240 likes | 552 Views
Italian Renaissance. 1450-1527. Italian Renaissance. Italian City States . Northern Italian cities began to expand international trade Genoa, Venice, Milan Government structure of city states: Signori (despots) or Oligarchies: Merchants controlled much of Italy by 1300
E N D
Italian Renaissance 1450-1527
Italian City States • Northern Italian cities began to expand international trade • Genoa, Venice, Milan • Government structure of city states: • Signori (despots) or Oligarchies: Merchants controlled much of Italy by 1300 • This created Comunes: Merchants and Merchant-adventurers. Economic agreement.
Results of Comunes • Italy became very urban. • Cities grew and populations soared like never before. • Great for trade, easy for disease to spread. • Led to political strife • Italy is never politically united; this is there ultimate downfall, but hind sight is 20-20. • POWER CURRUPTS!!
Political control • City states would use Condottieri: mercenary generals of private armies to maintain power. • This opened the doors for foreign armies to invade; They will come and it won’t be pretty for Italy! • Italian Balance of Power relied on alliances of weaker states with stronger states. This would change far to often to create any lasting power.
Major City States • Florence (including Genoa): Birth of the Renaissance. • Medici Family ruled • Bankers who loved the arts • Allied with other powerful families to control the politics of Florence and protect against other states. • Cosimo and Lorenzo were the first and greatest Medici rulers.
Major City States • Duchy of Milan: Ruled by Sforza Family after 1450. • Principle adversary of Venice and Florence until the “Peace of Lodi” 1454. • Peace of Lodi created 40 years of relative peace among the City States.
Major City States • The Papel States (Rome): • Pope is the political and religious leader • The Papel States controlled most of central Italy.
Major City States • Venice • Most important “port” • Longest lasting independent states • Remains independent until Napoleon conquered it in the early 1800’s. • One of the world’s great navel and trading powers during the 14th and 15th centuries. • Location was its largest asset.
Major City States • Naples; Kingdom of Two Sicilies • Included South Italian region of Naples and the island of Sicily • Only Italian city-state to officially have a “King” • Controlled by France between 1266-1435 • Controlled by Spain after 1435. • Relied heavily on others for protection.
Collapse of the States • First and foremost: They were never unified in their vision. • The idea of Italy was secondary to each individual state. • This allowed for foreign influence and invasion.
Collapse of States • France began invading in 1494. • Invaded Naples at the request of Milan. • Milan wanted to control Naples and weaken Florence (their neighbors). • Milan’s Despot Ludovico “The Moor” convinced French King Charles VIII to Invade. • No turn away foreign invasions after this!!
Florence Disarray • Florence tried to appease France when it invaded. • The people overthrew the Medici Family • Florence’s power was severely weakened • Savonarola allied himself with France and took control • Promised to reform Florence; rid it of decadence.
Florence disarray • Savonarola alienated the people and lost control in 1498. • He was replaced by the Medici family • Revenge is sweet: • They burned him at the stake; But Florence and all of Italy was subject to repeated struggles between France and Spain to control. • Could Italy changed it’s fate? How? • Spain allied itself with The Papel States, Venice, and Naples. France with Florence and Milan.
Machiavelli • “The Prince” 1513 is the quintessential political treatise for the 16th century. • Can be seen in today’s leaders still. • Based on the rule of Cesare Borgia (Son of Pope Alexander VI) • The Ends Justify the Means • Better to be Feared than Loved • Rulers had to be practical and cunning, in addition to being aggressive and ruthless: lion and fox analogy.
Sack of Rome • Spain and the armies of the HRE Charles V invade and conquer Italy. • This signals the end of the Italian Renaissance in 1527.