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Summary European Renaissance and Reformation

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    Summary European Renaissance and Reformation



    Summary European Renaissance and Reformation - Transcript


    World History Survey

    Chapter 17 European Renaissance and Reformation 1300 1600

    Section 1 Italy Birthplace of the Renaissance

    The years 1300 to 1600 saw a rebirth of learning and culture in Europe Called the Renaissance it spread north from Italy It began there for three reasons First Italy had several important cities whereas most of northern Europe was still rural Second these cities included a class of merchants and bankers who were becoming wealthy and powerful Third Italian artists and scholars were being inspired by the ruined buildings and other reminders of classical Rome

    That new interest in the classical past led to an important value in Renaissance culture humanism This was a deep interest in what people have already achieved as well as what they could achieve in the future Scholars did not try to connect classical writings to Christian teaching but tried to understand them on their own terms

    Renaissance thinkers stressed the things of the world In the Middle Ages the emphasis had been mostly on spiritual values One way that powerful or wealthy people showed this interest in worldly things was by paying artists writers and musicians to create beautiful works of art

    Men tried to show that they could master many elds of study or work Someone who succeeded in many elds was admired greatly The artist Leonardo da Vinci was an example of this ideal He was a painter a scientist and an inventor Men were expected to be charming witty well educated well mannered athletic and self controlled Women were expected not to create art but to inspire artists

    Renaissance artists sometimes used new methods Sculptors made gures more realistic than those from the Middle Ages Painters used perspective to create the illusion that

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    their paintings were three dimensional The subject of artwork changed also Art in the Middle Ages was mostly religious but Renaissance artists reproduced other views of life Michelangelo showed great skill as an architect a sculptor and a painter

    Renaissance writers reached high achievements as well Several wrote in their native languages whereas most writing in the Middle Ages had been in Latin Writers also changed their subject matter They wrote to express their own thoughts and feelings or to portray in detail an individual Dante and others wrote poetry letters and stories that were self expressive and more realistic Niccol Machiavelli took a new approach to understanding government He focused on telling rulers how to expand their power even if that meant taking steps that the Church might view as evil

    Section 2 The Northern Renaissance

    By 1450 the bubonic plague had ended in northern Europe and the population was recovering Also the Hundred Years War between France and England was ending The suffering caused by these two events was fading and the new ideas from Italy spread to northern Europe where they were quickly adopted The northern Renaissance had a difference however While the educated people there became interested in classical learning they were more likely to combine that with interest in religious ideas

    Major artists appeared in parts of Germany France Belgium and the Netherlands The use of oil based paints became popular D rer painted religious subjects and realistic landscapes Holbein van Eyck and Bruegel painted life like portraits and scenes of peasant life They revealed much about the times

    The new ideas of Italian art moved to the north where artists began to use them Painters in Flanders were deeply interested in showing life in realistic ways They painted members of the rising merchant class and peasants revealing much about life of the period One pioneered in the use of oil based paints

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    Writers of the northern Renaissance combined humanism with deep Christian faith They urged reforms in the Church and society to try to make people more devoted to God and more just Thomas More wrote a book about an imaginary ideal society where greed war and con ict did not exist

    William Shakespeare is widely viewed as the greatest playwright of all time His plays showed a brilliant command of the English language and a deep understanding of people and how they interact with one another

    One reason that learning spread so rapidly during the Renaissance was the invention of movable type The Chinese had invented the process of carving characters onto wooden blocks They then arranged them in words inked the blocks and pressed them against paper to print pages In 1440 a German Johann Gutenberg adopted this practice He produced his rst book a Bible in 1455 The technology then spread rapidly By 1500 presses in Europe had printed nearly 10 million books

    Printing made it easier to make many copies of a book As a result written works became available far and wide Fewer books were printed in Latin and more books were printed in languages such as English French Spanish Italian or German As a result more people began to read the Bible on their own Some formed ideas about Christianity that differed from those of the Church

    Section 3 Luther Starts the Reformation

    By 1500 Renaissance values emphasizing the individual and worldly life weakened the in uence of the Church At the same time many people sharply criticized the Church for some of its practices Popes seemed more concerned with luxury and political power than with spiritual matters Critics resented the fact that they paid taxes to support the Church in Rome The lower clergy had faults Many local priests lacked education and couldn t teach people Others took actions that broke their vows as priests

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    In the past reformers had urged that the Church change its ways to become more spiritual and humble Christian humanists such as Erasmus and More added their voices to calls for change In the early 1500s the calls grew louder

