Transcript

The Renaissance1485–1660

Renaissance Timeline

1558:

Elizabeth I

crowned

1517:

Martin Luther

begins Protestant

Reformation

1588:

English navy

defeats Spanish

Armada

1649:

Charles I executed;

English monarchy

suspended

1480 1660

1509:

Henry VIII

crowned

c. 1533:

Henry VIII splits

Church of

England from

Rome

1564:

Shakespeare

born

1620:

Mayflower lands

at Plymouth

Rock

What Was the Renaissance?

The Renaissance (French for ―rebirth‖) was a great

revival of art, literature, and learning in Europe.

•It began in Italy in the fourteenth century and spread

across Europe to England over the next 100 years.

•Interest in the classical learning of ancient Greece and

Rome was renewed.

•The arts and sciences flowered.

•The human spirit of curiosity and creativity seemed

reenergized.

Characteristics of the Renaissance

•People read ancient Greek and Roman texts to

expand their understanding of the world.

•A humanist philosophy spread, focusing on human life

in the present as well as on eternity.

•Printing made books more widely available.

•The wealthy, growing merchant class began to

challenge the power of the church and the nobility.

•Scholarly Latin spread across Europe, aiding the

sharing of ideas across cultures.

The Renaissance and the Arts

Art flourished during the Renaissance. Church officials,

royalty, and wealthy families served as patrons to artists

such as

•Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519)

•Michelangelo (1475–1564)

•Edmund Spenser

(1552?–1599)

•William Shakespeare

(1564–1616)

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A study for Leda and the Swan by

Leonardo da Vinci.

Humanism in the Renaissance

•Humanists combined ideas from Latin and Greek

classics with traditional Christian thought to teach

people how to live and rule. They sought

•to answer questions about life—―What is a good life?‖

and ―How do I lead a good life?‖

•to use the classics to strengthen, not discredit,

Christianity

•Desiderius Erasmus and Thomas More were two well-

known humanists who helped shape European

thought and history.

The Invention of the Printing Press

In the early 1450s Johannes Gutenberg, a German,

invented the printing press. His invention transformed

the way information and ideas were exchanged.

•Books no longer had

to be copied by hand.

•Books became more

numerous, available,

and affordable.

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The Protestant Reformation

•began with Martin Luther in Wittenberg, Germany,

1517 and spread across Europe to England

•Martin Luther believed that religion should be based on a

personal understanding of the Bible, not on the authority

of the Pope and his bishops.

•gained momentum as the Catholic Church was

criticized for corruption

•had a financial component in England, where the

English objected to the financial burdens placed on

them by the Vatican in Italy

Henry VIII (r. 1509–1547)

•split the Church of England from the Roman Catholic

Church and declared himself head of the new church

•had six wives

•executed the humanist Thomas More

•authorized creation of the Great Bible—the first official

English translation of the Bible to be used in the

Church of England

•created the Royal Navy

The Reigns of Edward and Mary

Edward IV (r. 1547–1553)

•son of Jane Seymour

•crowned at age nine

•smart but sickly

•ruled only in name

•died of tuberculosis at

age fifteen

Mary Tudor (r. 1553–1558)

•daughter of Catherine of

Aragon

•restored power of Pope

and Catholic Church

•called ―Bloody Mary‖

because she executed

hundreds of Protestants

Henry VIII was survived by three heirs; each ruled

England in turn.

Elizabeth I (r. 1558–1603)

•daughter of Anne Boleyn

•regarded as a brilliant and

successful monarch

•reestablished Church of

England

•never married; known as the

―Virgin Queen‖

•patron of the arts

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Defeat of the Spanish Armada

In 1588 King Philip of Spain assembled the powerful

Spanish Armada and attacked England.

•England’s Royal Navy destroyed the Spanish Armada.

•The victory at sea was a

turning point in history. It

ensured England’s

independence from the

powerful Catholic countries

of the Mediterranean.

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Decline of the Renaissance

When Elizabeth died, she was succeeded by her

second cousin, James, the king of Scotland.

•James I (r. 1603–1625) loved literature and drama. He

was a patron to Shakespeare and sponsored a new

translation of the Bible.

•However, he was unable to resolve religious and

economic concerns, and his lavish dress and court life

offended pious and thrifty merchants.

Decline of the Renaissance

•Charles’s troubles with the English Parliament

sparked the English Civil Wars (1642–1651), which

ended in

•dissolution of the monarchy

•Charles’ beheading

•flight of Charles II, his son and heir, to France

Charles I (r. 1625–1649) succeeded James I, his father.

Puritans in Power (1649–1660)

•Puritans ruled England under the guidance of Oliver

Cromwell.

•Cromwell was a shrewd ruler who led England to

international prominence.

•Puritans closed down theaters from 1642 to 1660.

Match the achievement to the Renaissance ruler.

_____________— established the Church of England,

separate from the Roman church

_____________— supported the arts but offended the

English with a lavish and costly lifestyle

_____________— united England so that it could achieve

military victory over Spain

Elizabeth I James I Henry VIII

What Have You Learned?

Elizabeth I

James I

Henry VIII

The End


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