The Renaissance
... One of the richest cities, it controls trade through the Alps. Venice Sitting on the Adriatic, it attracts trade from all over the world. Florence Controlled by the De Medici Family, who became great patrons of the arts. Genoa Had Access to Trade Routes ...
... One of the richest cities, it controls trade through the Alps. Venice Sitting on the Adriatic, it attracts trade from all over the world. Florence Controlled by the De Medici Family, who became great patrons of the arts. Genoa Had Access to Trade Routes ...
Name
... 17. Anglican Church- the name for the church of England whom the King was the head 18. Protestant (Origin)-comes from the name given some German Princes who protested against joining forces with the pope against Luther’s ideas. 19. Renaissance Man-someone who excelled in many areas of study 20. Rena ...
... 17. Anglican Church- the name for the church of England whom the King was the head 18. Protestant (Origin)-comes from the name given some German Princes who protested against joining forces with the pope against Luther’s ideas. 19. Renaissance Man-someone who excelled in many areas of study 20. Rena ...
Italy: birthplace of the Renaissance
... • Urban while rest of Europe is rural •Wealthy merchant class • Wealthiest, most powerful class • Earned social rank • Individual achievement important (See Medici Family) ...
... • Urban while rest of Europe is rural •Wealthy merchant class • Wealthiest, most powerful class • Earned social rank • Individual achievement important (See Medici Family) ...
The Renaissance Outcome: Renaissance Painters/Sculptors LEQ
... A) The Book of the Courtier B) The Prince C) The School of Athens 6. Author of a Renaissance literary text that describes how members of a royal court should behave A) Machiavelli B) Brunelleschi ...
... A) The Book of the Courtier B) The Prince C) The School of Athens 6. Author of a Renaissance literary text that describes how members of a royal court should behave A) Machiavelli B) Brunelleschi ...
The Renaissance 1300-1600 Renaissance = Rebirth Rebirth in art
... Michelangelo is the Renaissance artist known for his many great sculptures including David, Moses, and the Pieta. Review Questions How did Leonardo da Vinci contribute to the Renaissance? How did paintings change in style during the Renaissance? Renaissance Writer Dante Alighieri: wrote about life a ...
... Michelangelo is the Renaissance artist known for his many great sculptures including David, Moses, and the Pieta. Review Questions How did Leonardo da Vinci contribute to the Renaissance? How did paintings change in style during the Renaissance? Renaissance Writer Dante Alighieri: wrote about life a ...
Cultural Achievements of the Italian Renaissance
... One of the most important cultural developments during the Renaissance occurred in the visual arts: due to the "Rebirth" of the classics, artists had a new understanding of anatomy, which inspired them to carve nude figures so as to display how accurately they were now able to depict muscles and joi ...
... One of the most important cultural developments during the Renaissance occurred in the visual arts: due to the "Rebirth" of the classics, artists had a new understanding of anatomy, which inspired them to carve nude figures so as to display how accurately they were now able to depict muscles and joi ...
European Architecture through the Centuries
... Renaissance Architecture During the Renaissance more secular buildings became popular. The Roman Classics became a primary reference at this point Architects made the transition from being skilled laborer to artists ...
... Renaissance Architecture During the Renaissance more secular buildings became popular. The Roman Classics became a primary reference at this point Architects made the transition from being skilled laborer to artists ...
high renaissance - chapter 22
... -The tentative artistic explorations of the Early Renaissance, burst into full bloom during the HR. -Artists no longer pondered the art of antiquity. -Role of artist/architect fully matured into one completely freed from medieval past -Artists brought to maturation the concepts initiated in the Ital ...
... -The tentative artistic explorations of the Early Renaissance, burst into full bloom during the HR. -Artists no longer pondered the art of antiquity. -Role of artist/architect fully matured into one completely freed from medieval past -Artists brought to maturation the concepts initiated in the Ital ...
A. “Re-birth” - Marshall Public Schools
... “For a man who, in all respects, will carry out only his professions of good, will be apt to be ruined amongst so many who are evil. A prince therefore who desires to maintain himself must learn to be not always good, but to be so or not as necessity may require. It is much more safe to be feared t ...
... “For a man who, in all respects, will carry out only his professions of good, will be apt to be ruined amongst so many who are evil. A prince therefore who desires to maintain himself must learn to be not always good, but to be so or not as necessity may require. It is much more safe to be feared t ...
The Renaissance
... By 1498, the people of Florence grew tired of Savonarola’s ways. He was hung and the Medici family returned to power. ...
... By 1498, the people of Florence grew tired of Savonarola’s ways. He was hung and the Medici family returned to power. ...
