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Day 32 1. RENAISSANCE AND THE NEW WORLD Knowledge and thought changed so much during the Renaissance (rebirth of learning and culture) that it is considered the end of the Middle Ages. Began in Florence, Italy in roughly 1350 and spread to Rome and much of the rest of Europe. The Renaissance Period ended in the 1600’s bringing 4 key developments: 1. 2. 3. 4. the flourishing of arts and literature based on the discovery of classical works the Protestant Reformation that tore apart the Christian world and reduced the power of the Catholic Church the voyages of discovery that led to the European conquest of America and European supremacy in the world The printing press which encouraged widespread literacy and made it possible for large numbers of people to learn of the new developments of the Renaissance. This new learning will open the door for the Scientific Revolution as people began to use reason and observation to understand how the world works 2. CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS Columbus finally convinces the King of Spain to finance a daring expedition to Asia Columbus proposed to east by sailing west, he thought that he could travel west around the globe to find the valuable spice trade Columbus believed the that world was small and round, but didn’t know of the two continents that stood in his way In 1492, Columbus sailed to the west and landed in what is now Hispaniola 3. LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE Longitude - The Prime Meridian which begins with zero in Greenwich England and measures north to south (astrolabe – a Muslim invention) Latitude – Measures around the globe, beginning with the Equator 4. WEST INDIES the West Indies are located in the Caribbean Sea Columbus believed he was in the East Indies, that is why he called them Indians There were 8 million Indians when Columbus landed in 1492, but by 1535, there were none (archipelago – a group of islands) 5. LATIN AMERICA This is the term applied to all of the Portuguese or Spanish speaking nations south of the United States including Central America, South America and Mexico The Panama Canal is located in Central America built by the United States and given back to Panama near the end of the 20th Century 6. FERDINAND MAGELLAN Magellan was a Portuguese navigator of the 1500’s who sailed for Spain His crew was the first to circumnavigate the earth (travel around) Magellan was killed in the Philippines by a poisoned arrow Vasco de Gama (Portuguese) was the first to find an all water route to Asia 7. SOUTH AMERICA The continent of South America was explored and conquered by Spain and Portugal Brazil was the only country to speak Portuguese The Treaty of Tordesillas (drawn by Pope Alexander VI) divided the world into 2 parts between Spain (west) and Portugal (east) 8. INCAS Native American people who built a great civilization along the Pacific coast of South America The largest Indian Empire in the Americas Conquistador Francisco Pizarro with 200 men destroyed an Indian army of 80,000 and captured their leader and held him for ransom The ransom was paid (rooms of gold and jewels), but the leader was killed and Pizarro was killed by his own greedy men The center of the empire was the city of Machu Picchu, which was discovered until 1911 The Indian wood was no match for Spanish steel The main goals of the conquistadors were: riches and spreading religion 9. MAYA Native American people of southern Mexico and Central America who developed the most advanced native civilization of the new world Fine arts, a calendar of 365 ¼ days and stone pyramid temples, also the Maya also had a written language The Maya were in decline before the Spanish came having depleted their natural resources and over populating 10. AZTECS The Aztecs were an advanced native culture of Mexico and Central America who were fierce and warlike; with their polytheistic religion practiced human sacrifice The Spaniards were amazed to see bridges, highways, aqueducts, a hundred foot temple, and a marketplace that attracted 60,000 people a day The Aztec empire fell in 1519, when the leader Montezuma was conquered by the Spanish conquistador Hernando Cortez 11. FLORENCE Lorenzo de Medici known as “Lorenzo the Magnificent”, a wealthy banker who took a great interest in recovering classical literature and in supporting artists such as da Vinci and Michelangelo. Artists and thinkers of the Renaissance, like the classical Greeks who inspired them, were Humanists ( interested in studying and improving the human experience on earth) Began in the northern city states of Italy, especially Florence 12. MACHIAVELLI Niccolo Machiavelli wrote several books about politics and war Wrote The Prince in which he says a prince must use cunning and ruthless methods to stay in power A humanist who believed people did better under strong rulers than weak ones Stresses Political effectiveness over morality “machiavellian” has come to mean manipulating others in a clever and deceptive way 13. LEONARDO DA VINCI Painted