    In 1517 a German monk and professor named Martin Luther protested some actions of a Church of cial That person was selling what were called indulgences By paying money to the Church people thought they could win salvation Luther challenged this practice and others He posted a written protest on the door of a castle church His words were quickly printed and began to spread throughout Germany Thus began the Reformation the movement for reform that led to the founding of new Christian churches

    Soon Luther pushed for broader changes He said that people could win salvation only through faith not good works He said that religious beliefs should be based on the Bible alone and that the pope had no real authority He said that each person was equal before God He or she did not need a priest to explain the Bible to them

    The pope punished Luther for his views but he refused to take them back The Holy Roman Emperor a strong Catholic called Luther an outlaw His books were to be burned No one was to shelter him Meanwhile many of his ideas were being put into practice The Lutheran Church was born around 1522

    In 1524 peasants in Germany hoped to use Luther s ideas to change society They demanded an end to serfdom a condition like slavery When it was not granted they revolted Luther disagreed with this revolt and the German princes killed thousands in putting the revolt down Some nobles supported Luther because they saw a chance to weaken the emperor s power German princes joined forces against Luther Some princes protested this War broke out between Catholics and these Protestant forces in Germany It nally ended in 1555 with the Peace of Augsburg That treaty granted each prince the right to decide whether his subjects would be Catholic or Protestant

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    The Catholic Church faced another challenge to its power in England Henry VIII the king was married to a princess of Spain She had borne him a daughter but he wanted a son This could prevent a civil war erupting when he died His wife was too old to have another child but the pope refused to grant him a divorce In 1534 Henry had the English Parliament pass a number of laws that took England out of the Catholic Church The laws made the king or queen not the pope head of the Church of England Henry remarried four times gaining his only son from his third wife

    One of Henry s daughters Elizabeth became queen in 1558 and completed the task of creating a separate English church New laws gave the new religion some traits that would appeal to both Protestants and Catholics In this way Elizabeth hoped to end religious con ict in England

    Elizabeth s England had to face a threat from Spain too In 1588 King Philip II of Spain launched a huge invasion of ships to conquer England This eet was defeated by a combination of English ghting skill and a terrible storm Though England survived Elizabeth s reign was marked by constant money problems

    Section 4 The Reformation Continues

    Protestantism arose elsewhere in the 1530s under the leadership of John Calvin Calvin wrote an important book that gave structure to Protestant beliefs He taught that people are sinful by nature and only those God chooses the elect will be saved He said that God knew from the beginning which people would be saved and which would not Calvin created a government run by religious leaders in a city in Switzerland The city had strict rules of behavior that urged people to live deeply religious lives Anyone who preached different religious ideas might be burned at the stake

    A preacher named John Knox was impressed by Calvin s high moral ideals Knox put these ideas into practice in Scotland This was the beginning of the Presbyterian Church Others in Switzerland Holland and France adopted Calvin s ideas as well In France his

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    followers were called Huguenots Con ict between them and Catholics often turned to violence In 1572 mobs killed about 12 000 Huguenots Another Protestant church that arose was the Anabaptists They preached that people should be baptized into the faith as adults They in uenced some later groups

    Protestant churches grew but millions remained true to the Catholic faith Still the Catholic Church took steps to reform itself A Spanish noble named Ignatius founded a new group in the Church based on deep devotion to Jesus Members started schools across Europe They tried to convert people to Catholicism who were not Christians In addition they tried to stop the spread of Protestant faiths in Europe

    Two popes of the 1500s helped bring about changes in the Church Paul III took several steps including calling a great council of church leaders at Trent in northern Italy The council which met in 1545 passed these doctrines

    the Church s interpretation of the Bible was nal Christians needed good works as well as faith to win salvation the Bible and the Church had equal authority in setting out Christian beliefs and indulgences could be sold

    Paul also put in action a kind of court called the Inquisition It was charged with nding trying and punishing people who broke the rules of the Church His successor Paul IV put these policies into practice These actions helped revive the Church and allowed it to survive the challenge of the Protestants

    CHAPTER OVERVIEW

    In the 1300s a renewed interest in classical learning and

    the arts arose in Italy Thinkers in northern Europe adopted these ideas as well but with a spiritual focus The desire for a more satisfying spiritual life led some to revolt against the Catholic Church as new churches were founded In response the Catholic Church undertook some reforms of its own strengthening the faith

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