Title: The Renaissance World History
1The RenaissanceWorld History
2Johann Gutenberg The Printing Press
- Printing pioneered by the Chinese
- German Gutenberg dev. movable type techniques
- Process more efficient
- 1st printed work certificates of indulgences
- Gutenberg Bible (1455) 200 copies printed
- 1st mass produced work
- Cost 300 Florins
- Cheaper faster than monk, hand-written copies
- Caused a cultural rev. in Europe
- Enabled the spread of new ideas Renaissance and
Reformation - Turning point btwn. Middle Ages and Early Modern
Period - Resulted in a rise in literacy
3Town Life during the Renaissance
- Guilds and the middle class continue their ascent
to power that began in the Middle Ages - Merchants and bankers became the most important
segment of society - Society
- Towns grew as commerce grew, people began to
urbanize and farm less - Power
- Middle class held most of the power by forcing
lords to grant charters for new towns and
controlling banking - Status
- Determined by wealth and ability
4The Growth of Italian City-States
- What is the Renaissance, why Italy?
- French for rebirth a revival in arts and
learning - Renewed interest in ancient Greek and Roman
culture - Italian city-states displayed their wealth by
supporting artists - Why were Italian City-States so powerful?
- Strong ties w/ Byzantine and Muslim merchants
- Each city-state specialized in one economic area
- Milan metal goods and military armor
- Florence banking and textiles
- Venice Asian Goods
- Rome religious center for pilgrims
5Florence the most influential city-state
- Maintained a thriving wool and silk industry
- acted as the middle man in exchange of goods
from the East - sold insurance to sea traders
- created banks that made loans to monarchs and
popes and exchanged currencies - Medici family promoted trade, banking, art,
learning, and intense civic pride
6Humanism The Spirit of the Renaissance
- A new interest in Ancient Culture
- Knowledge of classical works was rediscovered in
the Middle Ages- only those in holy orders could
read the Greek and Roman writings - Crusades made people eager to learn about the
world outside of Europe - Scholars believed classical writings would help
solve modern problems
- A Fascination with Classical Culture
- Artists used ancient art as models
- Donatello copied the Roman ideal of the human
body - Brunelleschi designed buildings after studying
ancient ruins in Rome - The practice of copying ancient style led to
innovations in technique
7Donatellos David
Donatellos Atys
8Brunelleschis il Duomo
9A New Type of Scholar Called a Humanist
- A Belief in Human Potential
- Believed each person could achieve great things.
- Claimed people educated in the classics could
create a better world - Emphasized human achievement on earth, rather
than the afterlife
- Studied ancient writings
- Studied Latin, Greek, history, and mathematics
- Opened schools
- Emphasized studying works in language they were
written in - Studied and wrote literature written in the
vernacular - Secularism was emphasized by many while
maintaining Christian beliefs
10Petrarch (Petrarca) 1304-1374
11- Background
- 1st Humanist (1300s)
- Petrarch and Dante are considered the fathers of
the Renaissance - Scholar, poet
- Wrote in Latin
- Works include a guide to the Holy Land, sonnets
to his love Laura, an early self-help book,
letters to historical figures
- Philosophy
- Believed in the value of studying ancient history
and literature - Study of human thought and action
- Saw no conflict with realizing humanitys
potential and having religious faith - Emphasized solitude study or a contemplative
life, rather than an active life experiencing the
world
12Dante Alighieri 1265-1321
13La Divina Commedia The Divine Comedy
- This dialect became the basis for the modern
Italian language - Describes a fictionalized account of Dantes
journey through Hell (Inferno), Purgatory
(Purgatorio), and Paradise (Paradiso) - Inferno described as having 9 levels, each level
getting worse and being the home to worse sins - 9th level is home to those who commit treachery
- The greatest literary statement produced in
Europe in the late Medieval Period - Written in vernacular, the Tuscan dialect
- Established the vernacular as an appropriate
language for all works, replacing Latin (access
to more people)
14Erasmus of Rotterdam 1466-1536
15Philosophy and Contributions
- Criticized Renaissance Popes as corrupt and
unconcerned with religious matters - Wrote in Latin, but encouraged the works to be
translated into the vernacular - Blamed for introducing the ideas that led to the
Reformation, he laid the egg according to the
Church - Known to question some Church practices and
Luthers ideas - Many of his translations are still in use today
- Northern Europe was still more religious
- Christian Humanism reform the Church by
eliminating abuses and restore piety - Promoted learning as a way to understand
Christianity better - Studied original versions of the Bible written in
Hebrew and Latin
16Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)
- Florentine statesman
- The Prince
- A handbook for politicians
- Offers a realistic analysis of politics
- Put ideas that already existed on paper
- The End Justifies the Means