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University of San Diego High School Advanced Placement European History Janet J. Davis McKee Notes© The Dawn of a New Era Written by: Margaret McKee, Castilleja School, Palo Alto, California European society in the Age of Faith--the Middle Ages, the medieval period--was theoretically uniform in its basic institutions of feudalism and the Church. However, by the 15th century, with tap roots going back into the 14th century, both of these institutions faced challenges that would profoundly alter their natures. Change affected every level and aspect of European life. Where Holy Emperor Henry IV bowed to the powerful pope, Gregory VII, at Canossa in the 11th century, later medieval monarchs such as England's Edward I ("the Hammer," reference Braveheart) and France's Philip IV ("the Fair" ["le bel"]) strengthened royal authority at the expense of Church and barons. Kings such as these attempted to undermine the power of the Church as well by convening popular assemblies such as Parliament in England, the Estates General in France, the Diets in the Holy Roman Empire, the Cortes in Spain. The convoking of such representative bodies attested to the growing economic and political significance of middle classes, comprising neither the toiling serfs nor the great feudal lords. Ambitious, resourceful kings forged alliances with the new middle class, tapped their wealth, granted them privileges. Crown and Town sought order-peace-unity while the barons loved to fight. In the medieval assemblies, that met only periodically and at the king's pleasure, lords, church, and commons could lay their grievances at his feet and hope for redress, in return for concessions of their own, usually in the form of taxes. The king listened to complaints, administered justice, protected the people from foreign invasion, and asked for money in order to do so. The emergence of these more-or-less popular assemblies illustrated the new feeling of patriotism; it also indicated the gradual erosion of Church and baronial power. Dynastic loyalty that fostered patriotism grew at the expense of lords and Church. Fear or threats of foreign invasion helped to define the new phenomenon. The Hundred Years War (13371454, approx.) contributed to dynastic patriotism in both England and France. The Reconquista served the same function in Spain and Portugal. All of England rejoiced in the victories of Crécy and Poitiers, the heroism of the Black Prince in the early phases of the war and the triumph Henry V at Agincourt later in the war. Joan of Arc's (Jeanne d'Arc's) martyrdom consolidated anti-English sentiments in France and led finally to the expulsion of the English and France's unification under the Valois dynasty. The fall of the Alhambra, the Moors' last stronghold in Granada, marked completed Spain's unification under "Their Catholic Majesties," Ferdinand and Isabella. The latter's successes illustrate the continuing importance of religion in the political area: Catholic Spain and Portugal rallied against both Jews and Moors; Catholic Hungary fought against Muslim expansion; Hussite Bohemia rebelled against the militantly Catholic Holy Roman Empire. Other dramatic and subtle differences in attitudes and institutions distinguished the "New Era" from the "Age of Faith" that preceded it: written and oral vernaculars challenged Latin as the common tongue; lay mysticism and heresy (Albigensians, Hussites, Lollards) undermined the universality of the Church as did the Great Schism of the West and the Babylonian Captivity of the Papacy; serfs ran away and peasants rebelled (the Jacquerie in France, Wat Tyler in England; people died in their hundreds of thousands in the pandemic known as the Black Death. By the end of the 14th century and beginning of the 15th, people--at least the elites--had a sense of something new "in the air." They coined a 1 name for it, the Renaissance. Conventionally though incorrectly defined as a rebirth of, variously, the arts and culture, Renaissance men (and women) turned the focus of their attention to the Classics. Classical studies led these individuals to examine and reexamine every field of endeavor and to change their view of themselves and of God. The Renaissance was at least in part an attempt to reconstruct the golden age of classical antiquity. The result was an explosion of creativity that began in Italy but spread to encompass the continent. Renaissance man (if such a fellow existed) lacked the historical perspective to acknowledge his debt to medieval art, philosophy, or learning. To a certain extent, he denounced his feudal past and ecclesiastical heritage. The early Italian humanist, Petrarch, inveighed against the Dark Ages that separated him from the classical "age of' light." Renaissance men were confident in their ability to make decisions, to control the environment and understand the world. Renaissance man did not