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Recovery and Rebirth:

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Title: Recovery and Rebirth:


1
Chapter 12
  • Recovery and Rebirth
  • The Renaissance
  • Pg. 314-320

2
Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian
Renaissance
  • Renaissance Rebirth
  • Rebirth of antiquity Greco-Roman civilization
  • Jacob Burkhardt
  • Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860)
  • Portrayed Italy as the birthplace of the modern
    world
  • Urban Society
  • City-states dominated political, economic,
    social life
  • Age of Recovery
  • Effects of Black Death, political disorder,
    economic recession
  • Emphasis on individual ability
  • New social ideal of a well rounded or universal
    person
  • Wealthy upper class, not a mass movement

3
Possible Test Question
  • The Italian Renaissance was primarily
  • a mass movement of the peasants.
  • characterized by a preoccupation with religion.
  • a product of rural Italy.
  • a recovery or rebirth of antiquity and
    Greco-Roman culture.
  • a religious reform movement.

4
Possible Test Question
  • According to Jacob Burckhardt, the Renaissance in
    Italy represented
  • the greatest period of economic recovery in the
    history of civilization.
  • a period of moral decline.
  • An era of tremendous graft and corruption in
    Italian government.
  • A continuation of the culture of the High Middle
    Ages.
  • A distinct break from the Middle Ages and the
    true birth of the modern world.

5
The Making of Renaissance Society
  • Economic Recovery
  • Italian cities lose economic supremacy
  • Lost their advantage due to the plague
  • Hanseatic League
  • Commercial organization of German Towns
  • Manufacturing
  • Textiles, printing, mining and metallurgy
    (firearms)
  • Banking
  • Florence and the Medici
  • Patron to the arts

6
Possible Test Question
  • The Medici controlled the finances of the Italian
    city-state of
  • Venice
  • Rome
  • Milan
  • Florence
  • Naples

7
Possible Test Question
  • What was the commercial and military league set
    up off the north coast of Germany?
  • Delian League
  • Prussian Confederation
  • Baltic League
  • League of German Cities
  • Hanseatic League

8
Possible Test Question
  • Two key areas of Renaissance technological
    innovation were
  • fireworks and glass making.
  • mill construction and hydraulics.
  • mining and metalworking, including manufacture of
    firearms.
  • Optical instruments and lens grinding.
  • The use of the vault and the arch.

9
Social Changes in the Renaissance
  • The Nobility (2nd Estate)
  • Reconstruction of the aristocracy
  • Aristocracy 2 3 percent of the population
  • Pursued education to maintain role in government
  • Baldassare Castiglione (1478 1529)
  • The Book of the Courtier (1528)
  • Impeccable character, grace, talents and noble
    birth
  • Achievements such as military and bodily
    exercises
  • Classical education, well versed in the arts
  • Service to the prince
  • Ideal of a well developed personality became the
    social ideal for the aristocracy

10
Possible Test Question
  • Castigliones The Courtier was a
  • primer on military training for nobles.
  • very popular handbook laying out the new skills
    in politics, the arts, and personality expected
    of Renaissance aristocrats.
  • sharp denunciation of the wasteful noble life.
  • treatise against active participation in public
    life.
  • work on how to achieve political power and then
    keep it.

11
Possible Test Question
  • The achievements of the Italian Renaissance were
    the products of
  • an elite movement, involving small numbers of
    wealthy patrons, artists, and intellectuals.
  • a mass movement in which all sections of society
    participated and contributed.
  • a narrow religious movement directed almost
    entirely by clerics.
  • a political movement in essence controlled mainly
    by kings.
  • Foreign inspiration and influence, particularly
    from Islamic Spain.

12
Peasants and Townspeople
  • Peasants (3rd Estate)
  • Peasants 85 90 percent of population
  • Decline of manorial system and serfdom
  • Urban Society hierarchy of 3rd Estate
  • Patricians wealth from trade, industry, banking
  • Petty burghers, shopkeepers, artisans,
    guildmasters, and guildsmen
  • The poor and unemployed (30-40 of urban pop.)
  • Slaves
  • Black Death caused a shortage of workers
  • Slavery declined by the end of the 15th century

13
Possible Test Question
  • The Third Estate of the fifteenth century was
  • predominately urban
  • essentially free from the manorial system,
    especially in eastern Europe.
  • relatively free from violence and disease in
    urban areas.
  • overwhelmingly made up of peasants.
  • made up of clergy and nobles.

14
Possible Test Question
  • The reintroduction of slavery in the fourteenth
    century occurred largely as a result of
  • continued warfare and the capture of foreign
    prisoners.
  • the shortage of labor created by the Black Death.
  • papal decrees encouraging a paternal relationship
    with pagans.
  • movements for Italian naval domination of the
    Mediterranean and the attendant need of manpower.
  • the importation of slaves from Africa.

