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Renaissance Period

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Renaissance Period Literatuur klas 5 Renaissance (16th century) Around 1600, people began to look differently at life, at their own place in the world. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Renaissance Period


1
Renaissance Period
  • Literatuur klas 5

2
Renaissance (16th century)
make notes
  • Around 1600, people began to look differently at
    life, at their own place in the world.
  • The period in which these new ideas gained
    strength is called the Renaissance Period.
  • Its characteristics are

3
1. From collective to individual attitude
make notes
  • Middle Ages
  • I belong to a group, and I serve that group.
  • (family, guild, religious community)

Renaissance Im an individual whose feelings
and actions have a value of their own.
4
More individual attitude
make notes
  • Renaissance
  • Im an individual whose feelings and actions
    have a value of their own.
  • Beginning of capitalism (private enterprise)
  • Artists developed their talent (anonimity
    discarded)
  • Individual relation with God
  • Uomo Universale

5
Uomo Universale
  • Renaissance ideal
  • Soldier, musician, poet, politician, scholar,
    scientist

6
2. From theocentric to anthropocentric attitude
make notes
  • Middle Ages
  • Memento mori ? My life is but a preparation
    for my death.

Renaissance Carpe diem. ? Im going to die,
so lets do something with my life! Seize the
day (still very religious)
7
3. From dogmatic belief to critical investigation
make notes
  • Middle Ages
  • I believe what the Church and authorities say is
    the Truth, and live by it.
  • (official doctrines)

Renaissance I want intellectual independence,
to look for my own Truth. (beginning of science)
8
Examples
make notes
  • Galilei The earth revolves around the sun.
  • Humanism Erasmus, Thomas More. (people can
    decide whats right and wrong because of
    universal morality)
  • Luther Reformation, Protestantism (Church lost
    sight of central truths of Christianity)

9
Greek and Roman classics
make notes
  • During the Middle Ages, the Greek and Roman
    cultures were not so popular, because they were
    believed to be pagan.
  • A key element of Renaissance is the rebirth of
    the Greek and Roman culture and writings.

10
Literature
  • Witchcraft, meetings with Devil (DIY!)
  • English more powerful than Latin
  • English language, education, culture,
    exploration, orderly government encouraged by
    Henry VIII

11
New genres in literature
make notes
  • Sonnet
  • (Poem in one stanza of 14 lines with a fixed
    rhyme scheme)
  • Essay
  • (Discussion of a topic with authors personal
    opinion ? inherited from Greek/Roman times)
  • Elegy
  • (also from Classics solemn poem of meditation)
  • Pastoral
  • (longing for peaceful and simple countrylife)

12
Sonnet Edmund Spenser
hand-out
  • One day I wrote her name upon the strand,
  • but came the waves and washèd it away
  • again I wrote it with a second hand,
  • but came the tide, and made my pains his prey.
  • Vain man, said she, that dost in vain assay,
  • a mortal thing so to immortalize,
  • for I my self shall like to this decay,
  • and eek my name be wipèd out likewise.
  • Not so, (quoth I) let baser things devise,
  • to die in dust, but you shall live by fame
  • my verse your virtues rare shall eternise,
  • and in the heavens write your glorious name.
  • Where whenas death shall all the world subdue,
  • our love shall live, and later life renew.

13
One day I wrote her name
make notes
  • Typical sonnet (1595), typical Renaissance
  • 14 lines
  • Strict Classic iambic pentameter (suitable for
    English)
  • Fixed rhyme scheme
  • - The man seeks individual achievement
  • Transience of life
  • Art is eternal

14
King Henry VIII
make notes
  • Famous chiefly because of his 6 wives.
  • ..and because of his conflict with the Pope.
  • Henry was a ruthless tyrant, who cost England
    dearly.
  • But encouraged stability, education, culture

15
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 1
  • Catherine of Aragon
  • All their sons died, but Pope wouldnt allow for
    divorce.
  • Split with Church.

16
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 2
  • Anne Boleyn
  • Unpopular, no heir, too flirty.
  • Cut off her head and all of her supposed
    lovers.
  • Daughter Elizabeth (1533)

17
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 3
  • Jane Seymour
  • Gave him a son, but died after giving birth.
  • This was such a blow that Henry didnt get
    married for a long, long time (two years).

18
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 4
  • Anne of Cleves
  • Political marriage, for intl. stability.
  • Too ugly, so divorced when diplomatic balance
    redressed.
  • (Recently, it is thought that Henry was by now
    the ugly one)

19
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 5
  • Catherine Howard
  • Henry now 49, she wasnt yet 20. Henry
    rejuvenated.
  • Adulterous beheaded.

20
King Henry VIII
  • Wife Number 6
  • Catherine Parr
  • Outlived Henry, while the vultures were gathering
    around his ageing body.

21
In sum King Henry VIII
make notes
  • Ruthless tyrant, desperate to continue the Tudor
    monarchy
  • (6 wives killing or imprisoning of rivals)
  • Turned his back upon Rome and Catholicism
  • Burned monasteries and seized all the Churchs
    assets. Whos laughing now?
  • Stability, education, culture

22
What now?
  • With Henry dead (1547), two pressing issues
  • Who would become King?
  • What would be Englands religion Catholic or
    Protestant?

23
What now? (1550s)
  • Mary (daughter from Henrys first marriage)
    married King Philip II of Spain, and became Queen
    of England. Making England a province of Spain.
    Olé!
  • Brought back Catholicism and burned many
    prominent Protestants. Olé!

24
Queen Elizabeth I
  • Daughter of Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII
  • Hardly saw her parents, was declared bastard
    after Boleyns execution.
  • Great way to start your life, eh?

25
Queen Elizabeth I
make notes
  • Queen in 1559. Popular with the people.
    Protestant. Rather harsh on Catholics
  • Who would she marry?
  • Nobody! Married to the English people The
    Virgin Queen
  • Intelligent and charming, she survived political
    scheming against her, e.g. by Mary, Queen of
    Scots, whose head she chopped off (Bloody Mary).
  • Country thrived under her rule.

26
Elizabeths inheritance
make notes
  • The English were starting to explore, setting up
    trade links all over the world.
  • This brought prosperity and foreign cultural
    influences to England.
  • Elizabeth did away with the Spanish armada. She
    died in 1603, leaving a prosperous, united
    country.

27
Development of drama
make notes
  • Lizzie O, I love the theatre!
  • She set up companies, and pretty soon playhouses
    were built in London.
  • Golden age of Marlowe and Shakespeare arrived!
  • Medieval, moral plays were given the boot.
    ?Dramatization of personal dilemmas, in the
    Renaissance spirit.

28
Marlowe, Shakespeare, Donne
  • brilliant!
  • massive!
  • groovy!
  • senbleedingsational!
  • da bomb!
  • legend!

..but not the only ones.
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