Title: Section 1 Chapter 11 LT
1Section 1 Chapter 11 LT
- Tell how Florence and other cities contributed to
the start and spread of the Renaissance. - Explain how reopening the Silk Road and Marco
Polos travels affected the Renaissance.
2Origins of the Renaissance Sect. 1
7.8.2 7.8.3
- The Big Idea
- The growth of wealthy trading cities in Italy led
to a new era called the Renaissance. - Main Ideas
- European trade with Asia increased in the 1300s.
- Trade cities in Italy grew wealthy and competed
against each other. - As Florence became a center for arts and
learning, the Renaissance began.
3Main Idea 1European trade with Asia increased
in the 1300s.
- The results of the Black Death1. economy of
Europe began to grow 2. Goods became available
3. people bought more things4. trade
increased. - Mongols took over China. They made roads safe
again, including the Silk Road, a trade route
between Europe and China. - Traders and travelers began to use the routes
again. Marco Polo and his family went over the
Silk Road. - He gained favor in the Chinese court and took
fabulous stories back to Italy.
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5Main Idea 2Trade cities in Italy grew wealthy
and competed against each other.
- Northern Italy and its cities had become trading
centers. These cities played very important roles
in trade. - These cities became trading centers.
- Florence- manufacturing center
- Genoa- Port city on the Mediterranean Sea
- Milan- manufacturing center
- Venice- Port city on the Mediterranean Sea
- Milan produced weapons and silk. Florence was a
center for weaving wool into cloth. - Wealthy families controlled the important cities
of Italy.
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8Main Idea 3As Florence became a center for arts
and learning, the Renaissance began.
- Trade goods from Asia poured into Europe. The
merchant families in Italy became very wealthy.
The families wanted everyone to see what they
could buy with their wealth. - Renaissance began in Florence, Italy because
Cosimo de Medici, a rich banker, wanted it to be
the most beautiful city in the world (art) and he
needed smart workers for his bank(education). - The love of art and education was a key feature
of a time we call the Renaissance, which means
rebirth.
9The Medici Family
- Florence, Italy, was a trading town, and banking
brought even more money to the economy. - The greatest bankers in Florence were the Medici
family. - The head of the family hired artists to decorate
his palace and architects to redo the buildings. - Built libraries and collected books because he
needed educated workers. - During the time the Medici family held power,
Florence became the center for Italian art,
literature, and culture.
10Section 2 Chapter 11
- Describe how rediscovering learning and art from
ancient Greece and Rome led to humanism, which
combined intellectual learning and religious
faith. - Explain achievements made in literature, art,
science, mathematics, and other fields by various
people.
11The Italian Renaissance Sect. 2
7.8.1 7.8.5
- The Big Idea
- New ways of thinking created a rebirth of the
arts and learning in Italy. - Main Ideas
- During the Italian Renaissance, people found new
ways to see the world. - Italians writers contributed great works of
literature. - Italian art and artists were among the finest in
the world. - Science and education made advances during this
time.
12Main Idea 1During the Italian Renaissance,
people found new ways to see the world.
- Scholars began to study humanities ,history,
literature, public speaking, and art. This led to
the thinking and learning known as humanism due
to a new interest in ancient history. - When the Turks conquered much of the Byzantine
Empire, scholars fled to Europe and took great
works of literature with them. Many of the works
were thought to be ancient classical writings,
works by Greek or Roman thinkers. - Italian scholars wanted to revive subjects that
the Greeks and Romans had studied. - Other sources of inspiration were Roman ruins and
fine classical statues.
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14Main Idea 2Italian writers contributed great
works of literature.
- Writers such as Dante Alighieri and Niccolo
Machiavelli contributed greatly to the
Renaissance. - Dantes major work was The Divine Comedy. Dante
wrote it in Italian, which was the vernacular,
the common language of the people. - Described an imaginary journey through the
afterlife - Described many of the problems Dante saw in
Italian society - Machiavelli wrote The Prince. He was also a
politician, and his book told leaders how to
rule. - Told politicians to focus on the here and now,
not on theories
15Main Idea 3Italian art and artists were among
the finest in the world.
