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The Renaissance

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Title: The Renaissance


1
The Renaissance
Sistine ChapelMichelangelo Buonarroti
2
What is the Renaissance?
  • A Rebirth of Roman and Greek Classical
    Learning/Culture
  • Time of artistic, scientific and intellectual
    discovery
  • New emphasis on secular spirit and the individual

3
Causes of the Renaissance
  • Increase in agricultural production
  • End of Feudalism
  • Crusades opened trade with Middle East
  • Re-emergence of urban centers
  • Decline of Church control
  • -Great Schism

4
Background of the Italian Renaissance
Economic
  • Increase in agricultural production
  • -Italian city-states to produce enough food to
    sustain their own populations
  • Increase in trade
  • -HRE provided a vast market for manufactured
    goods
  • -The Mediterranean Sea allowed Italy to easily
    engage in trade

5
Economic Result
  • Economic wealth is consolidated into the hands of
    a small number of merchant families in Italys
    growing cities

6
Background of the Italian Renaissance
  • Political
  • The collapse of the HRE and Great Schism left no
    unifying force in Italy

7
Political Result
  • Wealthy merchant families are able to use
    economic influence (patronage) to gather
    political power

8
Background of the Italian Renaissance
  • Social
  • Decline in Church control and increased economic
    wealth leads to a turn from Medieval Spiritualism
    to Classical Humanism.

9
Social Result
  • The arts flourish in Italy
  • Education took on a new importance

10
FlorenceThe Cathedral of Florence (Duomo)
Filippo Brunelleschi
11
FlorencePalazzo Strozzi
Small windows used for lending money
Rustication
12
FlorencePalazzo Vecchio
Michelangelos David
13
FlorencePonte Vecchio
14
Major Italian Cities
  • Florence
  • Republic on paper, but really an oligarchy of
    wealthy merchants
  • Ultimately under the control of the Medici
  • -Cosimo
  • -Lorenzo the Magnificent
  • Major industries textiles (wool, cotton and
    silk) and finance

15
MilanSanta Maria delle Grazie
Donato Bramante
16
MilanSanta Maria presso San Satiro
Donato Bramante
17
Milan
  • Located just south of the Alps
  • Provided manufactured goods to the French and HRE
  • Centralized state under the Visconti and later
    the Sforza
  • -Da Vinci

18
Naples
19
Naples
20
Naples
  • Hereditary monarchy.
  • Trade-based economy
  • Eventually taken over by Spanish
  • -most cosmopolitan city in Europe

21
Venice
The Doges Palace
Canale di San Marco
22
Venice
23
VeniceBasilica di San Marco
Byzantine Influence
24
Venice
  • Economy based on Mediterranean trade
  • -Byzantine Empire
  • Maritime military power
  • Oligarchy of wealthy merchant/aristocracy

25
Vatican City
Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini
Michelangelo Buonarroti
26
Sistine Chapel
Michelangelo Buonarroti
27
The Pantheon
Raphaels Burial Place
28
Rome
Colosseum
29
Rome
  • Seat of the Bishop of Rome (Pope)
  • Acts as the capital of the Papal States
  • -City-State politics on an international level
  • Home to many large building projects to highlight
    various wealthy Italian families power
  • -Sistine Chapel
  •  

30
Renaissance Society
  • Classes
  • Patrician merchants began to blur the roles of
    the clergy, nobility and commoners
  • -The Book of the Courtier by Baldassare
    Castiglione

31
The Book of the Courtier by Baldassare
Castiglione
32
Education
  • Educational practices reflected the Patrician
    merchants blurring of the roles of the clergy,
    nobility and commoners
  • -Humanism and virtù
  • -Liberal Studies and Physical
    Education/Renaissance Man

33
Leonardo Da Vinci
34
Families
  • Patrician merchants tried to increase their
    economic and political power through family
    networks
  • -marriage
  • -Giovanni Tournabuoni
  • -Palla di Noferi Strozzi
  • -Pope Julius II and Sixtus IV

35
Sistine Chapel
acorns
Michelangelo Buonarroti
36
Family Crests
Della Rovere (acorns) Medici
Julius II Leo X Clement VII
37
Tornabuoni Chapel
Ludovica Tornabuoni
Domenico Ghirlandaio
38
Tornabuoni Chapel
Ludovica Tornabuoni
Alessandro di Francesco Nasi
Domenico Ghirlandaio
39
Patronage
  • Through both familial and extra-familial systems
    of reciprocity, Patrician merchant tried to
    increase their economic and political power
  • -Medici

40
Small Chapel of the Medici Palace
Piero de' Medici
Cosimo de' Medici
Lorenzo deMedici
Benozzo Gozzoli
41
Santa Trinita in Florence
Gentile da Fabriano
42
Portrait of Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de'
Medici and Luigi de' Rossi
Pope Clement VII
Pope Leo X
Raffaello Sanzio
43
Church
  • The Catholic Church became increasingly secular
    due to the rise of humanism and patronage
    networks
  • -Renaissance Popes

44
Borgia Apartments Vatican City
Alexander VI
Cesare Borgia
Bernardino di Betto (Pinturicchio)
45
Borgia Apartments Vatican City
Cesare Borgia
46
Baldassare Castiglione
Raffaello Sanzio
47
Portrait of Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de'
Medici and Luigi de' Rossi
Pope Clement VII
Raffaello Sanzio
48
Baldassare Castiglione
  • Born near Mantua-from a noble family
  • Worked as a envoy to Pope Leo X, Pope Clement
    VII, the Sforza family (Milan) and the Duke of
    Urbino
  • Wrote The Book Of The Courtier
  • Clement VII accused him of duplicity when
    Charles V sacked Rome

49
The Book Of The Courtier
  • Greatly influenced royal court behavior
  • Described how a courtier behaved
  • Accorded with traditional ideas of leadership
    behavior
  • Stated that nobles are born and not made
  • Advised nobles to not only master military skills
    but also to pursue a classical education
  • Told courtiers to behave according to strict
    standards of conduct
  • Key term sprezzatura - the cultivated ability to
    "display artful artlessness"

50
Goals of Courtier
  • To use his skills to win the favor of the prince
    so that he can give the prince honest council
    without fear of angering him
  • To advise the prince to pursue the morally
    correct course

51
Niccolò Machiavelli
Santi di Tito Palazzo Vecchio, Florence
52
Lorenzo deMedici
Andrea del Verrocchio
53
Niccolo Machiavelli
  • Born in Florence-From poor branch of a prominent
    family
  • Worked as a diplomat
  • Eventually forced into exile after the Medici
    returned from their own exile at the hands of
    Girolamo Savonarola
  • Wrote The Prince to regain the favor of Lorenzo
    de Medici

54
The Prince
  • Greatly influenced politics throughout the rest
    of history
  • Described how a leader should behave
  • Broke with the traditional understanding that
    leaders should behave according to moral ethics
  • Asserted that people are bad by nature
  • Stated control is the most efficient means of
    governing
  • Advised leaders that their decision making should
    be based on increasing their own political power
  • Key phrase-"It is much safer for a prince to be
    feared than loved, if he is to fail in one of the
    two"

55
Goals of the Prince
  • To acquire and maintain power

56
Question
  • Do you agree with Machiavelli or Castiglione?

57
Question
  • Would George Bush agree with Machiavelli or
    Castiglione?
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