Title: The Renaissance
1The Renaissance
2Introduction
- the people of Europe living in the 1400s, 1500s,
and 1600s didnt know that they were living in
the Renaissance. - Historical periods are historians inventions,
useful labels for complex phenomena. - The changes in peoples values, beliefs, and
behavior that marked the emerging Renaissance
occurred gradually. - Much that could be called medieval lingered on
long after the period known as the Middle Ages
was past.
3Rediscovering Ancient Greece and Rome
- The term renaissance is a French word meaning
rebirth. It refers particularly to renewed
interest in classical learningthe writings of
ancient Greece and Rome. - During the Middle Ages, few ordinary people could
read. Those who could read were encouraged to
study texts explaining Church doctrine. - In the Renaissance, however, people discovered
the marvels of old Greek and Latin classicsbooks
that had been forgotten for hundreds of years.
4The Spirit of Rebirth
- Some people became more curious about themselves
and their world than people in general had been
in the Middle Ages. - Gradually there was a renewal of the human
spirita renewal of curiosity and creativity. - New energy seemed to be available for creating
beautiful things and thinking new, even daring,
thoughts.
5It All Began in Italy A Flourish of Genius
- The Renaissance began in Italy in the fourteenth
century and lasted into the sixteenth. - Extraordinary people flourished in this
periodartists such as Leonardo da Vinci and
Michelangelo, explorers such as Christopher
Columbus, and scientists such as Galileo. - Almost everyone in Europe and Britain at this
time was Roman Catholic, so the Church was very
rich and powerful. - Many of the popes were generous supporters of
artists, architects, - and scholars.
6Michael Angelo
7David
8The Sistine Chapel
9Leonardo Da Vinci
Above Vitruvian Man Left Mona Liza
10Galileo
11Christopher Columbus
12It All Began in Italy A Flourish of Genius
- Pope Julius II, for example, commissioned the
artist Michelangelo to paint gigantic scenes from
the Bible on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, a
small church in the popes city, called the
Vatican. - Michelangelos bright, heroic figures, which are
still admired by thousands of visitors to Rome
each year, show individual human beings who are
noble and capable of perfection. - This optimistic view of humanity was also
expressed by many other Renaissance painters and
writers.
13Humanism Questions About the Good Life
- Refreshed by the classics, the new writers and
artists were part of an intellectual movement
known as humanism. - The humanists went to the old Latin and Greek
classics to discover new answers to such
questions as What is a human being? What is a
good life? and How do I lead a good life? - Of course, Christianity provided complete answers
to these questions, answers that the Renaissance
humanists accepted as true. - They sought to harmonize the Bible and the
classics. - Their aim was to use the classics to strengthen,
not discredit, Christianity.
14Humanism Questions About the Good Life
- The humanists first task was to recover accurate
copies of these ancient writings. - Their searches through Italian monasteries turned
up writers and works whose very existence has
been forgotten. - Their next task was to share their findings. So
they became teachers, especially of the young men
who would become the next generations
rulerswise and virtuous rulers, they hoped.
15The New Technology A Flood of Print
- The printing press transformed the way
information was exchanged during the Renaissance.
- Before this, all books were laboriously written
out by handyou can imagine how difficult and
expensive this was and how few books were
available. - The inventor of printing with movable type was a
German named Johannes Gutenberg (14001468). - He printed the first complete book, an immense
Latin Bible, at Mainz, Germany, around 1455. From
there, the art and craft of printing spread to
other cities in Germany and beyond. - By 1500, relatively inexpensive books were
available throughout western Europe.
16Guttenburgs Printing Press
17The New Technology A Flood of Print
- In 1476, printing reached England. In that year,
William Caxton (14221491), a merchant, diplomat,
and writer, set up a printing press in
Westminster (now part of London). - In all, Caxtons press issued about one hundred
different titles, initiating a flood of print in
English that is still increasing.
18Two FriendsTwo Humanists
- Desiderius Erasmus (1466?1536) is today perhaps
the best known of all the Renaissance humanists. - Erasmus was a Dutch monk, but he lived outside
the monastery and loved to travel, visiting many
of the countries in Europe, including Italy,
France, Germany, and England. - Because he wrote in Latin, he could address his
many writings to all the educated people of
western Europe. - On his visits to England, Erasmus became friendly
with a number of important people, among them a
young lawyer named Thomas More (14771535).
