Renaissance: The Italian City-States
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Transcript Renaissance: The Italian City-States
The Renaissance
1350 - 1600
Major Theme: After the Later
Middle Ages, Europe
experienced a “rebirth” of
commerce, interest in classical
cultures, and confidence in
human potential.
The Renaissance
Marked the beginning of modern
European History
Time Line:
1. Began in Italy, early 1300s
2. Spread to Northern Europe, c. 1450
3. Lasted in England from 16th-17th
centuries
The Renaissance
Characteristics:
1. Distinctly different from Middle
Ages (19th c. Swiss historian Jacob
Burckhardt)
2. Benefits applied almost exclusively
to upper class – little impact on
peasants and working class
Italian
City-States
Five major players:
1. Florence
2. Milan
3. Rome
4. Venice
5. Naples
Rise of the City-States
Northern Italian city-states led the way –
Genoa, Venice, Milan
–
–
–
Oligarchies and signori in control by 1300 in
most of Italy
Trade and banking
Urbanization of Italy
Politics of the City-States
–
Competition, not unity
–
“Balance of power”
Disunity led to disaster
Diplomatic legacy of the city-states
Condottieri – mercenary generals with private
armies hired by city-states
Republic of Florence
Center of the Renaissance in 14th15th
Dominated by Medici family
Cosimo de Medici
(1389-1464) –
ruler of Florence
Lorenzo de Medici (14491492) – “The Magnificent”,
patron of arts
Duchy of Milan
Ruled by Sforza family after
1450
Main adversary of Venice and
Florence
Ludovico Sforza (“il Moro”)
– (1452-1508) – most
famous ruler, patron of da
Vinci
Rome, the Papal States
Popes served
as religious
and political
leaders
Controlled
much of central
Italy
Powerful
Italian families
competed for
the Papal office
Alexander VI –
(1492-1503) –
Borgia family,
corrupt &
controversial
Julius II –
(1503-1513)
– “the
Warrior
Pope”, great
patron of the
arts
Republic of Venice
Longest-lasting
of the citystates – until
early 1800s
International
trading power
with strong
navy
Kingdom of Naples
Only city-state with “King”
Controlled by French – 1266-1435
Ruled by
Spanish
after 1435
Secondlargest city
in Europe
in 1500s
Decline of the City-States
1494 – French invasions began –
support Milan vs. Florence and Naples
1494-1559 – Hapsburg-Valois Wars for
control of Italy
Italy now center of ‘power struggle’
between Spain & the Holy Roman
Empire (Hapsburgs) and France (Valois)
Decline of the City-States
1494 – Medicis ousted in
Florence
1494-1498 – Girolamo
Savonarola – Catholic
priest – ruled Florence as
a theocracy
1497 – “Bonfire of the
Vanities”
Savonarola
excommunicated and
burned at stake, Medicis
eventually returned to
power
End of the Italian Renaissance
1527 – Sack of
Rome by soldiers
of Charles V of HRE
Pope Clement VII
imprisoned by
Charles V
Destruction of
Rome signaled end
of Italian
Renaissance