consider himself an insignificant speck but a unique creation endowed with reason. "What a piece of work is man," reflected Hamlet, "How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty…." Renaissance men saw themselves at the center of God's universe, a universe they could comprehend and perhaps refashion. Life was not the vestibule to eternity, but a place for the joy and fulfillment that God intended for man, whom He created in His own image. A Renaissance man lived in the world not apart from it; he was not in the cloister; he was not a priest. The Renaissance brought man to the threshold of modern times. The characteristic Renaissance attitude described above was known as humanism, defined in the writings of Petrarch and Bruni. Humanism stressed the classical notion, “Man is the measure of all things.” To quote Leon Batista Alberti, “A man can do all things if he will.” Renaissance humanists did not question the existence of God nor doubt the basic tenets of Christianity; however they cast such theological issues in secondary roles: Power, politics, creativity, individuality, ambition, success, fame absorbed Renaissance man. He was secular and materialistic rather than spiritual and mystical. While not denying his faith, he was simply more interested in himself. Renaissance humanists found their role models in classical or heroic figures such as Caesar, Alexander, Marcus Aurelius and other high achievers of the past. Italy: Cradle of the Renaissance The Renaissance began in Italy; from there the ideas of humanism percolated North over the expanding trade routes. In medieval Italy the urban tradition did not atrophy altogether, nor did the two class division of feudalism entrench itself. Trade between the old cities of Roman times dwindled but did not die. Thus, Italy throughout the Middle Ages, remained less rural, manorial, agrarian and insular than northern Europe. In addition, classical ruins existed throughout the peninsula to remind man of the grandeur of the past and to provide models for imitation. Because of the Church’s ongoing concern with education, because of the manuscripts preserved in dusty monasteries and because of the needs of record keeping and communication, literacy – at least for the elites – survived. Furthermore, the Church, with its curia, its bureaucracy, its administrative responsibilities, needed literate clerics. It was certainly hoped that prelates above the level of parish priests could read and write. Even in the darkest time of the Dark Ages, the Church patronized of artists and artisans, sponsored the construction, beautification, decoration of churches, monasteries, convents, abbeys, cathedrals. The visual arts--stained glass, fresco, sculpture--were essential ingredients in preserving and propagating the faith among an illiterate populace. The Church, until the Babylonian Captivity, was headquartered in Italy (duh!). 2 Last and of enduring significance, the Crusades acted as the catalyst in the transformation of Europe from medieval to Renaissance. For two hundred years, the crusading knights left and returned via Venetian or Genoese ports. In the wake of the Crusaders merchants, students, pilgrims, and tourists journeyed to and from the Holy Land. Expanding travel and travelers introduced new products to European markets; increased demand--in particular for the spices to preserve food or improve its taste provided incentives for merchants to supply European consumers with their desires. Products, which in the 11th century were priceless luxuries, by the 14th were necessities. Merchants competed for markets, ventured farther and farther a field bringing northern Europe into the commercial, economic, social transformation of Europe. Towns expanded, as did the flow of money and the size of the middle class. The standard of living rose, distracting the prosperous from matters of salvation to those of materialism. Occupations in commerce, manufacturing, and finance attracted the ambitious. Careers were built and fortunes made in areas completely alien to the old, medieval noble-serf stratification. These careers demanded a facility in reading, writing and arithmetic. As men of new wealth flourished in the new environment, they beautified their homes and places of business; they hired artisans and artists to make them more comfortable and more luxurious. In their spare time, these "new men" read more than their business ledgers; they purchased and perused books from the classical past that praised the secular-rather-than-spiritual values they espoused. It all began in Italy. Italy's Mediterranean trade links with the Near East brought wealth to the peninsula. Italian merchants and bankers established connections with like-minded individuals in the North, stimulating the same kinds of developments (trade-towns-$middle class-secular p.o.v) there. Products (tallow, hides, timber, fur, leather, herring) from the Low