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For Multiple Choice Questions on Time Periods go to:
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http://www.homestead.com/chaffeyaphistory/european.html possibly the best AP Euro site on the web.
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http://www.historyteacher.net/ multiple choice and matching quizzes plus well designed short notes. Go
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Renaissance Notes
                                     AP European History Prose Notes

Taken from George Burson – Aspen High School on the net
The Renaissance

I. The Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance
Renaissance means “rebirth.” Although the Renaissance does not represent a sudden or dramatic cultural
break with the Middle Ages, the period can be viewed as a distinct period of European history that
manifested itself first in Italy and then spread to the rest of Europe. Renaissance Italy was largely a land of
independent city-states. Within these new urban societies, a secular spirit emerged as increasing wealth
created new possibilities for the enjoyment of worldly things. Above all, the Renaissance was an age of
recovery from the disorder of the 14th century. Recovery was accompanied by a rebirth of the culture of
classical antiquity that led to new ways of viewing humans. Though not entirely new, there was a revived
emphasis on individual ability. These general features of the Italian Renaissance were primarily the
preserve of the wealthy upper classes—it was an elite, not a mass movement.

Beginning in the late 11th century the agricultural foundation of Western civilization began to be
transformed. The new agricultural practices and the subsequent increase in food production, which freed
part of the European population from the need to produce their own food, allowed diversification in
economic functions that led to a revival of trade, considerable expansion in the circulation of money, a
restoration of specialized craftspeople and artisans, and the growth and development of towns.

By the 14th century, Italian merchants were carrying on a flourishing commerce throughout the
Mediterranean and had also expanded their lines of trade north along the Atlantic seaboard. In England and
the Netherlands the Italians came into contact with the Hanseatic League. Hard hit by the plague, the
Italians lost their commercial preeminence while the Hanseatic League continued to prosper until the 15th
century when the League proved increasingly unable to compete with the developing larger territorial
states. The Hanseatic League had been formed as early as the 13th century when some north German towns
began to cooperate to gain favorable trading rights in Flanders. By 1500, more than 80 cities belonged to
the League. As the Hanseatic League began to decline in the 15th century, the Italians, especially the
Venetians, continued to maintain a wealthy commercial empire. Not until the 16th century, when the
overseas discoveries gave new importance to the states facing the Atlantic, did the Italian city-states begin
to suffer from the competitive advantages of the more powerful national territorial states.

The aristocracy constituted between 2 and 3 percent of the population in most countries, but they managed
to dominate society. They served as military officers and held important political posts. By 1500, certain
ideals came to be expected of the noble or aristocrat. First, nobles should possess fundamental native
endowments, such as impeccable character, grace, talents, and noble birth. The perfect courtier must also
cultivate certain achievements. Primarily, he should participate in military and bodily exercises since the
principal profession of a courtier was arms. He was also expected to have a classical education and to adorn
his life with the arts by playing a musical instrument, drawing, and painting. Finally, the aristocrat was
expected to make a good impression. While being modest, he should not hide his accomplishments, but
show them with grace. The purpose these courtly standards was so the courtier could win “the favor and
mind of the prince whom he serves, so that he may be able to always tell him the truth about everything he
needs to know, without fear or risk of displeasing him, and that when he sees the mind of his prince
inclined to a wrong action, he may dare oppose him so as to dissuade him of every evil intent and bring him
to the path of virtue” (The Book of the Courtier, 1528).

Peasants constituted as much as 85 to 90 percent of the total European population. During the 14th century
the manorial system and serfdom continued to decline, although in many places lords were able to retain
many of the fees thy charged their peasants. While serfdom was declining in western Europe, eastern
Europe experienced a reverse trend. The weakness of eastern rulers enabled nobles to tie their peasants to
the land and use servile labor in the large-scale production of grain for the ever-growing export market.

At the top of urban society were the patricians, whose wealth from capitalistic enterprises in trade, industry,
and banking enabled them to dominate their urban communities economically, socially, and politically.
Below them were the petty burghers, the shopkeepers, artisans, guildmasters, and guild members who were
largely concerned with providing goods and services for local consumption. Below these two groups were
the property less workers earning pitiful wages and the unemployed, living squalid and miserable lives.
These people constituted as much as 30 or 40 percent of the urban population. Beneath them were the
slaves, especially in the Italian cities.

Although some domestic slaves remained, slavery in European society had largely disappeared by the 11th
century. It reappeared in Spain, where both Christians and Muslims used captured prisoners as slaves
during the lengthy reconquista. In the second half of the 14th century, the shortage of workers after the
Black Death led Italians to reintroduce slavery on a fairly large scale. Slaves were obtained primarily from
the eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea region. Between 1414 and 1423, 10,000 slaves were sold on
the Venetian market. Most slaves were females, many of them young girls.

By the end of the 15th century, slavery had declined dramatically in the Italian cities. Many slaves had been
freed by their owners, and the major source of slaves dried up as the Black Sea slave markets were closed
to Italian traders after the Turks conquered the Byzantine Empire. Prices rose dramatically, further cutting
demand. Moreover, a general feeling had arisen that slaves-the “domestic enemy” as they were called—
were dangerous and not worth the effort. The Portuguese shipped about 140,000 black slaves into Europe
from Africa between 1444 and 1505. Most of these slaves were kept as curiosities at court.

The extended family played an important role in Renaissance Italy. Families that were related and bore the
same surname often lived near each other and might dominate an entire urban district. Old family names
conferred great status and prestige. The family bond was a source of great security in a dangerous and
violent world, and its importance helps explain the vendetta in the Italian Renaissance. A crime committed
by one family member fell on the entire family, ensuring that retaliation by the offended family would be a
bloody affair involving large numbers of people. Marriages were arranged by parents, often to strengthen
business or family ties. The important aspect of the marriage contract was the size of the dowry. The size of
the dowry was an indication of whether the bride was moving upward or downward in society. With a large
dowry, a daughter could marry a man of higher social status, thereby enabling her family to move up in
society.

II. The Italian States in the Renaissance
By the 15th century, five major powers dominated the Italian peninsula—the duchy of Milan, Venice,
Florence, the Papal States, and the kingdom of Naples. Besides the five major states, there were a number
of independent city-states under the control of powerful ruling families that became brilliant centers of
Renaissance culture.

The frenzied world of the Italian territorial states gave rise to a political practice of the balance of power.
This system was designed to prevent the aggrandizement of any one state at the expense of the others. This
system was especially evident after 1454 when the Italian states signed the Peace of Lodi, which ended
almost a half-century of war and inaugurated a relatively peaceful era until 1494. The breakdown of the
balance power encouraged the French and Spanish to move into Italy. Feeling isolated, the duke of Milan
foolishly invited the French to intervene in Italian politics. The French took advantage of the offer in 1494,
and with an army of 30,000 men, advanced through Italy and occupied the kingdom of Naples. Other
Italian states turned to the Spanish for help and for the next 15 years, the French and Spanish competed to
dominate Italy. Beginning in the decade of the 1510s, the war was continued by a new generation of rulers
as part of a long struggle for power throughout Europe between the Valois and Hapsburg dynasties. The
terrible sack of Rome in 1527 by the Spanish army brought a temporary end to the Italian wars. Hereafter,
the Spaniards dominated Italy. Few Italians conceived of creating an alliance or confederation of states that
could repel foreign invaders. Italians remained fiercely loyal to their own petty states, making invasion a
fact of life in Italian history. Italy would not achieve unification and nationhood until 1870.

III. The Intellectual Renaissance in Italy
During the 14th through 16th centuries Italy was the cultural leader of Europe. This new Italian culture was
primarily the product of a relatively wealthy, urban lay society. One of the most important movements we
associate with the Renaissance is humanism. Renaissance humanism was a form of education and culture
based on the study of the classics. Humanism was not so much a philosophy of life as an educational
program that revolved around a clearly defined group of intellectual disciplines or “liberal arts”—grammar,
rhetoric, poetry, ethics, mathematics, astronomy, music, and history—all based on an examination of
classical authors. Crucial to all liberal studies was the mastery of Greek and Latin. The purpose of a liberal
education was to produce men who followed a path of virtue and wisdom and possessed the rhetorical skills
to persuade others to take it.

