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Chapter 10. Renaissance & Discovery. The Renaissance. “rebirth”; transition from medieval to modern times. Medieval Europe (pre-12 th c.) fragmented, feudal society agricultural economy church-dominated thought & culture. Renaissance Europe (post-14th c.)
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Chapter 10 Renaissance & Discovery
The Renaissance “rebirth”; transition from medieval to modern times • Medieval Europe (pre-12th c.) • fragmented, feudal society • agricultural economy • church-dominated thought & culture • Renaissance Europe (post-14th c.) • political centralization & national feelings • urban, commercial-capitalist economy • growing lay/secular control of thought & culture
Renaissance (1300–1600) • Revival of the ancient classics • Values • Humanism • Individualism • Secularism (not necessarily anti-religious) • Vehicles • Commerce • Invention • Why Italy? • Gateway between East and West > Trade & Wealth
The Italian City-State • Like tiny countries > Milan, Venice, Florence, Naples, Papal States • Left to develop by endemic warfare between popes & Holy Roman emperors • Characterized by intense social strife & competition for political power • Social classes: old rich, new rich, small business owners, poor • Poor people revolt > Ciompi Revolt • Cosimo de’ Medici—Florentine banker & statesman > Medici family > most powerful • City-states ruled through despotism? • Govt. where ruler exercises absolute power • Used mercenaries to achieve success • Goal > maintain law and order • Art & culture flourished nonetheless, because of the profusion of wealth • Florence > cultural center of Renaissance > financial center for the arts
Humanism • The scholarly study of Greek & Latin classics and the ancient Church Fathers, in hopes of reviving worthy ancient values • Advocated studia humanitatis: liberal arts study (grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, politics, philosophy)—to celebrate the dignity of humankind & prepare for life of virtuous action • Italian humanists searched out manuscript collections, making volumes of Greek & Latin learning available to scholars • Civic humanists • Govt. workers in Italian city-states • Basically, humanists want to add to the greater good of humanity
Famous Humanists • Francesco Petrarch “Father of Humanism” • Modeled the study of the classics • Mocks Medieval Christian values • Letters to the Ancient Dead & love sonnets to Laura • Dante Alighieri • Divine Comedy • Souls journey to God • Formed cornerstone of Italian literature • Giovanni Boccaccio (boh-kah-chee-oh) • Decameron • Focuses on human ability • Collector of classics • Lorenzo Valla • Catholic • Influenced Protestant reformers • Donation of Constantine • Challenged the authority of the papacy • Father of modern criticism
Renaissance Art • Embraced natural world & human emotion • Medieval art more abstract & almost always religious • Works characterized by rational order, symmetry, proportionality • Linear Perspective • Depth (3D Look) & Realism • Chiaroscuro • Treatment of light and shade • Intense contrast • Sfumato • Allowing tones and colors to shade gradually into one another • Creating a soft look (Mona Lisa) • Classical Themes • Greek, Roman, and Biblical figures are commonly incorporated • Key Point • Humanism a major influence on Renaissance art
Famous Italian Renaissance Artists • Donatello (1386-1466): Florentine sculptor influenced other Italian artists of Renaissance; David & St. Mark (famous sculptures) • Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519): lived Renaissance ideal of the universal person: painter, advisor to kings, engineer, physiologist, botanist, etc.; Mona Lisa (most famous painting in the world) • Raphael (1483–1520): large Vatican fresco: The School of Athens • Michelangelo (1475–1564): 18-foot sculpture of David; Sistine Chapel frescoes—10,000 sq. ft., 343 figures, 4 years to complete
Mannerism (Renaissance Art) • New style develops during High Renaissance • Mannerism > makes room for the strange and abnormal > freer reign to the individual to paint > dramatic surreal depictions • Artists > El Greco & Tintoretto
Da Vinci’s Notebook
Slavery in the Renaissance • Slavery flourishes during the Renaissance as much as Art & Culture • Slavery increases • Black Death (1348-1350) causes a demand • Household/Domestic slavery popular • Plantations in the New World & in the Mediterranean Sea • Slavery existed a long time in Europe even back to the Ancient Greeks • Europeans see themselves as liberating slaves from their captors
