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Renaissance

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Title: Renaissance


1
Renaissance Reformation
2
Italian Renaissance
  • Renaissance rebirth
  • Renaissance began in Italy and Spread to the rest
    of Europe
  • Italy was largely an urban society/ powerful
    city-states became the center of Italian
    political, economic social life
  • Renaissance was age of recovery from disasters of
    the 14th century plague, political instability,
    decline of church power
  • There was a rebirth of ancient culture

3
Italian Renaissance
  • A new view of human beings began with the
    emphasis of individual ability
  • A high regard for human worth realization what
    individuals could achieve created a new social
    ideal
  • Leonardo da Vinci painter, sculptor, architect,
    inventor, mathematician
  • Renaissance had more of an impact on upper class
    but still had emphasis on common people
  • Decorations on homes churches with new art that
    celebrated religious secular themes, the
    human body

4
Leonardo da Vinci
5
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6
Italian City States
  • During Middle Ages, Italy failed to develop a
    monarchial state/ lack of single ruler allowed
    city-states to rise be independent
  • Milan, Venice, Florence all played critical
    roles in Italian politics
  • City-states profited from trade that expanded
    during the Middle Ages
  • Italians traded by ship
  • Traded with Byzantine empire Islamic
    civilizations in East

7
Milan
  • Located in Northern Italy
  • One of the richest cities in Italy
  • 14th cent, Visconti family established themselves
    as dukes of Milan/Last Visconti ruler died in
    1447
  • Francesco Sforza conquered the city became duke
  • Sforza was a leader of mercenaries
  • Visconti Sforza leaders created strong
    government efficient tax system

8
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9
Franceso Sforza
10
Venice
  • Link Between Asia western Europe
  • City drew traders from all over the world
  • Republic with an elected leader called a doge /
    in reality a small group of merchant-aristocrats
    ran the government on behalf of their own
    interests
  • Trade empire made Venice a powerful international
    trading empire

11
Florence
  • Dominated the region of Tuscany
  • 14th cent, wealthy merchants established control
    over Florentine government/ Led Florence into
    battle _at_neighbors
  • 1434, Cosimo de Medici took control of the city/
    wealthy Medici family controlled government from
    behind the scenes
  • Grandson Lorenzo later dominated the city

12
Florence
  • Late 1400s, Florence experienced a decline
  • Economy was based on manufacturing of cloth
    they began getting competition from the English
    which drove down profits

13
Florence
  • Dominican preacher, Girolamo Savonarola began
    condemning the Medici family
  • People turned to Savonarolo because they were
    tired of Medici family
  • People eventually began tired of Savonarolos
    strict regulations on gambling, horseracing,
    swearing, painting
  • He was accused of Heresy by the church killed

14
I smell cheese, I think
15
Italian Wars
  • Growth of monarchies in Europe led to problems
    for Italy
  • 1494, French King Charles VIII led troops in
    occupied the kingdom of Naples
  • Northern Italy asked Spain for help
  • Spain France fought for 30 years to occupy
    Italy

16
Italian Wars
  • May 5, 1527 Charles I of Spain along with
    mercenaries destroyed Rome
  • There was a frenzy of bloodshed looting
  • Church officials were sold as slaves churches
    were ruined
  • This ended the Italian wars established Spain
    as a dominating force in Italy

17
Niccolo Machiavelli
  • Wrote the Prince
  • Expresses the Italians love with political power
  • Central theme of the book Prince was how to
    acquire obtain political power
  • Machiavelli rejected the Christian principles of
    leadership/ the understanding of human nature was
    most important
  • Was one of the first to abandon morality as the
    basis for analyzing political activity
  • He had a profound influence on political leaders
    who followed

18
Machiavelli
19
Renaissance Society/Nobility
  • Landholding nobles were faced with declining
    incomes during 14th 15th centuries/Old new
    nobility were able to restore their lands
  • By 1500, nobles again dominated society/made up
    2-3 of society/held important political roles
    were advisers to the king

20
Peasants Townspeoples
  • Peasants made up an overwhelming mass of the
    people/85-90 of the total European population
  • Serfdom decreased with decline in manoralism
  • Increased of peasants became free by 1500
  • Townspeoples were mostly merchants artisans

