Graphic Organizer Activity
... terms of lofty ideals but in the William Michelangelo? way it actually worked. His Shakespeare? Michelangelo was a brilmost famous work is Shakespeare wrote and proliant painter and sculptor. He The Prince. duced plays written in English helped to design St. Peter’s in which he portrayed personalBas ...
... terms of lofty ideals but in the William Michelangelo? way it actually worked. His Shakespeare? Michelangelo was a brilmost famous work is Shakespeare wrote and proliant painter and sculptor. He The Prince. duced plays written in English helped to design St. Peter’s in which he portrayed personalBas ...
Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael, Donatello (and Petrarch)
... • Cosimo de’ Medici was the wealthiest European of his time • He was virtually dictator of Florence for 30 years through his influence ...
... • Cosimo de’ Medici was the wealthiest European of his time • He was virtually dictator of Florence for 30 years through his influence ...
Renaissance Vocab List
... Thomas More wrote Utopia, which describes an ideal and peaceful society in which people live in peace, all are educated, and crime is eliminated ...
... Thomas More wrote Utopia, which describes an ideal and peaceful society in which people live in peace, all are educated, and crime is eliminated ...
The English Renaissance
... What are the implications for her rule? Restore authority of Roman church Return England to Catholic country Oppression of Protestants ...
... What are the implications for her rule? Restore authority of Roman church Return England to Catholic country Oppression of Protestants ...
Merchants from the Islamic world who traded with Europeans first
... clear system of rules and consequences. 8. By establishing a more reliable method of food production, the Neolithic Revolution led to the development of social classes. 9. The divine right of kings refers to the King only having to answer to God. 10. Perspective and dimension were emphasized in pain ...
... clear system of rules and consequences. 8. By establishing a more reliable method of food production, the Neolithic Revolution led to the development of social classes. 9. The divine right of kings refers to the King only having to answer to God. 10. Perspective and dimension were emphasized in pain ...
“Florence is widely considered as the birthplace of the Renaissance
... ‘... [He] used to make figures nine, ten, even twelve heads high, simply to increase their grace. He would say that the artist must have his measuring tools in the eye, rather than in the hand, as it is the eye that judges...’ (Hale 1969, p. 97) ...
... ‘... [He] used to make figures nine, ten, even twelve heads high, simply to increase their grace. He would say that the artist must have his measuring tools in the eye, rather than in the hand, as it is the eye that judges...’ (Hale 1969, p. 97) ...
Chapter 23
... • Very emotional, unreal light, sudden lights and darks • Michelangeloesque figures ...
... • Very emotional, unreal light, sudden lights and darks • Michelangeloesque figures ...
Lecture 1 – Middle Ages to Rococo
... Roughly you can divide the Middle Ages in two architectural periods – the Romanesque and the Gothic period. The architecture of the Romanesque, or Norman, period is signified by solidity and ...
... Roughly you can divide the Middle Ages in two architectural periods – the Romanesque and the Gothic period. The architecture of the Romanesque, or Norman, period is signified by solidity and ...
Perspective!
... Copied new testament to Greek with mistakes Wrote “Praise of Folly” pokes fun at church and attitudes of the time: ignorance, superstition and greed ...
... Copied new testament to Greek with mistakes Wrote “Praise of Folly” pokes fun at church and attitudes of the time: ignorance, superstition and greed ...
Ch. 1-1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
... Worldly pleasures - people start to enjoy life’s material goods (secular) such as music, art, fine food and clothing Patrons of the arts - Church leaders and wealthy Renaissance merchants spent huge amounts of money beautifying their community by paying artists to create works of art - paintings and ...
... Worldly pleasures - people start to enjoy life’s material goods (secular) such as music, art, fine food and clothing Patrons of the arts - Church leaders and wealthy Renaissance merchants spent huge amounts of money beautifying their community by paying artists to create works of art - paintings and ...
The Renaissance
... • Worldly pleasures—people start to enjoy life’s material goods (secular) such as music, art, fine food and clothing • Patrons of the arts—Church leaders and wealthy Renaissance merchants spent huge amounts of money beautifying their community by paying artists to create works of art—paintings and s ...
... • Worldly pleasures—people start to enjoy life’s material goods (secular) such as music, art, fine food and clothing • Patrons of the arts—Church leaders and wealthy Renaissance merchants spent huge amounts of money beautifying their community by paying artists to create works of art—paintings and s ...
The Northern Renaissance
... literacy rate throughout Europe. • Christian humanists changed views about how ...
... literacy rate throughout Europe. • Christian humanists changed views about how ...
Chapter 15 Renaissance and Reformation
... a. most famous book of renaissance b. used real people, fake conversation to explain how people should act in society ...
... a. most famous book of renaissance b. used real people, fake conversation to explain how people should act in society ...
15.2
... They fled because of the clashes going on between Northern countries and Italian city-states ...
... They fled because of the clashes going on between Northern countries and Italian city-states ...
