Chapter 12 - The Renaissance
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Transcript Chapter 12 - The Renaissance
The Late Middle Ages
And the Renaissance
The Black Death
loss of 1/3 of European population (mostly in
cities)
Causes: bubonic plague carried by fleas on
Asian black rats; poor sanitation, overcrowded
homes, poor health, poor hygiene, poor
housing
Results: Severe impact on European economy;
in some areas workers enjoyed higher wages;
Best of clergy died (staying behind to help the
sick); Jews blamed; serfdom ended in many
areas; first enclosure of fields in Britain
Crisis in the Catholic Church
Early Criticisms of the church
Marsiglio de Padua: Defender of Peace – Church
should be subordinate to the state Church should be
governed by a council of laity and priests superior to
pope.
John Wyclif (1320-1384): church should only follow
Scripture; English translation of Bible; his later
followers were Lollards
John Huss (1369-1415): ideas similar to Wyclif;
nationalist party in Czech (Bohemia)
Hussites: followers of Huss who staged large rebellions
in 14th century.
Crisis in the Catholic Church
Babylonian Captivity (1305-1378): 7
successive popes resided at Avignon, France.
Damaged papal prestige (esp. in England &
Germany); Rome’s economy damaged
Great Schism (c. 1378-1417): Further conflict
led to election of two popes—one in Rome,
one in France; further hurt prestige of church.
Conciliar Movement (1409-1418): Council of
Pisa and Council of Constance, ended schism;
failed as movement to put power in a church
council; pope’s power still supreme
Hundred Years’ War (13371453)
Cause—English lays claim to large areas of
French land.
Three phases:
Early English Victories: Crecy (1346) and
Poitiers (1356)
French reclaim territory and stalemate
English victories: Agincourt (1415), French
regain lands
– Joan of Arc: led French army to victory at Orleans
during crucial stage of the war
Results: France kicks England out; creation of
modern nation states begin (“New Monarchs”).
Innovations in war technology: longbow,
cannon, infantry. Decimation of landed nobles.
Northern Italian Economy
Cities developed international trade: Genoa,
Venice, Milan.
popolo (middle class) took power in 13th
century; republican gov’t short-lived
signori (despots) or oligarchies (rule of
merchant aristocracies) by 1300
commenda: Contract between merchant and
“merchant-adventurer” who agreed to take
goods to distant locations and return with the
proceeds (for 1/3 of profits)
Italian City States, 1454
Politics of Italian City-States
Republic of Florence (Included Republic
of Genoa) – Medici family
Cosimo De’Medici (1389-1464): allied
with other powerful families of Florence
and became unofficial ruler of the republic
Lorenzo the Magnificent
(14491492): lavish patron
of the arts
Politics of Italian City-States
Girolamo Savonarola (1452-1498) –
theocracy in Florence 1494-98; (predicted
French invasion due to paganism and moral
decay of Italian city-states); burned at the
stake Charles VIII (1483-1498), French
invasions of Italy; Italy became battleground
for international ambitions
Politics of Italian City-States
Duchy of Milan -- Sforza family (Caterina
Sforza (1463-1509), great art patron)
Rome, the Papal States – papacy
(“Renaissance popes”)
Naples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Venice,
Venetian Republic
Isabella d’Este (1474-1539): most famous
Renaissance female ruler (ruled Mantua)
condottieri: leaders of private armies hired by
cities for military purposes
Humanism
Humanism -- Revival of antiquity (Greece
and Rome) in literature
Individualism/ secularism: “man is the
measure of all things”
virtú: the quality of being a great man in
whatever noble pursuit
Education: (emphasis on Latin and Greek)
Humanism
Petrarch—(1304-1374) “Dark Ages”
metaphor; “father of humanism” and
1st modern writer, literature no longer
subordinate to religion
Dante – Divine Comedy
Boccacio – Decameron: aimed to impart
wisdom of human character and behavior.
Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) Oration on
the Dignity of Man; Platonic academy
Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529) – The
Book of the Courtier
Humanism
Leonardo Bruni (1370-1444) – wrote
history of Florence; division of historical
periods; narrative form; civic humanist;
first to use term “humanism”
Lorenzo Valla (1407-1457)—On the
False Donation of
Constantine (1444); study of Latin
Niccolo Machiavelli
(1469-1527) -- The Prince
(1513) – Cesare Borgia
New Artistic Styles
Look to Roman and
Greek influences.
Use of realistic
perspective in depicting
scenes.
Portrait painting
becomes popular.
Depiction of
Renaissance ideals.
New dignity of the
individual
Early Renaissance
Florence the leader in Renaissance art esp. in
quattrocento (1400s)
Filippo Brunelleschi (1377-1446) – architect of
cathedrals (il duomo in Florence)
Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472), architect of
cathedrals.
Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378-1455) -- sculptor: bronze
doors for Florentine baptistry
Donatello (1386-1466 – sculptor: David (in bronze)
Masaccio (1401-1428) painter: nude human figures
Giovanni Bellini (1430-1516) – Portrait of a
Condottiere
Benvenuto Cellini (1500-1574) – goldsmith and
sculptor
Giotto di Bondone (1267-1337)
Considered to be the
Father of the Italian
Renaissance
Broke with linear
style of Middle Ages.
First to us
chiaroscuro.
Reputed to be a
shrewd and witty
character.
Praised by the poet
Dante.
Giotto - The Mourning of Christ
Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510)
Spent almost his
entire life in
Florence.
Only significant
journey was to
Rome to work on
Sistine Chapel.
Died in obscurity
and his fame was
not reestablished
until the 19th
century.
Botticelli-Primavera
Botticelli- Birth of Venus
High Renaissance
“High Renaissance” centered in
Rome (1500-1527) – cinquecento
(1500s)
Most worldly of Renaissance
popes – Alexander VI (14921503); Julius II (1503-1513); and
Leo X (1513-1521), funded great
art projects
Characteristics: classical balance,
harmony, restraint
Leonardo da Vinci (14521519)
Painter, sculptor,
architect and
engineer.
Often left work
unfinished.
Conducted
extensive
scientific studies.
Invented the
armored tank and
designed aircraft.
Da Vinci – The Last Supper
Michelangelo Buonarotti
(1475-1564)
Sculptor, painter,
architect, and poet.
Tormented genius
who was rarely
satisfied with his
talents.
In painting and
sculpture his work
focused mainly on
the nude human
form.
Michelangelo – La Pieta
Michelangelo – Sistine Chapel
Raphael Sanzio (1483-1520)
Child prodigy in
the world of art.
Patronized by the
popes and named
Papal Architect in
1514.
Died of fever at
age 37.
Raphael – Three Graces
Raphael – School of Athens
Printing Press (c. 1456)
Johann Gutenberg – spread of
humanistic literature to rest of Europe.
By 1480, 380 printing presses in Europe
(1000 by 1500)
Christian Humanism
Attempted to find a balance between
religious and secular concerns
Rejected the “otherworldliness” of
the Middle Ages.
Emphasis on early church writings
for answers to improve society.
Christian Humanist Writers
Desiderius Erasmus (Erasmus of
Rotterdam) (1466-1536) – In Praise of
Folly; most famous intellectual of his
times, criticized the church: “Erasmus lay
the egg that Luther hatched”
Thomas More (1478-1536) – Utopia –
creates ideal society on an island; but to
achieve harmony and order people have
to sacrifice individual rights
Christian Humanist Writers
Jacques Lefevre d’Etables (1454-1536):
leading French humanist; produced 5
versions of the Psalms that challenged a
single authoritative Bible.
Francesco Ximenes de Cisneros (14361517): reformed Spanish clergy and church,
Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition
Northern Renaissance Arts
Low Countries (Dutch
Republic, Flanders and
parts of Germany, etc)
produced especially
important artists.
Jan and Hubert Van Eyck
– First successful use of
oil painting
– Worked mainly in
Ghent, Belgium.
Peter Brueghel (1520-1569)
Focused on lives of ordinary
people.
Painted great landscapes
Also worked on religious
subjects
Completed most of his work in
Antwerp and Brussels
Peter Brueghel – Peasant Wedding
Albrecht Durer (1471-1528)
German – foremost
northern Renaissance
artist
Famous for woodcuts
and engravings.
Paintings include a
number of self protraits
Albrecht Durer – The Last Supper
Hans Holbein the Younger (14971543)
Son of Gothic artist.
German painter
who studied in Italy
Painted portraits of
Erasmus, Thomas
More, King Henry
VIII, his wives, and
Mary Tudor
Hans Holbein – The
Ambassadors
Domenikos El Greco (1541-1614):
painter: mannerism
Painter in Spain (of
Greek nationality)
Famous for unique style
known as mannerism.
Subjects depict
religious mysticism of
the period in Spain
El Greco – Death of Duke of Orgaz
Vernacular Writers
France
– Francois Rabelais’ (1494-1553)
Gargantua and Pantagruel
– Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)
Essays relativist in religion and
morality
Vernacular Writers
England
– Edmund Spenser (1552 – 1599) composed romantic
epic Faerie Queen
– Christopher Marlowe (1564 – 1593) skilled playwright
and poet
– William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) poet and
playwright. Wrote plays that best exemplfied the
varieties of human experience.
– Ben Jonson (1572 – 1673) poet and dramatist who
created plays in the Greek style.
Vernacular Writers
Spain
– Miguel de Cervantes (1547 – 1615) Wrote Don
Quixote. Regarded as one of the great novels
of the period.
– Felix Lope de Vega (1562-1635) wrote in every
major literary style. Created over 1500 plays, of
which 500 survive.