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What is the most important Event in European History
Since I spotted this particlur question concerning the United States History - and my European History outside of WW1 and WW2 is not as informed as I would like it - I thought maybe a discussion on what is the most important event or group of event (to be fair to European History) in the development of the world.
My prespective is skewed from the viewpoint of the United States. From my prespective the Exploration and Colonization of the New World (The Americas) had a dymantic impact upon the course of world events.
However I am also thinking the Greek experiment in Democracy is also one of the most important historical events in the development of the world.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
I don't know how broad a brush we are allowed to paint with given you mentioned event and groups of events as qualifiable, but I would argue the rise of the rational tradition (5th/4th Century Greece) as the most important.
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Re : What is the most important Event in European History
If we are talking about a single event the French Revolution. Sorry, skewed perspective here too.
For a chain of events, the flowering of the twelfth century. The century Europe was really born in, IMO. From here on, Europe started on it's radically new course which would eventually lead to the modern world.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
I would say the Franco-Prussian War. That began the long, slow military buildup in Europe, allowed Germany to become a single nation (massively influencing European affairs), and started a growing hatred between nations, which reached a head in 1914, WWI. The damage brought upon Germany afterwards caused Hitler's rise/WWII, and you know the story from there, Cold War, terrorism.....
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Pindar
I don't know how broad a brush we are allowed to paint with given you mentioned event and groups of events as qualifiable, but I would argue the rise of the rational tradition (5th/4th Century Greece) as the most important.
I think you have to approach European History with a fairly large brush stroke considering some of the events - like the Hundred Years War.
So yes a broad brush stroke would be apporiate (SP) in this particlur thread given the scope of time and number of cultures involved.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Nice topic. It will be interesting to see the difference between posts from the variety of nationalities around here.
The WW’s really set the stage for who Europe is today but there is so much more that happened… The rise and fall of the Roman Empire, The Philosophy, medical advancements, inventions, Mel Gibson in Bravehart ~;) , etc. but the one thing that impacts everyday life for so many people I think is...
The rise and spread of the Catholic/Christian religion.
Now that’s a broad brush stroke. ~:)
I think there are a lot more topics that are more interesting to me but when I think of an event as a stone and its results as the waves caused by it being tossed into a pond, the near fanatical :charge: spread of Christianity (or whatever term it should be called) was a pretty huge stone that has reached every corner of the world.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
I would have to say the Fall of Rome.
It meant Europe would not be another China; it gave rise to multiple new kingdoms that competed with one another; it gave Europe a written heritage but did not dictate how Europeans interpreted it; it gave rise to struggles between Church and State; it undermined slavery and reoriented the European economy northwards; it transformed social relations, providing fertile ground for everything from feudalism to city-states; it united Germanic vigor and concepts of personal freedom with Greco-Roman language and learning; it not only allowed a new Europe to be born (in the age of Charlemagne and, much more strongly, in the 11th/12th centuries) but also gave it its educaton.
P.S. Can't wait for Barbarian Invasions!
P. P. S. Honourable mention goes to the Industrial Revolution.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Most important chain of events:
The devolpment of modern science, especially physics and chemistry since the renaisance. that really changed the face of civilization.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Magna Carta? Limited the powers of the English King. Set in motion the movement to democracy.
French Revolution is a worthwhile mention.
Perhaps when the Mongols went home after crushing the Polish and Hungarian armies.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Interesting topic.
I'll go with the sack of Rome by the Celtic tribes under Brennus in 387 BCE. This massive humiliation and defeat of the fledgling Roman state, in my view, led to their militarization which in turn led to their conquest and expansion and eventually to the Empire of Rome which affected the history of all of Europe and the Mediterranean from then until now.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
None of that compares to the epic clash of the separate lines of the Homonid species. The Neanderthals had occupied Europe for thousands of years, but a new type of Homonid had been migrating north for a very long time: The Modern Man. It is in Europe where the Neanderthals lost the bid for existance.
It's generally agreed that the Homo Sapiens beat the Neanderthals because of superior ability to communicate, among other things. This far dwarfs the scak of rome--without Homo Sapiens, there might never have been a rome.
That might be so - the problem is that it is not recorded. So lets modify the topic just slightly to state - what is the most important event in Record European History.
