Chapter 12 Recovery and Rebirth: The Age of the Renaissance Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance It’s a rebirth!! Renaissance = Rebirth Jacob Burckhardt Jacob Burckhardt Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860) Urban Society – an ELITE movement! Age of Recovery – post-plague, advances in textiles, metallurgy, Hanseatic League Rebirth of Greco-Roman culture – reconcile Christian and Pagan worlds Emphasis on individual ability – L’uomo universale and virtu Secularism – live for HERE and NOW, not the afterlife Meaning and Characteristics of the Italian Renaissance Is it a rebirth? Burckhardt challenged… – desire for property, end of serfdom, Magna Carta? Worldliness – Crusades? Learning – universities? Antiquity – Aristotle? Reform – Pope Greg VII, Cluniacs, Conciliar movement? Individualism Renaissance Family Patriarchal family Marriage for POSITION, not LOVE Men were typically older, established Women married in teens – provide dowry Childbirth dangerous Courtesans not uncommon e.g. Veronica Franco of Venice Gave rise to courtly love since marriage didn’t satisfy these yearnings Social Changes in the Renaissance The Nobility of the Aristocracy – money talks! Aristocracy: 2 – 3 percent of the population Reconstruction Peasants 85 – 90 percent of population Decline of manorial system and serfdom Peasants: Urban Society Petty burghers, shopkeepers, artisans, guildmasters, and guildsmen The Poor and Unemployed Slaves French Renaissance Castle of Chenonceaux Italian States in the Renaissance Five Major Powers Milan – Visconti, Sforza Venice – Great Council Don’t mess. Florence - The Medici The Papal States The Role of Women Isabella d’Este – “First Lady” of the Renaissance Catherine de Medici - France Isabella d’Este: First Lady of the Renaissance France and Spain fight over the peninsula Modern diplomatic system – Peace of Lodi solves interstate rivalry for 40 years Florence, Italy Florence, Italy: The Duomo The Florence Cathedral dome was completed by Brunelleschi in 1436 and restored Florentine pride. The interior dome fresco was painted by Giogio Vasari, most famous for his widely read book, The Lives of the Artists, which provided biographies of many of the Renaissance masters ©2003 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Renaissance Italy: The Rival States Machiavelli and the New Statecraft Italy failed to develop an effective central political system Fragmented states had to hire mercenaries commanded by condottieri who had no loyalty to anything but money Italy became increasingly vulnerable to larger, consolidated states Niccolo Machiavelli (1469 – 1527) The Prince Acquisition, maintenance and expansion of political power – do what you need to, morality aside “like a lion” and “like a fox” – Henry VII of England, Louis XI of France? Rome sacked by Spanish, German, Italian mercenaries in 1527 ending Renaissance glory The Intellectual Renaissance in Italy Italian Renaissance Humanism Humanism based on Greco-Roman literature Leonardo Bruni Petrarch (1304 – 1374) – Middle Ages were a “dark time” – reject scholasticism in favor of virtuous living Civic Humanism Florence was the birthplace Leonardo Bruni (1370 – 1444) “New Cicero” – be a statesman AND an intellectual! Venue for utilizing humanist education is POLITICS! Virtu was the successful PUBLIC demonstration of human powers Be well-rounded – L’uomo universale like Leonardo The Intellectual Renaissance in Italy So this pope walks into a bar… Renaissance Literature Interest in litterae humaniores or humane letters rather than technical writing of law, theology, philosophy Vernacular Literature takes off due to efforts of “Tuscan Triumverate” Poggio Bracciolini Dante – Divine Comedy, Beatrice Petrarch – sonnets, letters to antiquity, Cicero, sonnets to Laura Boccaccio – Decameron, letters to Fiammetta Growth of writing Leonardo Bruni – writes history of Florence, historical periodization, uses term “humanism” Secularization of history Lorenzo Valla – Donation of Constantine Poggio Bracciolini’s “joke book” The Intellectual Renaissance in Italy Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463 – 