Renaissance and Reformation Section 1. Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 The Renaissance: an introduction - YouTubeThe Renaissance: an introduction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Italian Renaissance
Advertisements

Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance I. Italy’s Advantages A
“It is always darkest just before the day dawneth.”
The Renaissance and the Reformation
Objectives Describe the characteristics of the Renaissance and understand why it began in Italy. Identify Renaissance artists and explain how new ideas.
Ohio Academic Content Standard #6
NEXT Section 1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance The Italian Renaissance is a rebirth of learning that produces many great works of art and literature.
THE RENAISSANCE.
The people that survived the wars and the plague in the Middle Ages wanted to celebrate life. They began to question institutions, such as.
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
What was the Renaissance? *  Means ‘rebirth’  Transition from medieval era to the early modern age  Began in Italy 
The Renaissance. What was the Renaissance? The Renaissance was… A cultural movement that took place in Europe from the 14 th to the 16 th centuries A.
Kick Off October 9, 2013 Imagine that you have lived in Florence, Italy immediately following the Black Death. You survived, but many around you haven’t.
The Italian Renaissance
The Italian Renaissance
The Renaissance Chapter 13. Start Up Why is this the most famous painting in the world?
Renaissance and Reformation Section 1: The Italian Renaissance.
The Renaissance l The Renaissance was a change in the social, economic, political, and cultural life of Europe. l Renaissance artists and writers turned.
Ch 6 Sec 1  In the early 1300’s a movement began in Italy.  The Renaissance or “Rebirth” It was a philosophical and artistic movement. Renewed interest.
Chapter 1 European Renaissance and Reformation,
The Renaissance. Part One: An Introduction To The Renaissance.
The Renaissance 1300s-1650.
French for “Rebirth” Growth in the arts and learning. Began in Italy around 1300 (Florence became the center) Italy’s advantages:  Growing cities  Wealthy.
Intellectuals began to re-examine society and those “commonly accepted” beliefs… Lasting legacy….political world…Are politicians ‘moral’? Should your.
Renaissance and Reformation Section 1. Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Click the icon to play Listen to History audio. Click the icon below to connect.
BELLWORK Grab a handout from the front stool on “The Importance of Moveable Type.” Then, answer the following questions: 1.Who was Johann Gutenberg? 2.Why.
BIRTHPLACE OF THE RENAISSANCE. RENAISSANCE  Means “rebirth” and refers to the revival of art and learning following the Middle Ages.  It began in Italy.
The Renaissance Explain how and why the Italian Renaissance came to be and why the city-states were so important to the Renaissance.
The Renaissance in Italy Chapter 13: Section 1. What Was the Renaissance? Time of creativity Shift from agricultural to an urban society.
THE RENAISSANCE Name________________________________Period______.
The Italian Renaissance. Objectives Today we will be able to identify the factors involved in the development of the Italian Renaissance and the characteristics.
Unit 7 Vocabulary. The Renaissance: rebirth of cultural and intellectual pursuits after the stagnation of the Middle Ages. This period in European history,
The Italian Renaissance
Renaissance Chapter 13. Renaissance Renaissance means –“Rebirth” It was a time of change in Politics, Social Structure, Economics, and Culture. Changed.
Chapter 11, Lesson 1 The Renaissance Begins It Matters Because: Renaissance development helped shape today’s arts, architecture, literature, & science.
UNIT 4 Chapter 17 – European Renaissance & Reformation THE RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION.
The Renaissance was a time of renewal Renaissance means rebirth and Europe was recovering from the Dark ages and the plague. People had lost their faith.
What caused the italian renaissance? The Black Plague Decline in population leads to food surplus and increase in business activity Food surplus leads.
Renaissance.
“It is always darkest just before the day dawneth.” - Thomas Fuller, 1650 English Theologian & historian.
Italian City-States Recovery of Classical Culture.
The Renaissance Introduction As the economy and society changed, new ideas began to appear. This period of interest and developments in art, literature,
European Renaissance A Golden Age in the Arts. What was the Renaissance? A rebirth in art and learning that took place in Western Europe between 1300.
Brunelleschi Donatello Leonardo Machiavelli Michelangelo Raphael.
Italian Renaissance. Setting the Stage During the late Middle Ages, Europeans suffered from both war and plague. Those that survived, questioned the Church.
European Renaissance A Golden Age in the Arts. What was the Renaissance? A rebirth in art and learning that took place in Western Europe between 1300.
European Renaissance Western Europe 1300 to 1600 C.E.
Europe in the 15 th Century AP World History Notes Chapter 15.
Renaissance and Reformation Main Idea: In Italy the growth of wealthy trading cities and new ways of thinking helped lead to the rebirth of the arts and.
RENAISSANCE ce RENAISSANCE MEANS REBIRTH RENAISSANCE MEANS REBIRTH REBIRTH OF LEARNING AND A REDISCOVERY OF IDEAS WHICH WERE LOST DURING THE.
Section 1: The Italian Renaissance
The Italian Renaissance Preview Starting Points Map: Europe Main Idea / Reading Focus The Beginning of the Renaissance Renaissance Ideas Quick Facts:
Chapter 15 - Renaissance and Reformation
RENAISSANCE ce RENAISSANCE MEANS REBIRTH
BELLWORK Define the following words: Humanism Individualism Secular
Click the icon to play Listen to History audio.
The Renaissance and Reformation (1300–1650)
The Italian Renaissance
Italian Renaissance.
Italian Renaissance.
Chapter 17 The Renaissance
The Italian Renaissance
The Italian Renaissance
Renaissance
European Renaissance and Reformation
The Italian Renaissance
European Renaissance and Reformation
The Italian Renaissance
Objectives Describe the characteristics of the Renaissance and understand why it began in Italy. Identify Renaissance artists and explain how new ideas.
Presentation transcript:

