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Renaissance Chapter 14 The Renaissance • 1350-1550 • Renaissance means rebirth – A rebirth of ancient Greek and Roman worlds – Rebirth after disorder and disunity of the middle ages – Also known as the Italian Renaissance; a period of history that started in Italy and spread to the rest of Europe • Time of creativity and changes in politics, economics, society and culture. • Characteristics of the Renaissance – Secular viewpoint emerged • as increasing wealth created new possibilities for the enjoyment of material things – Age of recovery • which led to a rebirth of interest in ancient culture affecting both politics and art – Emphasis on individual abilities • the well rounded, universal person capable of achievements in many areas of life emerged • Not everyone in society was directly affected by these characteristics • The urban wealthy class was affected more than anyone else • The achievements of the period were visible everywhere – Homes, churches, public buildings were decorated with the art and architecture of the period Italian Renaissance • Italy was the birth place of the Renaissance – Center of ancient Roman culture – Architecture, antique statues, coins and inscriptions were all still visible and reminders of the glory of Rome – Survived the middle ages and had prosperous city states; Rome, Florence, Milan, Venice and Genoa – Had a wealthy and powerful merchant class • • • • One such family --- the Medici family of Florence Know for their banking business One of the wealthiest families in Europe Their wealth led to them controlling the Florentine government and becoming patrons of the arts (financially supported artists) Humanism • Intellectual movement/study of classical culture • Focused on worldly/secular subjects rather than religious issues • Believed education should stimulate the individual’s creative powers • Schools returned to teaching the humanities: grammar, rhetoric, poetry, and history • One well known humanist was Petrarch – Assembled a library of Greek and Roman manuscripts – Wrote literature of his own Middle Ages Art vs. Renaissance Art Italian Renaissance Art • Reflected humanism • Portrayed religious figures against everyday backgrounds or Greek/Roman backgrounds • Painted portraits of well known people of the time • Represented both humans and landscapes in a realistic way • Adopted new techniques – Perspective – making distant objects smaller than those close to the viewer – Shading to make objects look round – Drew from live models and studied human anatomy to portray body more accurately Italian Renaissance Artists • • • • • • • Leonardo Da Vinci Michelangelo Raphael Titian Botticelli Donatello Masaccio Renaissance Technology • The Printing Press – Johann Gutenberg – 1456 he printed a complete edition of the Bible using movable type – Within 50 years they had printed more than 20 million copies of the Bible – Impact • • • • Made books less expensive to produce and purchase More people learned to read and write Allowed people to gain a broader range of knowledge Exposed people to new ideas The Reformation Chapter 14 Abuses in the Church • Problems and abuses in the church that led to people wanting reforms of the church – Popes competing with princes for political power – Popes had a lavish lifestyle – hired painters and sculptors to beautify churches – Increased fees for services like marriage and baptisms to pay for projects to beautify the churches – Promoted the sale of indulgences – pardons for sins – indulgences were given in exchange for a monetary gift to the church Martin Luther • German Monk and Theology professor – Became a monk after nearly being stuck by lightening • 1517 – – he was very unhappy with the Church and the sale of indulgences – He wrote his 95 Theses – a list of arguments against the use of indulgences – He posted these on the church door in Wittenberg – Quickly these spread and he created chaos and debate – The church asked him to take back what he said and he refused – He urged people to reject the Church in Rome – 1521 he was excommunicated and eventually declared an outlaw • Martin Luther’s Teachings 1) Salvation could be achieved through faith alone • Instead of through good deeds 2) The Bible was the sole source of religious truths • Not the church hierarchy 3) Rejected the idea that priests and other members of the Church hierarchy had special powers 4) Translated the Bible into the German vernacular 5) Rejected five of the sacraments • Because the Bible did not mention them 6) Banned indulgences, confessions, pilgrimages and prayer to saints 7) Abolished Catholic mass • Used sermons instead 8) Permitted clergy to marry Spread of Lutheranism • Lutherans = Protestants: Those who protested the Pope • Lutheranism gained support because: – people saw it as a way to address the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church – Throw off the rule of the Church – Seize property – National loyalty • Peasants also supported Luther and used it to help them gain social and economic reforms; instead it led to a revolt and nearly 100,000 deaths • The Peace of Augsburg – Gave German princes the right to decide which religion, Catholic or Lutheran, would be followed in their lands John Calvin • French born priest and lawyer • Wrote “ Institutes of the Christian Religion” which described his religious beliefs and gave advice on how to organize a Protestant church • Had some similar beliefs and many different beliefs than Luther – Similar: faith=salvation, bible was truth – Different: God was all powerful, humans by nature were sinful, God alone decided on an individuals eternal life, predestination, divided world into saints and sinners • Set up a theocracy in Geneva Switzerland • Characteristics of the society – Stressed hard work, discipline, thrift, honesty and morality – Prohibited from fighting, swearing, laughing in church and dancing – Emphasized strict morality – Believed in religious education for girls and boys • Spread to all over Europe: France, Netherlands, England and Scotland English Reformation • Unlike in other countries where religious reforms were led by clergy in England it was led by the King • At first Henry VIII was against the new Protestant religions but when he decided he wanted to annul his marriage and the church denied his request his position changed • Henry wanted to annul his marriage because he wanted to remarry to try to have a male heir • The church denied his request mainly because the Pope did not want to anger Charles V – Holy Roman Emperor and brother to Henry’s wife • Henry passed laws to end the pope’s control of the church in England; Act of Supremacy – made Henry the supreme head of the Church of England • Even by doing this Henry never ended up with a surviving male heir (tried with six different wives) and the crown of England would be passed to his daughters Mary and Elizabeth Henry VIII Catherine of Anne Boleyn Aragon Jane Seymour Anne of Cleves Catherine Howard Katherine Parr Catholic Reformation • Because of the Protestant movement the Catholic church realized it needed to make changes • Council of Trent: met to make reforms in the Catholic church – Reforms: agreed faith = salvation, bible=truth but not only source of truth, ended abuses, made penalties for worldliness and corruption, new schools to better educate clergy • Inquisition, church court, to get rid of heresy and other immoral acts was established • The reforms were successful, they slowed the spread of Protestant religions and Catholics became more pious • But Europe remained divided – Catholics in the south, Protestants in the North