Title: Transformation of the West
1Transformation of the West
2Periodization
- 1300-1450
- Italian Renaissance
- 1450-1600
- Northern Renaissance,
- Reformation,
- Commercial Revolution
- 1600-1700
- Scientific Revolution,
- Political change
- 1700-1800
- Enlightenment
3First Changes Culture Commerce
- Petrarch writings of pride human achievement
contrast w/ previous more religious periods
A New Spirit
4Renaissance
1 of 2
- Italy
- urban center, commercial center
- Humanism focus on humankind
- Examples
- Literature Petrarch, Boccaccio
- Art Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo
- Politics Machiavelli
- Economic effects new focus on profit-seeking
- Political effects new focus on general well-being
5Renaissance
2 of 2
- Northern Renaissance
- political independence trade decline in Med
- More religious, but humanism continues
- Literature focused on human pleasures
(Shakespeare, Rabelais, Cervantes) - Politics increased states powers revenues
(Francis I) - Impact of Renaissance was limited however
- Peasants lives unchanged
- Lords still influential
6Changes in Technology Family
- New technology via contacts
- stronger iron, more efficient mining, greater
literacy from Gutenbergs printing - New European-style family
- Nuclear families, later marriages, fewer
children, greater emphasis on property
7Protestant Catholic Reformation
1 of 2
- Martin Luther challenges the Catholic Church
- Faith salvation
- NOT indulgences, pope, celibacy
- Protestantism was born
- General wave of Christian religious dissent
- Obvious political appeal b/c of challenge of
papal authority - Ordinary people shift by rebelling against
landlords
8Protestant Catholic Reformation
2 of 2
- After unity breached, other Protestant groups
sprang forward - Anglican England (Henry VIII)
- Calvinism Switzerland, parts of Germany, France,
low countries, England, Scotland - Advocated predestination, broader participation,
greater access to gov, popular education - Catholic Reformation
- Catholic Church fights back, successfully in S.
Europe - Jesuit order established important missionaries
in Asia Americas
9End of Christian Unity in West
- Effects of Reformation
- Religious wars
- Grudging limited religious pluralism, but not
liberty - Political benefits mixed
- Beyond politics
- Less connection b/t god nature
- More love b/t husband wife
- Women adopt new emotional role
- Literacy expands
10Commercial Revolution
- New levels of trade
- Caused by inflation from Spanish silver
- Increased borrowing investment ? trading
companies (some gov backed) ? new profits
banking - Colonial markets stimulate manufacturing
- Prosperity of commoners improves too
- Average 5x more things than SE Europeans
11Social Protest
- Formation of proletariat
- Rising population food prices hit poor hard
- Increased tension b/t
rich poor
Who Blamed poor for moral failings Persecuted witches Who Rebelled for greater equality, protection from poverty, and protection from property loss
12Next Changes Science Politics
- Scientific Revolution
- Rise of nation-state
- Copernicus 1st step in scientific revolution
- Discovered earth revolved around sun
- Showed new thinking could improve on tradition
Did Copernicus Copy?
13Science The New Authority
1 of 2
- Examples of scientists who followed Copernicus
- Kepler
- Vesalius
- Galileo
- Harvey
- Bacon
- Descartes
- Newton
- Locke
14Science The New Authority
2 of 2
- Impact of scientific revolution
- Spread of scientific knowledge
- Belief in human control understanding
environment - Attacks on traditional religious ideas
- Wide assumption about human progress
- Science center of intellectual life for 1st time
15Absolute Parliamentary Monarchies
- Decline of feudal monarchy 2 new government
forms - Absolute Monarchy
- Stopped convening feudal parliament, appointed
bureaucrats, professionalized army, promoted
mercantilism - Example France to lesser extent Prussia,
Habsburg - Parliamentary Monarchy
- Central state, but monarch shared power with
parliamentary representatives - Example England, Netherlands
16The Nation-State
- Governments who increasingly ruled peoples of
common culture language - Resulted in
- New loyalties political bonds
- which resulted in
- Commoners believing gov should act in their best
interests - which resulted in
- New functions of gov (like economics)
17The West by 1750
18Political Patterns
- By end of period, political change drawing to
close in England France - Change continued in Prussia however
- Frederick the Great
- Warfare b/t nations continued often b/c of
rivalry
19Enlightenment Thought
1 of 2
- Cultural changes as result of applying rational
thought to human society - Some scientific advances, but mostly social
sciences - Diderot
- Enlightenment principles
- -
- -
- -
- -
20Enlightenment Thought
2 of 2
- Popularization changes for ordinary people
- Common exchanges of ideas
- Increasingly wide audiences for findings
- Attitudes toward children changed
- Less physical punishment, more interaction
education - Family hierarchy weakened
- Women gain some more equality
- Emotional love encouraged for marriages
21Ongoing Change in Commerce
- Commerce consumerism spread to ordinary life
- Agriculture
- New techniques
- New crops
- Manufacturing
- Shift from domestic artisans to manufacturers
- Commerce, ag, manufacturing combined population
explosion
22Innovation Instability
- Interconnection of developments in key
- Stronger gov, ag improvements, population growth,
popular beliefs, economic structures, role of
family - Change in Europe change in view of others
- Backwards, if not uncivilized
Global Connections