERGNE

York

Cambridge
Oxford London
Canterbury

MAINE

AQUITAINE

POITOU

ANJOU

BRITTANY

NORMANDY

TOURAINE

BOURBON

BURGUNDY

CHAMPAGNE

BLOIS

North
Sea

GASCONY

0 100 200 Miles

0 100 200 300 Kilometers

French fiefs possessed, 1154
French fiefs possessed, 1252
To France, 1214

MAP 10.1England and France (1154–1337): (left) England and Its French Holdings; (right)
Growth of the French State.King Philip II Augustus of France greatly expanded the power of the
Capetian royal family through his victories over the Plantagenet monarchy of England, which
enabled Philip to gain control over much of north-central France.

Q How might the English Channel have made it more difficult for the English kings to
rule their French possessions?

226 Chapter 10 The Rise of Kingdoms and the Growth of Church Power

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