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Transcript
TERMINOLOGY

Status Quo (definition): the existing state of affairs,
especially regarding political and social issues
 ….and in what we are learning today, religious
issues as well!
Overview

In these notes we are going to be looking at various
historical events that challenged the European status
quo prior the French Revolution:






The Black Death
The Reformation
The Renaissance
The Scientific Revolution
The Enlightenment
Exploration and the American Revolution
Prelude: the “Dark Ages”

Often called ‘medieval’ as well

The Roman Empire falls to German barbarians, this
puts most of the Western world in disarray

What results is a lot of fighting and wars and
consequently not much time for literature, arts, and
education

NOTE: more recently historians are tending not to call
this period in history the ‘dark ages’ and rather Late
Middle Ages because new information is starting to
show a more prosperous, less ‘dark’ period
The
Black Death
(1347-1351)

You’ll be learning more about this after you finish your Black
Death manuscripts!
The Reformation
A Challenge to the Catholic Church (1500’s AD)
Martin Luther

Monk who became upset
that the church was selling
indulgences


Do a quick search on
indulgences and write a brief
summary of what they are in
your notes
Started to question many of
the teachings/doctrine of
the Catholic Church
95 Theses

Prepared 95 theses (points)
against the Catholic Church
in 1517 AD

Through these theses
concludes that faith and not
good works or deeds led to
salvation
The Word Spreads…

This document was copied (using the printing press!)
and spread throughout Europe

This grows in popularity and eventually creates a new
domination, Lutheranism (the beginning of the
Protestants)
Protestantism

Comes from the world “Protest”

Describes Christians that broke away from the Catholic
Church and founded churches in protest of Catholic
practices

The Protestants also disagreed amongst themselves
which is why there is many denominations today!
King Henry VIII

Threw out the Catholic Church
from England and created his
own Church of England. This
was later called the Anglican
church

Took power, land and money
from the Catholic church but
changed little in the belief
system
Puritans

Puritans later leave the
church and immigrate to
America for religious
freedom
Why is the Protestant
Reformation important?

The Roman Catholic Church was a major part of
medieval life

ie. even if you weren’t a believer, you would still go to church
and take part in all the ceremonies, etc.

The Roman Catholic Church believed it was the only
Church (at least in Europe) and when the Protestants
challenged this, it was a huge shock

Would eventually be the cause of wars as well…
The Renaissance
A Rescue from the Dark Ages
(14th, 15th, 16th Centuries)
Word Origins

The word ‘renaissance’ comes from two French words,
which combined together mean ‘rebirth’
What was the Renaissance?

The rebirth of classical antiquity (looking back at the
literature, architecture and art of ancient Greece, Rome,
etc.)

It is a period of vigorous artistic and intellectual
activity

Originated in Italy
Changes in Art

Renaissance art was concerned with the observation of
the natural world and the communication of human
emotions

Went for a more realistic approach then symbolic in
terms of paintings

Architects started to look at older marvels (like the
Pantheon) for inspiration
Medieval Art
TASK:

As you look through the following slides, make note of the
differences in art between the Medieval art style (the slide
before) and the Renaissance art style (the two slides that
follow this one)
Renaissance Art
Humanism

Francesco Petrarch (1304-1474)
was the father of humanism

He wrote Latin epic poems and
biographies about famous
Romans
Humanism

Humanism is nurturing one self with secular* learning,
liberal arts, etc.

The focus switched from God and the Church to the
study of man

Advocated liberal art programs that embraced
grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, politics, and moral
philosophy
*Secular is non-religious, and applicable to the here and now
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)

A painter, scientist and a military
engineer

Dissected corpses to learn
anatomy and was a self taught
botanist

As an artist he showed great skill
in showing inner moods through
complex facial expressions
There is a theory that he used his
own portrait to create the Mona
Lisa—what do you think?
Other Famous Renaissance
Artists

Raphael Santi

Michelangelo Buonarotti

Donatello
Why is it the Renaissance
important?

The Renaissance is in many ways the beginning of
modern day as we know it

Humanism switches the focus from the study of God to
the study of man

Humanism also attempts to revitalize the classics,
which in turn revitalizes education (gets Europe out of
the Dark Ages)
The Scientific
Revolution
1500’s AD
A light goes on in the Dark Ages…
Revolutionary how?
L’ Éclairissement
The French Revolution
session ii
The Enlightenment
A Philosopher giving a L ectureon theOrrer y in which a lamp isput in placeof theSun
painting by Joseph Wright of D erby, ca 1766

Revolutionary in the sense that it changed how people looked
at and investigated the world
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Key Ideas

Heliocentric Model
 Sun is the center of the universe, not the earth

Scientific Method
 Becomes the dominant means of investigating
anything

Faith versus Reason
 Begins the long conflict between science and
religion