21
Peasants
22
Family Marriage
  • To maintain the family, parents carefully
    arranged marriages often to strengthen business
    or family ties
  • It was often worked out by the time a child was 3
  • Dowry was important part of marriage/size of
    money given to husbands family by the wives
    family
  • Father-husband was center of Italian
    family/managed all finances, women shared no
    wealth
  • Women supervised the household
  • Adulthood was reached only when fathers went
    before a judge formally freed them (late teens
    to late 20s

23
Italian Families
24
MMMMMtasty
25
Intellectual/Artistic Renaissance
  • Humanism key intellectual movement of
    Renaissance/ based on the study of the classics
    literary works of ancient Greece Rome/
  • Humanists studied grammar, rhetoric, poetry,
    moral philosophy, history/ Today these subjects
    are called humanities
  • Petrarch father of Italian Renaissance humanism
  • In Florence, humanist movement took a different
    direction thought intellectual activity was a
    life of solitude rejected family community
    life/ earlier humanists believed you should serve
    your state

26
Petrarch
Father of Humanism
27
Renaissance Literature
  • Some writers wrote in vernacular
    language(language spoken in their region) instead
    of Latin
  • Italian author Dante Chaucer helped make
    vernacular literature more popular

28
Dante
Dantes Divine Comedy
29
Dante, Divine Comedy
  • Dante Divine Comedy
  • Story of the souls journey through salvation
  • Divided into 3 realms Hell, Purgatory, Heaven
  • Dante is led on an imaginary journey through
    these 3 realms until he reaches paradise

30
Chaucer, Canterbury Tales
  • Used English vernacular
  • Canterbury Tales, most famous work
  • Consists of a collection of tales told by a group
    of 29 pilgrims journeying to the tomb of St.
    Thomas a Becket at Canterbury
  • Format gave Chaucer the opportunity to portray
    English society from the high to low class of
    people

31
Christine de Pizan
  • Frenchwoman, best known for her works written in
    the defense of women
  • Book of the City of Ladies written in 1404, she
    denounced the theory that male writers claimed
    that women were unable to learn were easily
    swayed

32
Renaissance Education
  • Humanist movement had a huge impact on education
  • Humanists believed that liberal studies helped
    individuals reach their full potential/today we
    call them liberal arts
  • Liberal arts moral philosophy, rhetoric,
    grammar logic, poetry, mathematics, astronomy,
    music
  • Purpose of a liberal education was to produce
    individuals who follow a path of virtue wisdom
  • Following Greek ideals of sound mind body,
    humanist educators stressed physical education/
    students learned throwing, archery, dancing,
    encouraged to run, wrestle, hunt, swim

33
Renaissance Education
  • Educators thought that humanist education was
    practical preparation for life
  • Aim was to produce complete citizens
  • Very few females attended humanist schools/
    steered toward studying the classics/ did not
    learn mathematics or rhetoric/ Religion morals
    were the emphasis in preparing to be good wives

34
Artists
  • Renaissance artists sought to imitate nature in
    their works
  • Frescoes painted by Masaccio in Florence at the
    beginning of the 15th century are the first
    masterpieces of early Renaissance art
  • Fresco painting done on fresh, wet plaster with
    water based paints

35
Masaccio Frescoes Paintings
Was able to create an illusion of 3 dimensions
36
Renaissance Sculptors
  • Donatello spent time in Rome studying copying
    the statues of Greeks Romans/ Most prominent
    sculpture was statue of Saint George
  • Filippo Brunelleschi was inspired by buildings of
    classical Rome to create new architecture in
    Florence/ designed the church of San Lorenzo

37
Donatello/ St. George statue
38
High Renaissance (1490-1520)
  • Associated with 3 artistic giants Leonardo,
    Raphael, Michelangelo
  • Leonardo mastered the art of realistic painting
    even dissected bodies to better see how nature
    worked
  • At 25, Raphael was regarded as one of the best
    painters in Italy/admired for his paintings of
    the Virgin Mary
  • Michelangelo accomplished painter, sculptor,
    architect/ Sistine Chapel in Rome, Statue of David

39
Renaissance Heroes in a ½ Shell
40
Raphael
41
Michelangelo/ Sistine Chapel
42
Michelangelo
43
Protestant Reformation
  • Reformation name given to the religious reform
    movement that divided the western church into
    Catholic protestant groups
  • Martin Luther began the reformation in the early
    1600s, but there were many earlier developments
    that led to it