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 The Renaissance: an introduction - YouTubeThe Renaissance: an introduction - YouTube

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Click the icon to play Listen to History audio. Click the icon below to connect to the Interactive Maps.

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Main Idea In Italy the growth of wealthy trading cities and new ways of thinking helped lead to a rebirth of the arts and learning. This era became known as the Renaissance. The Italian Renaissance Changes in Society Decreased population-why? Surplus agriculture-why? So what is the result? City-states emerge Specialized areas-England,wool; Germany,wheat

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Michelangelo’s painting was different from the art of the Middle Ages, and only one way in which European society began changing after the 1300s. Changes in Society The Beginning of the Renaissance 1300, Black Death, starvation, warfare Catastrophic events, enormous loss of life Decrease in population led to: –Increase in food production –Decline in food prices –More money to spend –Specialization in products Urban areas specialized, particularly in Italy Italy divided into several large city-states in north, various kingdoms, Papal States south Catholic Church, nobles, merchants, artisans dominated society in city-states Many sought to display new wealth with knowledge of arts

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Milan, Florence Milan, west of Venice, based economy on agriculture, silk, weapons Florence, to south, famous for banking, cloth Merchants refined raw wool into fine cloth Venice access to sea, Venice built economy, reputation on trade Shipbuilding prospered Wealthy Venetian merchants built unique city, “work of art”

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Find the Main Idea How did society and cities change in the 1300s?

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 As the economy and society changed, new ideas began to appear. This period of interest and developments in art, literature, science and learning is known as the Renaissance, French for “rebirth.” Italians who could read looked for more information Searched libraries, found lost texts New World of Ideas As they read, began to think about philosophy, art, science in different ways Began to believe in human capacity to create, achieve Different Viewpoints Renaissance Ideas

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 RootsHumanities Humanism Interest in ancient Greek, Roman culture Characteristics of good education Scholastic education gave way to classics: rhetoric, grammar, poetry, history, Latin, Greek Subjects came to be known as humanities, movement they inspired known as humanism Humanists emphasized individual accomplishment Roots traced to work of Dante; work contained glimpses of what would become focus on human nature Historians believe Renaissance began with two humanists who lived after Dante—Giovanni Boccaccio, Francesco Petrarch Both wrote literature in everyday language not Latin Advances were made in medicine, as well as astronomy

