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Renaissance & Reformation. Chapter 12. Italian Renaissance. A period of European history that began in Italy and spread to the rest of Europe. Italy comprised of urban societies. Promoted secular views Considered age of recovery from disasters rom the fourteenth century. Italian Renaissance.
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Renaissance & Reformation Chapter 12
Italian Renaissance • A period of European history that began in Italy and spread to the rest of Europe. • Italy comprised of urban societies. • Promoted secular views • Considered age of recovery from disasters rom the fourteenth century.
Italian Renaissance • New viewpoint on human beings • Person could excel at many things like Leonardo da Vinci who was a painter, sculptor, architect, inventor, and mathematician. • Affected much of the population, even upper class and ordinary people.
Italian States • Milan • northern Italy at the crossroads from coastal cities to the Alpine passes. • Francesco Sforza conquered and created centralized state. • Created an efficient tax system
Italian States • Venice • Link between Asia and Western Europe. • Republic with elected leader called a Doge • Trade made Venice incredibly powerful and internationally powerful.
Italian States • Florence • Medici family took control of the government in 1434 • Economy based on manufacturing cloth • Economy declined in late 1400s
Italian Wars • French King Charles VIII led an army of 30,000 to attack Italy and occupied kingdom of Naples. • Wanted riches of Italian states. • Spain sent troops to help northern Italian states which led to a 30 year conflict. • 1527- turning point: Thousands of unpaid troops were directed to pillage Rome. • Church officials sold into slavery. • Spain became dominate force in Italy.
Machiavelli • Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince is one of the most influential works on political power in the Western world. • How to keep and hold political power • Based on understanding human nature • Abandon morality as basis for analyzing political activity.
Renaissance Society • Nobility: declining incomes, new blood • 2-3% population • New roles from The Book of the Courtier • Character, grace, and talent • Two basic skills: warrior & education • Standard of conduct: modesty
Renaissance Society • Peasants • 85-90% of the population • Labor owed by a peasant to a lord was converted into rent on land paid in money • Townspeople • Merchants and artisans • Urban life diverse, contained patricians, burghers, and workers
Renaissance Society • Family • Arranged marriages to strengthen business or family ties. • Size of dowry important • Father-husband was center of Italian family • Managed finances, made all decisions • Fathers had to free children, not by reaching a certain age.
Printing Press • 1455- Johannes Gutenberg’s Bible was the first European book produced from movable type. • 1500- thousands of printers all over Europe.
1.Weakening of the Catholic Church: The Breaking of Vows • By the 1300s, many people felt that the church had become too corrupt. • Many priests, monks, and nuns made vows (solemn promises) not to marry or have children, but many of them broke these vows. • Church leaders behaved more like royalty than like humble servants of God.
2.Weakening of the Church: Buying Indulgences • An indulgence was a release from punishment for sins, in return for good works. • The church would sell indulgences to people to raise money, but only rich people were able to afford them. • People who received indulgences did not have to perform good deeds to make up for their sins and would spend less time in purgatory.
3.Weakening of the Church: Conflict with Rulers • The church became wealthy and powerful. • King Philip IV tried to tax the French clergy. When the pope threatened to excommunicate him, he had soldiers kidnap the pope. Although they released him, the pope died soon afterward.
4.Weakening of the Church: Two (or more!) Popes • Pope Clement V moved headquarters from Rome to the French city of Avignon, and the next 6 popes lived there. • Pope Gregory XI moved the papacy back to Rome in 1377. When he died, the new pope refused to move back to France. • French cardinals elected a rival pope. There were now two popes, and a third one was elected by a church council. Each claimed to be the true head of the church. This was the case for about 30 years.
5.Early Calls for Reform • John Wycliffe (~1330-1384): A British scholar who questioned the Pope’s authority and attacked indulgences & immoral behavior by the clergy. • Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536): A humanist priest from Holland who called for reform in the church. In 1509 he wrote The Praise of Folly which called for a return to simple Christian goodness.
6.Martin Luther • A German priest who disagreed with many Catholic beliefs, and was especially outraged by the selling of indulgences. • He felt that the church was selling false salvation to uneducated people.
7.Martin Luther • In response, Luther posted a list of 95 theses (arguments) against indulgences and church abuses on the church door in the town of Wittenberg. He also sent the list to church leaders. • Luther argued that the Bible – not the pope or church leaders – was the ultimate source of religious authority. • Luther was excommunicated in 1521, but then later started his own church called the Lutheran Church. Many people followed him because they were also unhappy with church practices. • He also translated the Bible into German. • This is how the Protestant Reformation began.
9.John Calvin (1509-1564) • A French humanist who started a Protestant branch in Geneva, Switzerland. • He believed that salvation came only from God’s grace, and that the “saved” were chosen by God and lived according to strict standards (“predestination”). There was nothing people could do to change their destiny. Success in business was a sign of God’s grace. • He influenced many other reformers.
11.King Henry VIII (1491-1547) • In 1534, King Henry VIII formed the Church of England (Anglican Church) with himself as its head. • He did this because the Catholic church would not allow him to divorce his wife.
15.William Tyndale (~1491-1536) • An English priest, scholar, and writer. • Tyndale translated the Bible into English. His translation was famed for its beautiful language and later became known as the King James version of the Bible. • Tyndale was burned at the stake for translating the Bible.
13.Weaknesses of the Catholic Church Breaking of vows Two popes The Catholic Church Disagreements with rulers Indulgences
14. Reformation Flow Chart Martin Luther’s 95 Theses
15. Counter-Reformation (Discussion, Debate, and Reform!) • A Catholic reform movement where church leaders worked to: • correct abuses • clarify and defend Catholic teachings • Condemn Protestant errors • Win back areas of Europe that had been lost by using missionaries • The Council of Trent determined that faith, good works, and the sacraments were all necessary for salvation. The Latin Bible was still the only official Bible. • The church decided to no longer sell indulgences.
16.Religious Wars • Many wars were fought in Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries. • Civil wars in France between Catholics and Protestants left over a million people dead. • The Thirty Years War (1618-1648) in Germany was the last major war of the Reformation. The result was that European rulers could decide for themselves whether their countries would be Catholic or Protestant, and much of northern Europe became Protestant.