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Modern World History Course 2.4 English Democratic Traditions 43 Views
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Transcript
- 00:03
Ah, the Middle Ages... the time of wars, dirt, and no flushing [Man riding a horse]
- 00:08
toilets. Those were the good old days... for sowing seeds of modern democracy. Well,
- 00:14
let's get this party started with some feudalism. That's how parties usually [Man holding a glass of wine]
- 00:17
start, right? Well, in each town or village in western Europe, there was a lord who
- 00:21
was the local landowner and queen bee. You could say the lord was the Regina
Full Transcript
- 00:25
George of the village. Acreage equaled attitude in those days. Vassals were
- 00:30
lower in the social hierarchy. They depended on their lord to give them land, [Man working hard for a lord]
- 00:34
which they then farmed. Vassals returned a portion of what they earn from their
- 00:39
efforts back to the lord. So lords were the original Hollywood agents... gotta
- 00:44
love that ten percent. And to top it all off, when things got real, the vassals had
- 00:48
to serve in the lord's militia. We guess there were some perks. The vassals [Man dressed in armor holding a sword]
- 00:53
got protection from their lord, as well as certain guaranteed rights and lessons
- 00:56
in conflict resolution. Well, this system worked pretty well for a long time.
- 01:00
Nobody had too much of anything, and the lords and vassals had a touching [Lord and Vassal at a table eating and drinking wine]
- 01:04
relationship that benefited all. I love you, you love me... you know the drill.
- 01:08
Eventually, however, things got complicated. Don't they always? Well,
- 01:13
groups of lords banded together and picked one queen bee to rule them all.[Lords together deciding one ruler]
- 01:16
The queen bee became the king bee, and wouldn't you know it, all the plebs in
- 01:20
Europe were happy to keep pledging their loyalty to the lord of the lords, so long as
- 01:25
he kept them safe. Lesser lords were also cool with this situation, so long as the [King stood at the top of a castle tower]
- 01:30
king didn't make them mad. Looks like we figured out where Tina Fey got the
- 01:34
inspiration for Mean Girls. But, as we all know, it only takes one bad apple to
- 01:39
screw things up for everybody else... a bad seed, a bad egg--basically someone yucky. [A lord eating a bad apple]
- 01:44
Enter King John, the big yuck-o who ruled England for about 15 years at the
- 01:49
beginning of the 13th century. Well, King John's political smarts were less than [King John with a priest]
- 01:53
stellar. First, he got into it with the Catholic Church, and then he raised taxes
- 01:58
after losing a battle in France. Nobody likes a loser, and that included the
- 02:02
nobility of England, who decided it was time to limit the King's power with a [A giant boulder almost hits King John]
- 02:06
little document we like to call the Magna Carta. It looked like this... just
- 02:11
kidding, it was one of these boring guys. Can't blame us for trying
- 02:14
to liven up history though, right? We here in the US of A abide by a system called [The congress building]
- 02:18
civil law. We have a constitution--actually, a lot of constitutions--from
- 02:22
which all things legal flow. Well, British common law, which got its start with the
- 02:26
Magna Carta, is different. Instead of basing everything on written laws only, [Pen scribbles out the word only]
- 02:31
the Brits also rely on something called precedent. No, not president. They've got a
- 02:36
prime minister, but that's not the point. Precedent means that a judge decided [A judge using a gavel]
- 02:40
something like a million years ago, and yeah, it seemed to work then, so that same
- 02:45
decision gets applied to the same situation over and over and over and
- 02:48
over again today. Because if history doesn't repeat itself enough on its own,
- 02:51
well, we may as well help it along. Well, as the centuries passed, the group of lords [Man in court with a judge]
- 02:55
determined to keep a check on the king stayed a group of lords determined to
- 02:59
keep a check on the king, only they changed their name to "Parliament." During
- 03:04
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Parliament operated independently of the
- 03:08
king and took on more and more of the work of governing England. Well,
- 03:11
Parliament also incorporated representatives from different social
- 03:15
classes in different areas of the country into itself. It did pretty well
- 03:19
despite having such a silly name. You couldn't have just gone with something
- 03:22
simple like, we don't know, Trevor? So checks on the executive, government that [Person scribbles out Parliament and writes Trevor]
- 03:27
benefits and is representative of everyone, a hatred of taxes? You know, the
- 03:31
English government of the Middle Ages had it all, and today so does our
- 03:34
democracy. But you know what? We've got the Statue of Liberty and all Britain
- 03:38
has is a really fat dude named Ben. That's not right, is it? [A man called Ben stood by the Big Ben Clocktower]
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