44
Leading up to the Reformation
  • Christian humanism was a school of thought that
    wanted to reform the Catholic Church
  • Christian humanists believed in the ability of
    human beings to reason improve themselves/they
    thought if people would read the classics basic
    works of Christianity, they would become more
    pious and then bring change to the Catholic
    Church
  • Christian humanists believed that in order to
    change society, they first had to change
    individuals
  • Desiderius Erasmus was the best known Christian
    humanist

45
Desiderius Erasmus
  • Called his view of religion the Philosophy of
    Christ
  • He wanted to say that Christianity could show
    people how to live good lives on a daily basis
    rather than a system of beliefs that people have
    to practice in order to be saved
  • Stressed internal forms of religion
  • Was not concerned with pilgrimages, feasts,
    relics
  • Wanted to spread the philosophy of Christ,
    provide education, criticize abuses of the
    church

46
Erasmus/ The Praise of Folly
  • Written in 1509, Erasmus humorously criticized
    aspects of society that he believed were most in
    need of reform
  • Singled out monks for special treatment
  • Erasmus sought reform with the Catholic church,
    did not wish to break away
  • His actions prepared the way for the Reformation
  • Erasmus laid the egg that Luther hatched

47
Corruption in the Church
  • Between 1450 1520 a series of popes known as
    Renaissance popes failed to meet the churchs
    spiritual needs
  • Popes too involved in political matters not
    enough in religious matters
  • Julius II led armies against his enemies/ caused
    much criticism with the people
  • Church officials were concerned with money used
    their church offices to get wealthy and advance
    their careers

48
Pope Julius II
49
St. Peters Basilica
50
Corruption in the Church
  • Ordinary priests were ignorant of their duties
  • People wanted to know how to save their souls
    priests were unable to offer advice or
    instruction
  • Church leaders were failing to meet their
    responsibilities people wanted assurance of
    salvation
  • Churches started selling relics as a source of
    indulgence
  • Indulgences attached to relics could reduce time
    in Purgatory by 1443 years
  • Indulgences were also sold as certificates

51
Martin Luther
  • Was a monk professor at the University of
    Wittenberg in Germany/ lectured on the Bible
  • Luther arrived at answer to the problem of
    Salvation that had bothered him since becoming a
    monk
  • Catholic teaching had stressed that both faith
    good works were needed to gain personal salvation
  • In Luthers opinion, humans were powerless in the
    sight of an almighty God
  • Luther said that Faith was most important that
    good works would not secure you a place in heaven
  • This became the chief teaching of Protestant
    Reformation/Bible became the main source of Truth

52
Martin Luther
53
Ninety-Five Theses
  • Luther was not a rebel, just trying to do what
    was right was greatly upset with the selling of
    indulgences
  • October 31, 1517, Luther sent the Ninety-Five
    Theses to his superiors other church officials
  • They were an attack on the abuses of the Church
  • Pope Leo X did not take the issue seriously

54
Pope Leo X
Luther.. some drunken German who will ammend
his ways when he sobers up
55
Break with the Church
  • By 1520, Luther was calling for a break from the
    Church/called on German princes to overthrow the
    papacy in Germany and form a reformed church
  • Luther attacked the use of sacraments/thought
    priests were using them to destroy the real
    meaning of the gospel
  • Luther only kept 2 sacraments Baptism
    Communion
  • Luther also called for the clergy to marry/went
    against Catholic requirement of celibacy

56
Baptism Communion
57
Break with the Church
  • Church excommunicated Luther in January 1521/ he
    was called to appear in front of the Holy Roman
    Empire at the city of Worms under newly elected
    emperor Charles V
  • Charles tried to convince Luther he was wrong but
    failed
  • Edict of Worms Luther was made an outlaw/
    Luthers works were to be burned Luther
    arrested
  • However, Luthers Ruler Elector Frederick of
    Saxony refused to kill Luther and sent him into
    hiding then protected him when he returned to
    Wittenberg in 1522

58
Edict of Worms
59
Elector Frederick of Saxony
60
Rise of Lutheranism
  • Luthers religious movement became a revolution
  • Luther gained support of many German rulers
  • German rulers took control of Catholic churches
    in their territories and formed state churches
    under the watch of the government
  • Lutheranism first protestant church
  • Luther set up church services to replace the
    masses that consisted of Bible readings,
    preaching the word of the God, song
  • June 1524, German peasants revolted against Lords
    looked for Luthers support/He cited with the
    Lords/ Luther had to rely on government to spread
    his message