19Two FriendsTwo Humanists
- More and Erasmus had much in common They both
loved life, laughter, and classical learning, and
they both were dedicated churchmen, though they
were impatient with some of the Churchs corrupt
practices at that time. - Like Erasmus, More wrote in Latinpoems,
pamphlets, biographies, and his famous treatise
on human society, Utopia. - More held a number of important offices, rose to
the top of his profession, was knighted, and as
lord chancellor, became one of the kings chief
ministers.
20The Reformation Breaking with the Church
- While the Renaissance was going on throughout
Europe, there occurred in some countries another
important series of events, called the
Reformation. - In England these two vast movements were closely
related, and their forces were felt by all
English writers. - Reformers rejected the authority of the pope and
the Italian churchmen. - By the 1530s, an open break with the Roman
Catholic Church could no longer be avoided. - By then a number of circumstances made such a
break possible. - Strong feelings of patriotism and national
identity made the English people resent the
financial burdens imposed on them by the
Vaticanthe pope, after all, was a foreign power
in far-off Italy.
21The Reformation Breaking with the Church
- Moreover, new religious ideas were coming into
England from the Continent, especially from
Germany. - There, a monk named Martin Luther (14831546) was
teaching a different kind of Christianity. - His teachings were not based on what the pope
said but rather on a personal understanding of
the Bible. - In addition, right at home in England, humanists
like Thomas More and Desiderius Erasmus were
ridiculing the ignorance and idleness of monks
and the loose living and personal wealth of
priest and bishops.
22Martin Luther Reformer
23King Versus Pope All for an Heir
- The conflict between the pope and the king of
England came to a climax when Henry VIII wanted
to get rid of his wife of twenty-four years. - The Church did not allow divorce, so Henry needed
a loophole. - He asked Pope Clement VII to declare that he,
Henry, was not properly married to his Spanish
wife, Catherine of Aragon, because she had
previously been married to his older brother
Arthur, now dead. (It was against Church law to
marry a dead siblings spouse.)
24Catherine vs. Anne
QUEEN Concubine
25King Versus Pope All for an Heir
- Henry had two motives for wanting to get rid of
Catherine. - First, although she had borne him a daughter, she
was too old to give him the male heir that he
thought he must have. - What is more, the king now wished to marry Anne
Boleyn, who had been his favorite for several
years. - The pope was not able to grant Henry the
annulment of his marriage, even if he had wanted
to, because the pope was controlled by Queen
Catherines nephew, the emperor of Spain. - So when he received the popes refusal in 1533,
Henry appointed a new archbishop of Canterbury,
who obligingly declared Henrys marriage to
Catherine invalid. - In 1534, Henry concluded the break with Rome by
declaring himself head of the English Church.
26King Versus Pope
Arthur Prince of Wales King Henry VIII
27Baby-Mama-Drama
- Why did Henry want a divorce so badly that he
broke with the church? - Catherine was unable to have a son although she
did produce a girl (Mary). - He lusted after a maid in waiting. And then fell
in love with her sister, Ann Boleyn who refused
to sleep with him unless they were married. - He divorced Catherine and had a baby girl with
Ann (Elizabeth). - Catherine was put under house arrest because she
refused to accept the annulment.
28HENRY VIIINOTORIOUS
- King Henry the Eighth, to six wives he was
wedded One died, one survived, two divorced, two
beheaded."
29Henry VIII Renaissance Man and Executioner
- Henry VIII (reigned 15091547) had six wives
After Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, there
were Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Catherine
Howard, and Catherine Parr. - The sexual intrigues of the court trapped two of
Henrys wives The king could play around, but he
couldnt tolerate suspicions of his wives
fidelity. - Like Thomas More, Anne Boleyn and Catherine
Howard lost their heads on the chopping block.
30Henry VIII Renaissance Man and Executioner
- Despite his messy home life, Henry VIII was an
important figure in history. - He created the Royal Navy, which put a stop to
foreign invasions of England and provided the
means for the political power, language, and
literature of England to spread all over the
globe. - Henry himself deserves the title Renaissance man.
- He wrote poetry and played many musical
instruments well he was a champion athlete and a
hunter and he supported the new humanistic
learning. - In his old age, however, Henry was also coarse,
dissolute, arrogant, and a womanizer. - He died without knowing that the child he ignored
because she was female would become the greatest
ruler England ever had.