Countries, France, HRE, for which there were markets in both Italy and the East found their way to new destinations. To facilitate trade, great banking houses, such as the Medici, Pazzi, Fuggers, and Rothschilds, emerged. The developments in Italy, the location of Florence, and the ingenuity and dynamism of the Medici family combined to make Florence the very heart and soul of the early Renaissance. Cosimo d'Medici and his grandson Lorenzo were among the greatest art patrons or all time! Art and Artists of the Italian Renaissance No better illustration of the dramatic changes occurring in Florence, Italy, and Europe can be found than in the veritable explosion of artistic genius that took place in Renaissance Florence. Here could be seen exuberant humanism interacting with both classical ideals and the continuing influence or a revitalized Church. Indeed, there was a clear thread of continuity between medieval art (powerfully religious and symbolic) and the full flowering of Renaissance humanistic art. In the Quattrocento and Cinquocento, a number of artists in both painting and sculpture represent the interconnection of spiritual themes (religious or Churchly subject matter, didactic in intent) and secular (new techniques and styles, new subject matter.) PRECURSORS 1. Giotto (1266-1337). His dates identify Giotto as an extremely early or pre-Renaissance artist; he was the trail-blazer, groundbreaker, revolutionary who prepared the way for the great "masters" of the Quattrocento. As a Renaissance man (or wannabe Renaissance man,) he signed his paintings and more than dabbled in architecture and construction. In keeping with the definitions described above, Giotto was a Florentine; his paintings were consistently religious in both subject matter and location. He painted familiar stories from the Old and New Testaments and lives of the saints in churches, monasteries, cathedrals, and chapels in the traditional medium of fresco, painting on wet plaster. However, Giotto broke entirely from the flat, symbolic disciplines of the past, portraying his figures with weight, bulk, form, depth, realism. He discarded the characteristic style of medieval 3 miniature and illumination to give fresh rendering to traditional subjects. Today, Giotto's frescoes may appear stilted and primitive to the modern eye, but they stunned his contemporaries with their powerful, impact. He drew from live models rather than copying old pictures and perpetuating old symbols. Giotto's innovations brought painting from the cobwebbed cloisters of the medieval past into the full light of Renaissance day. His people seemed to be composed of flesh and blood and to be experiencing real human emotions. He defined a psychological and visual realism that pointed to an altogether new direction in western art. Every great artist of the later periods studied his frescoes. His impact was enormous. 2. Brunelleschi (1377-1446) Also a Florentine, Brunelleschi's important contributions lay in the areas of painting and architecture. His major architectural achievement was the design and construction of the dome on the Cathedral in Florence, a hugely significant accomplishment for that day and this. In typically Renaissance fashion, his inspiration came from the classical ruins of the Pantheon in Rome. He influenced others to incorporate classical forms such as geometric shapes, columns, the rounded arch to achieve the balance and harmony of' the classical and Renaissance ideals. The Pazzi Chapel, Hospital of the Innocents, and Medici Library are all examples of Brunelleschi's genius. In addition to being an architectural trend-setter, Brunelleschi's impact on painting was considerable. He and other major artists of his day, such as Donatello, Ghiberti, and the Pisano Brothers, competed to win the commission to cast the low-relief bronze decorations on the doors to the Baptistry in Florence. Brunelleschi lost to his life-long rival Ghiberti, but in composing his design, Brunelleschi formulated the principles of linear perspective and three dimensions, which every artist worth his salt utilized from that time on. Thus, Brunelleschi stands as a major early or pre-Renaissance artist in the fields of both architecture and painting. His struggles with the Signoria and competitions with other artists all place him in the mainstream of the Florentine Renaissance. 