Bell Ringer: Sept. 30 & Oct. 1
... What is your vernacular? How do you think people felt when they could read the Bible in their own language? ...
... What is your vernacular? How do you think people felt when they could read the Bible in their own language? ...
The Renaissance - Valhalla High School
... • After five years 25 million people were dead--one-third of Europe's population. • Even when the worst was over, smaller outbreaks continued, not just for years, but for centuries. The survivors lived in constant fear of the plague's return, and the disease did not disappear until the 1600s. • The ...
... • After five years 25 million people were dead--one-third of Europe's population. • Even when the worst was over, smaller outbreaks continued, not just for years, but for centuries. The survivors lived in constant fear of the plague's return, and the disease did not disappear until the 1600s. • The ...
File - Lorraine A. Rollo, Ph.D.
... consequences of the Black Death, Church crises, and amid ongoing political rivalries. Intellectuals, artists and statesmen found inspiration in classical antiquity, a time when Italian culture was preeminent among western civilizations. 2. The Renaissance movement emerged in Italy in a secular & wea ...
... consequences of the Black Death, Church crises, and amid ongoing political rivalries. Intellectuals, artists and statesmen found inspiration in classical antiquity, a time when Italian culture was preeminent among western civilizations. 2. The Renaissance movement emerged in Italy in a secular & wea ...
Out of the doom and gloom of the Dark Ages…
... Educated men and women hoped to bring back the life and culture of Greece and Rome But, of course, bringing back a golden age is never possible. What they created was something totally new… ...
... Educated men and women hoped to bring back the life and culture of Greece and Rome But, of course, bringing back a golden age is never possible. What they created was something totally new… ...
renaissance italy - New Providence School
... What Columbus knew of the world in 1492 was contained in this map by the Nuremberg geographer Martin Behaim, creator of the first spherical globe of the earth. The ocean section of Behaim’s globe is reproduced here. Departing the Canary Islands (in the second section from the right), Columbus expec ...
... What Columbus knew of the world in 1492 was contained in this map by the Nuremberg geographer Martin Behaim, creator of the first spherical globe of the earth. The ocean section of Behaim’s globe is reproduced here. Departing the Canary Islands (in the second section from the right), Columbus expec ...
Art History 361
... Platonic ideals of physical beauty, and being Christians, wanted to fuse this pagan idealism with Christian doctrine. The art and taste during the Renaissance for complicated mythological fantasies intermingled with allegories and symbolisms tried to achieve this fusion of the Platonic idealism with ...
... Platonic ideals of physical beauty, and being Christians, wanted to fuse this pagan idealism with Christian doctrine. The art and taste during the Renaissance for complicated mythological fantasies intermingled with allegories and symbolisms tried to achieve this fusion of the Platonic idealism with ...
The Renaissance
... • New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of Arabic numerals) were introduced. b) sequencing events related to the rise of Italian city-states and their political development, including Machiavelli’s theory of governing as described in The Prince; Florence, Venice, and Genoa • Had access to tr ...
... • New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of Arabic numerals) were introduced. b) sequencing events related to the rise of Italian city-states and their political development, including Machiavelli’s theory of governing as described in The Prince; Florence, Venice, and Genoa • Had access to tr ...
The Italian Renaissance
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
renaissance
... with the Arabs, ideas were exchanged along with goods. These ideas, preserved from the ancient past, served as the basis of the Renaissance. When the Byzantine empire fell to Muslim Turks in 1453, many Christian scholars left Greece (and Constantinople) for Italy. ...
... with the Arabs, ideas were exchanged along with goods. These ideas, preserved from the ancient past, served as the basis of the Renaissance. When the Byzantine empire fell to Muslim Turks in 1453, many Christian scholars left Greece (and Constantinople) for Italy. ...
McKay Ch12 Study Guide 11e - District 196 e
... The Renaissance was an era of intellectual and artistic brilliance unsurpassed in European history. It is clear that some thinking people in this era, largely a mercantile elite, saw themselves living in an age more akin to that of the bright and creative ancient world than that of the recent dark a ...
... The Renaissance was an era of intellectual and artistic brilliance unsurpassed in European history. It is clear that some thinking people in this era, largely a mercantile elite, saw themselves living in an age more akin to that of the bright and creative ancient world than that of the recent dark a ...
The Italian Renaisance
... • Began in 1485 with Henry VII • English Humanists were interested in social issues – Thomas More (Utopia): criticized his society by comparing it to “the ideal one” – William Shakespeare: • Drew on ideas from medieval heroes & classical legends • Wrote about universal human qualities ...
... • Began in 1485 with Henry VII • English Humanists were interested in social issues – Thomas More (Utopia): criticized his society by comparing it to “the ideal one” – William Shakespeare: • Drew on ideas from medieval heroes & classical legends • Wrote about universal human qualities ...
Document
... Science 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. ...
... Science 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. ...
The Italian Renaissance
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
REN1
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
... The significance of printing and mining as new industries The fifteenth-century banking empire of the Medici family in Florence ...
chapt28 Ren begins
... reCatholicChurch.The church taught that laws were made J and that thosewho broke them were sinful. It encouraged to follow its teachingswithout questionin order to savetheir Forthe church,life after deathwas more importantthan life on In contrast,humanistsbelievedthat peopleshould use their to quest ...