15
Family and Marriage in Renaissance Italy
  • Husbands and Wives
  • Arranged Marriages
  • Size of dowry depended on status
  • Husband head of household
  • Had to legally free kids or emancipate them
  • Wife managed household
  • Had lots of babies!
  • Children
  • Childbirth
  • Approx. 10 of mothers died
  • 50 of children didnt reach the age of 20
  • Sexual Norms
  • Aristocratic men had affairs quite often
  • Prostitution was seen as a necessary vice

16
Possible Test Question
  • Which of the following statements best describes
    marriage in Renaissance Italy?
  • Young men asked women for their hand in marriage,
    after a lengthy courtship.
  • Husbands were generally the same age as their
    spouses.
  • Marriages were usually arranged, to strengthen
    familial alliances.
  • Men and women waited longer to get married than
    in the Middle Ages.
  • Men and women married earlier than in the Middle
    Ages because of increased economic opportunities.

17
The Italian States in the Renaissance
  • Five Major Powers
  • Milan
  • Francesco Sforza
  • Venice
  • Florence
  • Cosimo Medici (1434-1464)
  • Lorenzo the Magnificent (1469-1492)
  • The Papal States
  • Looked to regain control over Urbino, Bologna,
    Ferrara
  • Kingdom of Naples

18
Italian States Contd
  • Independent City-States
  • Mantua
  • Vittorino da Feltre
  • Ferrara
  • Governend by the DEste family
  • Urbino
  • Federigo da Montefeltro
  • Wife was Battista Sforza, niece of Francesco
    Sforza
  • The Role of Women
  • Battista Sforza governed Urbino when her husband
    was gone
  • Naples was strongly influenced by Isabella dEste
  • Helped rule Mantua before after her husbands
    death

19
Italian States Contd
  • Warfare in Italy
  • Balance of power between city states existed
  • Until Ludovico Sforza invited French to intervene
    in Italian polics
  • Other states turned to Spain for help
  • Struggle between France and Spain
  • Charles VIII of France vs. Ferdinand of Aragon
  • After 1510, Francis I of France vs. Charles I of
    Spain
  • Charles I sacked Rome in 1527 ending the Italian
    wars
  • Invasion and division
  • Still only a slight sense of Italian nationalism
  • Italy will not be a unified nation until 1870

20
Possible Test Question
  • By the fifteenth century, Italy was
  • a centralized state.
  • dominated by the Papal States exclusively.
  • the foremost European power.
  • dominated by five major regional independent
    powers.
  • made up of hundreds of independent city-states.

21
Possible Test Question
  • Perhaps the most famous of Italian ruling women
    was
  • Battista Sforza.
  • Isabella dEste.
  • Christina of Milan.
  • Catherine de Medici.
  • Christine de Pizan.

22
Possible Test Question
  • Federigo da Montefeltro of Urbino was
  • an example of a skilled, intelligent, independent
    Italian warrior prince.
  • an outspoken advocate of Italian unification.
  • a callous, disloyal prince, loathed by the
    papacy.
  • strictly opposed to the proliferation of
    condottieri in Italy.
  • a pious subject of the papacy.

23
Possible Test Question
  • The Peace of Lodi in 1454 exemplifies what key
    Italian Renaissance political concept?
  • rule through intimidation
  • peace at any price
  • a balance of power between multiple, competing
    territorial states
  • the useless nature of paper treaties
  • the inevitability of war and violence

24
Map 12.1 Renaissance Italy
25
The Birth of Modern Diplomacy
  • Modern diplomacy a product of Renaissance Italy
  • Ambassador used to be a servant of Christendom
  • Changing concept of the ambassador
  • Resident ambassadors
  • Agents of the territorial state

26
Machiavelli and the New Statecraft
  • Niccolo Machiavelli (1469 1527)
  • The Prince (1513)
  • Realistic examination political rule
  • Acquisition, maintenance and expansion of
    political power
  • Prince should act on behalf of the state, not his
    conscience
  • Cesare Borgia
  • Pope Alexander VI son
  • Perfect model for the The Prince

27
Possible Test Question
  • Machiavellis ideas as expressed in the The
    Prince achieve a model for
  • a republican state in Italy.
  • a new attitude of moral responsibility among
    politicians.
  • a modern secular concept of power politics.
  • a deeply religious conception of the religious
    sanctity of the state.
  • the justification of divine right monarchy.