The French Invasions (1494–1527) • Italy > fragmented > always cooperated during time of invasion > this would change at times • Milan and Naples fighting late 1400s • Despot Ludovico il Moro of Milan invited French to aid him • Fatal mistake • French always had dynastic claims in Italy • Once French are in, they don’t want to leave without gaining territorial rights • Spain gets involved & forms an alliance with Italian city-states > League of Venice • Famous figures • French King Charles VIII – successor Louis XII • Pope Alexander VI • Pope Julius II (warrior pope) • Conclusion > France invaded three times • Leads to future wars between France & Spain • Idea of Italian nationalism • OMG it spreads humanism to the north • Italian political decline
Niccolò Machiavelli (1469–1527) • Convinced by chaos of foreign invasions that Italian political unity & independence were ends justifying any means • Concluded only a strongman could impose order on a divided & selfish people (Italians) • Admirer of Roman rulers & citizens • Believer in virtu • Ability to act decisively and heroically for the good of the country • The Prince (1513) • Recommends temporary use of fraud & brutality to achieve Italian unity • Hoped for strong ruler from the Medici family
Revival of Monarchy • After 1450, divided feudal monarchies unified national monarchies • Rise of Nationalism • Rise of towns, alliance of growing business classes with kings—broke bonds of feudal society • Representative assemblies form • Example > English Parliament • The sovereign state: • Powers of taxation, war making, law enforcement no longer reside with semiautonomous vassals, but with monarch & royal agents • Law created order • Large standing armies > power • Taxation > created source of income > need for? • Examples > tax on food & clothes, direct tax What is a monarchy?
Revival of Monarchy (cont.) • Shift > Feudal Monarchy to National Monarchy • France • Collapse of English Empire in France after Hundred Years’ War, 1453 • Ruled by Bourbon dynasty (Louis XI > ) • Builds strong army during Hundred Years’ War • Strong economy • Powerful nobility weakens King • Efficient govt. but bad foreign policy (lots of wars) • Spain • 1469 marriage of Isabella of Castile & Ferdinand of Aragon • Together secured borders, ventured abroad militarily, Christianized Spain • Brought Spanish church under state control, ended toleration of Jews & Muslims • Sponsored Christopher Columbus, leading to Spanish Empire in Mexico & Peru • Helped make Spain the dominant European power in 16th Century
Revival of Monarchy (cont.) • England • Turmoil of Wars of the Roses, 1455–1485 (Lancaster vs. York) > Civil War • 1485 Battle of Bosworth Field seats Henry VII, first Tudor monarch • Tudor dynasty will dominate throughout the 16th century • Used English law for monarch’s benefit • Holy Roman Empire • Germany & Italy exceptions to 15th-c. centralizing trend • The many (princes) fought off the one (emperor) • Divided into some 300 autonomous entities • Princes did not want national unity • 7 man electoral college of the major territories to elect the emperor • Basically, princes shared executive power with the emperor (Maximilien I) • Emperor a member of Habsburg family dynasty • Disunity leads to religious dissent & conflict
The Northern Renaissance • Northern humanists • Developed own distinctive culture • More diverse social backgrounds • More interested than Italians in? • Religious reform & educating laity • Social reform based on Christian principles • Printing press with movable type: Johann Gutenberg, Mainz, mid-15th c. • Precursors: rise of schools & literacy (demand for books); invention of cheap paper • By 1500, printing presses running in more than 200 cities in Europe • People could popularize their viewpoints freely & widely? • Humanist ideas spread (made them famous) • Rulers in church & state now had to deal with more educated, critical public • Powerful tool of religious/political propaganda for Rulers • Works being printed in the vernacular • More people learning to read & write in their language • Result????????? • Divide between educated and non-educated starts to break down
Northern Renaissance Cont. • Again, more concerned with religion than Italians were • Linked Humanism more with Christianity • Classical ideas + Christian values = Virtuous Conduct • Civic Humanism > Make society better > social reform • Famous Northern Humanists • William Shakespeare > known for romance and comedy • Humanism, Appreciation for classical culture, and Importance of individual • Sir Thomas More > Utopia > Perfect society?? • Critique of society • Erasmus > Most famous (he gets a entire slide next) • Geoffrey Chaucer > Canterbury Tales • First significant work written in the English vernacular • Education more of a central focus • Separate education from Catholic doctrine • More Secular topics • Northern Renaissance Artists • Albrecht Durer > visits Italy > spreads techniques to North • Jan Van Eyck > Flemish artist > perfected painting with oils