Petrarch (1304-1374) has often been called the father of Italian renaissance humanism. He was the first
intellectual to characterized the Middle Ages as a period of darkness, promoting the mistaken belief that
medieval culture was ignorant of classical antiquity. Petrarch’s interest in the classics led him on a quest for
forgotten Latin Manuscripts and set in motion a ransacking of monastic libraries throughout Europe.
Petrarch worried at times whether he was sufficiently attentive to spiritual ideals. His qualms did not
prevent him from inaugurating the humanist emphasis on the use of pure classical Latin, making it
fashionable for humanists to use Cicero as a model for prose and Virgil for poetry. As Petrarch said,
“Christ is my God; Cicero is the prince of the language.”

In Florence, the humanist movement took a new direction at the beginning of the 15th century when it
became closely tied to Florentine civil spirit and pride. Fourteenth-century humanists such as Petrarch had
described the intellectual life as one of solitude. In the busy civic world of Florence, intellectuals began to
take the classical Roman Cicero, who was both a statesman and an intellectual, as their model. Cicero
served as the inspiration for the Renaissance ideal that it was the duty of an intellectual to live an active life
for one’s state, and humanists began to serve the state as chancellors, councilors, and advisers.

Also evident in the humanism of the first half of the 15th century was a growing interest in Greek.
Humanists eagerly perused the works of Plato and Greek poets, dramatists, historians and orators (e.g.
Thucydides, Euripides, and Sophocles), all of whom had been ignored by the scholastics of the Middle
Ages as irrelevant to the theological questions they were examining. Italian humanists were very critical of
the Catholic church at times, but fundamentally they accepted the church and above all wished only to
restore a simpler, purer, and more ethical Christianity. To the humanists, the study of the classics was
perfectly compatible with Christianity.

The period of the Renaissance witnessed the invention of printing with movable metal type. This
development was a gradual process that culminated sometime between 1145 and 1450. Johannes
Gutenberg’s Bible, completed in 1455 or 1456, was the first real book produced from movable type. By
1500, there were more than 1,000 printers in Europe who had published almost 40,000 titles (between 8
and 10 million copies). Probably 50 percent of these books were religious in character. Next in importance
were the Latin and Greek classics, medieval grammars, legal handbooks, works on philosophy, and an
ever-growing number of popular romances.
Printing became one of the largest industries in Europe, and its effects were soon felt in many areas of
European life. It encouraged the development of scholarly research and the desire to attain knowledge. It
facilitated cooperation among scholars and help produce standardized and definitive texts. Printing also
stimulated the development of an ever-expanding lay reading public. Without the printing press, the new
religious ideas of the Reformation would never have spread as rapidly as they did in the 16th century.

IV. The Artistic Renaissance
Renaissance artists considered the imitation of nature to be their primary goal. The new artistic standards
reflected a new attitude of mind in which humans became the focus of attention. The realistic portrayal of
the human nude became one of the foremost preoccupations of Italian Renaissance art. The new assertion
of human individuality was reflected in the new emphasis on portraiture. Patrons appeared in the corners of
sacred pictures, and monumental tombs and portrait statues honored many of Florence’s prominent citizens.

By the end of the 15th century, especially talented individuals, such as Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519),
Raphael (1483-1520), and Michelangelo (1475-1520), were no longer seen as craftsmen, but as artistic
geniuses. Artists became heroes, individuals who were praised more for their creativity than for their
competence as craftspeople. Michelangelo, for example, was frequently addressed as “the Divine One” (II
Divino). As society excused their eccentricities and valued their creative genius, the artists of the
Renaissance became the first to embody the modern concept of the artist. As respect for artists grew, so too
did their ability to profit economically from their work. They mingled with the political and intellectual
elite of their society and became more aware of new intellectual theories, which they then incorporated into
their art.

V. The European State in the Renaissance
France-- The 100 Years War had left France depopulated and prostrate. Unruly nobles made it difficult for
the king to assert his authority. But the war also developed a strong degree of French nationalism. The need
to prosecute the war provided an excuse to strengthen the authority of the king. Charles VII (1422-1461)
with the consent of the Estates-General established a royal army. He received from the Estates-General the
right to levy the taille, an annual direct tax usually on land or property, without any need for further
approval from the Estates-General. Losing control of the purse meant less power for this parliamentary
body. Under Charles VII the French king also began to assume control over the church in France.

The process of developing a French territorial state was greatly advanced by King Louis XI (1461-1483).
Some historians have called Louis XI the founder of the French national state. He retained the taille after
the 100 Years War as a permanent tax. This tax enabled the king to have a sound, regular source of income.
When the duke of Burgundy was killed in 1477 fighting the Swiss, Louis added the duchy of Burgundy to
his own lands. In 1480 the provinces of Anjou, Maine, Bar, and Provence were brought under royal control.
Louis also encouraged the growth of industry and commerce. For example, he introduced the silk industry
to Lyons.

England--The 100 Years War also seriously strained the English economy. Moreover, the end of the war
brought even greater domestic turmoil to England when the War of the Roses broke out in the 1450s. The
civil war pitted the house of Lancaster, whose symbol was a red rose, against the house of York, whose
symbol was a white rose. Many aristocratic families were drawn into the conflict. Finally, in 1485, Henry
Tudor defeated the last Yorkist king, Richard III and established the new Tudor dynasty.

As the first Tudor king, Henry VII (1485-1509) worked to reduce internal dissension and establish a strong
monarchical government. The English aristocracy had been much weakened by the War of the Roses
because many nobles had been killed. Henry eliminated the private wars of the nobility by abolishing their
private armies. Since England, unlike France and Spain, did not possess a standing army, the king relied on
special commissions to trusted nobles to raise troops for a specific campaign, after which the troops were
disbanded.

Henry VII was particularly successful in extracting income from the traditional financial resources of the
English monarchy, such as crown lands, judicial fees and fines, and customs duties. The king avoided war
and he did not have to call parliament on any regular basis to grant him funds. By not overburdening the
landed gentry and middle class with taxes, Henry won their favor, and they provided much support for his
monarchy. Henry also encouraged commercial activity.

Spain--During the Middle Ages, several independent kingdoms had emerged in the course of the long
reconquest of the Iberian peninsula from the Muslims. Aragon and Castile were the strongest; in the west
was the independent monarchy of Portugal; in the north, the small kingdom of Navarre oriented toward
France; and in the south, the Muslim kingdom of Granada.

A major step in the unification of Spain was taken with the marriage of Isabella of Castile (1474-1504) and
Ferdinand of Aragon (1479-1516) in 1469. This marriage was dynastic union of two rulers, not a political
union. Both kingdoms maintained their own parliaments (Cortes), courts, laws, coinage, customs, and
political organs. Nevertheless, the two rulers worked to strengthen royal control of government. They also
reorganized the army, making it the best in Europe by the 16th century.

Ferdinand and Isabella recognized the importance of controlling the Catholic church. They secured from
the pope the right to select the most important church officials in Spain, and the church became an
instrument for the extension of royal power. In 1492, flush with the success of the conquest of Muslim
Granada, Ferdinand and Isabella expelled all Jews from Spain. It is estimated that 150,000 out of possibly
200,000 Jews fled. Muslims were “encouraged” to convert to Christianity after the conquest of Granada. In
1502, Isabella issued a decree expelling all professed Muslims from her kingdom. To be Spanish was to be
Catholic, a policy of uniformity enforced by the Inquisition.

During the reigns of Ferdinand and Isabella, Spain (or the union of Castile and Aragon) began to emerge as
an important power in European affairs. Both Granada and Navarre had been conquered and incorporated
into the royal realms. Nevertheless, Spain remained divided in many ways. Only the royal dynasty provided
the centralizing force, and when a single individual, the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella, succeeded
both rulers as Charles I 1n 1516, he inherited lands that made him the most powerful monarch of his age.

The Holy Roman Empire--After 1438, the position of Holy Roman Emperor remained in the hands of the
Habsburg dynasty. Having gradually acquired a number of possessions along the Danube, known
collectively as Austria, the house of Habsburg had become one of the wealthiest landholders in the empire
and by the mid-fifteenth century began to play an important role in European affairs. Through marriage, the
Habsburgs gained Luxembourg and a large part of the Low Countries. The addition of these territories
made the Habsburg dynasty an international power and brought them the undying opposition of the French
monarchy because the rulers of France feared they would be surrounded by the Habsburgs.

Although the Holy Roman Empire did not develop along the lines of a centralized monarchical state, within
the empire the power of the independent princes and electors increased steadily. These German states such
as Bavaria, Hesse, Brandenburg, and the Palatinate, posed a real threat to the church, the emperor, and
other smaller independent bodies in the Holy Roman Empire, especially the free imperial cities.

