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AP Review #1: Renaissance (Ch. 12) & Reformation (Ch. 13)

The document summarizes key aspects of the Renaissance and Reformation periods in 3 parts. It outlines the rise of trade and wealthy merchant classes fueling Renaissance culture in Italy. It describes the social hierarchies and roles as well as the patronage that supported Renaissance art and humanism. Finally, it discusses the causes of the Protestant Reformation in response to Catholic Church abuses and the split between Lutheran and Calvinist branches of Protestantism.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3K views3 pages

AP Review #1: Renaissance (Ch. 12) & Reformation (Ch. 13)

The document summarizes key aspects of the Renaissance and Reformation periods in 3 parts. It outlines the rise of trade and wealthy merchant classes fueling Renaissance culture in Italy. It describes the social hierarchies and roles as well as the patronage that supported Renaissance art and humanism. Finally, it discusses the causes of the Protestant Reformation in response to Catholic Church abuses and the split between Lutheran and Calvinist branches of Protestantism.

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AP Review #1: Renaissance (Ch. 12) & Reformation (Ch.

13)

Renaissance Economy
 IT as center for revival of trade
 Emergence of a wealthy merchant class
o Dominated bookkeeping, opening markets, monopolies on trade goods (wool)
o Soon dominated econ/pol life of entire city-state
o Had to compete w/ Hanseatic League (GR/Baltic region)
o Ex. Medici (Florence) = largest banking house of Europe
 IT economically fueled the Renaissance

Renaissance Society
 1st 2nd 3rd Estates
 2nd Estate – nobles expected to be well educated, interest in arts, embrace civic virtue
o Law of primogeniture (eldest son inherits the property)
o Castiglione, Book of the Courtier (expectations for nobles)
 3rd Estate = 90% of population; farmers hit hard by Plague)
 WOMEN
o NO pol/econ rights; lower status than men
o Expected to bear children/manage the house (assist husbands in shops/fields)
o Diff. from MA’s when women could work in shops or even serve as guild masters
o Marriages often arranged (business deals/increase status, wealth of family)

Renaissance Politics
 2 forms of governance: national monarchies or city-states
 Italian city-states: Florence, Naples, Milan, Venice, Papal States
o Peace of Lodi (1454- balance of power among the 5)
o Acted as RIVALS; can’t coop means can’t unite
 Disunity made them susceptible to attack from foreign invaders
o 1527: Sack of Rome (Spain)
 Practice of resident ambassadors originated in Ren. IT

Renaissance ART
 A cultural “rebirth” stimulated by the patronage of wealthy families/kings/popes and the new found
interest in the classics
 Religious themes remained (ex. Sistine Chapel) but experimented with classical/secular themes (ex.
Birth of Venus)
 Celebrated the individual, worth of the human/individual (David); portraits popularized (Mona Lisa);
perspective (School of Athens); application of math/science (Vitruvian Man) & architecture
(Tempietto & St. Peter’s Basilica – Bramante)
 Primary goal of art= realistic portrayal of their subjects
 Popularity of art (among the elite) led to increasing social status of the artist
 Northern Renaissance
o More literary than artistic; more socially diverse; more centered on religion than in IT
o Van Eyck (Arnolfini Portrait); Durer (Self Portrait); Brueghel (“painter of the peasants”)

Humanism
 Intellectual movement of the Ren. (aided in the improvement of society/societal reforms)
 FOCUS: Education, study of classics, individualism/secularism, civic virtue, humanities
(grammar/rhetoric, poetry, ethics, history)
 FATHER = Petrarch
 Elite movement, but spread education to lay population for first time/growth of humanist
schools/tutors
o Ex. Cosimo d’Medici funded the Florentine Platonic Academy
 Printing press led to increased demand for printed material (both secular & religious)
 Created an educated population that questioned the status quo, challenged traditional authorities &
thirsted for new ideas!
 Christian Humanism= better society through religious reforms (Thomas More – Utopia; Erasmus-
Praise of Folly)