1494) Oration on the Dignity of Man – men can choose their own path – they are not like beasts! All things have a divine component Humanism and Philosophy Plato displaces Aristotle – universe is hierarchical placing man between God and nature (Neoplatonism) Marsilio Ficino (1433 – 1499) Translates Plato’s dialogues Synthesis of Christianity and antiquity Renaissance Hermeticism (magic) – humans could possess divinity through KNOWLEDGE and become magi or sages Renaissance Education Education was the key to changing human nature Medieval universities trained theologians, lawyers, doctors Renaissance education gave rise to secondary education – prep for LIVING Vittorino da Feltre “Liberal Studies” for the “free man” including history, philosophy, poetry, math, grammar, astronomy, music Create people who would be fit to lead and live in society Mostly for boys though some elite girls went Renaissance Education Manners also emphasized Castiglione’s NO MORE PUBLIC FLATULENCE! Book of the Courtier (1528) Be more refined! No more belching, public flatulence, spitting Be well-dressed, wellspoken, athletic, artistic, musical Conduct self with grace at court Northern Renaissance Dude. Cool. Less sudden than in Italy, but did occur in North Northern artists in many cases surpassed Italians Northern writers also revived classical Latin, though emphasis was more religious The Impact of Printing Johannes Uh Oh… Gutenberg Movable type (1445 – 1450) Gutenberg’s Bible (1455 or 1456) Spread of Printing – Venice, Mainz More laypeople reading, learning, questioning – key for Reformation The Northern Renaissance Dr. Faustus makes a deal with Satan… Erasmus of Rotterdam Praise of Folly Thomas More’s Utopia No new universities in Italy during Renaissance, but 14 new ones established in German states alone – including one at Wittenberg… Dr. Faustus – subject of Marlowe’s and Goethe’s writings…worth selling soul to devil for knowledge! The Artistic Renaissance Early Renaissance Masaccio (1401 – 1428) Movement and Anatomical Structure Donato di Donatello (1386 – 1466) David Filippo Brunelleschi (1377 – 1446) Church of San Lorenzo Duomo Perspective Leonardo da Vinci (1452 – 1519) Last Supper Mona Lisa – portraiture? Raphael (1483 – 1520) School of Athens Michelangelo (1475 – 1564) The Sistine Chapel The Northern Artistic Renaissance Jan van Eyck (c. 1380 – 1441) Giovanni Arnolfini and His Bride Albrecht Dürer (1471 – 1528) Adoration of the Magi Music in the Renaissance Guillaume Dufay The European State in the Renaissance I’m Crafty. The Renaissance State in Western Europe France Charles VII – royal army, ability to tax sans parliamentary consent (taille, gabelle) and independence of French Church vie Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges Noble Louis XI the Spider King (1461 – 1483) – breaks up smacknoble factions, including Charles the Bold of down! Burgundy, supports silk industry England War of the Roses - Henry VII Tudor (1485 – 1509) Marries Elizabeth of York Taxed wealthy nobles (barons) to raise army Court of Star Chamber – befriends lesser nobility No wars No livery and maintenance Commercial treaties The European State in the Renaissance I love my job. Spain Unification of Castile and Aragón 1469 Promoted exploration New roads and bridges – protective tariffs Establish Cortes Establishment of professional royal army Religious uniformity – Cardinal Francisco Jimenez/Ximines de Cisneros The Inquisition - Torquemada Conquest of Granada Expulsion of the Jews, Muslims The Lion Court (harem) in the Alhambra Granada, Spain (Christians claim from Muslims, 1492) Europe in the Renaissance Central, Eastern, and Ottoman Empires Central Europe: HRE Habsburg Dynasty – in place from 1438 tp 1806 Territory gained through MARRIAGE more than WAR Charles V – Controls HUGE part of Europe Charles V. Apparently dogs have been sniffing crotch since the 16th century… Austria, Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia from Grandpa Maximilian Burgundian lands from Grandma Mary, married to Max Aragon and Naples from Grandpa Ferdinand Castile and the Spain’s conquests from grandma Isabella Diverse lands were difficult to