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Rebirth of Learning 1350-1600 Early Middle Ages Europe Kings Lords Bishops Lower lords Crusades Black Death 2nd Agr Revolution Peasants Parish priests New Economy Serfs High Kings Lords Bishops GUILDS (university) journeyman Lower lords apprentice laborers Peasants Parish priest Townsmen Trade and Commerce: The Foundations of Town Life Centers for trade and shipping Purchase of luxury goods such as silk, spices, ivory, and porcelain Guilds dominated social and civic life of towns Guilds reflected importance of Christianity in towns Moneychanger and his Wife by Quentin Massys A) contributed to building cathedrals B) adopted patron saints and sponsored parades in their honor Kings Lords European Renaissance Kings ~1300- ~1700 Clergy New wealth Nobles Bishops GUILDS (university) journeyman Lower lords apprentice laborers Humanism Bourgeoisie Art lawyers merchants guildsmen Printing Proletariat New Monarchs Peasants Parish priests peasants New Technologies Townsmen Town Life in the Middle Ages Town Life in the Renaissance 1400 500 C.E. SOCIETY • Towns were small because society was based on agriculture and most people lived in the countryside • Nobles had most of the power a) lords owned the land where most towns were located b) towns needed protection from knights that lords could provide • Status determined by birthright POWER 1650 • Towns grew because society began to be based on commerce and more people started to live in cities • Middle class had most of the power a) limited the power of feudal lords by forcing them to grant charters b) gained control of great sums of money by organizing banks STATUS • Status determined by wealth and ability What was the Renaissance? Why did it begin in Italy? • • • Renaissance is a French word meaning “rebirth.” It refers to a revival in arts and learning Period when scholars became interested in ancient Greek and Roman culture Italian city-states displayed their wealth by giving financial support to artists who created works with classical themes New Wealth 1. Venice and Genoa 2. Followed by Florence Milan Rome 3. Acceptance by church of profit motive St. Thomas Aquinas Humanism 1. Individualism Focus on man rather than God Mirandola’s Oration on the Dignity of Man (1463-94) “You shall determine your own nature without constraint from any barrier.” Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier How should the ideal man and woman behave? 2. Classicism a. translation of Greek, Roman texts b. Arab texts that used Greek and Roman texts that no longer existed -Ibn Sina, Averroes 3. Secularism- focus on world/not just heaven *transforms education Universities not just for educating clergy The Arts Renaissance Art and Artists/Genius Italian city-states/ Florence de Medici family= bankers, art patrons Cathedral of Florence the Duomo Brunelleschi’s Dome How did Florence become the most influential city-state? • • • • • Maintained thriving industry in wool and silk trade Purchased luxury items from the East and sold them for a large profit Sold insurance to sea traders to protect their overseas investments Created numerous banks that made loans or exchanged currencies Medici family promoted trade, banking, the arts, scholarship and civic pride The Medici Family • Made a fortune as merchants and bankers. • Used their profits to promote trade, banking, the arts, scholarship and civic pride. Characteristics of Renaissance Art Raphael’s “School of Athens” Socrates Plato Aristotle Euclid Averroes Pythagoras Ptolemy Massys’ “A Money Changer and His Wife” Da Vinci’s “Proportional Study of Man in the Manner of Vitruvius” Durer’s “Erasmus” Bruegel’s “Summer” 1. Public Art David as symbol of Florence (small citystate surrounded by large states) Michelangelo Donatello 2. Perspective Use of geometric proportions, arrangements Masaccio Trinity with the Virgin 1427 3. chiaroscuro Leonardo da Vinci Mona Lisa Michelangelo Sistine Chapel ceiling 4. Biblical/classical themes 5. Realism 5. Realism/ Merchants as subjects Van Eyck’s The Arnolfini Wedding 1434 Northern Renaissance Printing Chinese had pioneered wood block printing press Gutenberg puts it together with new thicker inks and moveable type What about paper? Northern Renaissance • • • • • Late 15th century Van Eyck Durer Holbein’s Henry VIII Brueghel Satires were very popular as well as “how-to” books Renaissance Literature Writing in the Vernacular (not Latin) Petrarch—sonnets Dante—The Divine Comedy Erasmus—Father of Humanism wrote “In Praise of Folly” Machiavelli The Prince 1512 realpolitick observations of how politics really worked in Florence and rest of Europe “…it is much safer to be feared than loved..” “A prudent ruler ought not to keep faith when by so doing it would be against his interest..” “…one who deceives will always find those who allow themselves to be deceived.” principle=the end justifies the means New Technologies 1. Caravel and lateen (triangular) sail from Arab dhows combine with straight sternpost, stern rudder, and square sails of northern Europe Dhow Caravel 2. New maps portolani – sailing maps • 3. Applications for gunpowder cannons- cannonballs by 14th century Galileo’s telescope First portable clocks developed in Florence, Italy, in 1410 by Brunelleschi. Before this time, mechanical clocks were large, fixed devices. The spring- driven clock made it possible to carry the time around with you. Renaissance Ends • Invasions by French, Spanish and Holy Roman Empire sap strength of Italian citystates • Italy lost monopoly on trade routes--wealth decreases • Catholic Reformation stifles creativity with Forbidden Books list and Inquisition