The Ottoman Turks and the end of Byzantium--Beginning in northeastern Asia Minor in the 13th century,
the Ottoman Turks spread rapidly, seizing the lands of the Seljuk Turks and the Byzantine Empire. In 1345,
they bypassed Constantinople and conquered the Balkans. In 1453, Constantinople fell to the Turks after a
siege of several months By the end of the 15th century the Turks were threatening Hungary, Austria,
Bohemia, and Poland. The Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, became their bitter enemy in the 16th
century.

VI. The Catholic Church in the Renaissance
Two widespread heresy movements—Lollardy and Hussitism—posed new threats to the church. English
Lollardy was a product of the Oxford theologian John Wyclif (c. 1328-1384), whose disgust with clerical
corruption led him to a far-ranging attack on papal authority and medieval Christian beliefs and practices.
Wyclif alleged that there was no basis in Scripture for papal claims of temporal authority and he advocated
that the popes by stripped of both their authority and property. Rejecting all practices not mentioned in
Scripture, Wyclif condemned pilgrimages, the veneration of saints and other common church practices. His
attacks on church property were especially popular, and he attracted a number of followers who came to be
known as Lollards (the term means “mumblers of prayers and psalms,” and refers to what they criticized).

A marriage between the royal families of England and Bohemia enabled Lollard ideas to spread to
Bohemia where they reinforced the ideas of a group of Czech reforms led by the chancellor of the
university at Prague, John Hus (1374-1415). In his call for reform, Hus urged the elimination of the
worldliness and corruption of the clergy and attacked the excessive power of the papacy. Since the Catholic
church was one of the largest landowners in Bohemia, and since Germans dominated the Czech church
hierarchy, many Bohemians supported Hus. When Hus, given a safe conduct by the emperor, presented his
ideas to the Council of Constance, he was arrested, condemned as a heretic and burned at the stake. This
action turned the unrest in Bohemia into revolutionary upheaval. The resulting Hussite wars combined
religious, social, and national issues and wracked the Holy Roman Empire until 1436. Both Wyclif and Hus
can be seen as forerunners to the Reformation.

The primary concern of the papacy is governing the Catholic church as its spiritual leader. but as heads of
the church, popes had temporal preoccupations as well, and the story of the Renaissance papacy is basically
an account of how temporal concerns came to overshadow the popes’ spiritual functions. To further their
territorial aims in the Papal States, the popes needed increased financial resources. Since they were not
hereditary monarchs, popes could not build dynasties over several generations and they came to rely on the
practice of nepotism (the word nepotism is derived from nepos, meaning nephew) to promote their
families’ interests. For example Pope Alexander VI (1492-1503), a member of the Borgia family, raised
one son, one nephew, and the brother of one mistress to the cardinalate. Alexander scandalized the church
by encouraging his son Cesare to carve a territorial state in central Italy out of the territories of the Papal
States. The Renaissance popes were great patrons of Renaissance culture, and their efforts made Rome the
focal point of the arts at the beginning of the 16th century.

Background to the Renaissance

Crisis of the Later Middle Ages:
² Black Death (1347): 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
         Population did not reach pre-plague level until the mid-16th century.
² Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453): cause—English lays claim to some French land
         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”)
Peasant Revolts
         Causes: taxation during Hundred Years’ War, desire for higher wages, hostility toward
                  aristocracy, and higher expectations among peasantry.
         English Peasant Revolt (1381):
         Jacquerie in France (late 14th-early 15th c.)
         Results: revolts crushed; end of serfdom in England c. 1550

² Nationalist literature of the Later Middle Ages – use of the vernacular (national tongue)
       Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), The Divine Comedy (1321) (also a Renaissance figure)
       Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400): Canterbury Tales – portrayed English life
       Francois Villon (1431-1463): Grand Testament (1461) – greatest poet of Medieval France
                 portrayed ordinary French life with humor and emotion.

² 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.
         Babylonian Captivity (1309-1377): 7 successive popes resided at Avignon, France
                 Damaged papal prestige (esp. in England & Germany); Rome’s economy damaged
         Great Schism (c. 1377-1417): Further conflict led to election of two popes—one in Rome,
                 one in France; further hurt prestige of church
         Conciliar Movement (1409-1418): ended schism; failed as movement to put power in a
                 church council; pope’s power still supreme

Life in Later Middle Ages
         Marriage: avg. age for men = mid-20s; women = 16-18
                  divorce was unheard of
                  economic reasons most important for marriage (love not until 18th-19th centuries)
                  prostitution in cities (men didn’t marry until later)
         Work:
                  agricultural cycles and church ritual closely linked
                  small % of men were artisans in towns; protected by guilds
                  Serfdom reduced in many areas
         Recreation: aristocracy – jousting tournaments; common people—archery, wrestling, bull-
                  baiting, bear-baiting; alcoholism rampant
         Laity increasingly managed parish lands
         Fur-collar crime: corrupt nobles (esp. England) took advantage of peasantry

Medieval philosophy: scholasticism (St. Thomas Aquinas)
       Attempted to reconcile faith and reason by using logic to support Christian doctrine
       Worked to reconcile Aristotle’s ideas with Christianity

THE RENAISSANCE
The Modern World; contrast with the Later Middle Ages (see separate study guide)
Renaissance: mainly in Italy (1300-1600)
Origins of Renaissance: Jacob Burckhardt – claimed period in distinct contrast to Middle Ages
Northern Italian 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)
          These cities had dominating trade routes because of their location between Eastern and Western
         Europe & between Europe & the Middle East.
Politics among the Italian City-States
         ² Major city-states and figures
                  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 (1449-1492): lavish patron of the arts
                  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
         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
        Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) -- The Prince (1513) – Cesare Borgia
   ²    ²     Charles V, sack of Rome in 1527: symbolizes end of Renaissance in Italy

²Humanism -- Revival of antiquity (Greece and Rome) in literature- subjects concerned with humankind
& culture, as opposed to science. Language and literature,composition, history and philosophy. Music and
mathematics were sometimes studied as well
         Petrarch—“Dark Ages” metaphor; “father of humanism” and 1st modern writer, literature no
                  longer subordinate to religion
         Boccacio – Decameron: aimed to impart wisdom of human character and behavior.
         Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) Oration on the Dignity of Man; Platonic academy
             Education: (emphasis on Latin and Greek)
         Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529) – The Book of the Courtier
         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
Individualism/ secularism: “man is the measure of all things”
         virtú: the quality of being a great man in whatever noble pursuit
Printing press: Johann Gutenberg – spread of humanistic literature to rest of Europe.

New Attitudes
     1. Interest in earthly life - Thinkers in the middle ages, such as Scholastics, had tried to use ideas
     borrowed from the ancient writer's to support the church.
     2 .Medieval thinkers had thought of earthly existence chiefly as preparation for an afterlife but The
     people of the Renaissance believed life on earth should be lived as fully as possible.
      a. a popular characteristic of classical times was the appreciation of the individual.
      b. interested in the unique qualities that made one person stand out.
      c. Men and women who were rich benefited from the new spirit of the times.
     3. Public Service and politics.
      a. Upper- Class Italians valued public service & praised those who were useful to society.
      b. They believed that an education in the humanities was a sound preparation for a rewarding life.

Renaissance Art
    Features of Renaissance Art
       1.Individualism - The expression of art that was manly expressed through the creativity of the
                artists who expressed their religious feelings.
       2.Balance & proportion - The Renaissance artists tried to show people,trees, buildings &
                mountains in their proper sizes.
       3.Use of Perspective - the impression of depth & distance on the flat surface of a painting.
                .A way of using mathematical laws in planning the paintings
       4.New Materials - Oil based paints became more popular because it didn't dry so fast so they could
                change whatever they painted
        Florence the leader in Renaissance art esp. in quattrocento (1400s_
                Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) – contemporary Renaissance art historian.
                Giotto (1266-1336) – considered 1st Renaissance artist, use of chiaroscuro
                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 (young)
                Masaccio (1401-1428) painter: real, nude human figures
                Giovanni Bellini (1430-1516) – Portrait of a Condottiere
                Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510) – painter: Birth of Venus
                Benvenuto Cellini (1500-1574) – goldsmith and sculptor
“High Renaissance” centered in Rome (1500-1527) – cinquecento (1500s)
                Most worldly of Renaissance popes – Alexander VI (1492-1503); Julius II (1503-
1513); and Leo X (1513-1521)
                  Characteristics: classical balance, harmony, restraint
                  Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) – Last Supper, Mona Lisa; “Renaissance Man”
                  Raphael Santi (1483-1520) – School of Athens
                  Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564), “universal man”; Sistine Chapel; David;
                   pieta: Mary holding limp body of Christ considered most perfect marble sculpture
                  Titian – Venice painter known for his special tint of red
    Society
       Women: Christine de Pisan (1363?-1434?): The City of Ladies; The Book of Three Virtues
                Perhaps Europe’s first feminist
        Blacks: exotic and highly prized
Northern Renaissance
   ² Christian Humanism: emphasis on early church writings for answers to improve society
                Desiderius Erasmus (Erasmus of Rotterdam) (1466-1536) – In Praise of Folly most
                famous intellectual of his times; respected influential humanist; trained as a Catholic
                priest, he studied both the humanities & the Christian teachings.
                 he thought that the Church was getting greedy & corrupt & he called for a return to the
                simple faith of early Christianity.
       c. In The Praise of Folly, Erasmus criticized scholars scientists, philosophers, & clergy of his time
                for being narrow minded.