31WIFIE
Queen Mary Ann Boleyn-aka
Mom Jane Seymour of Aragon (divorced)
(Beheaded) bore
Edward I
(Died)
Ann of Cleves Catherine Howard
Catherine ParrAka The Flanders
Mare Adulterer (Beheaded) Married
Thomas Seymour (Divorced)
(Survived!)
32 Henry Catherine of Aragon Mary Henry
Anne Boleyn Elizabeth Henry Jane
Seymour Edward
33The Protestant Reformation
- Henry closed all of Englands monasteries and
sold the rich buildings and lands to his
subjects. - While the vast majority of his subjects agreed
with Henrys changes in the Church, some of them
did not. - The best known of those who remained loyal to the
pope was Sir Thomas More, the lord chancellor of
England. - More felt he could not legally recognize his
friend Henry as head of the Church. - For Mores stubbornness, Henry ordered that More
be beheaded.
34The Protestant Reformation
- This was the very beginning of Protestantism in
England. - Many people were dissatisfied with the new church
for reasons just the opposite of Mores. - They felt that it was not reformed enough, that
it was merely a copy of Catholicism, as in some
ways it was. - These people later became known as Puritans,
Baptists, Presbyterians, Dissenters, and
Nonconformists. - Some of them said that religion was solely a
matter between the individual and God. - This idea, which is still the foundation of most
Protestant churches, is closely related to the
teachings of those Renaissance humanists who
emphasized the freedom of all human beings.
35After King Henrys Death
- Henry VIII21 April15091547
- Catholic-Protestant
- Mary I("Bloody Mary")19 July15531558
- Catholic
- Edward VI28 January15471553
- Protestant
- Elizabeth I("The Virgin Queen")17
November15581603 - Protestant
- Jane Grey("The Nine Days' Queen")10 July19
July 1553 (Executed)
36The Boy King and Bloody Mary
- Henry VIII was survived by three children Mary,
Elizabeth, and Edward. - According to the laws of succession, a son had to
be crowned first, and so at age nine the son of
Henry and Jane Seymour became Edward VI (reigned
15471553). - An intelligent but sickly boy, he ruled in name
only while his relatives wielded the actual
power. - When Edward died (of tuberculosis), he was
followed by his half-Spanish half-sister, Mary
(reigned 15531558). - Mary was a devout, strong-willed Catholic
determined to avenge the wrongs done to her
mother, Catherine of Aragon. - She restored the popes power in England and
ruthlessly hunted down Protestants.
37Edward VI Boy King
38The Boy King and Bloody Mary
- If she had lived longer and exercised better
judgment, Mary might have undone all her fathers
accomplishments. - She made a strategic error, however, when she
burned about three hundred of her subjects at the
stake. - She further lost the support of her people when
she married Philip II, king of Spain, a country
England was beginning to fear and hate. - Marys executions earned her the name Bloody
Mary. - Because she was childless, upon her death she was
succeeded by her sister Elizabeth.
39Bloody Mary
On behalf of the Catholic Church
40Spanish Inquisition
41Spanish Inquisition
42Elizabeth The Virgin Queen
- Elizabeth I (reigned 15581603) was one of the
most brilliant and successful monarchs in
history. - Since she inherited a kingdom torn by fierce
religious feuds, her first task was to restore
law and order. - She reestablished the Church of England and again
rejected the popes authority. - The pope excommunicated her.
- To keep Spain happy, she pretended that she just
might marry her widowed brother-in-law, King
Philip. - Philip was the first of a long procession of
noblemen, both foreign and English, who wanted to
wed her. - However, Elizabeth resisted marriage all her life
and officially remained the Virgin Queen. - She knew that her strength lay in her
independence and in her ability to play one
suitor off against another.
43Elizabeth
44A True Daughter
- A truly heroic person, Elizabeth survived many
plots against her life. - Several of these plots were initiated by her
cousin, another MaryMary Stuart, Queen of Scots.
- As Elizabeth had no children, Mary was heir to
Englands throne because she too was a direct
descendant of Henry VII. - A Catholic, Mary was eventually deposed from her
throne in Protestant Scotland. - Put under house arrest, she lived as a royal
exile in England, carefully watched by her cousin
Elizabeth. - Elizabeth endured Mary and her plots for twenty
years and then, a true daughter of her father,
sent her Scottish cousin to the chopping block.
