Yeah, the dates are all very approximate. "The Middle Ages" was a long time, at any rate. And the term itself implies it was all just one long interruption between the Classical Age and the Italian Renaissance.Sigh. Alas, the days of my undergraduacy were spent studying business and IT subjects, so I never started learning history until my mid-late 20s. I still made up for lost time by reading as widely as I could, studying everything from the fall of Rome (and back to the Sumerians, Egyptians and Greeks), through the Byzantines, the rise of Islam, the Viking age and the Crusades, on to the Mongols and the eventual Renaissance (and beyond).
True, it's a tremendously long subject, and the list above only gives you the "highlights".
Catrin, just wondering: what do you make of the period roughly bordered by 500-1000 AD? This used to be called 'The Dark Ages', but I've recently read The Bright Ages by Perry and Gabriele, in which the two authors argue that 'the Dark Ages' is a misnomer. (I've also seen the same argument put forward in Dr. Ian Mortimer's Medieval Horizons).
It's hard to know what to make of it. The 'Dark Ages' in Europe were not gloomy and uneducated everywhere, but equally there was plenty of war, poverty and misery.
I also feel that 1500 AD is a bit generous for ending the Middle Ages, maybe. But then again, it depends on context: are we talking about Constantinople's fall in 1453? the Battle of Bosworth Field, 1485? Columbus's sailing of 1492? Or the English reformation (1517)?
Or perhaps we mean literature and art, in which case the Renaissance begins in Italy ... but again, exact year or place are impossible to define. Can we date it back to 14th-century Florence, with the writings of Petrarch and Dante, and the paintings of Giotto? Or maybe 1401 Florence, with the rise of Ghiberti and Brunelleschi? Ack. There's so much debate around this subject, maybe I should stop before professional historians start flaming me.![]()
As to the earlier part of it, I can remember where I was sitting (at my drafting table in Summer studio in architecture school) when it hit me that the "Dark Ages" are called that not because nothing happened during that time, or even less, because the sun never shone then (Though maybe that was true for A.D. 536!), but because our awareness of that time is dark.
I haven't thought about the pre-1000 period a lot lately. I have to admit it didn't interest me that much in college, me being an architecture student and more into buildings than jewelry and other decorative arts. I've come to appreciate it a lot more since, especially books like the Lindesfarne Gospels and the Book of Kells.
Gotta admit, though, it's the 12th century Renaissance that excites me the most. So darn much going on!
Your own interests are, dare I say it, inspiring. I'm glad I'm not the only one with a strong historical perspective.