Chapter 17 - Jenksps.org
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THE TRANSFORMATION
OF EUROPE
Chapter 17
Humanist Education and Literature
Focused on secular themes
Accepted classical beliefs (renew society)
Individualism: emphasis on dignity & indiv. worth
Human Improvement: develop talents through activities
Recover ancient manuscripts (orig. sources)
Wrote in common vernacular
Petrarch: wrote sonnets about his lost love
Lorenzo Valla: used textual-critical method
Falsely Believed and Forged Donation of Constantine
Annotations on the New Testament
Machiavelli: (The Prince): analyzed politics
Machiavellian Quotes
If an injury has to be done to a man it should be so severe
that his vengeance need not be feared.
Men are so simple and so much inclined to obey
immediate needs that a deceiver will never lack victims
for his deceptions.
Men should be either treated generously or destroyed,
because they take revenge for slight injuries - for heavy
ones they cannot.
Politics have no relation to morals.
The new ruler must determine all the injuries that he will
need to inflict. He must inflict them once and for all.
Spread of Renaissance Ideas
First throughout Italy – then West. Europe
Reshaped European civilization
Civic Humanism: service to the republic
Princely Ideal: study classics to properly rule
The
Courtier – B. Castiglione
City-Life (stronger in indep. Italian city-states)
Social groups: wealth and ability replace
nobility
Middle-class: gained wealth and power
Peasants were still at the bottom of society
More opportunity to leave the manor
Italian Renaissance Governments
Florence: originally a republic; controlled by the Medici
Medici brought in humanist ideas
Majority of tax burden was on the upper-class
Savanarola led a short-lived revolt against the Medici
Rome: ruled by the pope
Cardinals made up the wealthiest portion of the pop.
Renaissance popes were viewed as corrupt
Promoted projects to beautify Rome
Venice: ruled by a doge in a republican setting
Council of Ten helped govern/run the city
Gained prosperity through trade
Classical architecture; influenced by Byzantines and the West
Renaissance Art
Expressed own values, emotions, attitudes
Works were as life-like as possible
Devoted to religion – had secular overtones
Learned to give perspective/expression
Architecture:
Return to classical style (arches, domes, columns)
Architects took credit for their work
Brunelleschi: the dome for the cathedral in Florence
Ren. Art Continued
Sculpture:
Return to classical style
Free-standing, nude figures
Donatello: first to sculpt a nude sculpture
Michelangelo: began in Florence, moved to Rome
Ghiberti: baptistery doors in Cathedral of Florence
Giotto: first to paint realistically
Massacio: first to use lighting and perspective
Da Vinci: “Renaissance Man” (Mona Lisa & Last Supper)
Best known sculptors:
Painting:
More realistic, less symbolic (capture human emotion)
Renaissance Painters
Michelangelo: painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
Raphael: most notable was paintings of “Virgin Mary”
Northern Renaissance
1400s: ideas spread throughout W. Europe
War
helped with continued contact w/ others
Da Vinci was brought to Paris by Francis I
Trade fostered spread of ideas
French Renaissance
Blended
Gothic and Classical design
Writers were inspired by Petrarcha
Ronsard (sonnets); de Montaigne (essay); Rabelais (comic)
Northern Humanism
Differences in Northern Humanism
Ideas were adapted to meet needs
Focused on Christian writing
Used textual-critical method to interpret patristic writings
Wanted to renew Church to 1st Century purity
Christian Humanism (wanted to reform the church)
Humanist learning combined with Bible study
Erasmus: “Go Back to the Sources”
Study Greek and Hebrew
Used biting humor to make his point
Translated the N.T. using Valla’s t-c method
Found inaccuracies in other translations
Northern Painters
Relied on Medieval models
rather than classical ones
Jan & Hubert van Eyck
Painted scenes from the
Bible
Developed the technique of
oil on canvas
English Renaissance
Began in 1485 with Henry VII
English Humanists were interested in social issues
Thomas More (Utopia): criticized his society by comparing
it to “the ideal one”
William Shakespeare:
Drew on ideas from medieval heroes & classical legends
Wrote about universal human qualities
Economic and Social change
Spain led the conquest to the Americas
Rapid population growth (1460 – 1560)
Agricultural price increase (1400s – 1600s):
Wages did not increase
The Protestant Reformation
Martin Luther (1483-1546) attacks Roman Catholic
church practices, 1517
