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The Reformation and the Scientific Revolution

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Title: The Reformation and the Scientific Revolution


1
The Reformation and the Scientific Revolution
  • Chapter 13, sections 3, 4, 5

2
Causes of the Reformation
  • The Renaissance had emphasized secular ideas and
    challenged the authority of the Church
  • Printing press had spread these ideas
  • Often difficult for the Pope to enforce his
    central authority
  • Many people who were far from Rome resented
    paying taxes

3
Criticism of the Church
  • The leaders were corrupt, spent tax money on
    extravagant lifestyles
  • Popes had secret children
  • Priests and monks were poorly educated, could
    hardly read

4
Martin Luther
  • A monk and teacher
  • Unhappy with some religious leaders selling
    indulgences to get you into heaven
  • Wrote the 95 Theses (or arguments) in 1517
  • Printing press made them widely available
  • Only faith and good works can give you salvation
  • Church teachings should be based on the Bible
    only (not the Pope)
  • All people with faith are equal, and should not
    need priests to interpret the Bible for them

5
Response to Martin Luther
  • Pope Excommunicated Luther in 1520
  • Emperor of Spain Declared Luther an outlaw and
    heretic, forbid anyone to shelter him
  • Lutheranism founded, rather than trying to reform
    Catholic Church
  • Peasants revolted and pillaged monasteries (1524)
  • Those who supported Luther became known as
    Protestants

6
Switzerlands Reformation
  • People in Switzerland also had problems with the
    Catholic Church
  • John Calvin agreed with a lot of what Martin
    Luther said, but also believed in predestination
  • For Calvinists, there were 2 kinds of people
    saints and sinners
  • People loved Calvinism, and by the late 1500s, it
    had spread into Germany, France, the Netherlands,
    England, and Scotland

7
Questions to think about
  • Why did the sale of indulgences become a critical
    issue during the Renaissance, but not during the
    Middle Ages?
  • Page 246 Similarities and differences between
    Catholicism, Lutheranism, and Calvinism

8
England Becomes Protestant
  • Broke with Catholic Church for political reasons
    (1527)
  • Henry VIII wanted to divorce or annul his wife
    Catherine, Pope did not allow it
  • (He wanted a son, but Catherine only had Mary)
  • 2nd wife had Elizabeth I
  • 3rd had Edward
  • King Henry VIII

9
  • Henry was furious that the Pope would not allow
    him to divorce or annul, so he decided to take
    things into his own hands
  • He kept most Catholic traditions, but took the
    power of the Church in England away from the Pope
    and gave it to himself
  • Ransacked monasteries and and took the land and
    wealth
  • He executed many Catholics who disagreed with
    him, including many who had been close friends

10
Religious Turmoil
  • When Henry VIII died in 1547, he had only one
    surviving son, even though he had married 6 times
  • 9 year old Edward became King, and with
    Protestant advisors, made England Protestant
  • Edward was a sick child, and died when he was 15.
  • His half-sister Mary, from Henrys first
    marriage, became Queen
  • Mary was determined to bring England back to
    Catholicism, and had thousands of Protestants
    burned at the stake

11
Queen Elizabeth
  • Mary died of cancer, and her half-sister
    Elizabeth (daughter of Anne Boleyn) became Queen
  • Elizabeth looked for ways to compromise, and
    decided to make England a Protestant country
    while keeping many Catholic traditions

12
The Scientific Revolution
  • The Renaissance and Reformation signaled the
    breakdown of the medieval worldview
  • In the mid-1500s, the Scientific Revolution
    showed that people had found new ways of thinking
    about the world around them
  • The big idea behind the Scientific Revolution is
    that mathematical law determines nature and the
    universe

13
  • We are going to jigsaw chapter 13, section 5!
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