* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Why was the Renaissance
Spanish Golden Age wikipedia , lookup
Art in early modern Scotland wikipedia , lookup
Waddesdon Bequest wikipedia , lookup
Renaissance in Scotland wikipedia , lookup
Renaissance philosophy wikipedia , lookup
Renaissance Revival architecture wikipedia , lookup
French Renaissance literature wikipedia , lookup
Renaissance music wikipedia , lookup
Renaissance architecture wikipedia , lookup
Italian Renaissance painting wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 14.1 The Renaissance and Science Revolution (1300-1600) Objective Explain why the Renaissance began in Italy: Why was the Renaissance: The Renaissance a time of creativity and change in many areas political, social, economic and cultural. The changes that took place in the way people views themselves and world. Spurred b a reawakened interest in classical learning, especially the culture of ancient Rome, creative Renaissance minds set out to transform their own age. Their era, they felt, was a time to rebirth after the disorder and disunity of the medieval world. But Renaissance Europe did not really break completely with its medieval past. Latin, mathematics of Euclid, the astronomy of Ptolemy and the works of Aristotle were well known to late medieval scholars. Yet the Renaissance did produce new attitude towards culture and learning. Unlike medieval scholars, who debated the nature of life after death, Renaissance thinkers were eager to explore the richness and variety of human experience in the here and now. At the same time, there was a new emphasis on individual achievements. The Renaissance ideal was the person with talent in many fields. The Renaissance supports a spirit adventure and a wide-ranging curiosity the led people to explore new worlds. Columbus, who sailed to the Americas in 1492, represented that spirit. Nicolaus Copernicus, the scientist who revolutions the way people viewed the universe. Renaissance writers and artist, eager to experiments with new forms, were also products of that adventurous spirit. Objective Explain why did the Renaissance in Italy: Italian Beginnings: The Renaissance began in Italy in the mid 1300s, and then spread north to the rest of Europe. It reached its height in the 1500s. Italy was the birthplace of the Renaissance for several reasons. Why Italy: The Renaissance was marked by a reawakened interest in the culture of ancient Rome. Italy was the centre of ancient Roman history; it was natural for the reawakening to start there. Architectural remains, antique statues, coin, and inscriptions, all were visible reminders to Italians of the “glory that was Rome.” Italy differed from the rest of Europe in another way. Italy’s cities had survived the Middle Ages. In the north, city-states like Florence, Milan, Venice and Genoa grew into prosperous centres of trade and manufacturing. Rome, in the central Italy, and Naples in the south, along with a number of smaller city-states, also contributing to the Renaissance cultural revival. A wealthy and powerful merchant’s class in these city-states further promoted the cultural rebirth. These merchants exerted both political and economic leadership and their attitudes and interest helped to shape the Italian Renaissance. They stressed education and individual achievement. They also spent lavishly to support the arts. Florence and the Medicis: Florence, perhaps more than any other cities, came to symbolise the Italian Renaissance. Like ancient Athens, it produced a dazzling number of gifted poets, artist, architects, scholars and scientist in a short of time. In the 1400s, the Medici, family of Florence organised a banking business. The business prospered and the family expanded into wool manufacturing, mining and other ventures. Soon, the Medicis ranked among the richest merchants and banking in Europe. Money translated into culture and political power. Cosimo de’ Medici gained control of the Florentine government in 1434, and the family continued as a crowned rulers of the city for many years. Best known of all the Medicis was Cosimo’s grandson Lorenzo, who died in 1492, represented the real Renaissance ideal. A clever politician, he held Florence together during difficult times. He was also a generous patron of financial supporters of the arts. Unser Lorenzo, poets and philosophers visited the Medici palace. Arts like Michelangelo earned their craft by sketching ancients Romans statutes collected in the Medici garden. Lorenzo was himself a poet and some of his works are still features in collections of Italian verse. Humanism: At the heart of the Italian Renaissance was an intellectual movement known as humanism. The study of classical culture, humanism focus on worldly subjects rather than on the religions issues that occupied medieval thinkers. Humanism scholars hoped to use the wisdom of the ancients to increase their understanding of their own times. Humanism believed that education should stimulate the individual’s creative power. The main areas of study were grammar, rhetoric, poetry and history based on Greek and Romans text. Humanism