I like many of the responses so far. It will be interesting to see how it develops (as more people post).
What about the Renessance (SP) Period - did the events of that period have a major impact on Europe - the histories I have read talk a lot about how the splintering (SP) of the Catholic Church into seperate faiths had some impact on what was going on. Martin Luther seem to have a major impact on Northern parts of Europe.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
This is a really difficult question, because Europe is the craddle of civilization, almost everything that happened there was important. But for modern history i would say two (closely realted): the French Revolution (and all it could have been if the buorgeoisie didn't take the power) and the creation of the Commune of Paris, one of the most relevant evidence that communism works (sure the central power on Paris wiped them out of the planet when they changed their minds and wanted them under their dominion...)
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
I think the most Important was the creation of Roman Empire.They used Hellenistic science, philosophy and Gladius,to create a Europe from various tribes. :bow:
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
The most important event which changed European history is the birth of Christ.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Chrystianity in all its consequences from liberating millions of slaves to the French Revolution and the fall of the SU. ~;)
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by kagemusha
I think the most Important was the creation of Roman Empire.They used Hellenistic science, philosophy and Gladius,to create a Europe from various tribes. :bow:
How would you answer Hurin's point that the fall of Rome is most important because it led to scores of (radically) different and often competing Europes?
I couldn't answer the initial poster's question because of its essentialist nature. If you want to know what 'made' Europe, I think several important developments must be pointed out, among which Pindar's birth of rationality, Cegorach's rise (and fall...) of Christianity and Hurin's 'creative' fragmentation since Charlemagne would all rate at the same level of importance, along with a host of (as yet unmentioned) events, from the scientific break-throughs of a Huygens, Newton, Freud or Pasteur and the political breakthrough of Socialism all the way down to the horror of 'Auschwitz' and all that it entails.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Hm there are lots of important events in European history...
I would say the Reformation as that stopped the power of the church and from that point science had more freedom to develop. It also opened up the society which made more free thinking possible which eventually lead to democracy.
CBR
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
If Hitler have won the war , all of the above was to be just a far memory...some of us even could not be here .
So 1942 to 1944/5 - the most important years/event in Europe (and in North Africa and the M. East) .
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by AdrianII
How would you answer Hurin's point that the fall of Rome is most important because it led to scores of (radically) different and often competing Europes?
I couldn't answer the initial poster's question because of its essentialist nature. If you want to know what 'made' Europe, I think several important developments must be pointed out, among which Pindar's birth of rationality, Cegorach's rise (and fall...) of Christianity and Hurin's 'creative' fragmentation since Charlemagne would all rate at the same level of importance, along with a host of (as yet unmentioned) events, from the scientific break-throughs of a Huygens, Newton, Freud or Pasteur and the political breakthrough of Socialism all the way down to the horror of 'Auschwitz' and all that it entails.
Im aware of this.I thought only to post my opinion.Its very hard to name just one event.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by AdrianII
I couldn't answer the initial poster's question because of its essentialist nature. If you want to know what 'made' Europe, I think several important developments must be pointed out, among which Pindar's birth of rationality, Cegorach's rise (and fall...) of Christianity and Hurin's 'creative' fragmentation since Charlemagne would all rate at the same level of importance, along with a host of (as yet unmentioned) events, from the scientific break-throughs of a Huygens, Newton, Freud or Pasteur and the political breakthrough of Socialism all the way down to the horror of 'Auschwitz' and all that it entails.
I actually like that answer Adrian, it shows a better understanding of History then most. The course of development of any culture, group of nations, or even a single nation is based upon many different events. To narrow down it down to one event is indeed essentialist in nature.
But its an interesting discussion because of that - it shows what individuals think about what was the most important thing to them concerning the history. There is a philisophical (SP) reason for doing this - but that would be a Backroom thread not a Monastery one.
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Re : What is the most important Event in European History
French Revolution
Retreat of the Mongols in the 13th century
Fall of the Roman Empire
Reformation
And so on... you can't really say there's a 'most important event', because unlike America history (no offense intended here), there are a whole lot of different point of views there. As a French, I'd say the French Revolution/Napoleonic Era, but people from Italy and Greece might say 'the beginning/end of the roman empire', people from Eastern europe might say 'the retreat of the mongol hords' or 'the Yalta treaty',etc.
