Title: Chapter 14, Section 1
1Chapter 14, Section 1
World History Connections to Today, Prentice Hall
(2003)
2Reading QuizPlease ACE the following questions
- What conditions in Italy contributed to the
emergence of the Renaissance? - How did Renaissance art reflect humanist
concerns? - Describe Castigliones ideal Renaissance man.
3The Middle Ages (500 1350)
- Fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century.
- Invasion of
- Magyars (Hungarians)
- Northmen (Norse or Vikings)
- Arabs
- Mongols
A History of Modern Europe From the Renaissance
to the Present (1996)
4The Middle Ages (500 1350)
5The Middle Ages (500 1350)
- Three Social Groups
- Clergy
- Nobles
- Peasants
6The Middle Ages (500 1350)
- Nation-states did not exist
- Economic, Political, and Judicial institutions
were overwhelmingly local. - Town walls were used to protect communities.
7Government of the Middle Ages Feudalism
- King
- Autocratic Monarchy (Top of the food chain)
- Nobles (A seat at the table)
- Titles assigned by the King.
- Peasants (The food)
- 85 of the population in Europe.
- Also called Serfs.
8Chapter 14, Section 1 Learning Focus
- Why were the Italian city states a favorable
setting for a cultural rebirth? - What was the Renaissance?
- What themes and techniques did Renaissance
artists and writers explore?
9Vocabulary
- Patron
- Humanism
- Humanities
- Perspective
10The Italian City-States
- The Renaissance began in Italy, then spread north
to the rest of Europe.
11(No Transcript)
12Why Italy?
- The Renaissance was marked by a new interest in
the culture of ancient Rome. Because Italy had
been the center of the Roman empire, it was a
logical place for this reawakening to begin. - In the north, city-states like Florence, Milan,
Venice and Genoa grew into prosperous centers of
trade and manufacturing.
13Why Italy?
- A wealthy and powerful merchant class in these
city-states further promoted the cultural
rebirth. These merchants exerted both political
and economic leadership, and their attitudes and
interests helped to shape the Italian
Renaissance. They stressed education and
individual achievement. They also spent lavishly
to support the arts.
14The Medici (Godfathers of the Renaissance)
- In the 1400s, the Medici family of Florence
organized a successful banking business. - The Medici were generous patrons of the arts. A
patron is a financial supporter. Poets and
philosophers frequently visited the Medici
palace. Artists learned their craft by sketching
ancient Roman statures displayed in the Medici
gardens.
15What was the Renaissance?
- The Renaissance was a time of creativity and
change in many areas- political, social,
economic, and cultural. Perhaps most important,
however, were the changes that took place in the
way people viewed themselves and their world.
16A New Worldview
- Their era, they felt, was a time of rebirth after
what they saw as the disorder and disunity of the
medieval world. - Unlike medieval scholars, who were more likely to
focus on life and death, Renaissance thinkers
explored the richness and variety of human
experience in the here and now.
17A New Worldview
- At the same time, there was a new emphasis on
individual achievement. Indeed, the Renaissance
ideal was the person with talent in many fields.
18A Spirit of Adventure
- The Renaissance supported a spirit of adventure
and a wide-ranging curiosity that led people to
explore new worlds. - The Italian navigator Christopher Columbus, who
sailed to the Americas in 1492, represented that
spirit.
19Humanism
- At the heart of the Italian Renaissance was an
intellectual movement known as humanism. Based on
the study of classical culture, humanism focused
on worldly subjects rather than on the religious
issues that had occupied medieval thinkers. - Humanists believed that education should
stimulate the individuals creative powers.
20Humanism
- They returned to the humanities, the subjects
taught in ancient Greek and Roman schools. - The main areas of study were grammar, rhetoric,
poetry, and history, based on Greek and Roman
texts. - Humanists did not accept the classical texts
without question, however. Rather, they studied
the ancient authorities in light of their own
experiences.
21A Golden Age in the Arts
- Renaissance artists studied ancient Greek and
Roman works and revived many classical forms. - The sculptor Donatello, for example, created a
life-size statue of a soldier on horseback. It
was the first such figure done since ancient
times.
22New Techniques
- Renaissance artists learned the rules of
perspective. By making distant objects smaller
than those close to the viewer, artists could
paint scenes that appeared three-dimensional.
23Three Geniuses of Renaissance Art
24Raphael
25Leonardo da Vinci
26Michelangelo
27Three Geniuses of Renaissance Art
- Leonardo da Vinci
- Michelangelo
- Raphael
28Italian Renaissance Writers
- A literature of how-to books sprang up to help
ambitious men and women who wanted to rise in the
Renaissance world.
29Castigliones Ideal Courtier
- The most widely read of these handbooks was The
Book of the Courtier. Its author, Baldassare
Castiglione, describes the manners, skills,
learning, and virtues that a member of the court
should have.
30Castigliones Ideal Courtier
- Castigliones ideal courtier was a well-educated,
well-mannered aristocrat who mastered many
fields, from poetry to music to sports.
31Castigliones Ideal Courtier
- Castigliones ideal differed for men and women.
32Castigliones Ideal Courtier
- The ideal man, he wrote, is athletic but not
overactive. He is good at games, but not a
gambler. He plays a musical instrument and knows
literature and history but is not arrogant.
33Castigliones Ideal Courtier
- The Ideal woman offers a balance to men. She is
graceful and kind, lively but reserved. She is
beautiful, for outer beauty, wrote Castiglione,
is the true sign of inner goodness.
34How about now?
Every Magazine tells her shes not good enough.
The picture that she sees makes her cry. -Jon
McLaughlin Beautiful Disaster
35Machiavellis Successful Prince
- In The Prince, published in 1513, Machiavelli
combined his personal experience of politics with
his knowledge of the past to offer a guide to
rulers on how to gain and maintain power.
36Machiavellis Successful Prince
- The Prince looked at real rulers, such as the
Medicis, in an age of ruthless power politics.
Machiavelli stressed that the end justifies the
means. He urged rulers to use whatever methods
were necessary to achieve their goals. On the
issue of honesty in government, for example, he
taught that getting results was more important
than keeping promises.
37Machiavellis Successful Prince
- How praiseworthy it is for a prince to keep his
word and live with integrity rather than
craftiness, everyone understands yetthose
princes have accomplished most who paid little
heed to keeping their promises, but who knew how
craftily to manipulate the minds of men.
-Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince
38Partner Question, Chapter 14, Section 1
- Describe two ways that todays society still
reflects beliefs that originated in the
Renaissance. - Do you and your partner think a political leader
today would be wise to follow the advice of
Niccolo Machiavelli? Why or why not?
39Chapter 14, Section 1
World History Connections to Today Prentice Hall
2003