Nationalism affected the church in the fourteenth century by moving different religions into new countries
Nationalism in the Renaissance had a significant impact on the church. As countries sought to establish their own identities, they began to challenge the authority of the Roman Catholic Church and elevate their own national churches. This led to conflicts and tensions between the church and the emerging nation-states, ultimately contributing to the Protestant Reformation and the subsequent splintering of Christianity.
The Pope was in charge of the church during the Renaissance. Throughout the Renaissance, there were several popes.
How did humanism affect society? People had the time to sit back and question the way the church looks at things. Also they could be more artistic.
how did art affect renaissance thinking and worldview?
it improved it
During the Renaissance period, there was a mix of religions in different regions of Europe, including Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism, and Islam. The dominant religion in many parts of Europe was Catholicism, but there was also a growing influence of Protestantism, especially after the Protestant Reformation. Additionally, there were pockets of Jewish and Islamic communities in various parts of Europe.
The Renaissance affect us today because without the Renaissance we would not have art,science,literatureand more.
Answer by a CatholicI don't think the Church had much say in the whether the Renaissance happened or not.
Robert Reinhold Ergang has written: 'The Renaissance' -- subject(s): Renaissance 'Herder and the foundations of German nationalism' -- subject(s): Germany, Herder, Johann Gottfried, 1744-1803, Nationalism, Nationalism and nationality, Nationality 'Europe since Waterloo' -- subject(s): History
cause they could
How have nationalism and economic development affected women in the Other World?
Harlem renaissance affect America history through the slave issues
The Renaissance was a period in history in which the arts flourished. The church was an institution which supported music in society.