3. Donatello (1396-1466). The Florentine, Donatello, did for sculpture what Giotto did for painting and Brunelleschi for architecture. His “David” was a stunningly original statue, the first free standing nude carved since classical antiquity. “David” was revolutionary because Donatello dared to portray him as a young Greek god; his casual nudity was daring innovation. In “David” as well as his other works of spiritual or Biblical subjects, Donatello worked to capture and portray reality rather than relying on worn out symbols from the past, incorporating movement and grace into his statues. He was one of the first artists to attempt in sculpture the fusion of the classical with the traditionally Christian: “David” is an excellent example of a traditionally Biblical subject executed in a startling classical or new manner. Donatello’s statues illustrated the neo-platonic ideal of the Renaissance – that is, outer form reflects inner essence. The clarity, purity and beauty of “David” were the outward manifestations of his essential nature. Other major works by Donatello included “Gattamelata”, “Mary Magdalene”, “john the Baptist” and “Habbakuk”. Donatello's innovations marked the departure of European sculpture from its medieval antecedents. Medieval sculpture, for the most part, was columnar. Renaissance sculpture was free-standing and three-dimensional. In addition, Renaissance sculptors after Donatello emphasized the nude human body, which became a supreme vehicle for the expression of beauty. The trail-blazers--Giotto, Brunelleschi, and Donatello--were followed by the "giants" of the Quattrocento (14001s) and the Cinquecento (1500's). In the Quattrocento, experimenting with line, color, bulk, volume, perspective, and detail were Masaccio and Botticelli. From this true century of genius, I have selected my two favorites. 4 QUATTROCENTO (1400's) 1. Masaccio (1401-1428). The promise of Giotto was fulfilled a century later by Masaccio. Contemporaries immediately recognized his frescoes, especially the "Life of St. Peter" in the Branacci Chapel, as landmarks. Every ambitious painter of the Quattrocento and after (Fra Angelico, Fra Filippo Lippi, Botticelli, Leonardo, et al.) came to study his bold nudes, startling use of perspective, precise attention to anatomical detail, and subtle use of light and shadow. In Masaccio's frescoes lay the first suggestion of the heroic view of man that would reach its climax in Michelangelo's "Creation" and "Last Judgment." Each figure in Masaccio's "Tribute Money" emerged as a real individual occupying space and time. His technique gave new power to the traditional Christian message, as well as a high moral tone to his massive, austere, majestic human figures. His deep religious convictions were powerfully evident in all of his paintings. The viewer is immediately struck with Masaccio's conception and rendering of human will and responsibility in the dramatic painting, "The Expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden." Masaccio did not expend his artistic energies in portraying the charm, grace, or refinement found in Donatello's neo-platonic ideal. He was not as tied to classical idealism as were Brunelleschi and Donatello, choosing instead themes of order, power, and a tragic view of the human struggle. Like Giotto, Masaccio prepared the visual and psychological way for the monumental heroism of Michelangelo. 2. Boticelli (144501510). Botticelli developed a graceful, harmonious and melodic style of painting that made exquisite use of color and clarity of line. In his two most famous paintings, “The Birth of Venus” and “Springtime”, Botticelli demonstrates how much a product of humanism he was, and how enamored he was with the classics and the classical view. He freely expressed classical themes; he gave full recognition to the gods, goddesses and myths of antiquity. He delighted in the female nude and defined a whole new concept of feminine beauty: a graceful woman with a slender body, flowing golden hair and an air of languid, undulating, pouting sensuality. However, even in the sunny optimism of his Florentine youth, Botticelli hinted at an undercurrent of melancholy and disillusionment in the Quattrocento. Botticelli's later career coincided with the death of his great patron, Lorenzo the Magnificent, and the traumatic rule of Savonarola in Florence. Botticelli himself experienced a profound religious conversion and destroyed some of his beautiful paintings in the infamous "burning of the vanities." After 1492, a new note of pessimism and dread intruded his paintings. "Calumny" and "Pieta" reflected a brooding sense of doom and foreboding. He abandoned the dreamy grace of the "Birth o' Venus" for an ascetic style; despair and rejection could be seen as he recognized the unfulfilled promises of the Florentine Renaissance. The contrast between his early and late works is obvious and dramatic, even to the untrained eye. CINQUOCENTO After Botticelli, the Renaissance moved off in other directions; to a certain extent it moved from Florence to a new flowering in Rome. The artists in the Cinquecento did so too. Although they continued to paint and sculpt religious and classical themes, the artists of the 1500s experimented in and with landscape, still life and portraiture. Oil was introduced to Italy in about 1450. The great geniuses of the High Renaissance, or Cinquecento, were Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael. The artists showed increasing interest in nature and form and the interplay of light and shadow. They worked to portray an essence of man according to their own personal perceptions. Leonardo in particular departed from the neoplatonic ideal (inner/outer harmony, fusion of the classical and Christian) to strive not for beauty but for essence expressed through line, composition, light and shadow. 