45Accomplishments
- It was a major accomplishment that she ever
survived to become Queen of England! Her mother
was executed on the charge of Treason, adultery
and incest. She was branded a bastard by her
father, King Henry VIII. She lost her title of
Princess Elizabeth and had to be referred to as
Lady Elizabeth! - It was a major accomplishment to survive the
questioning she endured at the Tower of London
when she was imprisoned there by her half-sister
Mary Tudor ( aka Mary I Bloody Mary). She was
accused of being involved with the Protestant
rebellion, led by Sir Thomas Wyatt the Younger - Her reign witnessed widespread increase in
literacy and great achievements in the arts -
great poets and playwrights emerged during her
era such as William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser,
Christopher Marlowe and Sir Walter Raleigh)
46Accomplishments
- The reign of Queen Elizabeth I also saw
significant expansion overseas. Great explorers
were encouraged such as Sir Francis Drake, Sir
Walter Raleigh, Sir John Hawkins, Sir Humphrey
Gilbert and Sir Richard Greenville - The new scientific thinking of the renaissance
was encouraged and important men such as Sir
Francis Bacon and Dr. John Dee emerged during the
Elizabethan era - She achieved an excellent reputation as a good
and wise ruler, who was truly loved by her people
- she was highly accomplished in the art of
rhetoric and Public Relations
47Elizabeth Religion
- Queen Elizabeth adopted a moderate religious
policy. The Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity
(1559), the introduction of the Prayer Book of
1559, and the Thirty-Nine Articles (1563) were
all Protestant in doctrine, but preserved many
traditionally Catholic ceremonies. Although a
Protestant she did not persecute Catholics with
conviction - she adopted a moderate approach - She established Protestantism as the country's
religion
48The Spanish Armada Sinks A Turning Point in
History
- King Philip of Spain, ever watchful for an
opportunity to hammer at England, used Marys
execution as an excuse to invade England. - He assembled a vast fleet of warships for that
purpose the famous Spanish Armada. - In 1588, Englands Royal Navy, assisted greatly
by nasty weather in the Irish Sea, destroyed the
Armada. - This victory assured Englands and all of
northern Europes independence from the powerful
Catholic countries of the Mediterranean. - It was a great turning point in history and
Elizabeths finest moment. - If Spain had prevailed, history would have been
quite different All of North America, like most
of South America, might be speaking Spanish
instead of English.
49A Flood of Literature
- What is the connection between these political
events and English literature? - With their own religious and national identity
firmly established, the English started writing
as never before. - After the defeat of the Armada, Elizabeth became
a beloved symbol of peace, security, and
prosperity to her subjects, and she provided
inspiration to scores of English authors. - They represented her in poetry, drama, and
fiction as a mythological figure. - Literary works that did not directly represent
her were dedicated to her because authors knew
she was a lover of literature, a person of
remarkably wide learning, and something of a
writer herself.
50William Shakespeare Bio
- Born in Stratford on about April 23rd 1564.
- His father William was a successful local
businessman and his mother Mary was the daughter
of a landowner. - The family paid for Williams education, although
there is no evidence he attended university. - In 1582 William, aged only 18, married Anne
Hathaway who was seven or eight years older .
They had their first daughter, Susanna. - They had another 2 children but Williams only
son Hamnet died aged only 11.
51Shakespeare
52Shakespeares Bio
- Spent most of his time in London writing and
performing in his plays. - Didnt mind being absent from his family - only
returning home during Lent when all theatres were
closed. - In the1590s he wrote the majority of his sonnets.
This was a time of prolific writing and his plays
developed a good deal of interest and
controversy. - Due to some well timed investments he was able to
secure a firm financial background leaving time
for writing and acting. The best of these
investments was buying some real estate near
Stratford in 1605. It soon doubled in value.
53Shakespeares Bio
- 1603 Shakespeare's theatrical company was taken
under the patronage of King James I, and became
known as the King's Company. - In 1608, the company acquired the Black friars
Theatre. Shakespeare soon joined the group of
the now famous writers who gathered at Mermaid
Tavern, located on Bread Street in Cheapside. - Retired from theatre in 1610 and returned to
Stratford.
54Shakespeares Bio
- 1613 Globe Theatre burned down, but Shakespeare
remained quite wealthy and contributed to the
building of the new Globe Theatre. - Shakespeare died on April 23, 1616 and was buried
in the chancel of the Church of the Holy Trinity
in Stratford. - A monument to Shakespeare was set up on the
north wall of the chancel, with a bust of
Shakespeare.