61
German Reformation
  • The fate of Luthers movement was tied to
    political affairs
  • Charles V Holy Roman Empire was also Charles I
    of Spain ruled immense empire consisting of Spain
    its colonies
  • Charles wanted to keep his empire under the
    control of one dynasty-Hapsburg/ Plus he wanted
    to keep it Catholic
  • Charles ended up becoming sick dying plus a
    of problems which allowed Lutheranism to spread
    by giving Lutherans time to organize before
    having to face Catholic forces

62
Charles V/ Charles I
63
German Reformation
  • Chief political concern of Charles V was a rival
    with king of France,Francis I led to a series
    of wars that lasted over 20 years
  • Charles faced opposition from Pope Clement VII
    who had sided with French king
  • Charles had to send forces to fight invading
    Ottoman Turks
  • Internal political situation was not in Charles
    favor
  • German states supported Luther as a way to assert
    their local authority over the authority of the
    empire Charles V

64
King Francis I of France
65
Pope Clement VII
66
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67
German Reformation
  • By the time Charles V was able to get forces to
    Germany, the Lutheran princes were well organized
  • Charles was unable to defeat them had to seek
    peace
  • Peace of Augsburg 1555 brought an end to
    religious warfare in Germany/ officially accepted
    the division of Christianity in Germany
  • German states were now free to choose their
    religion
  • Both were to have equal political rights
  • However, German rulers were able to choose the
    religion for all their subjects/individuals did
    not make the personal decision of which religion

68
Zwinglian Reformation
  • Ulrich Zwingli priest in Zurich
  • Introduced religious reforms/ relics were
    abolished/all paintings decorations were taken
    down in the church
  • New church service scripture reading, prayer,
    sermons
  • Tried to unite with Luther, but disagreed on
    meaning of communion
  • 1531, war broke out between Protestants
    Catholics/Zwingli army was routed he was killed

69
Calvinism
  • John Calvin educated in France
  • After converting to Protestantism, forced to flee
    Catholic France for Switzerland
  • 1536, published the Institutes of the Christian
    Religion summary of Protestant thought
  • Was very close to Luther on many
    doctrines/however emphasized the idea of God
    having an all-powerful nature
  • Believed in predestination God had determined
    in advance who would be saved who would be
    damned

70
Calvinism
  • Belief in Predestination gave Calvinists the
    belief they were doing Gods work on Earth
  • 1536, Calvin worked on reforming the city of
    Geneva
  • Created a church government that used both laity
    clergy in the service
  • Consistory legal body set up to enforce moral
    life of Genevans/had the right to punish people
    who deviated from church teachings
  • Citizens were punished for dancing, singing,
    obscene songs, drunkedness, swearing

71
Calvinism
  • By mid 16th century, Calvinism replaced
    Lutheranism as the most important form of
    Protestantism
  • Geneva stood as the center of the Protestant
    Reformation

72
Reformation in England
  • Was rooted in politics
  • King Henry VIII wanted to divorce wife, but the
    church would not allow
  • Thomas Crammer, archbishop of Canterbury,
    declared the marriage annulled
  • 1534, Henry broke from the Catholic Church
  • After his death, English leaders moved towards a
    protestant direction Anglican Church

73
King Henry VIII
74
Catholic Reformation
  • Revitalized in 16th century/regained much of what
    it lost
  • Reformation was supported by 3 pillars Jesuits,
    reform of papacy, Council of Trent
  • Society of Jesus was founded by Ignatius of
    Loyola small group of Jesuits who took a vow of
    obedience to the pope and spread the word of the
    Catholic church/fixing the problems of the past
  • Papacy Reform Renaissance popes brought a lot
    of corruption to the church/Pope Paul III
    appointed a Reform Commission in 1537

75
St. Ignatius of Loyola
76
Catholic Reformation
  • The commission blamed the problems on corrupt
    popes
  • Paul III also called for the Council of Trent
  • Council of Trent March 1545, group of
    cardinals, archbishops, bishops, abbots met in
    the city of Trent on and off for 18 years
  • Final decrees of Council of Trent reaffirmed
    traditional Catholic teachings, both faith and
    good works were declared necessary for salvation,
    seven sacraments were upheld, Belief in purgatory
    was strengthened, selling of indulgences was
    forbidden

77
Pope Paul III
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