consolidate – local German princes maintained control, opening door for religious dissent and Reformation; only Spain was a uniform Catholic state Central, Eastern, and Ottoman Empires I advanced all the way to Vienna! Holla! The Struggle for Strong Monarchy in Eastern Europe I unified Russia! Poland and Hungary tried to establish centralized state but ultimately failed to consolidate power Russia, under Ivan III, gives the boot to the Mongols and establishes the capital at Moscow (Muscovite state) The Ottoman Turks and the end of the Byzantine Empire Byzantine Empire had been buffer between advancing Turks and Europe Turks spread into Byzantine territory Constantinople falls to the Turks (1453) Under Sulieman the Magnificent, Turks advance all the way to Vienna, but Charles V rallies Christian troops vs. “infidels” to push them back east to Hungary Renaissance Church: Heresy and Reform Disco inferno! William Langland’s Piers Plowman condemns Church corruption John Wyclif and the Lollards agree – Church is out of control! Translated Bible into English Declared a heretic at Council of Constance Body exhumed and burned Burn baby burn! John Hus (1374 – 1415) and the Hussites Urged the elimination of worldliness and corruption of the clergy Burned at the stake (1415) after condemnation at Council of Constance Renaissance Church: Conciliar Movement Instigated by Western Schism, conflict between spiritual and temporal authority New belief that the Church’s power was derived from the community – community should have a say Popes didn’t want council – much like Kings didn’t want parliament to meet and limit power Failure to end Schism and Avignon papacy made council necessary – Pisa 1409 After Pisa makes matters worse, Constance (1414-8) solves schism Final council – Basel (1449) Martin V reasserts papal authority, thus ending conciliar movement Renaissance Church: Papal Empowerment With the conciliar movement over after Basel, Popes may do what they pleased! Political trends of the Renaissance influenced their behavior Bribery – holding more than 1 office Absenteeism – being away from post Simony – buying/selling church offices Fornication/abandonment of celibacy – Pope Greg VII had made celibacy the law in 1073 Nepotism – passing church office to one’s children (?!) Selling indulgences – pay out of purgatory, build the Pope a nice crib! Pluralism Renaissance Church: Renaissance Papacy I’m the warrior pope. Julius II (1503 – 1513) “Warrior Pope” went on military campaign to maintain control of papal states! Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling Patrons of Culture Julius II (see above) Leo X (1513 – 1521) son of Lorenzo De Medici, made a cardinal at age 13 and pope at 38; great patron of Raphael Renaissance Church: Resistance Lay Piety and Mysticism Extravagance of papacy, conflict between Church and state, and failure to stop Black Death created a unique situation People were obsessed with their salvation as war, plague, and famine killed millions Salvation through “good deeds” Growing importance of purgatory, established in 1254 “12-step method” for salvation? Too mechanical! Growth of mysticism People longed for spirituality Meister Eckhart – oneness w/God Johannes Tauler – oneness w/God by expressing love of God in everyday activities Gerard Groote – Imitate Christ! Live a life of piety! William of Occam’s concept of nominalism – spiritual truth through FAITH, not REASON Discussion Questions What social changes did the Renaissance bring about? How did Machiavelli deal with the issue of political power? How did the printing press change European society? What technical achievements did Renaissance artists make? Why were they significant? What was the relation between art and politics in Renaissance Italy? How did the popes handle the growing problems that were emerging in the Church in the Fifteenth and early Sixteenth Century? Web Links Renaissance Secrets Explore Leonardo’s Studio Leonardo da Vinci on the BBC Vatican Exhibit – Rome Reborn Renaissance – Focus on Florence The Uffizi Gallery – Florence Vatican Museums – The Sistine Chapel Gutenberg.de The War of the Roses The Ottoman Website