Indulgences: preferential pardons for charitable donors
Writes Ninety-Five Theses, rapidly reproduced with
new printing technology
Excommunicated by Pope Leo X in 1521
1520s-1530s dissent spread throughout Germany
and Switzerland
The Demand for Reform
Luther’s expanded critique
Closure of monasteries
Translations of Bible into vernacular
End of priestly authority, especially the Pope
Return to biblical text for authority
German princes interested
Opportunities for assertion of local control
Support for reform spreads throughout Germany
Reform outside Germany
Switzerland, Low Countries follow Germany
England: King Henry VIII (r. 1509-1547) has conflict
with Pope over requested divorce
England forms its own church by 1560
France: John Calvin (1509-1564) codifies Protestant
teachings while in exile in Geneva
Scotland, Netherlands, Hungary also experience
reform movements
The Catholic Reformation
Roman Catholic church reacts
Refining doctrine, missionary activities to Protestants, attempt
to renew spiritual activity
Council of Trent (1545-1563) periodic meetings to
discuss reform
Society of Jesus (Jesuits) founded by St. Ignatius
Loyola (1491-1556)
Rigorous religious and secular education
Effective missionaries
Witch Hunts
Most prominent in regions of tension between
Catholics and Protestants
Late 15th century development in belief in Devil and
human assistants
16th-17th centuries approximately 110,000 people put
on trial, some 60,000 put to death
Vast majority females, usually single, widowed
Held accountable for crop failures, miscarriages, etc.
New England: 234 witches tried, 36 hung
Religious Wars
Protestants and Roman Catholics fight in France
(1562-1598)
1588 Philip II of Spain attacks England to force
return to Catholicism
English destroy Spanish ships by sending flaming unmanned
ships into the fleet
Netherlands rebel against Spain, gain independence
by 1610
The Thirty Years’ War (1618-1645)
Holy Roman emperor attempts to force Bohemians
to return to Roman Catholic Church
All of Europe becomes involved in conflict
Principal battleground: Germany
Political, economic issues involved
Approximately one-third of German population
destroyed
The Consolidation of Sovereign States
Emperor Charles V (r. 1519-1556) attempts to revive
Holy Roman Empire as strong center of Europe
Through marriage, political alliances
Ultimately fails
Protestant Reformation provides cover for local princes to assert
greater independence
Foreign opposition from France, Ottoman Empire
Unlike China, India, Ottoman Empire, Europe does not develop
as single empire, rather individual states
Charles V abdicates to monastery in Spain
Sixteenth-century Europe
The New Monarchs
Italy well-developed as economic power through
trade, manufacturing, finance
Yet England, France, and Spain surge ahead in 16th
century, innovative new tax revenues
England: Henry VIII
Fines and fees for royal services; confiscated monastic holdings
France: Louis XI, Francis I
New taxes on sales, salt trade
The Spanish Inquisition
Founded by Fernando and Isabel in 1478
Original task: search for secret Christian
practitioners of Judaism or Islam, later search for
Protestants
Spread to Spanish holdings outside Iberian peninsula in
western hemisphere
Imprisonment, executions
Intimidated nobles who might have considered Protestantism
Archbishop of Toledo imprisoned 1559-1576
Constitutional States
England and Netherlands develop institutions of
popular representation
England: constitutional monarchy
Netherlands: republic
English Civil War, 1642-1649
Begins with opposition to royal taxes
Religious elements: Anglican church favors complex ritual,
complex church hierarchy, opposed by Calvinist Puritans
King Charles I and parliamentary armies clash
King loses, is beheaded in 1649
The Glorious Revolution (1688-1689)
Puritans take over, becomes a dictatorship
Monarchy restored in 1660, fighting resumes
Resolution with bloodless coup called Glorious
Revolution
King James II deposed, daughter Mary and husband
William of Orange take throne
Shared governance between crown and parliament
The Dutch Republic
King Philip II of Spain attempts to suppress
Calvinists in Netherlands, 1566
Large-scale rebellion follows, by 1581 Netherlands
declares independence
Based on a representative parliamentary system
Absolute Monarchies
Theory of Divine Right of Kings
French absolutism designed by Cardinal Richelieu
(under King Louis XIII, 1624-1642)
Destroyed castles of nobles, crushed aristocratic conspiracies
Built bureaucracy to bolster royal power base
Ruthlessly attacked Calvinists
Louis XIV (The “Sun King,” 1643-1715)
L’état, c’est moi: “The State – that’s me.”