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Early 1500s life in Italy seemed insecure, precarious Church no longer served as source of stability, peace Form of humanism developed from Petrarch’s ideas; focus was secular, was worldly rather than spiritual Humanists argued that individual achievement, education could be fully expressed only if people used talents, abilities in service of cities. Service Ideal Renaissance man came to be “universal man,” accomplished in classics, but also man of action, who could respond to all situations. Renaissance Man Secular Writers

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 How to Rule Philosopher, statesman Niccolò Machiavelli also wrote influential book Experiences with violent politics influenced opinions on how governments should rule in The Prince Examples of Renaissance Men

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Machiavelli Machiavellian advice seemed to encourage harsh treatment of citizens, rival states Describes men as “ungrateful, fickle, liars, and deceivers” Advises rulers to separate morals from politics –Power, ruthlessness more useful than idealism –Ruler must do whatever necessary to maintain political power, even if cruel Machiavelli’s theory that “the end justifies the means” deviated from accepted views of correct behavior Idea that state an entity in itself, separate from its ruler, became foundation for later political philosophy

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Scientific Challenges Science soon became important avenue of inquiry Church’s teachings about world were challenged, particularly that Earth center of universe Earth, Sun Nicholas Copernicus said Sun was center of universe Galileo Galilei arrested by church officials for saying Earth orbited Sun Science of the Renaissance

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Page 439

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Draw Conclusions What were some important new ideas of the Renaissance?

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Renaissance artists wanted to paint the natural world as realistically as possible. The arts a reflection of the new humanist spirit Medieval artists—idealized and symbolic representations Renaissance artists depicted what they observed in nature artists worked for The church whoever paid them governments Patrons of the Arts Renaissance Art Lorenzo de Medici supported most talented artists Milan, ruling Sforza family benefactors of artists, others Competition Among Patrons

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Religious paintings focused on personality Humanist interest in classical learning, human nature Building design reflected humanist reverence for Greek, Roman culture Classical architecture favored Classical Influence Studied perspective, 3- dimensional objects Experimented with using color to portray shapes, textures Subject matter changed= artists began to paint, sculpt scenes from Greek, Roman myths Artists Methods Styles and Techniques

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Highly talented in all fields His paintings still studied and admired Wrote out ideas, filling 20,000 pages of notes His interests, enthusiasm boundless Studied anatomy won fame with Pietà, sculpture of Jesus’ mother Mary holding son’s dead body Sculpture communicates grief, love, acceptance, immortality Michelangelo Marble statue=David Most famous painting, artwork on ceiling of Sistine Chapel=scenes from Old Testament considered one of greatest achievements in art history Sculpture, Painting Leonardo da Vinci

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 David Pieta, 1499

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 movie/roma/link/sistina.h tmhttp:// movie/roma/link/sistina.h tm

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Renaissance architecture reached height with work of Donato Bramante Had already achieved fame when chosen architect of Rome Design for St. Peter’s Basilica influenced appearance of many smaller churches Bramante Raffaello Sanzio=Raphael Renowned painter, accomplished architect Most famous work, The School of Athens, fresco—painting made on fresh, moist plaster Also well known for many paintings of the Madonna Raphael Other Artists

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 School of Athens Resurrection of Christ

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Find the Main Idea What was the ideal of Renaissance art?

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Leonardo Da Vinci Painter, writer, inventor, architect, engineer, mathematician, musician, philosopher

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1

Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 Homework Machiavelli: The Prince: Chapter I Read chapters 1, 2, 3 Write a short essay in which you defend Machiavelli’s theories, or disagree with them You should include an opening paragraph with a thesis, a body with supporting statements (including from the work), and a concluding paragraph Machiavelli: The Prince: Chapter I