Erasmus • Most famous northern humanist • Educational and religious reformer • Wanted reform in the Catholic Church • Aspired to unite classical ideals of humanity and civic virtue with the Christian ideals of love and piety • Reform society with bible and study of classics • Major works • The Praise of Folly > satire > shot at the immorality and hypocrisy of church leaders (Pope Julius II) • Adages > collection of ancient & contemporary proverbs • Philosophia Christi > states his own beliefs • Edited the works of Church Fathers and produced Greek edition of the New Testament • Church not happy • Erasmus works make Index of Forbidden Books • Basically believed dogma overshadowed Christian piety practice
Exploration & Empire, East & West • Portuguese: exploration of African coast, leading to sea-route around Africa to Asian spice markets; African slave trade • Bartholomew Dias: rounded Cape of Good Hope • Vasco de Gama: reached India • Columbus, 1492: thought Cuba was Japan & South America was China • Amerigo Vespucci, 1497: explored South American coastline • Ferdinand Magellan (d. 1521), 1519–1522: first circumnavigation • Consequences of discovery • Lasting imprint of Roman Catholicism • Biological impact of exchanging plant & animal species, diseases, etc. • Native American devastation • Economic dependency • Hierarchical social structure
Spanish Empire in the New World • Two Examples of Spanish conquest • Aztecs of Mexico – group of Native Americans who ruled all of central Mexico conquered by Hernan Cortesfrom Spain • Incas of Peru – large Native American empire in Western South America conquered by Francisco Pizarro who executes their leader Atahualpa Significance • One of the most dramatic and brutal events in modern history • Showed European superiority as far as weapons • Spread of European diseases to the natives • Whole civilizations destroyed • Marked a new transformation of South America into Latin America
The Church in Spanish America • The conquerors wanted to convert the captured native people to Christianity and to accept European culture • Some religious leaders felt the natives were being treated poorly such as Bartolome de Las Casas • “Black Legend” emerges from his writings • All Spanish treatment of natives is inhumane • Some of it is exaggerated > Some is true • Despite the opposition the Roman Catholic Church becomes one of the most powerful conservative forces in Latin America • In the end colonial church prospers by receiving land in the new world
Latin America Exploitation • Mining – the Spanish conquistadores or conquerors mined gold and silver with forced labor • Agriculture – on haciendas, large land estates owned by the peninsulares (people born in Spain) and creoles (people of Spanish descent born in America) used forced labor for mining, farming and ranching • Plantations in the West Indies used slaves to get sugar • Economic activity in government offices, the legal profession, and shipping • Labor servitude in order of appearance • Encomienda – a formal grant of the right to the labor of a specific number of Indians • Repartimiento – required adult male Indians to devote a certain number of days of labor annually to Spanish economic enterprises • Debt peonage – Indian laborers required to purchase goods from the landowner to who they were forever indebted • Slavery
Renaissance (Big Picture) • Emphasis on the importance of the individual would later become part of the foundation that would drive the development of democratic governments and capitalist economic systems in Europe & North America • Increased skepticism about the ancients • Why? Think of geography • At first condemned for the treatments of the native populations, Columbus and other explorers are hailed 300 years later for opening up the world to new civilizations • Exploration showed dark side of Western Civ. • Influx of spices and precious metals increases inflation in Europe • Inflation > economic problem • New wealth however increased the expansion of printing, shipping, mining, textile, and weapons industries • Foundations for modern states are set • Rebirth of intellectual and artistic activity • Still use artistic techniques today