                          criticized the church: “Erasmus lay the egg that Luther hatched”
                 Thomas More (1478-1536) – Utopia (Greek for nowhere), – creates ideal society on an
                 island; but to achieve harmony and order people have to sacrifice individual rights ; also
                   contained criticism of the politics, society, & religion of the times.
                 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 (1436-1517): reformed Spanish clergy and church,
                          Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition
         Northern Renaissance Art
                 Low Countries produced especially important artists
                 Jan Van Eyck – Flemish painter, detailed realistic works
                 Peter Brueghel the Elder (1520-1569)—focused on lives of ordinary people
                 Bosch –master of symbolism and fantasy; religious and folk legends as themes
                 Albrecht Durer (1471-1528) German – foremost northern Renaissance artist.
                 Hans Holbein the Younger (1497-1543): Erasmus of Rotterdam, Thomas More
         Writers
                 Francois Rabelais’ (1494-1553) Was a monk, who wrote a five- volume book Gargantua
                 & Pantagruel which made fun of those who did not take the humanist point of view."Let
                 nothing in the world be unknown to you"
                 Montaigne (1533-1592) – developed essay form; modern skepticism
         Germany
                 Regiomontanus; Nicholas of Cusa: mathematics
                 Copernicus : heliocentric theory
                 Cartography: Behaim and Schoner
                 Fugger family in Germany (esp. Jacob Fugger (1459-1525): international banking,
                          patronized the arts
                 Myscticism: Meister Eckhart, Thomas á Kempis, Gerard Groote: belief in personal
                          relationship with God
                 Include other Germans listed above
         England:
                 Elizabethan Period
                          William Shakespeare
                 Jacobean Period (James I)
                          Authorized Bible, 1604
                          John Milton
Spain: Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616): Don Quixote
                Domenikos El Greco (1541-1614): painter: mannerism

² “New” Monarchs: consolidated power and created Europe’s first modern nation-states
      French recovery after 100 Years’ War: Valios line of monarchs
               Louis XI “Spider King” (1461-83): large royal army, taxes, power over clergy
               Francis I (1515-1547): Condordat of Bologna, taille
      England: after 100 Years’ War
               War of the Roses – victorious House of Lancaster = rise of Tudor dynasty:
               Henry VII (1489-1509): Star Chamber (nobles tried w/o jury; often tortured)
               Henry VIII (1509-1547): English reformation
      Spain
               Marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon (1478-1516) & Isabella of Castile (1474-1504):
                        1492: unified Spain; Reconquista—removed last of Moors; expulsion of
                                 Jews
               hermandades: alliance of cities to oppose nobles
               Spanish Inquisition: monarchy enforced authority of the national church
      Habsburg Empire: (Holy Roman Empire)
               Maximilian I (1493-1519): gained much territory with marriage to Mary of Burgundy
               Charles V: most powerful ruler in Europe (1st Holy Roman Emperor)
                        ruled Spanish and Austrian Hapsburg branches, sacked Rome in 1527
                        sought to prevent spread of Protestant Reformation in Germany

Life in the 16th and 17th centuries
          Hierarchy:
                   Countryside: manorial lords, peasants, landless workers
                   Cities: merchants (bourgeoisie), artisans, laborers
                   education or wealth became means of moving up social ladder (for the fortunate few)
          Demography: population growth leveled by 1650; cities saw larger increase than countryside
          Family: nuclear family; patriarchal; avg. lifespans – men = 27, women = 25!; divorce rare
          Witch Hunts: as many as 100,000 executed between 1500-1700; mostly elderly women
          Food and Diet: commoners relied on bread (& beer); upper-classes enjoyed meats, cheese,
                   sweets; English ate the best; famines were reality in many parts
          Slavery:
                   introduced by Portuguese
                   blacks seen as exotic, highly prized in certain areas
                   slavery existed in Mediterranean sugar plantations

Renaissance Definitions

    Alexander VI - (1492-1503) Corrupt Spanish pope. He was aided militarily
    and politically by his son Cesare Borgia, who was the hero of The Prince.

    Dante Alighieri - Italian poet wrote Inferno and Divine Comedy.

    Boccaccio - (1313-1375) Wrote the Decameron which tells about
    ambitious merchants, portrays a sensual, and worldy society.

    Botticelli - One of the leading painters of the Florentine renaissance,
    developed a highly personal style. The Birth of Venus

    Brunelleschi - (1377-1446) Italian architect, celebrated for work in
    Florentine. He was anti-Gothic. Foundling Hospital in Florence.
Michalangelo Buonarroti - (1475-1564) Worked in Rome. Painted the Sistine Chapel. Sculpted the
statue of David.

    Castiglione - Wrote The Courtier which was about education and manners
    and had a great influence. It said that an upper class, educated man should
    know many academic subjects and be trained in music, dance, and art.

    Leonardo Da Vinci - (1452-1519)Artist who made religious paintings and
    sculptures like the Last Supper.

    Lorenzo de Medici - r(1469-1492) The Medici’s were a great banking
    family in Florence in the 15th century. He ruled government of Florence from
    behind the scene.

    Miguel De Cervantes - (1547-1616) Spanish writer. Wrote Don Quixote.

    Pico Della Mirandola - Wrote On the Dignity of Man which stated that man
    was made in the image of God before the fall and as Christ after the
    Resurrection. Man is placed in-between beasts and the angels. He also
    believed that there is no limits to what man can accomplish.

    Donatello - (1386-1466) Sculptor. Probably exerted greatest influence of
    any Florentine artist before Michelangelo. His statues expressed an
    appreciation of the incredible variety of human nature.

    Erasmus - (1466?-1536) Dutch Humanist, religious education. Wrote In
    Praise of Folly.

    Jacob Fugger - Headed leading banking/trading house in l6th century Europe.

    Giotto - (1276-1337) Florentine Painter who led the way in the use of
    realism.

    Hans Holbein the Younger - Painter noted for his portraits and religious
    paintings.

    Humanism - Humanists studied the Latin classics to learn what they reveal
    about human nature. Humanism emphasized human beings, their
    achievements, interests, and capabilities.

    Individualism - Individualism stressed personality, uniqueness, genius, and
    the fullest development of capabilities and talents.

    Julius II - r(1503-1513) Pope - very militaristic. Tore down the old Saint
    Peter’s Basilica and began work on the present structure in 1506.

    Niccolo Machiavelli - (1469-1527) Wrote The Prince which contained a
    secular method of ruling a country.

    Montaigne - (1533-1592) Michel de Montaigne is the finest representative
    of early modern skepticism. Created a new genre, the essay.

    Sir Thomas More - (1478-1535) Englishman, lawyer, poilitican, Chancellor
    for Henry VIII. Wrote Utopia which presented a revolutionary view of society.
    Executed for not compromising his religious beliefs.
"New Monarchs" - Monarchies that took measures to limit the power of the
    Roman Catholic Church within their countries.

    Pazzi Conspiracy - Conspiracy to overthrow the Medici’s.

    Petrarch - (1304-1374) Father of the Renaissance. He believed the first two
    centuries of the Roman Empire to represent the peak in the development of
    human civilization.

    Quattrocento - The 1400’s.

    Cinquecento - The 1500’s.

    Rabelais - French satirical author.Gargantua and Pantagruel.

    "Renaissance Man" - A man that is multitalented and is well educated.