5 1. Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) Leonardo epitomized the Renaissance, humanistic ideal of man. He was skilled in painting, sculpture, engineering, architecture, musical composition, poetry, costume design, fortifications, natural history, anatomy: Versatile is the adjective that best describes Leonardo, the prodigious and multi-faceted genius. Probably the two most famous and most copied paintings in the world--"Mona Lisa" and "The Last Supper"--were done by Leonardo. In these, as in all of his works, Leonardo worked to capture a particular moment in time. 'The "moment" in the "Last Supper" was when Jesus Christ announced to his disciples, "And one of -you shall betray me." To which each answered with the shocked, "Is it I, Lord?" Leonardo perceived this painting as a problem of emotion, composition, and impact. As in many of his other commissions, once he had solved the problem, it no longer interested him. His patrons had a terrible time getting Leonardo to complete anything once he had lost interest in it. Poor Signore Giacondo never did get his hands on his wife's portrait, "La Giaconda," more familiarly known as "Mona Lisa." Many of Leonardo's uncompleted masterpieces hint at what a curious, enigmatic person the artist was. His paintings were as complex as he was, as seen in the "Mona Lisa." He labored for four years defining his image or woman--graceful, mysterious, beautiful, and, in the last analysis, indefinable. The haunting smile of Mona Lisa replicates itself again and again: "The Virgin o' the Rocks" the "Virgin and St. Anne," to name just two. Leonardo represented the High Renaissance's departure from an uncritical absorption in the classics. Leonardo wanted to copy no models, but to experience and experiment for himself. He was an original, an innovator, no more bound by classical themes than by Christian ones. Typically humanistic, however, Leonardo's continued to study and depict the human body in its every facet and detail, including the grotesque, the ugly, the macabre. His sketchbooks and drawings give eloquent testimony to this fascination. Leonardo was not the single greatest artist of the High Renaissance, but he could rival the greatest in any medium: Michelangelo in sculpture or Raphael in painting. In his drive, range of interests and curiosity, no other artist could approach him. All of his completed paintings were masterpieces of composition expressing tender beauty and effective use of what Leonardo called “sfumato”, a smoky, mysterious technique that he employed to led emphasis and drama to his paintings. 2. Michelangelo Buonnaroti (1475-1564). The titanic, heroic, tortured giant of' the High Renaissance was Michelangelo. His stirring, optimistic, powerfully rendered in "David." His vision, like that of Masaccio, was heroic, moral, beautiful, austere; for Michelangelo the male nude remained the epitome of beauty. How different from Donatello's charming, nonchalant, boyish "David" was Michelangelo's giant: inherent in Michelangelo's "David" was also the inevitability of struggle and its possibility of failure; his hauntingly poignant "Pieta" portrayed the eternal purity of the Virgin grieving over the death of her son, again with the inescapability of human suffering . Michelangelo's humans struggled and succeeded ("David") and struggled and failed ("The Last Judgment.") Like Masaccio, Michelangelo rejected the harmonious, urbane, sophisticated, refined tendencies of the Quattrocento. In his paintings of the human body ("Creation," "Last Judgment") he focused his energy on the human form, especially that of the male nude, the lifeconfirming, life-enhancing symbol that, if anything, characterized Michelangelo. His paintings and sculptures were robust, defiant, heroic, somehow tragic, especially his last "Pietas" and "The Last Judgment." Most famous for his three great masterpieces ("Creation," "David," and "The Last Judgment,") Michelangelo also designed the dome of Bramante's basilica of St. Peter's. Painter, architect, engineer, Michelangelo always considered himself first and foremost a sculptor. Nevertheless, "Creation" on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and the "Last 6 Judgment" on the wall place him in the ranks of the greatest masters of the Italian Renaissance. On the ceiling o' the Sistine Chapel, executed in the medium of fresco, Michelangelo told the story of' creation in nine panels; these were interspersed in triangular sections along the sides of the ceiling with the ancestors of Christ and the giant brooding figures of the prophets and sibyls