Transcript Bellringer

Bellringer
• Why didn’t ancient Greece invent
feudalism?
Agenda
1. The Renaissance
2. Renaissance Art
3. Thesis statement practice
Objectives
Students will be able to…
66. Explain the economic and cultural
foundations of the Renaissance.
67. Describe the artistic, political, and
philosophical developments of the
Renaissance.
Europe Suffers…
• The Middle Ages
–Focus on survival
–Wars
–Plagues
–Ignorance
• But finally, a recovery…
Objective #66
The Renaissance
• Renaissance: a rebirth of culture
–Greek and Roman culture return!
• Almost a golden age
–Prosperity? 
–Cultural development? 
–Peace? Sort of
How did it start?
• The effect of the Crusades
–Re-learning of Greco-Roman ideas
from interaction with the Muslims
–Increased demand for Middle Eastern
products
–Stimulated production of stuff to sell
in the Middle East
• Banks
Banking and Credit
• For long-distance trade
–Barter is inefficient
–So is carrying gold and silver
• Instead, carry a letter of credit
–Bank promise that you have the
money
–Banks work out the details later
Other Economic Ideas
• Interest: the price you pay to borrow
money
–Church calls this a sin (usury)
–Traders become more secular
• Bookkeeping
–Hard to do with Roman numerals
–Arabic numerals introduced (though
invented in India)
Italian Renaissance
• Starts in Italy. Why?
–Competitive city-states, governed as
republics
–Dominated trade routes between
Middle East and northern Europe
–Lived on top of Roman culture, stole
Greek culture from Constantinople
Genoa
Florence
Venice
City-State Politics
• Initially republics, but wealthy
families came to dominate
–Control trade, then control
government
–Liked to spend their money on art
to show off – patrons
Machiavelli
Objective #67
• Machiavelli’s The Prince
–Political philosophy for absolute
power
–Ends justify the means
• Better to be feared than loved
• Do good when possible, evil
when necessary
Renaissance Spirit
• Humanism
–Study of classics, focus on human
potential and achievements
• Shift of values from Christianity
–Petrarch (humanist poet)
• Secular
–Worldly focus, even for church leaders
–Have pretty, expensive stuff on earth
Art
• With patrons and an emphasis on
having nice things on earth, art
flourishes
• Themes:
–Middle Ages: church and salvation
–Renaissance: individuals and worldly
matters (and churchy things)
Art
A mini-webquest
Famous Artists
Leonardo
Michelangelo
Donatello
Raphael
Leonardo Da Vinci
• The Renaissance Man
–Many interests and talents
–Painter, sculptor, architect, musician,
inventor, engineer, scientist,
anatomist…
• Famous Works
–Mona Lisa
–Last Supper
Mona Lisa
Last Supper
Michelangelo
• Sculptor, architect, and painter
• Famous works
–Most known for painting the ceiling of
the Sistine Chapel
–Considered himself a better sculptor
• Pieta
• David
Sistine Chapel
“The Creation of Adam”
Pieta
Michelangelo’s David
Raphael
• Painter and architect
• Famous works (several rooms in the
Vatican)
–School of Athens
School of Athens
Donatello
• Much less famous
than the others
• Also made a
statue of David
Northern Renaissance
Northern Renaissance
• Wealth supports Renaissance ideas
–Recover after Hundred Years War
–More trade and more cities
• Humanism with more of a focus on
religion than in Italy
–Erasmus: The Praise of Folly
–Sir Thomas More: Utopia
–Shakespeare
The Printing Press
• Invented in 1450
by Johann
Gutenberg
– Spreads learning
and ideas (more
books)
– Gutenberg Bible