    Revival of antiquity - The awakening from the dark ages and the focusing on
    the Roman’s.

    Fra. Girolamo Savonarola - (1452-1498) Dominican friar who attacked
    paganism and moral vice of Medici and Alexander VI. Burned at stake.

    Secularism - The belief in material things instead of religious things.

     Lorenzo Valla - (1406-1457) On Pleasure, and On false Donation of Constantine. Father of modern
historical criticism.

    Vernacular - Everyday language.

    Virtu - The striving for excellence.

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3 renaissance packet

  • 1. For Written Period Summaries go to: http://ap_history_online.tripod.com/apeh2.htm For Multiple Choice Questions on Time Periods go to: http://cwx_prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/kagan3/ -click on fact finder http://www.history.wadsworth.com/spielvogel/student/undex.html -click on student resources http://college.hmco.com/history/west/mckay/western_society/6e/students/ace/index.html http://www.historyteacher.net/EuroProjects/ExamReviewSheets/APEuroMainReviewPage.htm http://www.homestead.com/chaffeyaphistory/european.html possibly the best AP Euro site on the web. Awesome notes, great setup of review and test questions all at one place. The site I would build if I had time. Go here. http://thecaveonline.com/APEH/ another great site, search out the good stuff and it will help http://www.historyteacher.net/ multiple choice and matching quizzes plus well designed short notes. Go here. Renaissance Notes AP European History Prose Notes Taken from George Burson – Aspen High School on the net The Renaissance I. The Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance Renaissance means “rebirth.” Although the Renaissance does not represent a sudden or dramatic cultural break with the Middle Ages, the period can be viewed as a distinct period of European history that manifested itself first in Italy and then spread to the rest of Europe. Renaissance Italy was largely a land of independent city-states. Within these new urban societies, a secular spirit emerged as increasing wealth created new possibilities for the enjoyment of worldly things. Above all, the Renaissance was an age of recovery from the disorder of the 14th century. Recovery was accompanied by a rebirth of the culture of classical antiquity that led to new ways of viewing humans. Though not entirely new, there was a revived emphasis on individual ability. These general features of the Italian Renaissance were primarily the preserve of the wealthy upper classes—it was an elite, not a mass movement. Beginning in the late 11th century the agricultural foundation of Western civilization began to be transformed. The new agricultural practices and the subsequent increase in food production, which freed part of the European population from the need to produce their own food, allowed diversification in economic functions that led to a revival of trade, considerable expansion in the circulation of money, a restoration of specialized craftspeople and artisans, and the growth and development of towns. By the 14th century, Italian merchants were carrying on a flourishing commerce throughout the Mediterranean and had also expanded their lines of trade north along the Atlantic seaboard. In England and the Netherlands the Italians came into contact with the Hanseatic League. Hard hit by the plague, the Italians lost their commercial preeminence while the Hanseatic League continued to prosper until the 15th century when the League proved increasingly unable to compete with the developing larger territorial states. The Hanseatic League had been formed as early as the 13th century when some north German towns began to cooperate to gain favorable trading rights in Flanders. By 1500, more than 80 cities belonged to the League. As the Hanseatic League began to decline in the 15th century, the Italians, especially the Venetians, continued to maintain a wealthy commercial empire. Not until the 16th century, when the overseas discoveries gave new importance to the states facing the Atlantic, did the Italian city-states begin to suffer from the competitive advantages of the more powerful national territorial states. The aristocracy constituted between 2 and 3 percent of the population in most countries, but they managed to dominate society. They served as military officers and held important political posts. By 1500, certain ideals came to be expected of the noble or aristocrat. First, nobles should possess fundamental native endowments, such as impeccable character, grace, talents, and noble birth. The perfect courtier must also cultivate certain achievements. Primarily, he should participate in military and bodily exercises since the
  • 2. principal profession of a courtier was arms. He was also expected to have a classical education and to adorn his life with the arts by playing a musical instrument, drawing, and painting. Finally, the aristocrat was expected to make a good impression. While being modest, he should not hide his accomplishments, but show them with grace. The purpose these courtly standards was so the courtier could win “the favor and mind of the prince whom he serves, so that he may be able to always tell him the truth about everything he needs to know, without fear or risk of displeasing him, and that when he sees the mind of his prince inclined to a wrong action, he may dare oppose him so as to dissuade him of every evil intent and bring him to the path of virtue” (The Book of the Courtier, 1528). Peasants constituted as much as 85 to 90 percent of the total European population. During the 14th century the manorial system and serfdom continued to decline, although in many places lords were able to retain many of the fees thy charged their peasants. While serfdom was declining in western Europe, eastern Europe experienced a reverse trend. The weakness of eastern rulers enabled nobles to tie their peasants to the land and use servile labor in the large-scale production of grain for the ever-growing export market. At the top of urban society were the patricians, whose wealth from capitalistic enterprises in trade, industry, and banking enabled them to dominate their urban communities economically, socially, and politically. Below them were the petty burghers, the shopkeepers, artisans, guildmasters, and guild members who were largely concerned with providing goods and services for local consumption. Below these two groups were the property less workers earning pitiful wages and the unemployed, living squalid and miserable lives. These people constituted as much as 30 or 40 percent of the urban population. Beneath them were the slaves, especially in the Italian cities. Although some domestic slaves remained, slavery in European society had largely disappeared by the 11th century. It reappeared in Spain, where both Christians and Muslims used captured prisoners as slaves during the lengthy reconquista. In the second half of the 14th century, the shortage of workers after the Black Death led Italians to reintroduce slavery on a fairly large scale. Slaves were obtained primarily from the eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea region. Between 1414 and 1423, 10,000 slaves were sold on the Venetian market. Most slaves were females, many of them young girls. By the end of the 15th century, slavery had declined dramatically in the Italian cities. Many slaves had been freed by their owners, and the major source of slaves dried up as the Black Sea slave markets were closed to Italian traders after the Turks conquered the Byzantine Empire. Prices rose dramatically, further cutting demand. Moreover, a general feeling had arisen that slaves-the “domestic enemy” as they were called— were dangerous and not worth the effort. The Portuguese shipped about 140,000 black slaves into Europe from Africa between 1444 and 1505. Most of these slaves were kept as curiosities at court. The extended family played an important role in Renaissance Italy. Families that were related and bore the same surname often lived near each other and might dominate an entire urban district. Old family names conferred great status and prestige. The family bond was a source of great security in a dangerous and violent world, and its importance helps explain the vendetta in the Italian Renaissance. A crime committed by one family member fell on the entire family, ensuring that retaliation by the offended family would be a bloody affair involving large numbers of people. Marriages were arranged by parents, often to strengthen business or family ties. The important aspect of the marriage contract was the size of the dowry. The size of the dowry was an indication of whether the bride was moving upward or downward in society. With a large dowry, a daughter could marry a man of higher social status, thereby enabling her family to move up in society. II. The Italian States in the Renaissance By the 15th century, five major powers dominated the Italian peninsula—the duchy of Milan, Venice, Florence, the Papal States, and the kingdom of Naples. Besides the five major states, there were a number of independent city-states under the control of powerful ruling families that became brilliant centers of Renaissance culture. The frenzied world of the Italian territorial states gave rise to a political practice of the balance of power. This system was designed to prevent the aggrandizement of any one state at the expense of the others. This
