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The Northern Renaissance as a whole. The Courtier 1. According to Castiglione, what physical...
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Transcript of The Northern Renaissance as a whole. The Courtier 1. According to Castiglione, what physical...
The Northern Renaissance as a whole
The Courtier
1. According to Castiglione, what physical attributed befitted a courtier?*Medium height, well proportioned, nimble, strong, light, and quick
2. Why did a courtier need to handle different kinds of weapons skillfully?
* to be ready to fight in war, and to defend himself in a fight with another gentleman
3. Why did Castiglione feel a courtier should engage in such activities as hunting, swimming, and tennis?
* to be better prepared to fight in war, to demonstrate his skill and distinguish himself, to become physically fit, and to fit in with nobles at court.
The Prince
1. Take 5 minutes to share your cause and effect chart with the person sitting next to you
2. Write a numbered list of tips for princes who want to gain fame and public approval1. Set a good example
2. Do great deeds
3. Encourage excellence
4. Foster peace
5. Reward success
6. Respect citizens/ subjects
How was Northern Humanism spread?
By the learning imported by students returning to the Netherlands from Italy
The French invasions of ItalyOccurred between 1495- 1559
What happened during the French invasions of Italy?
A general struggle for power and territory among the Italian city- states and European monarchies (France, England, Holy Roman Empire, Scotland)
Included an increased number of alliances, counter- alliance and betrayal
How did these invasions start?
Ludovico (Il Moro) Sforza, of Milan, asked the French king, Charles VIII to aid him when Milan was challenged by Italian city- state rivals Naples, Florence and the Borgia Pope Alexander VI (who ruled the papal states).
Charles VIII responded with an invasion of Florence and Naples.
When Piero de Medici attempted to appease Charles VIII, Girolamo Savanorola helped agitate the Florentines, and they exiled Piero.
Louis XII, Charles’s successor, eventually invaded Milan in 1499
What is the conclusion of these invasions?
Italy’s political power declinesThe states of Italy, which had wielded power disproportionate to their size during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, were reduced to second-rate powers or destroyed entirely.
France fought too many wars in Italy and outspent itself
By the end of the wars in 1559, Habsburg Spain had been established as the premier power of Europe, to the detriment of France.
Witnesses to Italy’s political decline
Da Vinci
Raphael
Michelangelo
Niccolo Machiavelli
Important Northern Renaissance Writers
Desiderious Erasmus (1466- 1536)
The most famous of northern Renaissance writers
Tried to unite the classical ideal of civic virtue with Christian ideals
His works included opposition to church involvement in government and satirized (ridiculed) religious superstition.
Produced a Greek edition of the New Testament (1516)
Also wrote, Praise of Folly in which he made fun of greedy merchants, heart sick lovers, argumentative lovers and pompous (arrogant) priests
Thomas More (1478- 1535)
English humanistGood friends with Erasmus.Best known for Utopia, a critique of society that envisioned an imaginary society based on tolerance and communal property.Wrote in Latin
Women and the Northern Renaissance
Most Europeans at this time could not read and write.Those who could afford schooling sent their sons
Christine de PizanSpoke out against the practice of sending only boys to school
Very educated
Was one of the first women to earn a living by writing
Mostly wrote about men’s objection to teaching women
Ex: The Book of the City of Ladies
Printing Press
History of Writing:
• 2700 B.C. Egyptians write books on papyrus scrolls
• 1000 B.C. Chinese make books by writing on strips of bamboo
• A.D. 300 Romans write on sheets of parchment (treated animal skin)
• A.D. 800 Irish monks hand- write and hand- illustrate The Book of Kells
Life Before the Printing Press
Kings and princes had encouraged schools and literacy to help provide educated bureaucrats to staff the offices of their kingdoms.
By the 15th century a new literate lay public had been created thanks to the expansion of schools and universities during the late Middle Ages.
Demand for cheap books and expansion of lay education led to the creation of the Gutenberg Printing Press.
Printing Press
Gutenberg Printing Press
Johan Gutenberg invents the printing press in the German city of Mainz, the center of printing for the whole of Western Europe.
Printing had existed, but this was the first time movable components were incorporated.
Popular books in the early decades of print were books of
Religion
Calendars
How to books
Printing Press cont.
About 1455 Gutenberg prints the first complete book on a printing press it is known as the Gutenberg Bible.
By 1500 printing presses operated in at least 60 German cities and in more than 200 cities throughout Europe.
The printing press was a boon (advantage) to the careers of humanists, who now gained international audiences.
Effects of the invention
Standardized texts enabled a print revolution which made anyone who could read an instant authority
Rulers and the church were now dealing with a less naïve, (innocent) audiences.
Print became a powerful tool for political and religious propaganda
Kings could now instruct people more easily
Clergymen were now able to mass produce both indulgences and pamphlets.
Elizabethan Age
Renaissance reaches England in the mid 1500s
It is known as the “Elizabethan Age” after Queen Elizabeth I who reigned from 1558- 1603
Among the most famous English writers was William Shakespeare, many regard him as the greatest playwright of all time
Revered the classics and drew on them for inspiration and plots
Works display a masterful command of the English language and deep understanding of human beings
Many of his plays examine human flaws