55The Globe Theater
56Shakespeares Bio
- The bust and the engraving by Droeshout that
prefixed the First Folio are the only renderings
of Shakespeare that are considered to be
accurate. - In Shakespeare's will, he left most of his
property to Susanna and her daughter, except for
his "second-best bed," which he left to his wife.
57The Age of Shakespeare
- Shakespeare lived and worked between 1564 and
1616, placing him squarely in the long and
important reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603).
- The periodthe age of Shakespearewas shaped by
Queen Elizabeths indomitable spirit, and is
considered something of a golden age for English
literature. - Shakespeare is often at the forefront of our
minds as an example of and great influence on
Elizabethan England
58Shakespeares Curse
- On his Tombstone
- Good friend for Jesus sake forbear
- To dig the dust enclosed here
- Blest be the man that spares these
- Stones and curst be he that moves my
- Bones
59The Grave Curse
60Shakespeare Contributor
- Stands out in this period as a poet and
playwright as yet unsurpassed. - Gifted and incredibly versatile, and he surpassed
"professionals" as Robert Greene who mocked this
"shake-scene" of low origins. - Though most dramas met with great success in the
Elizabethan Era, it is in his later years (marked
by the early reign of James I) that he wrote what
have been considered his greatest plays Hamlet,
Romeo and Juliet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth,
Antony and Cleopatra, and The Tempest. - His plays have been translated into every major
living language, and are performed more often
than those of any other playwright.
61Shakespeares Works
- Shakespeare produced most of his known work
between 1590 and 1613. - Early plays were mainly comedies and histories,
genres he raised to the peak of sophistication
and artistry by the end of the sixteenth century.
- He then wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608,
including Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth,
considered some of the finest examples in the
English language. - In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, also
known as romances.
62Contributions Cont.
- There are four periods in Shakespeare's writing
career. - Until the mid-1590s-wrote mainly comedies
influenced by Roman and Italian models and
history plays in the popular chronicle tradition.
- His second period about 1595 with the tragedy
Romeo and Juliet and ended with the tragedy of
Julius Caesar in 1599. During this time, he wrote
what are considered his greatest comedies and
histories. - From about 1600 to about 1608, his "tragic
period", Shakespeare wrote mostly tragedies - 1608 to 1613, mainly romances.
63Influence Relevance
- Improvement of blank verse
- Combination of traditional with freer style.
- Development of characters
- Wide range of themes
- He was not of an age, but for all time! Ben
Jonson Quote (1573 - 1637) ...
64A Dull Man Succeeds a Witty Woman
- Elizabeth died childless.
- She was succeeded by her second cousin, James VI
of Scotland, the son of Elizabeths cousin Mary. - As James I of England (reigned 16031626), he
lacked Elizabeths ability to resolve critical
issues. - James was a spendthrift where Elizabeth had been
thrifty he was thick-tongued and goggle-eyed
where she had been glamorous and witty he was
essentially a foreigner where she had been a
complete Englishwoman. - James I tried hard.
- He wrote learned books he patronized
Shakespeare he sponsored a new translation of
the Bible and he was in many respects an
admirable man and a benevolent, peaceful ruler. - Yet his relationship with many of his subjects
went from bad to worse.
65The Decline of the Renaissance
- Jamess son and successor, Charles I (reigned
16251649), turned out to be remote, autocratic,
and self-destructive. - Some of his most powerful subjects had him
beheaded in 1649. - For the next eleven years, England was ruled by
Parliament and the Puritan dictator Oliver
Cromwell, not by an anointed king. - When Charless son came to power eleven years
later, in 1660, England had changed in many
important ways.
66Parliament
67The Decline of the Renaissance
- Of course the Renaissance did not end in 1660
when Charles II returned from exile in France,
just as it had not begun on a specific date. - Renaissance values, which were primarily moral
and religious, gradually eroded, and Renaissance
energies gradually gave out. - The last great writer of the English Renaissance
was John Milton, who lived on into an age in
which educated people were becoming more worldly
in their outlook. - Scientific truths were soon to challenge
long-accepted religious beliefs.
68The Decline of the Renaissance
- The English Renaissance was over.
- And so is this Power Point o)
Elizabeth I Bloody Mary