  • 3. system was especially evident after 1454 when the Italian states signed the Peace of Lodi, which ended almost a half-century of war and inaugurated a relatively peaceful era until 1494. The breakdown of the balance power encouraged the French and Spanish to move into Italy. Feeling isolated, the duke of Milan foolishly invited the French to intervene in Italian politics. The French took advantage of the offer in 1494, and with an army of 30,000 men, advanced through Italy and occupied the kingdom of Naples. Other Italian states turned to the Spanish for help and for the next 15 years, the French and Spanish competed to dominate Italy. Beginning in the decade of the 1510s, the war was continued by a new generation of rulers as part of a long struggle for power throughout Europe between the Valois and Hapsburg dynasties. The terrible sack of Rome in 1527 by the Spanish army brought a temporary end to the Italian wars. Hereafter, the Spaniards dominated Italy. Few Italians conceived of creating an alliance or confederation of states that could repel foreign invaders. Italians remained fiercely loyal to their own petty states, making invasion a fact of life in Italian history. Italy would not achieve unification and nationhood until 1870. III. The Intellectual Renaissance in Italy During the 14th through 16th centuries Italy was the cultural leader of Europe. This new Italian culture was primarily the product of a relatively wealthy, urban lay society. One of the most important movements we associate with the Renaissance is humanism. Renaissance humanism was a form of education and culture based on the study of the classics. Humanism was not so much a philosophy of life as an educational program that revolved around a clearly defined group of intellectual disciplines or “liberal arts”—grammar, rhetoric, poetry, ethics, mathematics, astronomy, music, and history—all based on an examination of classical authors. Crucial to all liberal studies was the mastery of Greek and Latin. The purpose of a liberal education was to produce men who followed a path of virtue and wisdom and possessed the rhetorical skills to persuade others to take it. Petrarch (1304-1374) has often been called the father of Italian renaissance humanism. He was the first intellectual to characterized the Middle Ages as a period of darkness, promoting the mistaken belief that medieval culture was ignorant of classical antiquity. Petrarch’s interest in the classics led him on a quest for forgotten Latin Manuscripts and set in motion a ransacking of monastic libraries throughout Europe. Petrarch worried at times whether he was sufficiently attentive to spiritual ideals. His qualms did not prevent him from inaugurating the humanist emphasis on the use of pure classical Latin, making it fashionable for humanists to use Cicero as a model for prose and Virgil for poetry. As Petrarch said, “Christ is my God; Cicero is the prince of the language.” In Florence, the humanist movement took a new direction at the beginning of the 15th century when it became closely tied to Florentine civil spirit and pride. Fourteenth-century humanists such as Petrarch had described the intellectual life as one of solitude. In the busy civic world of Florence, intellectuals began to take the classical Roman Cicero, who was both a statesman and an intellectual, as their model. Cicero served as the inspiration for the Renaissance ideal that it was the duty of an intellectual to live an active life for one’s state, and humanists began to serve the state as chancellors, councilors, and advisers. Also evident in the humanism of the first half of the 15th century was a growing interest in Greek. Humanists eagerly perused the works of Plato and Greek poets, dramatists, historians and orators (e.g. Thucydides, Euripides, and Sophocles), all of whom had been ignored by the scholastics of the Middle Ages as irrelevant to the theological questions they were examining. Italian humanists were very critical of the Catholic church at times, but fundamentally they accepted the church and above all wished only to restore a simpler, purer, and more ethical Christianity. To the humanists, the study of the classics was perfectly compatible with Christianity. The period of the Renaissance witnessed the invention of printing with movable metal type. This development was a gradual process that culminated sometime between 1145 and 1450. Johannes Gutenberg’s Bible, completed in 1455 or 1456, was the first real book produced from movable type. By 1500, there were more than 1,000 printers in Europe who had published almost 40,000 titles (between 8 and 10 million copies). Probably 50 percent of these books were religious in character. Next in importance were the Latin and Greek classics, medieval grammars, legal handbooks, works on philosophy, and an ever-growing number of popular romances.
  • 4. Printing became one of the largest industries in Europe, and its effects were soon felt in many areas of European life. It encouraged the development of scholarly research and the desire to attain knowledge. It facilitated cooperation among scholars and help produce standardized and definitive texts. Printing also stimulated the development of an ever-expanding lay reading public. Without the printing press, the new religious ideas of the Reformation would never have spread as rapidly as they did in the 16th century. IV. The Artistic Renaissance Renaissance artists considered the imitation of nature to be their primary goal. The new artistic standards reflected a new attitude of mind in which humans became the focus of attention. The realistic portrayal of the human nude became one of the foremost preoccupations of Italian Renaissance art. The new assertion of human individuality was reflected in the new emphasis on portraiture. Patrons appeared in the corners of sacred pictures, and monumental tombs and portrait statues honored many of Florence’s prominent citizens. By the end of the 15th century, especially talented individuals, such as Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), Raphael (1483-1520), and Michelangelo (1475-1520), were no longer seen as craftsmen, but as artistic geniuses. Artists became heroes, individuals who were praised more for their creativity than for their competence as craftspeople. Michelangelo, for example, was frequently addressed as “the Divine One” (II Divino). As society excused their eccentricities and valued their creative genius, the artists of the Renaissance became the first to embody the modern concept of the artist. As respect for artists grew, so too did their ability to profit economically from their work. They mingled with the political and intellectual elite of their society and became more aware of new intellectual theories, which they then incorporated into their art. V. The European State in the Renaissance France-- The 100 Years War had left France depopulated and prostrate. Unruly nobles made it difficult for the king to assert his authority. But the war also developed a strong degree of French nationalism. The need to prosecute the war provided an excuse to strengthen the authority of the king. Charles VII (1422-1461) with the consent of the Estates-General established a royal army. He received from the Estates-General the right to levy the taille, an annual direct tax usually on land or property, without any need for further approval from the Estates-General. Losing control of the purse meant less power for this parliamentary body. Under Charles VII the French king also began to assume control over the church in France. The process of developing a French territorial state was greatly advanced by King Louis XI (1461-1483). Some historians have called Louis XI the founder of the French national state. He retained the taille after the 100 Years War as a permanent tax. This tax enabled the king to have a sound, regular source of income. When the duke of Burgundy was killed in 1477 fighting the Swiss, Louis added the duchy of Burgundy to his own lands. In 1480 the provinces of Anjou, Maine, Bar, and Provence were brought under royal control. Louis also encouraged the growth of industry and commerce. For example, he introduced the silk industry to Lyons. England--The 100 Years War also seriously strained the English economy. Moreover, the end of the war brought even greater domestic turmoil to England when the War of the Roses broke out in the 1450s. The civil war pitted the house of Lancaster, whose symbol was a red rose, against the house of York, whose symbol was a white rose. Many aristocratic families were drawn into the conflict. Finally, in 1485, Henry Tudor defeated the last Yorkist king, Richard III and established the new Tudor dynasty. As the first Tudor king, Henry VII (1485-1509) worked to reduce internal dissension and establish a strong monarchical government. The English aristocracy had been much weakened by the War of the Roses because many nobles had been killed. Henry eliminated the private wars of the nobility by abolishing their private armies. Since England, unlike France and Spain, did not possess a standing army, the king relied on special commissions to trusted nobles to raise troops for a specific campaign, after which the troops were disbanded. Henry VII was particularly successful in extracting income from the traditional financial resources of the English monarchy, such as crown lands, judicial fees and fines, and customs duties. The king avoided war and he did not have to call parliament on any regular basis to grant him funds. By not overburdening the
