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The Renaissance

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Title: The Renaissance, Reformation, and Exploration Author: Cobb County School District Last modified by: Student Created Date: 10/12/2005 1:11:15 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Renaissance


1
The Renaissance
Primavera by Botticelli
2
The Renaissance Essential Questions
  1. What were the chief features of the Renaissance?
  2. How would you describe the political world that
    existed in the Italian states and what role did
    women play?
  3. What were the chief characteristics of Italian
    Renaissance humanism and how did it differ from
    Northern Italian humanism?
  4. What were the chief achievements of Italian and
    Northern Renaissance painters?

3
The Italian Renaissance
  • Renaissance means rebirth
  • Began in Italy
  • Lasted from 1350-1550
  • The classics from Greece and Rome were revived
  • Spread throughout Europe

Palazzo Della Signoria in Florence, Italy
4
Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance
  • Urban society
  • Secular-worldly
  • Recovery from the disasters of the 14th century
  • Black Death
  • Political disorder
  • Economic recession
  • New view of human beings and individual ability

Siena, Italy Piazza del Campo
5
The Italian States
  • During the Middle Ages, Italy had failed to
    develop as a monarchy
  • Lack of single ruler made it possible for a
    number of city-states in northern and central
    Italy to remain independent
  • Prospered from trade
  • Exchanged good with the Byzantine and Islamic
    civilizations, England, and the Netherlands
  • Obtained silks, sugar, and spices to take back to
    Italy

6
The Italian States Milan
  • 14th century-Visconti family established
    themselves as dukes of Milan and extend power all
    over Lombardy
  • Last Visconti dies in 1447
  • Francesco Sforza (condottiere-leader of a band of
    mercenaries) conquers Milan and becomes duke
  • Built a strong, centralized state
  • Efficient tax system

Duomo in Milan, Italy
7
The Italian States Venice
  • Grown wealthy from trading
  • Small group of merchant-aristocrats ran the
    government on behalf of their own interests
  • Trade empire brought enormous revenues
  • Became an international power

San Marco in Venice, Italy
8
The Italian States Florence
  • Dominated the region of Tuscany
  • In 1434, Cosimo de Medici took control of the
    city
  • The Medici kept the republic form of government,
    but ran it behind the scenes
  • Cosimo and Lorenzo put supporters in offices to
    carry out their policies
  • Florence was the cultural center of Italy

Duomo in Florence, Italy
9
The Italian States
  • Rest of monarchial Europe was attracted to the
    riches of Italy
  • Italians turn to Spain for help
  • Southern Italy (the Kingdom of Naples) became a
    battleground for French and Spanish dominance
  • Spanish sack Rome in 1527 because they are not
    being paid
  • Ends wars and Renaissance in Italy

10
Machiavelli and the New Statecraft
  • Wrote The Prince
  • Concerned with political power and how to get it
    and keep it
  • Rejected the Middle Ages view that rulers ought
    to behave on Christian moral values
  • Must be based on an understanding of human nature
  • A ruler acts on behalf of the state, therefore,
    he should let his own conscience sleep
  • Had a profound influence on political leaders in
    the Western world

Machiavelli
11
The Making of Renaissance Society Nobility
  • Around 3 of the population
  • Held political posts and advised Kings
  • Castiglione describe the perfect noble in his
    work The Book of the Courtier
  • Born, not made
  • Work to be a warrior
  • Have a classical education
  • Standards of conduct
  • Serve his prince in an effective and honest way

Isabella dEste
Pietro Medici
12
The Making of Renaissance SocietyPeasants and
Townspeople
  • About 90 of the population
  • Serfdom declined and more peasants were becoming
    free
  • Townspeople were divided also
  • Patricians-wealthy traders, industry, and
    banking-dominated communities
  • Burghers-shopkeepers, artisans, guild
    members-middle class
  • Impoverished-unemployed, pitiful wages, 30-40
    pop.

Moneychanger and his Wife by Quentin Massys
13
The Making of Renaissance SocietyFamily and
Marriage
  • Parents carefully arranged marriages to
    strengthen business or family ties
  • Details were worked out when children were 2 or 3
    years old
  • Legally binding
  • Dowry-sum of the money given by the wifes family
    to the husband upon marriage
  • Father was the center of family
  • Children became adults when they were legally
    freed
  • Mothers role was to supervise the household

The Marriage of the Virgin by Raphael
14
Italian Renaissance Humanism
  • Humanism was an intellectual movement based upon
    the study of the classics
  • Humanists studied the liberal arts-grammar,
    rhetoric, poetry, philosophy, and history
  • Petrarch is considered the father of
    humanism-used pure classical Latin
  • Reflected the values of urban society
  • Put to the service of the state

15
Education in the Renaissance
  • Humanists wrote books and opened schools based on
    their ideas
  • History
  • Philosophy
  • Rhetoric
  • Poetry
  • Astronomy
  • Music
  • Mathematics
  • Some women did attend humanists schools, but were
    not taught rhetoric and mathematics

Johannes Gutenberg
Gutenbergs Printing Press
16
Vernacular Language
  • Vernacular-language spoken in their own regions
  • Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales
  • English
  • Dantes Divine Comedy
  • Italian
  • Began to compete with Latin
  • Eventually replaced it

17
The Artistic Renaissance in Italy
Branccaci Tributo fresco by Masaccio
Self Portrait by Leonardo da Vinci
Dome of the duomo in Florence by Brunelleschi
18
The Artistic Renaissance in Italy
  • Fresco-painting done on fresh, wet plaster with
    water based paints
  • Figures had the illusion of being three
    dimensional
  • Two major achievements
  • Perspective
  • Moverment and human anatomy
  • Architects were inspired by the buildings of
    ancient Rome (San Lorenzo)

School of Athens by Raphael
Interior of San Lorenzo by Brunelleschi
19
The Artistic Renaissance in Italy
  • Mastery of techniques for a realistic portrayal
    of the world
  • Da Vinci dissected human bodies to study anatomy
  • Move from painting realistic forms to ideal forms
  • Glorified the human body

Pieta By Michelangelo Rome, Italy
Ospedale degli Innocenti Designed by
Brunelleschi Florence, Italy
20
The Artistic Renaissance in Italy
The Last Judgement By Michelangelo Sistine
Chapel Rome, Italy
21
The Artistic Renaissance in Italy
The Sistine Chapel Ceiling by Micelangelo
22
The Northern Artistic Renaissance
  • Skilled in painting details
  • Did not fully understand perspective
  • Jan Van Eyck from Flanders
  • Albrecht Durer from Germany

Jan Van Eyck
Albrecht Durer
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