28
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29
Italian Renaissance Humanism
  • Classical Revival
  • Petrarch (1304 1374)
  • Humanism in Fifteenth-Century Italy
  • Leonardo Bruni (1370 1444)
  • New Cicero
  • Lorenzo Valla (1407 1457)
  • Humanism and Philosophy
  • Marsilio Ficino (1433 1499)
  • Translates Platos dialogues
  • Synthesis of Christianity and Platonism
  • Renaissance Hermeticism
  • Ficino, Corpus Hermeticum
  • Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463 1494),
    Oration on the Dignity of Man

30
Education, History, and the Impact of Printing
  • Education in the Renaissance
  • Liberal Studies history, moral philosophy,
    eloquence (rhetoric), letters (grammar and
    logic), poetry, mathematics, astronomy and music
  • Education of women
  • Aim of education was to create a complete citizen
  • Humanism and History
  • Secularization
  • Guicciardini (1483 1540), History of Italy,
    History of Florence
  • The Impact of Printing
  • Johannes Gutenberg
  • Movable type (1445 1450)
  • Gutenbergs Bible (1455 or 1456)
  • The spread of printing

31
Art in the Early Renaissance
  • Masaccio (1401 1428)
  • Perspective and Organization
  • Movement and Anatomical Structure
  • Paolo Uccelo (1397 1475)
  • The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian
  • Sandro Botticelli (1445 1510)
  • Primavera
  • Donato di Donatello (1386 1466)
  • David
  • Filippo Brunelleschi (1377 1446)
  • The Cathedral of Florernce
  • Church of San Lorenzo

32
Masaccio, Tribute Money
33
The Artistic High Renaissance
  • Leonardo da Vinci (1452 1519)
  • Last Supper
  • Raphael (1483 1520)
  • School of Athens
  • Michelangelo (1475 1564)
  • The Sistine Chapel

34
Raphael, School of Athens
35
The Artist and Social Status
  • Early Renaissance
  • Artists as craftsmen
  • High Renaissance
  • Artists as heroes

36
The Northern Artistic Renaissance
  • Jan van Eyck (c. 1380 1441)
  • Giovanni Arnolfini and His Bride
  • Albrecht Dürer (1471 1528)
  • Adoration of the Magi

37
Van Eyck, Giovanni Arnolfini and His Bride
38
Music in the Renaissance
  • Burgundy
  • Guillaume Dufay (c. 1400 1474)
  • The Renaissance Madrigal

39
The European State in the Renaissance
  • The Renaissance State in Western Europe
  • France
  • Louis XI the Spider King (1461 1483)
  • England
  • War of the Roses
  • Henry VII Tudor (1485 1509)
  • Spain
  • Unification of Castile and Aragón
  • Establishment of professional royal army
  • Religious uniformity
  • The Inquisition
  • Conquest of Granada
  • Expulsion of the Jews

40
Map 12.2 Europe in the Second Half of the
Fifteenth Century
41
Map 12.3 The Iberian Peninsula
42
Central, Eastern, and Ottoman Empires
  • Central Europe The Holy Roman Empire
  • Habsburg Dynasty
  • Maximilian I (1493 1519)
  • The Struggle for Strong Monarchy in Eastern
    Europe
  • Poland
  • Hungary
  • Russia
  • The Ottoman Turks and the End of the Byzantine
    Empire
  • Seljuk Turks spread into Byzantine territory
  • Constantinople falls to the Turks (1453)

43
Map 12.4 The Ottoman Empire and Southeastern
Europe
44
The Church in the Renaissance
  • The Problems of Heresy and Reform
  • John Wycliff (c. 1328 1384) and Lollardy
  • John Hus (1374 1415)
  • Urged the elimination of worldliness and
    corruption of the clergy
  • Burned at the stake (1415)
  • Church Councils
  • The Papacy
  • The Renaissance Papacy
  • Julius II (1503 1513)
  • Warrior Pope
  • Nepotism
  • Patrons of Culture
  • Leo X (1513 1521)

45
Discussion Questions
  • Does the Renaissance represent a sharp break from
    the Middle Ages or a continuation of the Medieval
    Period?
  • What social changes did the Renaissance bring
    about?
  • How did Machiavelli deal with the issue of
    political power?
  • How did the printing press change European
    society?
  • What technical achievements did Renaissance
    artists make? Why were they significant?
  • What was the relation between art and politics in
    Renaissance Italy?
  • How did the popes handle the growing problems
    that were emerging in the Church in the Fifteenth
    and early Sixteenth Century?

46
Web Links
  • Renaissance Secrets
  • Explore Leonardos Studio
  • Leonardo da Vinci on the BBC
  • Vatican Exhibit Rome Reborn
  • Renaissance Focus on Florence
  • The Uffizi Gallery Florence
  • Vatican Museums The Sistine Chapel
  • Gutenberg.de
  • The War of the Roses
  • The Ottoman Website
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