  • 5. landed gentry and middle class with taxes, Henry won their favor, and they provided much support for his monarchy. Henry also encouraged commercial activity. Spain--During the Middle Ages, several independent kingdoms had emerged in the course of the long reconquest of the Iberian peninsula from the Muslims. Aragon and Castile were the strongest; in the west was the independent monarchy of Portugal; in the north, the small kingdom of Navarre oriented toward France; and in the south, the Muslim kingdom of Granada. A major step in the unification of Spain was taken with the marriage of Isabella of Castile (1474-1504) and Ferdinand of Aragon (1479-1516) in 1469. This marriage was dynastic union of two rulers, not a political union. Both kingdoms maintained their own parliaments (Cortes), courts, laws, coinage, customs, and political organs. Nevertheless, the two rulers worked to strengthen royal control of government. They also reorganized the army, making it the best in Europe by the 16th century. Ferdinand and Isabella recognized the importance of controlling the Catholic church. They secured from the pope the right to select the most important church officials in Spain, and the church became an instrument for the extension of royal power. In 1492, flush with the success of the conquest of Muslim Granada, Ferdinand and Isabella expelled all Jews from Spain. It is estimated that 150,000 out of possibly 200,000 Jews fled. Muslims were “encouraged” to convert to Christianity after the conquest of Granada. In 1502, Isabella issued a decree expelling all professed Muslims from her kingdom. To be Spanish was to be Catholic, a policy of uniformity enforced by the Inquisition. During the reigns of Ferdinand and Isabella, Spain (or the union of Castile and Aragon) began to emerge as an important power in European affairs. Both Granada and Navarre had been conquered and incorporated into the royal realms. Nevertheless, Spain remained divided in many ways. Only the royal dynasty provided the centralizing force, and when a single individual, the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella, succeeded both rulers as Charles I 1n 1516, he inherited lands that made him the most powerful monarch of his age. The Holy Roman Empire--After 1438, the position of Holy Roman Emperor remained in the hands of the Habsburg dynasty. Having gradually acquired a number of possessions along the Danube, known collectively as Austria, the house of Habsburg had become one of the wealthiest landholders in the empire and by the mid-fifteenth century began to play an important role in European affairs. Through marriage, the Habsburgs gained Luxembourg and a large part of the Low Countries. The addition of these territories made the Habsburg dynasty an international power and brought them the undying opposition of the French monarchy because the rulers of France feared they would be surrounded by the Habsburgs. Although the Holy Roman Empire did not develop along the lines of a centralized monarchical state, within the empire the power of the independent princes and electors increased steadily. These German states such as Bavaria, Hesse, Brandenburg, and the Palatinate, posed a real threat to the church, the emperor, and other smaller independent bodies in the Holy Roman Empire, especially the free imperial cities. The Ottoman Turks and the end of Byzantium--Beginning in northeastern Asia Minor in the 13th century, the Ottoman Turks spread rapidly, seizing the lands of the Seljuk Turks and the Byzantine Empire. In 1345, they bypassed Constantinople and conquered the Balkans. In 1453, Constantinople fell to the Turks after a siege of several months By the end of the 15th century the Turks were threatening Hungary, Austria, Bohemia, and Poland. The Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, became their bitter enemy in the 16th century. VI. The Catholic Church in the Renaissance Two widespread heresy movements—Lollardy and Hussitism—posed new threats to the church. English Lollardy was a product of the Oxford theologian John Wyclif (c. 1328-1384), whose disgust with clerical corruption led him to a far-ranging attack on papal authority and medieval Christian beliefs and practices. Wyclif alleged that there was no basis in Scripture for papal claims of temporal authority and he advocated that the popes by stripped of both their authority and property. Rejecting all practices not mentioned in Scripture, Wyclif condemned pilgrimages, the veneration of saints and other common church practices. His
  • 6. attacks on church property were especially popular, and he attracted a number of followers who came to be known as Lollards (the term means “mumblers of prayers and psalms,” and refers to what they criticized). A marriage between the royal families of England and Bohemia enabled Lollard ideas to spread to Bohemia where they reinforced the ideas of a group of Czech reforms led by the chancellor of the university at Prague, John Hus (1374-1415). In his call for reform, Hus urged the elimination of the worldliness and corruption of the clergy and attacked the excessive power of the papacy. Since the Catholic church was one of the largest landowners in Bohemia, and since Germans dominated the Czech church hierarchy, many Bohemians supported Hus. When Hus, given a safe conduct by the emperor, presented his ideas to the Council of Constance, he was arrested, condemned as a heretic and burned at the stake. This action turned the unrest in Bohemia into revolutionary upheaval. The resulting Hussite wars combined religious, social, and national issues and wracked the Holy Roman Empire until 1436. Both Wyclif and Hus can be seen as forerunners to the Reformation. The primary concern of the papacy is governing the Catholic church as its spiritual leader. but as heads of the church, popes had temporal preoccupations as well, and the story of the Renaissance papacy is basically an account of how temporal concerns came to overshadow the popes’ spiritual functions. To further their territorial aims in the Papal States, the popes needed increased financial resources. Since they were not hereditary monarchs, popes could not build dynasties over several generations and they came to rely on the practice of nepotism (the word nepotism is derived from nepos, meaning nephew) to promote their families’ interests. For example Pope Alexander VI (1492-1503), a member of the Borgia family, raised one son, one nephew, and the brother of one mistress to the cardinalate. Alexander scandalized the church by encouraging his son Cesare to carve a territorial state in central Italy out of the territories of the Papal States. The Renaissance popes were great patrons of Renaissance culture, and their efforts made Rome the focal point of the arts at the beginning of the 16th century. Background to the Renaissance Crisis of the Later Middle Ages: ² Black Death (1347): 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 Population did not reach pre-plague level until the mid-16th century. ² Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453): cause—English lays claim to some French land 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”) Peasant Revolts Causes: taxation during Hundred Years’ War, desire for higher wages, hostility toward aristocracy, and higher expectations among peasantry. English Peasant Revolt (1381): Jacquerie in France (late 14th-early 15th c.) Results: revolts crushed; end of serfdom in England c. 1550 ² Nationalist literature of the Later Middle Ages – use of the vernacular (national tongue) Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), The Divine Comedy (1321) (also a Renaissance figure) Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400): Canterbury Tales – portrayed English life Francois Villon (1431-1463): Grand Testament (1461) – greatest poet of Medieval France portrayed ordinary French life with humor and emotion. ² 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.
  • 7. 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. Babylonian Captivity (1309-1377): 7 successive popes resided at Avignon, France Damaged papal prestige (esp. in England & Germany); Rome’s economy damaged Great Schism (c. 1377-1417): Further conflict led to election of two popes—one in Rome, one in France; further hurt prestige of church Conciliar Movement (1409-1418): ended schism; failed as movement to put power in a church council; pope’s power still supreme Life in Later Middle Ages Marriage: avg. age for men = mid-20s; women = 16-18 divorce was unheard of economic reasons most important for marriage (love not until 18th-19th centuries) prostitution in cities (men didn’t marry until later) Work: agricultural cycles and church ritual closely linked small % of men were artisans in towns; protected by guilds Serfdom reduced in many areas Recreation: aristocracy – jousting tournaments; common people—archery, wrestling, bull- baiting, bear-baiting; alcoholism rampant Laity increasingly managed parish lands Fur-collar crime: corrupt nobles (esp. England) took advantage of peasantry Medieval philosophy: scholasticism (St. Thomas Aquinas) Attempted to reconcile faith and reason by using logic to support Christian doctrine Worked to reconcile Aristotle’s ideas with Christianity THE RENAISSANCE The Modern World; contrast with the Later Middle Ages (see separate study guide) Renaissance: mainly in Italy (1300-1600) Origins of Renaissance: Jacob Burckhardt – claimed period in distinct contrast to Middle Ages Northern Italian 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) These cities had dominating trade routes because of their location between Eastern and Western Europe & between Europe & the Middle East. Politics among the Italian City-States ² Major city-states and figures 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 (1449-1492): lavish patron of the arts 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 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
  • 8. Charles VIII (1483-1498), French invasions of Italy; Italy became battleground for international ambitions Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) -- The Prince (1513) – Cesare Borgia ² ² Charles V, sack of Rome in 1527: symbolizes end of Renaissance in Italy ²Humanism -- Revival of antiquity (Greece and Rome) in literature- subjects concerned with humankind & culture, as opposed to science. Language and literature,composition, history and philosophy. Music and mathematics were sometimes studied as well Petrarch—“Dark Ages” metaphor; “father of humanism” and 1st modern writer, literature no longer subordinate to religion Boccacio – Decameron: aimed to impart wisdom of human character and behavior. Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) Oration on the Dignity of Man; Platonic academy Education: (emphasis on Latin and Greek) Baldassare Castiglione (1478-1529) – The Book of the Courtier 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 Individualism/ secularism: “man is the measure of all things” virtú: the quality of being a great man in whatever noble pursuit Printing press: Johann Gutenberg – spread of humanistic literature to rest of Europe. New Attitudes 1. Interest in earthly life - Thinkers in the middle ages, such as Scholastics, had tried to use ideas borrowed from the ancient writer's to support the church. 2 .Medieval thinkers had thought of earthly existence chiefly as preparation for an afterlife but The people of the Renaissance believed life on earth should be lived as fully as possible. a. a popular characteristic of classical times was the appreciation of the individual. b. interested in the unique qualities that made one person stand out. c. Men and women who were rich benefited from the new spirit of the times. 3. Public Service and politics. a. Upper- Class Italians valued public service & praised those who were useful to society. b. They believed that an education in the humanities was a sound preparation for a rewarding life. Renaissance Art Features of Renaissance Art 1.Individualism - The expression of art that was manly expressed through the creativity of the artists who expressed their religious feelings. 2.Balance & proportion - The Renaissance artists tried to show people,trees, buildings & mountains in their proper sizes. 3.Use of Perspective - the impression of depth & distance on the flat surface of a painting. .A way of using mathematical laws in planning the paintings 4.New Materials - Oil based paints became more popular because it didn't dry so fast so they could change whatever they painted Florence the leader in Renaissance art esp. in quattrocento (1400s_ Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) – contemporary Renaissance art historian. Giotto (1266-1336) – considered 1st Renaissance artist, use of chiaroscuro 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 (young) Masaccio (1401-1428) painter: real, nude human figures Giovanni Bellini (1430-1516) – Portrait of a Condottiere Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510) – painter: Birth of Venus Benvenuto Cellini (1500-1574) – goldsmith and sculptor “High Renaissance” centered in Rome (1500-1527) – cinquecento (1500s) Most worldly of Renaissance popes – Alexander VI (1492-1503); Julius II (1503-