Crucifixion of St. Peter
... about 1300-1600 that was a new period of learning and creativity in Europe. • As some historian critiques note, this doesn’t mean that medieval period was a dark age. There was still culture, learning, and such going on then. At this time, however, there’s a sudden explosion of it and it takes a mar ...
... about 1300-1600 that was a new period of learning and creativity in Europe. • As some historian critiques note, this doesn’t mean that medieval period was a dark age. There was still culture, learning, and such going on then. At this time, however, there’s a sudden explosion of it and it takes a mar ...
Where did the Renaissance begin? What factors helped it to
... literacy. 4. Decreased the price of books. 5. Decreased the importance of scribes. Where: Germany When: 1450s Why: It made books more accessible. New ideas spread quickly. This would have a profound impact on Christianity with the Protestant Reformation. ...
... literacy. 4. Decreased the price of books. 5. Decreased the importance of scribes. Where: Germany When: 1450s Why: It made books more accessible. New ideas spread quickly. This would have a profound impact on Christianity with the Protestant Reformation. ...
Christian Crusades: East and West Medieval
... 1. The Rise of City-States: Genoa, Venice & Florence – What is a City-State? – City (urban) v country (rual) – How different from most of Europe? – How might a city set the stage for a “rebirth” to occur? ...
... 1. The Rise of City-States: Genoa, Venice & Florence – What is a City-State? – City (urban) v country (rual) – How different from most of Europe? – How might a city set the stage for a “rebirth” to occur? ...
Chapter 15 The Renaissance and Reformation
... {Italian Renaissance writers reflected Greek and Roman teachings} the study of their teachings came to be called classical education Another humanist, Niccolo Machiavelli, was set apart form other humanists due to his lack of concern for conventional morality. He argued in his essay The Prince that ...
... {Italian Renaissance writers reflected Greek and Roman teachings} the study of their teachings came to be called classical education Another humanist, Niccolo Machiavelli, was set apart form other humanists due to his lack of concern for conventional morality. He argued in his essay The Prince that ...
What Should I Know About the Renaissance?
... in Quarter 1…The Mongol Empire, the Ming Dynasty and the Age of the Exploration… were all happening during the European Renaissance. * The Renaissance was broken up into two periods: 1. The Italian Renaissance 1350 -1450 2. The Northern Renaissance 1450-1600 ...
... in Quarter 1…The Mongol Empire, the Ming Dynasty and the Age of the Exploration… were all happening during the European Renaissance. * The Renaissance was broken up into two periods: 1. The Italian Renaissance 1350 -1450 2. The Northern Renaissance 1450-1600 ...
Classical Humanism - Wolverton Mountain
... Sade. Petrarch saw her first time in the church of Saint Claire. Laura was the model of feminine attributes and platonic love for the Renaissance. During the Gothic period Mary would have been. Note the change. ...
... Sade. Petrarch saw her first time in the church of Saint Claire. Laura was the model of feminine attributes and platonic love for the Renaissance. During the Gothic period Mary would have been. Note the change. ...
Renaissance vs. Gothic
... Sade. Petrarch saw her first time in the church of Saint Claire. Laura was the model of feminine attributes and platonic love for the Renaissance. During the Gothic period Mary would have been. Note the change. ...
... Sade. Petrarch saw her first time in the church of Saint Claire. Laura was the model of feminine attributes and platonic love for the Renaissance. During the Gothic period Mary would have been. Note the change. ...
The Renaissance
... Rome: Pope and cardinals comprise wealthiest class. Replaces Florence as leading city- state St. Peter’s Basilica (largest Christian church in the world) Venice: By late 1500’s assume leadership of the Renaissance. ...
... Rome: Pope and cardinals comprise wealthiest class. Replaces Florence as leading city- state St. Peter’s Basilica (largest Christian church in the world) Venice: By late 1500’s assume leadership of the Renaissance. ...
World Cultures
... the ancient Greeks in their libraries. When the Italian cities traded 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 Gree ...
... the ancient Greeks in their libraries. When the Italian cities traded 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 Gree ...
Intro to the Renaissance PPT
... Rejected Aristotelian views and medieval scholasticism in favor of Roman authors, ...
... Rejected Aristotelian views and medieval scholasticism in favor of Roman authors, ...
Renaissance and Reformation
... – Example: page 158 in your text. – Many Italians believed that they were witnessing a “rebirth” of Greek and Roman culture. – The time period of 1350-1550 became known as the “Renaissance.” ...
... – Example: page 158 in your text. – Many Italians believed that they were witnessing a “rebirth” of Greek and Roman culture. – The time period of 1350-1550 became known as the “Renaissance.” ...
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.