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Renaissance of the 12th Century

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Title: Renaissance of the 12th Century


1
Renaissance of the 12th Century
2
  • Was it all darkness and ignorance?

No!
3
Advances of the 12th Century
  • Trade
  • Hanseatic League
  • Venice (Silk Road)
  • Philosophy
  • Scholasticism
  • Made ancient philosophy compatible with Church
    doctrine
  • Late 12th century -- rediscovery of Aristotle

4
Advances of the 12th Century
  • Science
  • Facts
  • Rediscovery of ancient knowledge
  • Technology
  • Gunpowder
  • Improved Ships
  • Navigational tools
  • Windmills

5
Scholasticism
  • Support church doctrine through study, reason,
    and logic.
  • Opposed mysticism. Not just good vs. evil.
  • Thomas Aquinas
  • Tabula rasa the mind at birth is "blank slate.
    Man can think and recognize ideas through a
    divine spark.

6
Thomas Aquinas
  • Summa Theologica
  • Summary of theology
  • Influential as Bible
  • "Five Ways" arguments for the existence of God.
  • Aristotelian reasoning logical argument
  • The intricate design and order of existent things
    and natural processes implies a Great Designer
    must exist. Therefore, proof for the existence
    of God.

7
Important Points from Summa Theologica
  • Theology is the greatest and most certain of all
    the sciences, since its source is from God, who
    is all-knowing.
  • Unbelief is the greatest sin.
  • The contemplative life is greater than the active
    life.
  • If a person has a spell put on them to cause them
    to get married, that marriage is invalid.
  • Everyone is called to religious life children,
    women, men.
  • Monks and Bishops live in a state of perfection.

8
12th CenturyThe Arts and Architecture
  • Romanesque
  • Similar to Roman
  • Elongated, narrow and tall arches
  • Gothic
  • Nothing to do with Goths
  • Pointed arches
  • Gargoyles
  • Highly decorated with statues inside and out

Romanesque
9
Romanesque
10
Early Gothic
Notre Dame 1163-1250
11
Gothic
12
Chartres Cathedral built between 1145 - 1220
13
Venetian Gothic
14
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15
Gothic Art
  • Main forms
  • sculpture, panel painting, stained glass, fresco
    and illuminated manuscript

16
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17
The Church
  • Dominates all aspects of life
  • Membership not optional
  • Governs all life milestones birth, marriage,
    death
  • Sin penance
  • Even cooking instructions used references such as
    boiling an egg during the length of time wherein
    you say a Miserere."

18
Problems within the Church
  • Avignon Papacy
  • Background French king vs. HRE
  • 1309-1377 Popes from France, not Roman. Popes
    reside in France.
  • 1377 Popes move back to Rome, but rival faction
    stays in France

19
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Rome Grieving the Loss of the Papacy
22
The Pope Returning to Rome in 1377
23
French Popes and Persecution
  • Cathars
  • Physical world is evil
  • Renounce anything associated with authority
  • Enemies of French King and Pope
  • Pope begins systematic persecution

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More Problems
  • Great Schism
  • 1378-1417, Two rival Popes
  • Council of Constance 1412
  • Limits Popes authority
  • No Pope may oppose council dictates
  • Conciliar Movement
  • Reform, 14th/15th Centuries
  • Church is ultimate authority, not a secular
    leader
  • Result? Church loses influence

27
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28
Man becomes more human
  • Feudalism Being Christian EVERYTHING
  • City of God vs. City of Man
  • End of the Middle Ages less Christian and more
    human (individualism).
  • Humanism
  • People began to doubt that all men were born
    sinful and doomed to damnation
  • Still deeply religious.
  • Personal and intense religious experience.
  • The Age of Faith

29
Church vs. Civil Justice
  • Before Christian beliefs
  • Will of God, Fate
  • Guilt crosses generations
  • Only church can absolve sin
  • 12th century real-world politics secular law
  • Revival of Roman law
  • Review of church law
  • Witnesses and juries
  • Precedent (Common Law)

30
Desire for Knowledge
  • Only men are educated
  • Love of knowledge for the sake of learning not
    for the Church or for the study of Law
  • Universities increase
  • Oxford, Paris,
    Bologna

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12th Century Scholars
  • Read Latin classics
  • Analyzed Roman law
  • Read and commented on Church texts
  • Traveled to Spain to learn from Muslim scholars
  • Traveled to Constantinople to read lost Greek
    texts
  • Revived science, philosophy, math, and medicine
  • Result More thought, discussion about problems

33
The Liberal Arts
  • Trivium The Foundation
  • Grammar, logic, rhetoric
  • Quadrivium Fine-tuning
  • Arithmetic AND Geometry, Music, Astronomy
  • Classical Education not possible without
    recovery from Islamic and Byzantine scholars
  • Post-graduate work philosophy and theology

34
Ambition and Social Class
  • Merchants motivated by profit.
  • Increased trade increased profit
  • Merchants worked cooperatively to share the risk
    and the profit (Hanseatic League)
  • Peasants motivated by status
  • Want status and wealth
  • Crusades are a way to increase status
  • Plague causes rigid social structure to break
    down

35
Ambition the Upper Classes
  • Sons of nobility entered monasteries to bring
    entire family closer to God
  • University increase in status. Knowledge
    Power
  • For the wealthy, wealth was less important

    than personal freedom,
    titles, high office.

36
So, how does the 12th Century compare to the
later Renaissance?
  • The Middle Ages were not all about superstition
    and ignorance
  • The 12th Century paved the way for the later
    renaissance of the 15th/16th centuries.
  • There are more similarities than differences when
    comparing the Renaissance of the 12th Century
    with that of the 15th Century

37
Summary of the 12th Century
  • Original thinking
  • Energetic pursuit of knowledge and wealth
  • Study of Latin to improve writing and speaking
  • Study of Logic to create clear thinking and
    reasoning
  • Study of Aristotle master of logic
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