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The Italian Renaissance

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Title: The Italian Renaissance


1
The Italian Renaissance
viztv.vizfact.com
Presentation created by Robert L.
Martinez Primary Content Source Prentice Hall
World History Images as cited.
theworldwidetraveler.com
2
The Renaissance began in Italy, then spread to
the rest of Europe. Italy was the birthplace of
the Renaissance for several reasons.
wwnorton.com
3
The Renaissance was marked by a new interest in
the culture of ancient Rome. Because Italy had
been the center of the Roman empire, it was a
logical place for this reawakening to begin.
d.umn.edu
4
Italy differed from the rest of Europe in other
ways. Its cities survived the Middle Ages. In the
north, city-states like Florence, Milan, Venice,
and Genoa grew into prosperous centers of trade
and manufacturing.
learner.org
5
Rome, in central Italy, and Naples, in the south,
along with a number of smaller city-states, also
contributed to the Renaissance cultural revival.
iicbelgrado.esteri.it
6
Wealthy and influential merchants exerted
political and economic leadership, and their
attitudes and interests helped to shape the
Italian Renaissance. They stressed education and
individual achievement. They also spent lavishly
to support the arts.
rome-in-italy.com
7
Florence came to symbolize the epitome of the
Italian Renaissance. Like the ancient city of
Athens, it produced a large number of gifted
poets, architects, scholars, and scientists.
8
In the 1400s, the Medici family of Florence
organized a successful banking business. The
family would expand into wool manufacturing and
mining. The Medicis ranked among the richest
merchants and bankers in Europe.
paradoxplace.com
9
The Medici family were generous patrons, or
financial supporters, of the arts.
walkaboutflorence.com
10
The Renaissance was a time of creativity and
change in many ways, political, social, economic,
and cultural. Perhaps most important were the
changes that took place in the way people viewed
themselves and their world.
charliekirks.com
11
Spurred by a reawakened interest in the classical
learning of Greece and Rome, creative Renaissance
minds set out to transform their own age. Their
era, they felt, was a time of rebirth after what
they saw as the disorder and disunity of the
Medieval Ages.
ricksteves.com
12
In reality, Renaissance Europe did not break
completely with its medieval past. After all,
monks and scholars of the Middle Ages had
preserved much of the classical heritage.
snarkmarket.com
13
Latin had survived as the language of the Church
and of educated people. And the mathematics of
Euclid, the astronomy of Ptolemy, and the works
of Aristotle were well known to late medieval
scholars.
Aristotle
en.wikipedia.org
14
The Renaissance produced new attitudes toward
culture and learning. Unlike medieval scholars,
who were more likely to focus on life after
death. Renaissance thinkers explored the richness
and variety of human experience in the here and
now. At the same time, there was a new emphasis
on individual achievement.
airminded.org
15
The Renaissance supported a spirit of adventure
and a wide-ranging curiosity that led people to
explore new worlds. The Italian navigator
Christopher Columbus, who sailed to the Americas
in 1492, represented that spirit.
spiritofrebellion.wordpress.com
16
So did Nicolaus Copernicus, a Polish scientist
who revolutionized the way people viewed the
universe.
hopeinrhodes.blogspot.com
17
At the heart of the Italian Renaissance was an
intellectual movement known as humanism. Based on
the study of classical culture, humanism focused
on worldly subjects rather than on the religious
issues that had occupied medieval thinkers.
faculty.umf.maine.edu
18
Humanists believed that education should
stimulate the individuals creative powers. They
returned to the humanities, the subjects taught
to ancient Greek and Roman schools. The main
areas of study were grammar, rhetoric, poetry,
and history, based on Greek and Roman texts.
my.opera.com
19
Humanists did not accept the classical texts
without question. Rather, they studied the
ancient authorities in light of their own
experiences.
20
Francesco Petrarch, a Florentine who lived in the
1300s, was an early Renaissance humanist. In
monasteries and churches, he found and assembled
a library of Greek and Roman manuscripts. Through
his efforts and those of others encouraged by his
example, the works of Cicero, Homer, and Virgil
again became known to Western Europeans.
guardian.co.uk
21
Renaissance artists studied ancient Greek and
Roman works and revived many classical forms. The
sculptor Donatello created a life-size statue of
a soldier on horseback. It was the first such
figure done since ancient times.
italian-renaissance-art.com
22
Roman art had been very realistic, and
Renaissance painters developed new techniques for
representing both humans and landscapes in a
realistic way. By making distant objects smaller
than those close to the viewer, artists could
paint scenes that appeared three-dimensional.
all-about-renaissance-faires.com
23
Renaissance painters used shading to make objects
looks round and real. Painters and sculptors
studied human anatomy and drew from live models.
As a result, they were able to portray the human
body more accurately, than medieval artists had
done.
aboutvenice.org
24
Renaissance artists rejected the Gothic style of
the late Middle Ages as cluttered and disorderly.
Instead, they adopted the columns, arches, and
domes that had been favored by the Greeks and
Romans.
lwooddesigns.wordpress.com
25
Renaissance Florence was home to many outstanding
painters and sculptors. The most celebrated
Florentine masters were Leonardo da Vinci,
Michelangelo, Donatello, and Raphael.
ianbrooks.me
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