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Re: Re : What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Meneldil
And so on... you can't really say there's a 'most important event', because unlike America history (no offense intended here), there are a whole lot of different point of views there. As a French, I'd say the French Revolution/Napoleonic Era, but people from Italy and Greece might say 'the beginning/end of the roman empire', people from Eastern europe might say 'the retreat of the mongol hords' or 'the Yalta treaty',etc.
You missed the point I believe - its all about the different points of view - and it will be based upon what regions the individual lives in.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by kagemusha
Its very hard to name just one event.
Exactly. For the same reason, I am sure that Hurin would agree with you that without the institutional inheritance of the Roman Empire, in particular Roman law, the long period of fragmentation that followed wouldn't have been nearly as fruitful.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
I think the most important event in European history be the apreance of the heavy armored lancer pionered by the Sarmatians and Parthians that the Goths and otherr Germanics, as well as the Romans adopted.
Without it, there would be no knights, and the warfare of Europe would have gone down a very different path.
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Re : Re: Re : What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Redleg
You missed the point I believe - its all about the different points of view - and it will be based upon what regions the individual lives in.
Oh, sorry for misunderstanding the question. I'd have to say that the French Revolution was really important, but obviously, I'm biased here :bow:
On a larger scale, then I'done could say that the 9th century (as a group of events) was fairly important, since it was more or less the era that saw the creation of many european modern states (France, Germany and Italy with the collapse of the Carolingian Empire, Poland, England - I think the Anglo-saxons more or less ruled all of modern day England in the 9th C -, Scotland - I think the Kingdom of Alba was 'created' in 843 - The Scandinavian States, Bohemia, Hungary - not sure about this though, the Magyars might have settled there a bit later, in the early 10th - , Russia with the beginnings of Kievan Rus, and Spain - as the different Spanish Kingdoms saw the Reconquista as one of their main aim.)
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Re: Re : Re: Re : What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Meneldil
Oh, sorry for misunderstanding the question. I'd have to say that the French Revolution was really important, but obviously, I'm biased here :bow:
No problem - since I wanted to see how others viewed their own history or the history of the world. That is why I made the question so generalized.
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Originally Posted by AdrianII
Exactly. For the same reason, I am sure that Hurin would agree with you that without the institutional inheritance of the Roman Empire, in particular Roman law, the long period of fragmentation that followed wouldn't have been nearly as fruitful.
So, If I understand this statment correctly - the insitutions established by Rome have survived the ages and most modern government institutions follow the Roman model.
I think this is correct in part. Take for instance Modern Armies - while they l organization of squads, plts, and on up are different then the Roman model - the overall concept of having an established military organization broken down to managable levels traces itself back to the Roman Legions. There were other armies that might have done the same thing - but I do believe the Roman Model is the main basis for our current military organization. At least it is in the United States.
Roman Law models - I am not so sure of - but given the military model - I can concide that point.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Here is short article about Roman Legacy .Also many great modern cities of Europe was founded by Romans. :bow:
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Re: Re : Re: Re : What is the most important Event in European History
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Originally Posted by Redleg
So, If I understand this statement correctly - the institutions established by Rome have survived the ages and most modern government institutions follow the Roman model.
In one way or another, many later European kingdoms and principalities, institutions and schools of thought borrowed heavily from their Roman predecessors: in military affairs, in architecture (good point there, Kagemusha), literature, law -- you name it.
When it comes to the many diverging European traditions that each took up this Roman inheritance, the differences count as much as the similarities of course. That's where Hurin's notion of the importance of competing European nations, institutions and traditions comes in. The shared Roman inheritance, in combination with the shared religion of Christianity, helped to forge a sense of common destiny for the continent. On the other hand the competition for riches, power, empire and prestige drove Europeans and their nations in very different directions.
The lack of such inherent competition would explain, for instance, why the Chinese never bothered to develop their maritime and naval capacity after Admiral Zheng's remarkable odyssee, discussed elsewhere in the Monastery.
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Re: What is the most important Event in European History
Thanks AdrianII - going to have to find that thread.
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Re: Re : Re: Re : What is the most important Event in European History
the law from now is actually napoleons, but before him romans and actually greek.