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GC unit 8 PP 2 The Northern Renaissance The Protestant Reformation

GC unit 8 PP 2 The Northern Renaissance The Protestant Reformation. The Northern Renaissance. Differences : Deeply concerned with religion (groundwork for reformation ) Father of Northern Humanism Desiderus Erasmus The Praise of Folly

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GC unit 8 PP 2 The Northern Renaissance The Protestant Reformation

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  1. GC unit 8 PP 2The Northern RenaissanceThe Protestant Reformation

  2. The Northern Renaissance • Differences: Deeply concerned with religion (groundwork for reformation) • Father of Northern Humanism • Desiderus Erasmus The Praise of Folly • Called for a return to an earlier simple Christian faith • Sir Thomas More Utopia (“Nowhere”) social reform • William Shakespeare (themes of common man) • Northern Artists: work on a smaller scale more landscapes etc…(also themes of religious upheaval) • Jan Van Eyck • Albrecht Durer

  3. Albrecht Durer Northern Renaissance Painter and engraver

  4. Jan Van Eyck Flemish painter Famous for portraits of common people The Arnolfini Wedding

  5. Jan Van Eyck (Arnolfini)

  6. Causes of the Reformation • Social and political unrest • New faith seen as a way of remaining Independent of outside control (HRE) • Commoners, Lords and Kings were all tired of Church authority over them • Tax money (Tithe) leaving their regions and winding up in Rome • Clerical immunity to temporal law • TENSION with the RC Church

  7. Catalysts • Wycliffe and Huss had begun the movement by laying out the themes • Religious simplicity, poverty of clergy, a more egalitarian Church, vernacular bible • Numerous abuses (Indulgences, clerical ignorance and immorality, too much spending) • The Printing Press helped spread the ideas (and vernacular Bibles) • Johann Guttenberg (1455)

  8. Martin Luther (1483-1546) • His father, Hans, was a miner • Extremely strict Middle class parents • Studied liberal arts at the University of Erfurt • Earned his masters, begins law school • Conversion experience • Joins an Augustinian Monastery and is ordained in 1507 • 1512 he earned his doctorate in Theology and joined the theology department at University of Wittenberg

  9. Luther’s main beliefs • Justification by faith alone (not faith and good works and ceremonies) • You could never earn it through works and ceremonies but only trust and belief in Jesus Christ • Requires the Bible to be in the Vernacular • He only believed in only 2 sacraments: Baptism and Eucharist and that lay authority more important than the Church • He attacked Papal infallibility and stressed the “priesthood of all believers” lowering the importance of the clergy (more egalitarian)

  10. The Indulgence Problem • Begun in 1343 when the Pope claimed to possess a “treasury of merit” • In 1517AugustinianJohn Tetzel was selling a special “Jubilee indulgence which prompts Luther to post his 95 thesis on October 31st 1517 • Reactions • Luther condemned as a Heretic and excommunicated by Pope Leo X

  11. Diet of Worms • 1521 The new Emperor Charles V convenes the Diet of Worms to allow Luther an opportunity to recant his beliefs • He refused, was placed under Imperial ban (Edict of Worms) and hidden by Frederick of Saxony translates New Testament (dies in 1546) • Charles V distracted by wars (with France and Turks) needed the help of the German Princes • Eventually offers the Peace of Augsburg (1555) which allowed German Princes to decide the religion of their land

  12. John Calvin (1509-1564) • French lawyer trained at the University of Paris (Jean Cauvin) upper class background • Converted to Protestantism in 1534 • Author of The Institutes of the Christian Religion • Inspired massive political resistance in France where Protestants were called Huegonots • He moves to Geneva in July of 1536 to escape and became a part of their governing body • Eventually exiled and would not return until 1540

  13. Calvinism in Practice • Predestination (However: the elect should live in a manifestly pleasing way) • Everyone should try to re-order society according to God’s plan • He ran Geneva Switzerland as a theocracy (refuge for protestants) • Bible # 1 authority (life governed by faith) • No dance, drink etc….

  14. The English Reformation • Irony? (1522 Henry was dubbed “Defender of the Faith by Pope Leo X) • Henry VIII (1509-1547) • Catherine of Aragon (Spanish Princess) • Problems? (widow of Henry’s brother) • Henry wants Anne Boyleyn • The annulment controversy They had been married 18 years, no male heir, just “Bloody Mary”) • Henry breaks with RC Church and creates the Church of England

  15. The New Church • Thomas Cranmer becomes Archbishop of Canterbury and grants the annulment • The Act of Supremacyis passed by Parliament and the English King is recognized as the leader of the English Church • Sir Thomas More executed for failing to recognize the new Church • No more tax money to Rome

  16. The other wives of Henry VIII • Anne Boyleyn • Mother of Elizabeth I, Beheaded for treason • Jane Seymour • Mother of Edward VI • Anne of Cleaves • Political marriage, eventually annuled • Catherine Howard (beheaded for adultery) • Catherine Parr (Her third marriage)

  17. Henry’s Church • How Protestant was he? • Kept the RC ban on clerical marriage • Also denied Eucharistic cup to the laity • Kept Confession as a sacrament • Full Protestantism Edward VI (1547-1553) • Only 10 years old when he became King • His regents brought England to “Full Protestantism” • The Book of Common Prayer

  18. The Counter Reformation • The Council of Trent (1545-1563) • 3 sessions over 18 years • Reaffirmed many beliefs • Pope infallible, faith and good works = salvation, only Church can interpret Bible, Indulgences OK, withhold cup from laity (no doctrinal changes) • Changes • The Jesuits, cut into Simony, Seminaries to train clergy, the Index, The Inquisition, Bishops supervision more active

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