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The Renaissance. Sistine Chapel Michelangelo Buonarroti. What is the Renaissance?. A “Rebirth” of Roman and Greek Classical Learning/Culture Time of artistic, scientific and intellectual discovery New emphasis on secular spirit and the individual. Causes of the Renaissance.
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The Renaissance Sistine ChapelMichelangelo Buonarroti
What is the Renaissance? A “Rebirth” of Roman and Greek Classical Learning/Culture Time of artistic, scientific and intellectual discovery New emphasis on secular spirit and the individual
Causes of the Renaissance • Increase in agricultural production • End of Feudalism • Crusades opened trade with Middle East • Re-emergence of urban centers • Decline of Church control -Great Schism
Background of the Italian Renaissance Economic • Increase in agricultural production -Italian city-states to produce enough food to sustain their own populations • Increase in trade -HRE provided a vast market for manufactured goods -The Mediterranean Sea allowed Italy to easily engage in trade
Economic Result • Economic wealth is consolidated into the hands of a small number of merchant families in Italy’s growing cities
Background of the Italian Renaissance Political • The collapse of the HRE and Great Schism left no unifying force in Italy
Political Result • Wealthy merchant families are able to use economic influence (patronage) to gather political power
Background of the Italian Renaissance Social • Decline in Church control and increased economic wealth leads to a turn from Medieval Spiritualism to Classical Humanism.
Social Result • The arts flourish in Italy • Education took on a new importance
FlorenceThe Cathedral of Florence (Duomo) Filippo Brunelleschi
FlorencePalazzo Strozzi Small windows used for lending money Rustication
FlorencePalazzo Vecchio Michelangelo’s David
Major Italian Cities Florence • Republic on paper, but really an oligarchy of wealthy merchants • Ultimately under the control of the Medici -Cosimo -Lorenzo the Magnificent • Major industries: textiles (wool, cotton and silk) and finance
MilanSanta Maria delle Grazie Donato Bramante
MilanSanta Maria presso San Satiro Donato Bramante
Milan • Located just south of the Alps • Provided manufactured goods to the French and HRE • Centralized state under the Visconti and later the Sforza -Da Vinci
Naples • Hereditary monarchy. • Trade-based economy • Eventually taken over by Spanish -most cosmopolitan city in Europe
Venice The Doge’s Palace Canale di San Marco
VeniceBasilica di San Marco Byzantine Influence
Venice • Economy based on Mediterranean trade -Byzantine Empire • Maritime military power • Oligarchy of wealthy merchant/aristocracy
Vatican City Michelangelo Buonarroti Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini
Sistine Chapel Michelangelo Buonarroti
The Pantheon Raphael’s Burial Place
Rome Colosseum
Rome • Seat of the Bishop of Rome (Pope) • Acts as the capital of the Papal States • -City-State politics on an international level • Home to many large building projects to highlight various wealthy Italian families’ power • -Sistine Chapel
Renaissance Society Classes • Patrician merchants began to blur the roles of the clergy, nobility and commoners -The Book of the Courtier by Baldassare Castiglione
Education • Educational practices reflected the Patrician merchants’ blurring of the roles of the clergy, nobility and commoners -Humanism and virtù -Liberal Studies and Physical Education/Renaissance Man
Families • Patrician merchants tried to increase their economic and political power through family networks -marriage -Giovanni Tournabuoni -Palla di Noferi Strozzi -Pope Julius II and Sixtus IV
Sistine Chapel acorns Michelangelo Buonarroti
Family Crests Della Rovere (acorns) Medici Julius II Leo X Clement VII
Tornabuoni Chapel Ludovica Tornabuoni Domenico Ghirlandaio
Tornabuoni Chapel Ludovica Tornabuoni Alessandro di Francesco Nasi Domenico Ghirlandaio
Patronage • Through both familial and extra-familial systems of reciprocity, Patrician merchant tried to increase their economic and political power -Medici
Small Chapel of the Medici Palace Piero de' Medici Cosimo de' Medici Lorenzo de’Medici Benozzo Gozzoli
Santa Trinita in Florence Gentile da Fabriano
Portrait of Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de' Medici and Luigi de' Rossi Pope Clement VII Pope Leo X Raffaello Sanzio
Church • The Catholic Church became increasingly secular due to the rise of humanism and patronage networks -Renaissance Popes
Borgia Apartments Vatican City Alexander VI Cesare Borgia Bernardino di Betto (Pinturicchio)
Borgia Apartments Vatican City Cesare Borgia
Baldassare Castiglione Raffaello Sanzio
Portrait of Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de' Medici and Luigi de' Rossi Pope Clement VII Raffaello Sanzio
Baldassare Castiglione • Born near Mantua-from a noble family • Worked as a envoy to Pope Leo X, Pope Clement VII, the Sforza family (Milan) and the Duke of Urbino • Wrote The Book Of The Courtier • Clement VII accused him of duplicity when Charles V sacked Rome
The Book Of The Courtier • Greatly influenced royal court behavior • Described how a courtier behaved • Accorded with traditional ideas of leadership behavior • Stated that nobles are born and not made • Advised nobles to not only master military skills but also to pursue a classical education • Told courtiers to behave according to strict standards of conduct • Key term sprezzatura - the cultivated ability to "display artful artlessness"
Goals of Courtier • To use his skills to win the favor of the prince so that he can give the prince honest council without fear of angering him • To advise the prince to pursue the morally correct course