  • 9. 1513); and Leo X (1513-1521) Characteristics: classical balance, harmony, restraint Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) – Last Supper, Mona Lisa; “Renaissance Man” Raphael Santi (1483-1520) – School of Athens Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564), “universal man”; Sistine Chapel; David; pieta: Mary holding limp body of Christ considered most perfect marble sculpture Titian – Venice painter known for his special tint of red Society Women: Christine de Pisan (1363?-1434?): The City of Ladies; The Book of Three Virtues Perhaps Europe’s first feminist Blacks: exotic and highly prized Northern Renaissance ² Christian Humanism: emphasis on early church writings for answers to improve society Desiderius Erasmus (Erasmus of Rotterdam) (1466-1536) – In Praise of Folly most famous intellectual of his times; respected influential humanist; trained as a Catholic priest, he studied both the humanities & the Christian teachings. he thought that the Church was getting greedy & corrupt & he called for a return to the simple faith of early Christianity. c. In The Praise of Folly, Erasmus criticized scholars scientists, philosophers, & clergy of his time for being narrow minded. criticized the church: “Erasmus lay the egg that Luther hatched” Thomas More (1478-1536) – Utopia (Greek for nowhere), – creates ideal society on an island; but to achieve harmony and order people have to sacrifice individual rights ; also contained criticism of the politics, society, & religion of the times. 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 (1436-1517): reformed Spanish clergy and church, Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition Northern Renaissance Art Low Countries produced especially important artists Jan Van Eyck – Flemish painter, detailed realistic works Peter Brueghel the Elder (1520-1569)—focused on lives of ordinary people Bosch –master of symbolism and fantasy; religious and folk legends as themes Albrecht Durer (1471-1528) German – foremost northern Renaissance artist. Hans Holbein the Younger (1497-1543): Erasmus of Rotterdam, Thomas More Writers Francois Rabelais’ (1494-1553) Was a monk, who wrote a five- volume book Gargantua & Pantagruel which made fun of those who did not take the humanist point of view."Let nothing in the world be unknown to you" Montaigne (1533-1592) – developed essay form; modern skepticism Germany Regiomontanus; Nicholas of Cusa: mathematics Copernicus : heliocentric theory Cartography: Behaim and Schoner Fugger family in Germany (esp. Jacob Fugger (1459-1525): international banking, patronized the arts Myscticism: Meister Eckhart, Thomas á Kempis, Gerard Groote: belief in personal relationship with God Include other Germans listed above England: Elizabethan Period William Shakespeare Jacobean Period (James I) Authorized Bible, 1604 John Milton
  • 10. Spain: Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616): Don Quixote Domenikos El Greco (1541-1614): painter: mannerism ² “New” Monarchs: consolidated power and created Europe’s first modern nation-states French recovery after 100 Years’ War: Valios line of monarchs Louis XI “Spider King” (1461-83): large royal army, taxes, power over clergy Francis I (1515-1547): Condordat of Bologna, taille England: after 100 Years’ War War of the Roses – victorious House of Lancaster = rise of Tudor dynasty: Henry VII (1489-1509): Star Chamber (nobles tried w/o jury; often tortured) Henry VIII (1509-1547): English reformation Spain Marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon (1478-1516) & Isabella of Castile (1474-1504): 1492: unified Spain; Reconquista—removed last of Moors; expulsion of Jews hermandades: alliance of cities to oppose nobles Spanish Inquisition: monarchy enforced authority of the national church Habsburg Empire: (Holy Roman Empire) Maximilian I (1493-1519): gained much territory with marriage to Mary of Burgundy Charles V: most powerful ruler in Europe (1st Holy Roman Emperor) ruled Spanish and Austrian Hapsburg branches, sacked Rome in 1527 sought to prevent spread of Protestant Reformation in Germany Life in the 16th and 17th centuries Hierarchy: Countryside: manorial lords, peasants, landless workers Cities: merchants (bourgeoisie), artisans, laborers education or wealth became means of moving up social ladder (for the fortunate few) Demography: population growth leveled by 1650; cities saw larger increase than countryside Family: nuclear family; patriarchal; avg. lifespans – men = 27, women = 25!; divorce rare Witch Hunts: as many as 100,000 executed between 1500-1700; mostly elderly women Food and Diet: commoners relied on bread (& beer); upper-classes enjoyed meats, cheese, sweets; English ate the best; famines were reality in many parts Slavery: introduced by Portuguese blacks seen as exotic, highly prized in certain areas slavery existed in Mediterranean sugar plantations Renaissance Definitions Alexander VI - (1492-1503) Corrupt Spanish pope. He was aided militarily and politically by his son Cesare Borgia, who was the hero of The Prince. Dante Alighieri - Italian poet wrote Inferno and Divine Comedy. Boccaccio - (1313-1375) Wrote the Decameron which tells about ambitious merchants, portrays a sensual, and worldy society. Botticelli - One of the leading painters of the Florentine renaissance, developed a highly personal style. The Birth of Venus Brunelleschi - (1377-1446) Italian architect, celebrated for work in Florentine. He was anti-Gothic. Foundling Hospital in Florence.
  • 11. Michalangelo Buonarroti - (1475-1564) Worked in Rome. Painted the Sistine Chapel. Sculpted the statue of David. Castiglione - Wrote The Courtier which was about education and manners and had a great influence. It said that an upper class, educated man should know many academic subjects and be trained in music, dance, and art. Leonardo Da Vinci - (1452-1519)Artist who made religious paintings and sculptures like the Last Supper. Lorenzo de Medici - r(1469-1492) The Medici’s were a great banking family in Florence in the 15th century. He ruled government of Florence from behind the scene. Miguel De Cervantes - (1547-1616) Spanish writer. Wrote Don Quixote. Pico Della Mirandola - Wrote On the Dignity of Man which stated that man was made in the image of God before the fall and as Christ after the Resurrection. Man is placed in-between beasts and the angels. He also believed that there is no limits to what man can accomplish. Donatello - (1386-1466) Sculptor. Probably exerted greatest influence of any Florentine artist before Michelangelo. His statues expressed an appreciation of the incredible variety of human nature. Erasmus - (1466?-1536) Dutch Humanist, religious education. Wrote In Praise of Folly. Jacob Fugger - Headed leading banking/trading house in l6th century Europe. Giotto - (1276-1337) Florentine Painter who led the way in the use of realism. Hans Holbein the Younger - Painter noted for his portraits and religious paintings. Humanism - Humanists studied the Latin classics to learn what they reveal about human nature. Humanism emphasized human beings, their achievements, interests, and capabilities. Individualism - Individualism stressed personality, uniqueness, genius, and the fullest development of capabilities and talents. Julius II - r(1503-1513) Pope - very militaristic. Tore down the old Saint Peter’s Basilica and began work on the present structure in 1506. Niccolo Machiavelli - (1469-1527) Wrote The Prince which contained a secular method of ruling a country. Montaigne - (1533-1592) Michel de Montaigne is the finest representative of early modern skepticism. Created a new genre, the essay. Sir Thomas More - (1478-1535) Englishman, lawyer, poilitican, Chancellor for Henry VIII. Wrote Utopia which presented a revolutionary view of society. Executed for not compromising his religious beliefs.
  • 12. "New Monarchs" - Monarchies that took measures to limit the power of the Roman Catholic Church within their countries. Pazzi Conspiracy - Conspiracy to overthrow the Medici’s. Petrarch - (1304-1374) Father of the Renaissance. He believed the first two centuries of the Roman Empire to represent the peak in the development of human civilization. Quattrocento - The 1400’s. Cinquecento - The 1500’s. Rabelais - French satirical author.Gargantua and Pantagruel. "Renaissance Man" - A man that is multitalented and is well educated. Revival of antiquity - The awakening from the dark ages and the focusing on the Roman’s. Fra. Girolamo Savonarola - (1452-1498) Dominican friar who attacked paganism and moral vice of Medici and Alexander VI. Burned at stake. Secularism - The belief in material things instead of religious things. Lorenzo Valla - (1406-1457) On Pleasure, and On false Donation of Constantine. Father of modern historical criticism. Vernacular - Everyday language. Virtu - The striving for excellence.