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The Renaissance in Europe
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The Italian States
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Content Vocabulary Mercenary Republic Burgher Bonus: Burgher Republic A soldier who fights primarily for pay A form of government in which the leader is not a king or monarch and certain citizens have the right to vote Member of the middle class Shopkeepers artisans skilled workers A form of government in which the leader is not a king or monarch and members of the middle class have the right to vote
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The Italian States Italy led Europe out of the dark ages because of its access to overland and maritime (sea) Trade creating independent city states with their own governments which were open to new ideas in Science and Artdark agesScience
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The Italian States Five major urban centers – Milan, Venice, Florence, Rome, and Naples – Dominated Italy and played crucial roles in Italian politics and culture. These City States (Area Controlled by a leading business person instead of a monarch) became wealthy because of their locations on major trade routes
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*The Italian States Powerful monarchies in other parts of Europe, particularly France and Spain, began to vie for control of Italy, leading to a series of wars between French and Spanish forces These wars culminated in the 1527 pillaging of Rome by the Armies of Charles I of Spain
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The Italian States In his book The Prince, Machiavelli expressed views that political activity should be independent of moral principals and that the end justifies the means and rule by any means necessaryMachiavelli
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The Italian States Renaissance society, like society in the Middle Ages, was divided into three social classes: the clergy, the nobility, and the peasants and townspeople
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Peasant life hadn’t changed much since the dark ages changed
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The Italian States Although nobles made up only a small portion of the population, they dominated society and were expected to adhere to certain ideals
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The Italian States Townspeople were divided into three groups: the wealthy urban upper class, the burghers – Shopkeepers, artisans, guild masters, and guild members; and the workers, who earned low wages, along with the unemployed. The poor workers and the unemployed were by far the most numerous
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance
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Content Vocabulary Humanism Vernacular An intellectual movement of the Renaissance based on the study of the humanities, Away from purely religious topics to include the knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Romans Writing in a local language of everyday speech of a particular region to allow more people access to new information
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Content Vocabulary Fresco Perspective New artistic technique of Painting on fresh, wet plaster with water based paints Artistic techniques used to give the effect of three dimensional depth to two- dimensional surfaces
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Humanism, and intellectual movement of the Renaissance, was based on the study of humanities, which included grammar, logic, rhetoric, poetry, moral philosophy, mathematics, astronomy, music, and history going back to the teaching of the Greeks and Romans Why was this so different than what they had been doing?
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Petrarch, often called the father of Italian Renaissance humanism, emphasized the use of pure classical Latin, resulting in the widespread us of humanist ideas in scholarly works
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Often writers, such as Dante Alighieri and Christian de Pizan, wrote in the Vernacular in order to be accessible to a larger audience The invention of the printing press in the mid-fifteenth century contributed to the rise in literacy
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Liberal studies were at the core of humanist schools as humanist educators aimed to create complete citizens, virtuous and wise
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance Renaissance artists developed a worldview that placed human beings at the center. They also used a new technique in painting and sculpture to imitate nature, especially the human form, in their art
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance The High Renaissance (about 1490 to 1520) produced master artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Michelangelo. The artists of northern Europe also imitated nature, but they used different approaches than their counterparts in Italy
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Ideas and Art of the Renaissance The High Renaissance (about 1490 to 1520) produced master artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Michelangelo. The artists of northern Europe also imitated nature, but they used different approaches than their counterparts in Italy Leonardo Da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa and carved the Statue of David
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