the Mona Lisa, the Last Supper His art inspired others to go outside of the religious world and paint real people and real events He designed weapons, bridges, buildings and had ideas for balloons and flying machines, drew detail images of the human body, operations such as; circulation of blood, how the eye worked, the relationship between the moon and tides When he died, da Vinci’s official title was First Painter, Architect, and Mechanic of the King Cited as the model of the Renaissance Man, a term which means an outstandingly versatile person who performs in many fields 14. MICHELANGELO At 15 joined the household of Lorenzo Medici Sculpted David a symbol of the new confidence and humanism of Renaissance man Created Pieta, a sculpture of Mary holding the dead body of Christ Painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel and designed the large dome of St. Peter’s Basilica (church) Michelangelo painted on wet plaster, a technique called fresco, when the plaster dries, the painting is boned to the wall Oil paints made painting more portable than frescoes and thus started showing up in peoples homes 15. THE VATICAN Vatican City is an independent nation within the city of Rome, at one-fifth of a square mile, it is the world’s smallest country Home to the Roman Catholic Church and the Pope Located within the Vatican are: the Sistine Chapel (Michelangelo spent 4 years painting biblical scenes on the ceiling) and St. Peter’s Basilica (home church of the Pope and is the largest Christian church building in the world), Saint Peter’s Square (where the Pope greets huge crowds on special occasions Music/Art Resources http://www.medieval.org/emfaq/beginlst/renaiss. htm (Music Selections) http://www.wga.hu/tours/sistina/index.html (Sistine Chapel) 16. MARTIN LUTHER As a Catholic monk and university professor in Germany, Martin Luther became concerned about the sale of indulgences (allowed a person to pay money to be forgiven of his sins Luther attacked this in his 95 Theses (arguments) nailing this to the door of a Catholic Church in Wittenberg, Germany Luther was merely trying to reform the Catholic practices, he really triggered the Protestant Reformation which resulted in the establishment of the Protestant Churches Reformation/Inquisition The Reformation split the Christian Church, and it started a century of bloody warfare between the Catholics and Protestants The Catholic Church launched a Counter-Reformation which adopted many reforms such as putting an end to indulgences, but it also started the Inquisition The Inquisition was a church court that put on trial those who disagreed with Catholic teachings 17. HENRY VIII Wants to divorce his first wife so he can marry the young Ann Boleyn whom he hoped might bear him a son Henry VIII makes himself the leader of the Anglican Church and proceeds to marry Ann Boleyn Anyone that refused to accept Henry VIII as the head of the church would be put to death, including Thomas More, the respected author of Utopia After 3 years of marriage, Henry accuses Ann Boleyn of adultery with 5 men and executes all 6 Marries Jane Seymour, who did bear Henry a son, but died during the process Henry marries 3 more times, divorcing another wife and executing another for adultery, his sixth wife outlives him A daughter born to Henry and Ann Boleyn became Queen Elizabeth I 18. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE England’s greatest contribution to the art of the Renaissance were the plays of William Shakespeare Shakespeare is considered perhaps the greatest writer in the English language Among his plays performed at the Globe Theater in London were Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra Also known as some of his greatest works are Romeo and Juliet (classically remade over and over in Hollywood and Broadway), Midsummer’s Night Dream, Hamlet 19. GALILEO Born in Italy Perfected an early telescope which he trained on Jupiter and her four moons, lending to the idea that the sun, not the earth was the center of the universe; this evidence contradicted the early theories of Ptolemy (Ptolemy thought that the earth was the center of the universe) Galileo wrote the Starry Messenger, but his theory contradicted the teaching of the Roman Catholic church doctrine (rules and beliefs) Galileo was tried by the church for heresy (disagreeing with the church doctrine) and was imprisoned for the remainder of his life Became the symbol for the fight against authority for freedom of thought Galileo helped start the Scientific Revolution 20. GUTENBERG Johan Gutenberg was a German goldsmith of the 1400’s who developed the metal movable type for the printing press The first book printed on the Gutenberg press was a beautiful version of the Bible ( a few copies still exist) Movable type allowed multiple copies of the same page (it took one person 6 months to copy one book by hand) Printing books became less expensive and gave people a reason to learn to read and write Some people believe that Gutenberg’s invention was one of the most important of the last one thousand years