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Discover how the Renaissance in Italy shaped art, culture, and society, leading to significant changes in Europe and beyond. Learn about key figures, humanist values, and the impact on politics and religion.
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Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance 1.1 Page 37
Renaissance • Means “Rebirth” • In terms of art and learning • Goal to bring back culture & life of classical Greece and Rome
City States • Northern Italy grew • Overseas trade caused by crusades • Norther Italy Urban, Rest of Europe Rural • 1300’s bubonic plague struck the cities hard • Fewer laborers= higher wages • Business pursued other interests - Art
Merchants • Did not inherit social rank • Had to work hard & became extremely involved in politics • Late 1200’s Florence came under influence of a banking family Medici • 1434 Won control of Florence’s government • Influenced ruling council by giving them loans • Passed the dictatorship down to his grandson
Studying History • Renaissance scholars looked down on the art of the middle ages • Wanted to return to the learning of the greeks and romans • Grew inspiration from the Ruins of Rome • Studied old manuscripts
Worldly Values • Humanism - an intellectual movement that focused on human potential and achievements • Secular - Worldly rather than spiritual and concerned with the here and now • Enjoy life without offending God & could enjoy luxuries • Patrons - financially supporting artists • Self portraits
Men & Women • Men who excelled in many fields • Praised as “Universal Man” or “Renaissance Men” • Women expected to know classics & be charming • Not to seek fame • Inspire art but not create it • Little influence in politics
Artists • Leonardo da Vinci - Mona Lisa • Raphael - Madonna & Child • Donatello - David • Michelangelo -
Machiavelli • Wrote The Prince • Political Guide Book
Main Idea • In the 1400’s the ideas of the Italian Renaissance began to spread to Northern Europe
Northern Renaissance • 1450 - population began to grow from bubonic plague • Cities grew after 100 years war • England & France monarchs sponsor monarchs • French King invades Italy • Italian artists flee North to safety
Writers • Italians bring classical languages & texts to the North • Use to examine the church • Utopia • An imaginary place where greed corruption & war have been weeded out.
Elizabethan Age • Renaissance spread to England • Named after Queen Elizabeth I • Shakespeare • Famous writer of the day
Printing • Gutenberg • changed the ways of printing • Made it easier for books to be made • Were made cheaper, faster & more widespread
Legacy of Renaissance • Period of Great Social Change • Changed Arts to model various ideal • Changed society • Spread of word • More books • new maps/discoveries • Laws • Question Religious practices
Luther Leads the Reformation 1.3 Page 54
Causes of Reformation • Printing spread ideas of secular & individual • Rulers challenge churches political power • Merchants in Germany started the movement
Problems with Church • Leaders were corrupt • Fought wars & spent on personal pleasures • Pope Alexander VI admitted to fathering many children • Some married, drank, gambled excessively & could barely read
Martin Luther • Monk & Teacher • Took a stance against Johann Tetzel • Selling indulgence to rebuild St. Peter's Cathedral • Wrote 95 Theses
Luther Cont. • 3 main ideas • People could win salvation only by faith in God's gift of forgiveness. The Church taught that faith and "good works" were needed for salvation • All church teachings should be clearly based on the words of the Bible. Both the pope and Church traditions were false authorities. • All people with faith were equal. Therefore, people did not need priests to interpret the bible for them.
Response • Popes Threat • Excommunicate Luther • Emperor's Opposition • Holy Roman Emperor summoned Luther to stand trial • Princes loyal to pope signed a agreement to join forces • Princes loyal to Luther signed a protest & became known as Protestants
England • Henry VIII • Wanted a son • Wanted to divorce first wife, Pope refused to annul the marriage • Henry asks parliament to get rid of churches power over England
England Cont. • Henry Secretly marries Anne Boleyn • Parliament approved Act of Supremacy - Breaking ties with the pope • Anne failed to give a son - Accused of treason & beheaded • Henry marries Jane Seymour - She gives a son but dies • Henry marries 3 more times
Elizabeth • Puts England to Protestantism • Makes England relatively peaceful with religion
The Reformation Continues 1.4 Pg. 61
Calvin • Published "Institutes of the Christian Religion" • Expressed ideas about God, salvation, and human nature • Said God chooses very few people to save & people could not earn salvation • Doctrine was called predestination & religion based on Calvin "Calvinism
Calvin Cont. • Ideal Gov. was Theocracy - A government controlled by religious leaders
Other Reforms • Anabaptists - people who were baptized as children should be rebaptized as adults • Church & state should be separate • Women - some influence over husbands to influence reforms
Catholic Reformation • Helping Catholics remain loyal • Also called Counter Reformation
Reforming Popes • Council of Trent • The Church's interpretation of the Bible was final. Anyone who said different was a heretic • Christians needed faith & good works for salvation. They were not saved by faith alone. • The Bible and Church tradition were equally powerful authorities for guiding Christian life • Indulgences were valid expressions of faith. But the selling of indulgences was banned
Reforming Popes Cont. • List of books dangerous to Catholic faith • Index of Forbidden Books • Burn over 10,000 books