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Wilkerson, Pam. “Renaissance Lecture Notes.” Class Notes. January 7, 2013. Renaissance Lecture Notes. (Early) Modern English Language. Caxton Printing Press Developed in 1475 Looked like handwriting Established early forms of spelling and grammar Inflections Word forms dropped
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Wilkerson, Pam. “Renaissance Lecture Notes.” Class Notes. January 7, 2013. Renaissance Lecture Notes
(Early) Modern English Language • Caxton Printing Press • Developed in 1475 • Looked like handwriting • Established early forms of spelling and grammar • Inflections • Word forms dropped • Endings added instead (--eth and –est) • Spelling • Printing press and Great Vowel Shift influenced spelling • Spoken word no longer matched spelling
(Early) Modern English Language • Great Vowel Shift • Borrowing • Acquired more words with trade, travel, and expansion of territories • Latin and Greek words
(Early) Modern English Language • Dictionaries • English grammar rules paralleled Latin • First dictionaries only included “difficult” words for scholars • Later dictionaries included common words, etymology, parts of speech, quotation, pronunciation, and illustrations • Style • Plain style used by Puritans and scientists • Ornate style used by scholars, writers, and Anglicans (called Cavaliers) • Inkhorn terms (terms written but rarely spoken) • Euphuisms (metaphors, allusions, etc.) • Metaphysical conceits (extended metaphors) • Shakespeare represents both styles in his plays: common language (prose) and elevated language (poetry)
“Renaissance” • Literally means “Rebirth” • Started in Italy • Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo • Galileo and Columbus • More education for all classes • Return to the Classics • Latin and Greek • Curiosity about self and world • Renewal of human spirit
Humanism • Asked questions like: • What is a human being? • What is a good life? • How do I lead a good life? • Stressed the importance of human life on earth (over afterlife and religion) • Delighted in arts and literature and nature • Knowledge of human mind and achievement • Individual and human potential • Positive perspective on humanity
Reformation of Church • Attempt to “reform” church practices • Desired a break from the Roman Catholic church in Italy • Recognized corruption • Recognized stray from Bible teaching to ritual practices • Henry VIII prompted the split for personal reasons, but masses supported
Henry VIII • Catherine of Aragon • Daughter Mary • Prompted split from the Catholic Church • Formed own church—Anglican Church or Church of England • Divorced Catherine • Anne Boleyn • Long-time mistress, Catherine’s attendant • Daughter Elizabeth • Beheaded Anne for being unfaithful
Henry VIII • Jane Seymour • Son Edward • Jane died shortly after Edward’s birth • Anne of Cleves • Divorced • Catherine Howard • Beheaded • Catherine Parr • Survived
Henry’s Successors • Edward • 9 years old • Sick, ruled by name only • Mary • Devote Catholic • Tried to force Catholic faith • Known as “Bloody Mary” • Married to Philip II of Spain • No children • Died of tumors—cancer, perhaps
Henry’s Successors • Elizabeth I • Restored Anglican Church • Contemplated King Philip’s marriage proposal • (Philip had been married to Bloody Mary) • Beheaded cousin Mary Queen of Scots • 20 years of betrayal to take throne • Defeated Philip of Spain in the Spanish Armada • Supported and contributed to Renaissance • Really good at “riding the fence” to avoid conflict
Elizabeth’s Successors • James VI of Scotland • Mary Queen of Scot’s son • Elizabeth’s nephew • Total opposite of Elizabeth • Spender • Thick-tongued and goggle-eyed • Foreigner • Charles I • James’s son • Ruled by force (divine rule) • Refused to call Parliament for 11 years • Supported extravagant church rituals • Beheaded by people in 1649
Elizabeth’s Successors • Oliver Cromwell • Puritan leader • Shut down theaters • Made Sunday a “day of rest” • Richard Cromwell • Ineffective • Overthrown • Charles II • Returned from exile to rule in 1660 • Renaissance declined, Restoration began • Puritans leave England • America settled