European Renaissance and Reformation Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance.

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European Renaissance and Reformation Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

Transcript of European Renaissance and Reformation Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance.

Page 1: European Renaissance and Reformation Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance.

European Renaissance and

ReformationItaly: Birthplace of the Renaissance

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Italy’s Advantages

City States Wealthy MerchantsGreece and Rome

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City States

Use text page 37

Why are the major City-States primarily located near the sea?

How would these City-States ideal breeding grounds for intellectual revolution?

What contributed to the Italians pursuing intellectual interests such as Art?

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Merchants and the Medici

Use the text pgs. 37-38

How did the merchants come to control the politics of the City-States?

Who were the Medici and why were they so powerful?

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The Renaissance Man

All educated men should create art!

A man who excels in many fields is praised as a “universal man” of Renaissance man.

A man should be charming, witty, and well educated.

He should sing, dance, play music, and write poetry. As well as be a skilled rider, wrestler, and swordsman.

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The Renaissance Woman

According to the Courtier, upper-class women were expected to be charming but not to seek fame.

A woman should inspire art; not create art.

Renaissance women were not to influence politics

However women like Isabella D’Este (pictured) was very involved in politics and the arts.

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The Renaissance Revolutionizes Art

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The Renaissance Revolutionizes Art

A realistic Style- copied from classical models. Influenced by the Greek and Roman artist

Painters used the technique of perspective, which shows a three dimensions on a flat surface

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Leonardo da Vinci

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Leonardo, Renaissance Man

A painter, sculptor, inventor and scientist. A true Renaissance Man

He studied how muscles move and how veins in a leaf are arranged.

He would incorporate his findings in his art.

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Leonardo da Vinci’s Inventions

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Raphael Sanzio

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Raphael Advances Realism

Student of Michelangelo and Leonardo

His Favorite subject was the Madonna and child (top right) he often portrayed them as gentle and calm

In his greatest achievement, Raphael filled the walls of Pope Julius II’s library with paintings

School of Athens (left)

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Michelangleo

Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, commonly known as Michelangelo, was an Italian sculptor, painter, architect, poet, and engineer of the High Renaissance who exerted an unparalleled influence on the development of Western art.

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Michelangelo Buonarrotihttp://youtu.be/NXyi82dYRxE

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Renaissance Literature

Renaissance writers began to develop the techniques still used today. They began writing in the vernacular (local

language) Wrote for self-expression and portrayed the

individuality of their subjects.

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Dante

Dante began writing his works in Italian instead of classical Latin. His most famous work is “Inferno” which portrays a man’s journey through the nine circles of Hell.

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Dante’s “Inferno”

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Francesco PetrarchFather of Renaissance Humanism

Petrarch wrote in both the vernacular (Italian) and Latin.

Famous for his sonnets (14 line poem)

Who is Laura?

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Machiavelli Advises Rulers

Niccolò Machiavelli wrote a political guidebook entitled “The Prince”.

In “The Prince”, Machiavelli examines how a ruler can gain power and keep it.

He believed that for a ruler to succeed in a wicked world, a leader had to be as strong as a lion and shrewd as a fox.

He was not concerned with moral correctness, only political effectiveness.

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Women Writers

Women writers of the Renaissance wrote about personal subjects, not politics.

Vittoria Colonna wrote sonnets with Michelangelo and helped to publish the Courtier.