- Italian artists had the support of very wealthy
families. - New techniques, like perspective, made their work
come alive. - Perspective is a method of showing a
three-dimensional scene on a flat surface so that
it looks real. - People in background are smaller
- Lines appear diagonal
- Use color to show distance
- Sandro Botticelli from Florence. He painted
everything in fine detail. - Titian, the finest artist of Venice, reflected
his interest in the past by painting scenes from
classical myths. - Michelangelo was one of the great Italian
artists. Painted portraits but also designed
buildings, wrote poetry, and painted murals in
the Vatican. - Leonardo da Vinci was the true genius. He was a
great painter, sculptor, architect, inventor, and
engineer.
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18Main Idea 4Science and education made advances
during this time.
- Many of the texts rediscovered in the 1300s dealt
with science. For the first time in centuries,
Europeans could read works by ancient scientists
and make their own scientific advances. - Mathematics was believed to be the key to
unlocking the universe. - Square roots and integers (- )
- Engineers and architects used math to design new
buildings. - Dome
- Astronomy was studied to learn more about the sun
and stars. - Learned that the Earth moves around the Sun
- Cartographynew maps for sailors
19The Spread of Renaissance Ideas
New subjects are studied because of this new
interest in all of these subjects.
Education and new ways of spreading information
would take the Renaissance far beyond Italy.
20Section 3 Chapter 11
- Means Describe how paper manufacturing and the
printing press helped to spread information and
ideas. - Means Explain achievements made in literature,
- art, science, mathematics, and so forth by
various people.
21The Renaissance Beyond Italy Sect. 3
7.8.4 7.8.5
- The Big Idea
- The Renaissance spread far beyond Italy and
changed in the process. - Main Ideas
- Paper, printing, and new universities led to the
spread of new ideas. - The ideas of the Northern Renaissance differed
from those of the Italian Renaissance. - Literature beyond Italy also thrived in the
Renaissance.
22Main Idea 1Paper, printing and new universities
led to the spread of new ideas.
- The greatest method of communication was
printing. The invention of the printing press
meant that books could be made faster than ever
before. - Johann Gutenberg, a German, developed a printing
press with movable type. The first printed book
was a Bible. Books could be copied faster now.
Increases literacy. - Travelers spread the ideas of the Renaissance
- Students from around Europe traveled to Italy to
study at the universities. - New universities began to open in France,
Germany, and the Netherlands. - Women from noble families were often educated at
home. They then married nobles from around
Europe and spread the Renaissance ideas to their
husbands lands.
23Main Idea 2The ideas of the Northern
Renaissance differed from those of the Italian
Renaissance.
- Unlike Italy, northern scholars focused on the
history of Christianity. The resulting
combination of humanist and religious ideas is
called Christian humanism. - Desiderius Erasmus wrote a book The Praise of
Folly. He criticized the corrupt clergy and said
that some rituals were meaningless and didnt
show devotion to God and His teachings.
24Artists of the Northern Renaissance
- Northern artists painted in a realistic style and
painted primarily scenes of daily life. - Albrecht Dürer was an artist from Germany who was
most famous for his prints. - A print is a work of art reproduced from an
original. - He carved an image into a metal sheet or wooden
block, covered it in ink, and pressed a sheet of
paper down on it to transfer the image to the
paper. - Hans Holbein and Jan van Eyck were famous for
their painting of portraits. - Van Eyck worked in oil paints, a new invention.
25Main Idea 3Literature beyond Italy also thrived
in the Renaissance.
- Writers in other countries besides Italy also
included Renaissance ideas. However, these
writers wrote in their own languages. - Miguel de Cervantes was a Spanish writer who
wrote Don Quixote in his own language.(vernacular)
- William Shakespeare also wrote in his own
language, English. He wrote plays and poetry and
is considered the greatest writer in the English
language. - The works of both men have been translated into
many languages and read all over the world.
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