Writers of histories are not agreed as to just when the Middle Ages came to an end; but all unite in saying that the change had come by about the year 1500. If we ask what this change was, the question is easy to answer, though perhaps hard to understand. When men had come to think different thoughts, and live under different institutions, in the Church and in the State, from those we have been describing, then the end of the Middle Ages had come. Feudalism ceased to be a sufficient tie to bind men together in society, and national states arose. Chivalry ceased to be the noble institution its founders had hoped to make of it and became a picturesque mimicry of high sentiment, without real hold on the life of the time. Men came to rely less upon their guilds and communes, their orders and classes, and act more for themselves as individuals. Ignorance, too, became less dense; and as men learned more of the world, and of themselves, superstition became less universal and degrading...
The Story of the Middle Ages
The Dark Ages 476-918 A.D. : A Classic Study of Medieval Europe's Turmoil and Transformation by Charles Oman
Charles Oman, Zenith Horizon Publishing
bookEarly Middle Ages, 500-1000
Robert Brentano
bookThe Story of Civilization Volume 2: The Medieval World :
Phillip Campbell
audiobookThe First Crusade: A New History
Thomas Asbridge
bookThe History of the Crusades (Vol.1-3) : Complete Edition
Joseph François Michaud
bookThe Middle Ages
Victor Duruy
bookWaking Up : A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion
Sam Harris
audiobookbookGod's Battalions : The Case for the Crusades
Rodney Stark
audiobookThe End of Faith
Sam Harris
audiobookA History of the Franks
Gregory of Tours
bookFree Will
Sam Harris
audiobookbookThe Medieval Anarchy: History in an Hour
Kaye Jones
audiobook