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Chapter 17 European Renaissance and Reformation
Chapter 17 European Renaissance and Reformation

... • Charles V fails to return rebellious princes to Catholic Church • Peace of Augsburg (1555)—each prince can decide religion of his state SLIDE 31 England Becomes Protestant Henry VIII Wants a Son • Henry has only daughter, needs male heir to rule England • Henry wants a divorce; Pope refuses to ann ...
Chapter 12 - My Social Studies Teacher
Chapter 12 - My Social Studies Teacher

... Civic humanism: an intellectual movement of the Italian Renaissance that saw Cicero, who was both an intellectual and a statesman, as the ideal and held that humanists should be involved in government and use their rhetorical training in the service of the state. Condottieri: leaders of bands of mer ...
Italian Renaissance 12.1 – 12.2
Italian Renaissance 12.1 – 12.2

... forgotten Latin manuscripts, especially in monastic libraries. • He emphasized using pure classical Latin (Roman Latin, not medieval Latin). • Cicero was the model for prose and Virgil for poetry. ...
1 - socialstudiesNCUHS
1 - socialstudiesNCUHS

... Machiavelli | William Shakespeare This Florentine artist lived more than a century before the Renaissance, but he painted in a style that would later be identified with the period. The Madonna in Glory is one of his most famous paintings. ...
Renaissance
Renaissance

... 19. Which is not a way that the Renaissance ideas spread to northern Europe? a. trade routes b. the printing press c. Italian merchants traveling to Northern Europe d. art gallery showings in London 20. What is the name a politically important influential Patron family in Renaissance Italy? a. Da Vi ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... Three of the most famous artists from this period are: 1. Leonardo da Vinci who painted the Mona Lisa 2. Michelangelo who sculpted the statue of David and painted the Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel 3. Raphael who painted portraits and murals for the Pope’s private residence ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

...  8 sided dome of Santa Maria del Fiore Cathedral  The symbol of Florence ...
Date: Tuesday April 1
Date: Tuesday April 1

... • 1. John Wycliff, was born in England about 1330. He believed that the church should give up its earthly possessions. His views proved unpopular with church officials, who removed him from his teaching position. • 2. Jan Hus was born in southern Bohemia about 1370. He became a priest and was soon p ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... • Nicholas Copernicus wrote that the earth rotates around the sun. ...
The renaissance mind mirrored in art
The renaissance mind mirrored in art

... hold. Nonetheless, in the mid to late thirteenth century strains of naturalism worked their way into art there. An impetus for this came from English Franciscan Roger Bacon, who helped develop fledgling experimental science. He complained that the images preachers had to rely on to help educate thei ...
Papers, Revisions, and Deadlines - WesFiles
Papers, Revisions, and Deadlines - WesFiles

... College of Letters 106/History 121 The Italian Renaissance Between 1350 and 1520 Italian writers, thinkers, and artists struggled to recover a lost Golden Age, the world of the ancients. Although they did not succeed in their goal, they ended up by inspiring a new Golden Age. This seminar explores t ...
Know the following terms/people and significance for each: They will
Know the following terms/people and significance for each: They will

... choice, true/false or matching format. To study, review the powerpoint slide presentations from each chapter. The questions and items are taken DIRECTLY from the powerpoint in the order that they appear. Make sure to define and provide the significance of all people and items listed below. Show up t ...
Video Worksheet: “Medici Godfathers of the Renaissance”
Video Worksheet: “Medici Godfathers of the Renaissance”

... 7. Brunelleschi also devised a way to alter the ____________________ on pulleys so the oxen could pull the 1700-pound sandstone beams 250 feet into the air and return them to the ground without changing direction. 8. Brunelleschi personally lay some of the ______________________ on the dome because ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... • Nicholas Copernicus wrote that the earth rotates around the sun. ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... • Nicholas Copernicus wrote that the earth rotates around the sun. ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... • Nicholas Copernicus wrote that the earth rotates around the sun. ...
Woods Theresa Woods Men and Women in Renaissance Italy April
Woods Theresa Woods Men and Women in Renaissance Italy April

... were to be “bold, energetic, and faithful,” to whomever they served, for a man who faltered in those pursuits were stained for life. The perfect courtier was to praise himself discretely and with modesty, for “seldom does anyone of any worth refrain from praising himself,” and be conversant in both ...
Renaissance - Welcome to the NIOS
Renaissance - Welcome to the NIOS