“New Monarchs”
 Decline of feudalism (growing towns allied with kings)
 Raised professional armies, consolidated power away from nobles,
collected taxes (despite noble privilege, decided laws, declared war,
minimized rep. bodies
 England
o Henry VII won in War of the Roses and began the Tudor
dynasty (1485)
 France
o Louis XI – defeat of England in 100 Years’ War
 Spain
o Unified by the marriage of Ferdinand (Aragon) and Isabelle (Castile)
o SP Army strongest in Europe
o Used the SP Inquisition to drive out heretics (Jews/Muslims/Disobedient Christians)

Why?
 Church Criticisms
o Secularized papacy & Church administration (clerical privileges)
o Abuses of the RCC (selling of offices…leads to pluralism and absenteeism)
o Laymen feel a spiritual void & salvation crisis
o Challenge to papal authority by new emerging powerful monarchs
 Inspired by Christian humanists – wanted return to simple piety! (Eras laid egg that Luth hatched)

Lutheranism (Germany) . . . 1st official split from the RCC


 Started the Protestant Reformation in 1517 (w/ 95 Theses); enraged by the selling of indulgences
 Beliefs
o (1)SALVATION IS EARNED BY FAITH IN GOD ALONE; (2)2 legitimate sacraments (3)rejects
transubstantiation; (4) Christians can interpret the Bible for themselves; (5)Church traditions
are NOT the basis of religious belief; promoted the vernacular (so translated the Bible into
German and English)
 Called before the Diet of Worms (1521 w/ HRE Charles V)
o Exiled when he refused to recant the 95 Theses
 Lutheranism grew in success when he pressures GR princes to break away (played into their dislike
of papal authority over their realms)

Calvinism (Switzerland) . . . Dominated 1550-1600


 Read reformed works; lived in FR where Huguenots faced persecution from the crown
 Beliefs
o (1) predestination; (2) promoted good work ethic; (3) some separation b/t church and state
 Replaced Lutheranism as most common form of Protestantism and his ideas influenced those in
England, Scotland & Netherlands.

English Reformation
 Henry VIII split from RCC for dynastic reasons (not theological differences)
o Pope denied his divorce to Queen Catherine, so he renounced England from the RCC \
 created the Church of England (Anglican Church) and declared himself the head (Act of Supremacy)
o Parliament also passed the Act of Succession to guarantee all of his children could be
legitimate heirs to the throne (Edward, Mary & Elizabeth all go on to become English
monarch)
 Queen Elizabeth 1 (Renaissance/overseas exploration/GB grew into a world power/defeat of SP
Armada/bridging of gaps b/t Protestants and Catholics)

Counter-Reformation
 Response to the Protestants and meant to reinvigorate the RCC
 Council of Trent
o reaffirmed ALL Catholic religious beliefs/practices (did NOT give in to Prot. Demands)
o DOES attempt to improve upon the moral conduct of the clergy; banned false indulgences
 Society of Jesus
o Founded by Loyola; promoted obedience to the Church through doctrinal edu. & missionary
work
 Inquisition
o Organization (legal system) used to try and remove heretics (such as those who wrote or
read from the Index of Forbidden Books)

Wars of Religion
 German Peasant’s Revolt
o Luther ultimately did not support the peasants – can’t lose support of princes
 Schmalkaldic Wars
o Catholic vs. Protestants in GR – Charles V too preoccupied to intervene
o Peace of Augsburg 1555 – princes can determine official religion of their realm
 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre (1572)
o 1000s French Huguenots murdered by Catholics (likely planned by Queen Catherine
d’Medici)
o Brought ultimate death of Henry of Navare (Henry III)
o Henry IV passes the Edict of Nantes (1598) granting religious freedom to Huguenots; later
revoked by Louis XIV
 OBVIOUSLY THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR…but we’ll get to that in Chapter 15 

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