Magnificent palace at Versailles, 1670s, becomes his
court
Largest building in Europe
1,400 fountains
25,000 fully grown trees transplanted
Power centered in court, important nobles pressured
to maintain presence
Absolutism in Russia:
The Romanov Dynasty (1613-1917)
Peter I (“the Great,” r. 1682-1725)
Worked to modernize Russia on western European model
Developed modern Russian army, reformed Russian
government bureaucracy, demanded changes in fashion:
beards forbidden
Built new capital at St. Petersburg
Catherine II (“the Great”, r. 1762-1796)
Huge military expansion
Partitions of Poland, 1772-1797
Social reforms at first, but end with Pugachev peasant
rebellion (1773-1774)
The European States System
No imperial authority to mediate regional disputes
Peace of Westphalia (1648) after Thirty Years’ War
European states to be recognized as sovereign and
equal
Religious, other domestic affairs protected
Warfare continues: opposition to French expansion,
Seven Years’ War
Balance of Power tenuous
Innovations in military technology proceed rapidly
Europe after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648.
Population Growth and Urbanization
Rapidly growing population due to Columbian
Exchange
Improved nutrition
Role
of the potato (considered an aphrodisiac in 16th
and 17th centuries)
Replaces bread as staple of diet
Better nutrition reduces susceptibility to plague
Epidemic disease becomes insignificant for overall population
decline by mid-17th century
Population Growth in Europe
180
160
140
120
100
Millions
80
60
40
20
0
1500
1700
1800
Urbanization
500000
450000
400000
350000
300000
Madrid
Paris
London
250000
200000
150000
100000
50000
0
1550
1600
1650
Early Capitalism
Private parties offer goods and services on a free
market
Own means of production
Private initiative, not government control
Supply and demand determines prices
Banks, stock exchanges develop in early modern period
Joint-Stock Companies (English East India Company,
VOC)
Relationship with empire-building
Medieval guilds discarded in favor of “putting-out”
system
Impact of Capitalism on the Social Order
Rural life
Improved access to manufactured goods
Increasing opportunities in urban centers begins depletion of
the rural population
Inefficient institution of serfdom abandoned in
western Europe, retained in Russia until 19th century
Nuclear families replace extended families
Gender changes as women enter income-earning
work force
Capitalism and Morality
Adam Smith (1723-1790) argued that capitalism
would ultimately improve society as a whole
But major social change increases poverty in some
sectors
Rise in crime
Witch-hunting a possible consequence of capitalist tensions
and gender roles
The Copernican Universe
Reconception of the Universe
Reliance on 2nd-century Greek scholar Claudius Ptolemy of
Alexandria
Motionless earth inside nine concentric spheres
Christians understand heaven as last sphere
Difficulty reconciling model with observed planetary
movement
1543 Nicholas Copernicus of Poland breaks theory
Notion of moving Earth challenges Christian doctrine
The Scientific Revolution
Johannes Kepler (Germany, 1571-1630) and Galileo
Galilei (Italy, 1564-1642) reinforce Copernican
model
Isaac Newton (1642-1727) revolutionizes study of
physics
Rigorous challenge to church doctrines
The Enlightenment
Trend away from Aristotelian philosophy and Church
doctrine in favor of rational thought and scientific
analysis
John Locke (England, 1632-1704), Baron de
Montesquieu (France, 1689-1755) attempt to discover
natural laws of politics
Center of Enlightenment: France, philosophes
Voltaire (1694-1778), caustic attacks on Roman
Catholic church: écrasez l’infame, “erase the infamy”
Deism increasingly popular
The Theory of Progress
Assumption that Enlightenment thought would
ultimately lead to human harmony, material wealth
Decline in authority of traditional organized religion