140 likes | 253 Views
Chapter 5 Section 2 Enlightenment Ideas Spread. Mr. Bellisario Woodridge High School First Period World History August 29 & 30, 2013. Prior to the Enlightenment, no one questioned…. Divine right rule Class systems Belief in going to heaven b/c of earthly suffering.
E N D
Chapter 5 Section 2Enlightenment Ideas Spread Mr. Bellisario Woodridge High School First Period World History August 29 & 30, 2013
Prior to the Enlightenment, no one questioned… • Divine right rule • Class systems • Belief in going to heaven b/c of earthly suffering
Enlightenment Effect on Arts(Courtly Art) Baroque • A grand and complex artistic style, during Louis XIV’s rule, early 1700’s • Huge colorful paintings • Glorified battles & Roman Catholic saints
Enlightenment Effect on Arts(Courtly Art) Rococo More personal art Elegant, charming & delicate
Enlightenment Effect on Arts(Middle class audience – merchants & town officials) • Wanted self-portraits without frills, family life in town or country setting • Rembrandt • Dutch artist • Gave dignity to middle-class subjects
Trends in music • Operas & ballets • Plays put to music • Orderly & structured • Opera houses opened • Johann Bach • Complex & beautiful • Religious works for organ & choir • George Handel – most famous for the “Messiah” • Mozart
Novels (wrote about the common folk) • Daniel Defoe – (Robinson Crusoe) – adventures of shipwrecked sailor • Samuel Richardson – (Pamela) – story about servant girl
Salons • Social gatherings where artists & thinkers exchange ideas. • Began by women, poetry readings.
Lives of the majority were unaffected by the Enlightenment, especially peasants who lived in small villages • Some peasants worked on patches of land • Tenant farmers paid yearly rents, showed little or no profit • Day laborers hired themselves out to work other’s farms • In France peasants had to provide free labor, building roads & bridges • In England peasants had to allow lords to fox hunt on their land, fields ripped up, crops destroyed
Censorship • Restricting people from hearing or reading about new ideas or new information • Old order was supposedly set up by God – Roman Catholic church leaders & government felt they had to protect people from new ideas • Banned books • Put writers in prison
Enlightened Despots • Rulers who accepted Enlightened ideas & brought about reforms to their nations • However, they never attempted to give-up their power.
Enlightenment Despots Catherine the Great (Russia) • Exchanged letters with Diderot & Voltaire • Limited reform • Spoke out against serfdom (farmers who worked for nobles & had no rights)
Enlightenment DespotsFredrick the Great • Listened to & reads Voltaire who built Prussian Academy of Science • Had agricultural reforms • Drained swamps • New crops like potatoes • Gave seed & tools to peasants who suffered in Prussian wars • Tolerated religious differences, said “everyone can go to heaven in his own fashion” • Reorganized civil service, simplified laws
Enlightenment DespotsJoseph II • Most radical • Traveled in disguise among subjects to learn of their problems, called “Peasant Emperor” • Gave religious toleration to Protestants & Jews in Catholic Austria • Sold monasteries & convents, used proceeds to build hospitals • Abolished serfdom • Ended censorship