... pyramid design, where her folded hands form the base. There is a dramatic contrast of light and dark. The brightly lit face is framed with various elements like hair, veil, and shadows. In the portrait of Mona Lisa there is no visible facial hair, even eyebrows and eyelashes are shown missing; still ...
Art of the Renaissance
Art of the Renaissance

... Miniature ...
Renaissance PPT
Renaissance PPT

... corruption, and immorality of their neighbor, lift up their souls to repentance and hope, and renew in them the full intensity of the faith that had inspired and terrified their youth:  Ye women, who glory in your ornaments, your hair, your hands, I tell you you are all ugly. Would you see true bea ...
THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE
THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE

... often the bodies of criminals or 'sinners' that were used. Doctors learned about anatomy from watching these dissections. Sometimes the criminal was alive at the start of proceedings as part of their punishment.During the Renaissance, the human body was regarded as a creation of God and the ancient ...
File
File

... fresco, he covered the wall with a double layer of dried plaster. Then, borrowing from panel painting, he added an undercoat of lead white to enhance the brightness of the oil and tempera that was applied on top. This experimental technique allowed for chromatic brilliance and extraordinary precisio ...
Renaissance Art in Italy
Renaissance Art in Italy

... Description: Renaissance Architect Palladio’s Villa Rotunda home revived the ...
Humanism and its influence on the Literature of the Italian
Humanism and its influence on the Literature of the Italian

... Humanism was the scholarly study of the Latin and Greek classics and of early Christian manuscripts, both for the joy of learning itself, and in the hope that knowledge gained would be useful in contemporary society. At its core, Humanism was an educational program. Unlike medieval scholasticism whi ...
da Vinci Invention Timeline (or any Renaissance invention)
da Vinci Invention Timeline (or any Renaissance invention)

... da Vinci Invention Timeline (or any Renaissance invention) “The term "Renaissance man" comes from fifteenth-century Italy and refers to the idea of a person with knowledge and skills in a number of different areas. Perhaps, no single individual defines the idea of a Renaissance man better than Leona ...
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Renaissance in Scotland



The Renaissance in Scotland was a cultural, intellectual and artistic movement in Scotland, from the late fifteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth century. It is associated with the pan-European Renaissance that is usually regarded as beginning in Italy in the late fourteenth century and reaching northern Europe as a Northern Renaissance in the fifteenth century. It involved an attempt to revive the principles of the classical era, including humanism, a spirit of scholarly enquiry, scepticism, and concepts of balance and proportion. Since the twentieth century the uniqueness and unity of the Renaissance has been challenged by historians, but significant changes in Scotland can be seen to have taken place in education, intellectual life, literature, art, architecture, music and politics.The court was central to the patronage and dissemination of Renaissance works and ideas. It was also central to the staging of lavish display that portrayed the political and religious role of the monarchy. The Renaissance led to the adoption of ideas of imperial monarchy, encouraging the Scottish crown to join the new monarchies by asserting imperial jurisdiction and distinction. The growing emphasis on education in the Middle Ages became part of a humanist and then Protestant programme to extend and reform learning. It resulted in the expansion of the school system and the foundation of six university colleges by the end of the sixteenth century. Relatively large numbers of Scottish scholars studied on the continent or in England and some, such as Hector Boece, John Mair, Andrew Melville and George Buchanan, returned to Scotland to play a major part in developing Scottish intellectual life. Vernacular works in Scots began to emerge in the fifteenth century, while Latin remained a major literary language. With the patronage of James V and James VI, writers included William Stewart, John Bellenden, David Lyndsay, William Fowler and Alexander Montgomerie.In the sixteenth century, Scottish kings, particularly James V, built palaces in a Renaissance style, beginning at Linlithgow. The trend soon spread to members of the aristocracy. Painting was strongly influenced by Flemish art, with works commissioned from the continent and Flemings serving as court artists. While church art suffered iconoclasm and a loss of patronage as a result of the Reformation, house decoration and portraiture became significant for the wealthy, with George Jamesone emerging as the first major named artist in the early seventeenth century. Music also incorporated wider European influences although the Reformation caused a move from complex polyphonic church music to the simpler singing of metrical psalms. Combined with the Union of Crowns in 1603, the Reformation also removed the church and the court as sources of patronage, changing the direction of artistic creation and limiting its scope. In the early seventeenth century the major elements of the Renaissance began to give way to Stoicism, Mannerism and the Baroque.
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