... reCatholicChurch.The church taught that laws were made J and that thosewho broke them were sinful. It encouraged to follow its teachingswithout questionin order to savetheir Forthe church,life after deathwas more importantthan life on In contrast,humanistsbelievedthat peopleshould use their to quest ...
Venetian Renaissance - Weatherford High School
... of literature being transcribed in vernacular text? ...
... of literature being transcribed in vernacular text? ...
Principle of Art shaped during the Renaissance
... beings. They believed that people were able to experience God directly and should have a personal, emotional relationship to their faith. God had made the world but humans were able to share in his glory by becoming creators themselves. These new cultural movements gave inspiration to artists, while ...
... beings. They believed that people were able to experience God directly and should have a personal, emotional relationship to their faith. God had made the world but humans were able to share in his glory by becoming creators themselves. These new cultural movements gave inspiration to artists, while ...
Renaissance Book 6
... pieces of art all across Italy keeping those humanistic values in mind. 9 centuries later, the art of the Renaissance is still influential today. In this presentation we will be taking a look at the various artists, writers, and architects that fueled the golden age for Italy. ...
... pieces of art all across Italy keeping those humanistic values in mind. 9 centuries later, the art of the Renaissance is still influential today. In this presentation we will be taking a look at the various artists, writers, and architects that fueled the golden age for Italy. ...
Renaissance Review - Lakeland Regional High School
... Vernacular allowed the ideas of the renaissance to spread throughout Europe by giving individuals increased access to writings in their own language and increasing literacy rates among the population. Works like those of Dante (Devine Comedy), Chaucer (Canterbury Tales), and Rabelais (Pantagruel an ...
... Vernacular allowed the ideas of the renaissance to spread throughout Europe by giving individuals increased access to writings in their own language and increasing literacy rates among the population. Works like those of Dante (Devine Comedy), Chaucer (Canterbury Tales), and Rabelais (Pantagruel an ...
Renaissance Art - Gonzaga University
... “sfumato”, Raphael’s elegance, and Michelangelo’s monumental works. It instead brought forth the emerging artists’ virtuosity, originality, and technical skill. 8) To understand how the Renaissance style was adopted by the rest of Europe in the 16th century when Italian artists ( Leonardo da Vinci, ...
... “sfumato”, Raphael’s elegance, and Michelangelo’s monumental works. It instead brought forth the emerging artists’ virtuosity, originality, and technical skill. 8) To understand how the Renaissance style was adopted by the rest of Europe in the 16th century when Italian artists ( Leonardo da Vinci, ...
The Renaissance
... • New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of Arabic numerals) were introduced. b) sequencing events related to the rise of Italian city-states and their political development, including Machiavelli’s theory of governing as described in The Prince; Florence, Venice, and Genoa • Had access to tr ...
... • New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of Arabic numerals) were introduced. b) sequencing events related to the rise of Italian city-states and their political development, including Machiavelli’s theory of governing as described in The Prince; Florence, Venice, and Genoa • Had access to tr ...
The Renaissance
... Carta is signed by king John 3. 100 years war- troops needed to fight 4. The Crusades- People die and they bring back goods to be sold- the beginning of towns situated around shops 5. Status is beginning to be determined by ability, not birth right ...
... Carta is signed by king John 3. 100 years war- troops needed to fight 4. The Crusades- People die and they bring back goods to be sold- the beginning of towns situated around shops 5. Status is beginning to be determined by ability, not birth right ...
The Renaissance
... Carta is signed by king John 3. 100 years war- troops needed to fight 4. The Crusades- People die and they bring back goods to be sold- the beginning of towns situated around shops 5. Status is beginning to be determined by ability, not birth right ...
... Carta is signed by king John 3. 100 years war- troops needed to fight 4. The Crusades- People die and they bring back goods to be sold- the beginning of towns situated around shops 5. Status is beginning to be determined by ability, not birth right ...
Renaissance Revival architecture
Renaissance Revival (sometimes referred to as ""Neo-Renaissance"") is an all-encompassing designation that covers many 19th century architectural revival styles which were neither Grecian (see Greek Revival) nor Gothic (see Gothic Revival) but which instead drew inspiration from a wide range of classicizing Italian modes. Under the broad designation ""Renaissance architecture"" nineteenth-century architects and critics went beyond the architectural style which began in Florence and central Italy in the early 15th century as an expression of Humanism; they also included styles we would identify as Mannerist or Baroque. Self-applied style designations were rife in the mid- and later nineteenth century: ""Neo-Renaissance"" might be applied by contemporaries to structures that others called ""Italianate"", or when many French Baroque features are present (Second Empire).The divergent forms of Renaissance architecture in different parts of Europe, particularly in France and Italy, has added to the difficulty of defining and recognizing Neo-Renaissance architecture. A comparison between the breadth of its source material, such as the English Wollaton Hall, Italian Palazzo Pitti, the French Château de Chambord, and the Russian Palace of Facets — all deemed ""Renaissance"" — illustrates the variety of appearances the same architectural label can take.