who foretold His coming. The ceiling stands as a dramatic fusion of classical and Christian themes. The portrayal of God the father, and later of Christ at the "Last Judgment" contained Michelangelo's own vision and religious statement. Christ was not a tender shepherd, but a stern judge. The sinners of "The Last Judgment" remind one of Masaccio's Adam and Even in "The Expulsion..." As in Botticelli's last works, Michelangelo's paintings reflected the influence of Savonarola. Yet, Michelangelo's man, though perhaps doomed, retained his intelligence, will, and courage; he embraced the struggle and grappled with destiny. The equal of Leonardo in the breadth and depth of his talents, Michelangelo also designed fortifications, studied anatomy, dissected cadavers, wrote poetry, and mastered the principles of engineering and architecture. Though in his own mind always a sculptor, Michelangelo's genius included most of the facets of Renaissance art. In his old age, Michelangelo took the commission of his old schoolmate-now Pope, Leo X. He agreed to design and superintend the construction on the dome of the basilica of St. Peter's in Rome. The far-reaching ramifications of this commission 3. Raphael (1493-1520). Unlike the towering, writhing energy of Michelangelo, unlike the unfulfilled genius of the endlessly curious and restless Leonardo, Raphael recalled the sunny optimism of the Quattrocento paintings of Fra Angelico and Botticelli. Raphael's world was tame, luxurious, serene, and refined. He grew up in Mantua, went to Rome in 1500 where he enjoyed the patronage of popes Julius II and Leo X, Unlike the tormented Michelangelo who couldn't get along with anyone, Raphael was a likable fellow--neither as intense as Michelangelo nor as complicated as Leonardo. His exquisite Sistine Madonnas reflected his own temperament: gentle, harmonious, poetic and technically perfect. His Madonnas revealed his highly developed sensitivity to feminine beauty, genius for composition, and flair for visual narrative. The influence of humanism and the classics can be seen in one of his larger works, "The School of Athens," peopled with Aristotle, Plato, and other figures of classical antiquity, even including the gloomy and brooding Heraclitus, apparently a figure added to the fresco after Raphael and Bramante sneaked into the Sistine Chapel to steal a look at Michelangelo's gargantuan epic of "Creation." One of Raphael’s strongest talents lay in portraiture, as seen in his portraits of Julius II and Baldassare Castiglione. Raphael was “of more limited genius…” than someone like Leonardo, but “what he had was more fully developed.” To put it another way, Raphael “… created little, initiated little but rather gathered into his single personality the whole and varied activities of the men who had one before…” Raphael was a synthesizer; and this is not intended to denigrate his rich talent in any way. Literature of the Renaissance Leaving the stunning art of the Italian Renaissance, one can see similar gigantic achievements in the areas of literature, warfare, social mobility, and politics, to name just a few. As with the visual arts, elements from the Age of faith exerted their influence, as did the ideas of the classical revival, as did whole new attitudes and points of view. The spiritual and secular interacted at every level. In literature in all countries, one of the major differences from the Middle Ages lay in the departure from Latin to the local vernacular. As early as the 14th century, Dante and Petrarch wrote in Italian, Chaucer in English. The great mystics/heretics of the 14th century, Wyclif and Hus, delivered their sermons in English and Czech respectively. 7 The pioneer in Renaissance literature was the Florentine, Dante (1265-1321). A contemporary of Giotto, Dante blazed the way in writing. In The Divine Comedy, composed in Italian, Dante fused the spiritual and the secular, Christian and classical; in this powerful, imaginative work, Dante exemplified much of what 13th century Italians thought about their life and their fears for the future, In The Divine Comedy, Dante and his guide, Virgil, journey first to Hell (Inferno) then to Purgatory (Purgatorio), and finally to Heaven (Paradisio). Other precursors or early Renaissance writers in Italy (the cradle) such as Boccaccio (1313-1375) and Petrarch (1304-1375) wrote in Italian, incorporated non-religious ideas in their writings. In England Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales. Petrarch, a Florentine employed in a clerical capacity for a time by the Avignon popes collected classical tomes, which he read in their original Latin and/or Greek. A scholar of the Bible and the writings the Church fathers, he also emerged as one the first humanists. However, his beautiful love sonnets dedicated to Laura earned him his place in literature. Boccaccio, also a Florentine, wrote the rich, earthy, bawdy Decameron. Set