did not accept the classical text without question. Rather, they studied the ancient authorities in light of their own experiences. Petrarch: Francesco Petrarch a Florentine who lived from 1304-1374 was an early Renaissance humanism. Inn monasteries and churches, he hunted down and assembled a library of Greek and Roman manuscripts. Thought his efforts, as well as his efforts of others encouraged by his example, the speeches of Cicero, the poems of Homer and Virgil and Livy’s History of Rome again became known to Western Europeans. Petrarch also wrote literature of his own. His Sonnet to Laura, love poems written in the vernacular and inspired by a women he knew only from a distance, greatly influence other writer of his time. Objective Describe the ideas that influence d Renaissance scholars, Arts and Writers: A Golden Age in the Arts: The renaissance reached its most glorious expressions I its painting, sculpture and architecture. Wealthy patrons played a major role in these artistic flowers. Popes, princes and powerful women such as Isabella d’Este of Mantua were important patrons of the arts. Like artist of the Middle Ages, renaissance artist portrayed religious figures such as Mary, Jesus and the saints. The sculptor Donatello created life-size statutes of a soldier on horseback. It was the first such figure done since ancient time. Roman art had been very realistic and renaissance painters developed new techniques for representing both humans and landscapes in a realistic way. Renaissance artist learned the real of perspective. By making distant objects smaller than those close to the viewer, artist could paint scenes that appeared three dimensional. They also used shading to make object look round and real. Renaissance artist studied human anatomy and drew form life models. This made possible for them to portray the human body more accurately than medieval artist had done. The genius of Leonardo: Leonardo was born in 1452 in Florence. His exploring mind and endless curiosity fed a genius for invention. Most popular painting is the Mona Lisa. Leonardo made sketches of nature and of model in has studio. He even dissected corpse to learn how muscles work. His interest extended to botany, anatomy, and optics, music, architectural and engineering. He made sketch of flying machines and under boats centuries before the first aeroplanes or submarine was actually built. Michelangelo: Michelangelo was a genius-sculptor, engineering, painting, architect and poet. His masterpieces like Pieta, which captures the sorrow of Mary as she cradles the dead Christ on her knees. David, Michelangelo’s statute of the biblical shepherd who killed Goliath, recalls the harmony and grace of ancient Greek traditions. Raphael: Raphael studied the works of those great masters. His painting blended Christians and classical styles. One of his well known works, School of Athens, pictures an imaginary gathers of great thinkers and scientist, Plato, Aristotle, Socrates and even the Arabic philosopher Averroes. In typical Renaissance fashion, Raphael including the faces of Michelangelo, Leonardo and himself in the assembled group. Raphael’s best known portrayal of the Madonna, the mother of Christ. Women artist: Some of these women kept their work secret, allowing their husbands to pass if off as their own. In 1500s, Sofonisba Auguissola, Italian noblewomen, won fame as a portrait painter. One of her works, The Artist’s Sisters Playing Chess, earned her an invitation to become court painter to King Philip II of Spain. In 1600s, Artemissa Gentileschi created bold paintings of dramatic realism. In Judith and the Maidservant, she depicts the nobility of the biblical heroine Judith, who served Israel from an invading army by killing the enemy leader. Architecture: Renaissance architects rejected the Gothic style of the late Middle Ages as cluttered and disorderly. They adapted the columns, archers and the domes favoured by the Greek and Romans. The cathedral in Florence, Filippo Brinellaschi created a magnificent dome, which he modelled on the dome of the Parthenon n Rome. Equally famous is Michelangelo’s design for the dome of St. Peter’s Church in Rome. Writing for New Age: Castiglione’s ideal courtier: The most widely read of these books was The Book of the Courtier by Baldassare Castiglione. Castiglione’s ideal courtier was a well educated, aristocrat who has mastered many fields, poetry, music and sport. He good at games, musical instruments, literature and history. Machiavelli’s advice: Niccolo Machiavelli had served Florence as a diplomat and had observed the kings and princes in foreign court. He also studied ancient Roman history. He combined his knowledge experiment of politics with his knowledge of the past to offer a guide to rulers on how to gain and maintain power. The Prince did not discuss leadership in terms of high ideas. Machiavelli took a look at real rulers in an age of ruthless power politics. He stressed that the end justifies the means. He urged rulers to use whatever methods were necessary to achieve their goals. Machiavelli saw himself as an enemy of oppression and corruption.