The Renaissance - Lakewood City School District
... • John Calvin of Switzerland took Luther’s ideas on Original Sin one step further. • He said that all events were preordained by God, and that God already decided who will be saved and who will be damned. • The Calvinist Doctrine, known as predestination, later became the central belief of the Purit ...
... • John Calvin of Switzerland took Luther’s ideas on Original Sin one step further. • He said that all events were preordained by God, and that God already decided who will be saved and who will be damned. • The Calvinist Doctrine, known as predestination, later became the central belief of the Purit ...
Chapter 5 Study Guide—Renaissance and Reformation
... 13. Ninety-Five Theses—published by Martin Luther in 1517, it attacked the sale of indulgences 14. van Eyck—was the first to use oil paint showing greater color and detail 15. “Bloody Mary”—Queen Mary of England called this because she had protestants rounded up and executed by burning them at the s ...
... 13. Ninety-Five Theses—published by Martin Luther in 1517, it attacked the sale of indulgences 14. van Eyck—was the first to use oil paint showing greater color and detail 15. “Bloody Mary”—Queen Mary of England called this because she had protestants rounded up and executed by burning them at the s ...
File
... merchants and lawyers. These people could afford to build fine houses, but more importantly use their money to buy books and employ artists and musicians. In addition, a cultural diffusion took place, exchanging knowledge from Arab scholars from the East with writings from the Ancient Greeks. The cl ...
... merchants and lawyers. These people could afford to build fine houses, but more importantly use their money to buy books and employ artists and musicians. In addition, a cultural diffusion took place, exchanging knowledge from Arab scholars from the East with writings from the Ancient Greeks. The cl ...
Chapter 15: Renaissance: SOL 1.13
... Two famous humanists were 1. Desiderius Eramus: wrote The Praise of Folly 2. Thomas More: wrote Utopia ...
... Two famous humanists were 1. Desiderius Eramus: wrote The Praise of Folly 2. Thomas More: wrote Utopia ...
Drill WHI SOL 13 The Renaissance Drill
... A period of European history, lasting from about 1300 to 1600, during which renewed interest in classical culture led to far reaching changes in art, learning, and views of the world. ...
... A period of European history, lasting from about 1300 to 1600, during which renewed interest in classical culture led to far reaching changes in art, learning, and views of the world. ...
Transformations in Europe - Arlington Public Schools
... The stunningly beautiful maps and globes of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe were the most complete, detailed, and useful representations of the earth that any society had ever produced. The best mapmaker of the century was Gerhard Kremer, who is remembered as Mercator (the merchant) becaus ...
... The stunningly beautiful maps and globes of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe were the most complete, detailed, and useful representations of the earth that any society had ever produced. The best mapmaker of the century was Gerhard Kremer, who is remembered as Mercator (the merchant) becaus ...
the renaissance - WorldHistory
... of many subjects and talents (writer, artist, musician and athlete) “Renaissance Woman” studied many subjects, mostly in private women were to inspire art, not create it ...
... of many subjects and talents (writer, artist, musician and athlete) “Renaissance Woman” studied many subjects, mostly in private women were to inspire art, not create it ...
Chapter 17-The Renaissance and Reformation
... an intellectual movement that focused on human potential and achievements. • Emergence of a more secular society that was focused on the here and now. • The Renaissance Man- “A young man should be charming, witty, and well educated in the ...
... an intellectual movement that focused on human potential and achievements. • Emergence of a more secular society that was focused on the here and now. • The Renaissance Man- “A young man should be charming, witty, and well educated in the ...
Art in early modern Scotland
Art in early modern Scotland includes all forms of artistic production within the modern borders of Scotland, between the adoption of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century to the beginnings of the Enlightenment in the mid-eighteenth century.Devotional art before the Reformation included books and images commissioned in the Netherlands. Before the Reformation in the mid-sixteenth century the interiors of Scottish churches were often elaborate and colourful, with sacrament houses and monumental effigies. Scotland's ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm, with the almost total loss of medieval stained glass, religious sculpture and paintings.In about 1500 the Scottish monarchy turned to the recording of royal likenesses in panel portraits. More impressive are the works or artists imported from the continent, particularly the Netherlands. The tradition of royal portrait painting in Scotland was probably disrupted by the minorities and regencies it underwent for much of the sixteenth century, but it flourished after the Reformation. James VI employed Flemish artists Arnold Bronckorst and Adrian Vanson, who have left behind a visual record of the king and major figures at the court. The first significant native artist was George Jamesone, who was succeeded by a series of portrait painters as the fashion moved down the social scale to lairds and burgesses.The loss of ecclesiastical patronage that resulted from the Reformation created a crisis for native craftsmen and artists, who turned to secular patrons. One result of this was the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls. Other forms of domestic decoration included tapestries and stone and wood carving. In the first half of the eighteenth century there was an increasing professionalisation and organisation of art. Large numbers of artists took the grand tour to Italy. The Academy of St. Luke was founded as a society for artists in 1729. It included among its members Allan Ramsay, who emerged as one of the most important British artists of the era.