in the charming hill town of Fiesole outside of Florence where, according to Boccaccio's whim, a number of young Florentines gathered to escape an outbreak of plague. The bored young folk set about telling stories to each other (like the travelers in The Canterbury Tales) to while away the time. As in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, Boccaccio wrote Decameron in the vernacular, making it accessible to the literate public,(such as it was.) It has been for centuries a gold mine of information of what people at that time thought about, were interested in, feared, loved, hated. After the precursors (Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio), the Quattrocento writers branched off into a variety of genres. Vasari wrote a history of art and biographies of leading artists; Leon Battista Alberti and Cellini wrote autobiographies; Lorenzo Valla (1407-1547) made a study of the Greek, Latin, and Hebrew sources on which contemporary theology was based, opening up the field of literary criticism. Valla's major contribution was his proof that the "Donation of Constantine," one of the foundations of papal claims to supremacy over Europe's kings, was an 11th century forgery. The degree to which humanism and secularism captured the mind and enthusiasm of Renaissance man can best be seen in the works of two Cinquecento writers, Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529) and Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527). Castiglione's fame rests on The Courtier and Machiavelli's on The Prince. These authors eschewed religious issues altogether and concentrated on matters of the here and now. In The Courtier, Castiglione wrote what amounted to a manual of behavior for the accomplished Renaissance gentleman: he must be proficient in the manly arts (riding, swordsmanship), in writing both verse and prose, in music, in painting, in good manners and in being pleasant to "the ladies." He should be pleasant and attractive, well-groomed, neat, and clean. He should appear to be natural and unaffected, not conceited. He should be competent in everything--the well-rounded Renaissance man. To a certain extent, Castiglione's "courtier" reflected the neo-platonic ideal that inner beauty of character would reveal itself in outer beauty of person, not unlike Donatello’s "David." Emulating Castiglione, Giovanni Delia Casa (1503-1556) wrote Rules of Etiquette that included the following advice to the young Renaissance gentleman: Your conduct should not be governed by your own fancy, but in consideration of the feelings of those whose company you keep…. When you have blown your nose, you should not open your handkerchief and inspect it, as if pearls or rubies had dropped out of your skull. It is not polite to scratch yourself when you are seated at table. You should also 8 take care…not to spit at mealtimes, but if you must spit, then do so in a decent manner. It is bad manners to clean your teeth with your napkin, and still worse to do it with your finger. ... it is not a polite habit to carry your toothpick either in your mouth like a bird making its nest, or behind your ear. (The Renaissance. Ed by the National Geographic Book Service, 1970, 93.) One of the most enduringly influential writers of the Renaissance, Machiavelli addressed issues of politics, morality, liberty, order, and the role of the state. His most famous dictum was, "the end justifies the means." He advised a ruler to be strong and daring, as "brave as a lion, sly as a fox." His pessimistic view of human nature, of man as a base creature, led him to define an effective government as one that was dictatorial and could control the low instincts of human nature. He counseled a prince to rule by fear rather than love, to concern himself with what works rather than with what was right. He dedicated The Prince to Cesare Borgia who, Machiavelli hoped, would unite Italy and end the incessant civil wars that ravaged the peninsula. For Machiavelli, the unification of Italy and establishment of order would justify any harsh or despicable tactic to achieve the goal. Renaissance humanists in Italy (and elsewhere) more and more concerned themselves with problems in this world and less and less in preparation for the next. They did not leave the Church nor did they deny its preaching; they were simply more interested in other issues. The questions asked by humanists prepared the way for the Scientific Awakening of the 16th and 17th centuries. Other Copernicus refuted the earth-centered (geocentric) view of the universe; Galileo formulated a new methodology based upon observation and experimentation. Bartholomieu Dias, Vasco da Gama, Christopher Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan revolutionized not only geography, cartography, and navigation, but they transformed man's view of himself and his world. Observation, experimentation, and the courage to innovate produced two dramatic technological achievements during the Renaissance: printing (casting -from movable type) and gunpowder. Printing revolutionized intellectual life and education, bringing books within range of more than just the extraordinarily wealthy and privileged elites; gunpowder revolutionized warfare and made obsolete the heyday of "knights in shining armor." Significant advances in other areas developed during the Renaissance. Leonardo, as every schoolchild knows, was an avid student of anatomy. His drawings of the skeletal structure, muscles, veins, and organs were startlingly accurate and illustrate the inquiring, pragmatic side of the Renaissance. At the same time, however, Renaissance scientists continued to be fascinated with the "pseudo-sciences" of alchemy (transforming base metals into gold) and astrology (forecasting the future through reading the. stars,) numerology, hermeticism. Studies in alchemy and astrology did have the beneficial result of contributing to the development of the legitimate sciences of chemistry and astronomy. Traditional Christianity could not emerge unchanged or indeed unscathed by the turbulence of Renaissance thought. The Babylonian Captivity, Great Schism of the West, Conciliar Movement, the "heresies" of Wyclif and Hus all indicated unrest with institutional religion. Mysticism--which thrived on the borderland between orthodoxy and heresy-spread as individuals attempted to reach a personal, intimate, direct communion with God. The profound piety that accompanied mysticism and the quest for a personal God, 9 contributed to reading and studying the Bible. Humanism and the heady wine of individualism demanded a critical examination of sacred tests; they suggested that each person was endowed with the capacity to understand what he/she read and could make decisions regarding destiny and salvation. The invention of printing of course hastened the spread of such activities. This questioning took place at a time when the Church itself had reached a low point or prestige. As society, attitudes, values, and relationships underwent seismic shifts, the Church would not be immune to the challenges. Indeed, the papacy was not the same after Avignon and The Great Schism. Three generations of exile from Rome, the pronounced French influence, the character of the papacy during the "captivity," and its increasing absorption with financial prerogatives diminished the devotion and affection felt towards the Pope by the community of the faithful. The Schism further weakened the organizational structure o' the Church. Renaissance skepticism, individualism, criticism and questioning undermined the Church in two ways: on the one hand, it was intellectually less satisfying to sophisticated, worldly, secular and ambitious men who were not drawn into careers in the Church as had been the case during the Middle Ages; on the other had, the Church was so much part and parcel of the Italian Renaissance that the deeply devout and piously spiritual did not percolate up into positions of power. Renaissance popes were men of the world. To put it another way, the secularization of society was mirrored in the secularization of the papacy. An absorption in politics, war and finance – not to mention power – filled the College of Cardinals with appointees noted for their administrative ability and political connections or their net worth – they had to pay for their red hats. Lorenzo d’Medici purchased a Cardinal’s hat for his thirteen year old son, who later became Leo X, to ensure Florentine influence in the church hierarchy. Many of the Cardinals were men of education and benevolent patrons of literature, music, drama and art. A few of them were saintly. Some were not yet priests; some were openly secular, for their political, diplomatic and fiscal duties required it. Some fortified their palaces and retained private armies (Julius II waged war with enthusiastic gusto!) for protection from the fractious Roman mob, from condottiere and from other ambitious Cardinals. The great majority of both laymen and clergy accepted naturally and dutifully the authority of the Church; they believed its doctrines, obeyed its requirements, and observed the sacraments. In considering the so-called "decline of the Church," it would be unfair and inaccurate to deny the support and consolation it gave to vast numbers of devoted and. devout Christians. By the end of the 15th century, the Church and the papacy – restored to Rome for 80 years – were deeply affected by both humanism and the easy moral laxity of the Italian Renaissance. Violence, conspiracy, bribery and assassination were part of the political realities of the day and hence part of the papacy of the day as well. While the Popes were the spiritual shepherds of the faithful, they had practical responsibilities as princes of the Papal States; as such they were embroiled in the power politics of the war torn Italian peninsula. 10