answersLogoWhite

0

🌎

Renaissance

The Renaissance was a period in which Europe underwent a rebirth in regards to classical art, literature, and architecture. The movement originated in Italy during the 14th century before spreading throughout Europe.

4,371 Questions

What is the Italian translation of 'Renaissance'?

The word 'Renaissance' is Latin for 'rebirth.' It is used to describe a period of history in which Europe experienced a 'rebirth' of widespread interest in intellectual pursuits, such as science, philosophy, and history.

What is the definition of commercial revolution?

great increase in commerce in Europe that began in the late middle age.

What change occurred during the Renaissance?

Humanist ideas were the change because people started to see that you didn't have to fear God (as they did in the Middle Ages) and started to live life to its fullest.

How we're Milan Genoa Venice and Florence important economically?

Milan, Genoa, Venice, and Florence were the four major trade cities. They allowed importing and exporting, which brought in money.

How were Renaissance leaders selected?

Renaissance leaders were elected from various guilds in a city or from the aristocracy. This meant that the leader of a city could be anybody.

What did people in Italy eat for breakfast during the renaissance?

What did they eat for breakfast lunch and dinner durning the reniassance

What is the English translation of the Italian 'ritmo dell'amore'?

"Rhythm of love" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase ritmo dell'amore.

Specifically, the masculine noun ritmo means "rhythm." The word dell' combines the preposition di with the masculine singular definite article il to mean "of the." The masculine noun amore means "love."

The pronunciation is "REET-moh deh-lah-MOH-reh."

Who were the medicis and what was their affect on the Renaissance?

The Medicis were members of a rich Florentine family who were patrons of the Arts. In those days, an artist made his living by getting commissions from the rich. These were basically orders for art work. The Medicis commissioned art for their personal chapel, for churches they frequented, for the city of Florence which they virtually controlled for some time, etc. Since some of the greatest artists of the Renaissance lived and worked in Florence, much of the art they commissioned are masterpieces. Michelangelo and Raphael are among those who benefitted from the Medicis love of Art.

They also got themselves embroiled in city politics and even had a member or two of the family killed by political rivals. A Medici became Pope and another married the King of France.

Did Mary Queen of Scots live during the Renaissance period?

Short Answer:

Mary, Queen of Scots did live during the renaissance period. The general renaissance spanned from roughly the fourteenth century to the seventeenth century and the specifically Scottish renaissance was from the fifteenth century to the seventeenth century. Mary was born 8 December 1542 and died 8 February 1587, so she perhaps only just scraped the dawning of the renaissance period in Scotland.

More Detailed Answer:

The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned the period roughly from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, beginning in Italy in the Late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe. Though availability of paper and the invention of metal movable type sped the dissemination of ideas from the later fifteenth century, the changes of the Renaissance were not uniformly experienced across Europe.

The Renaissance in Scotland was a cultural, intellectual and artistic movement from the fifteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth century. It is associated with the pan-European Renaissance that is usually regarded as beginning in Italy in the late fourteenth century and reaching northern Europe as a Northern Renaissance in the fifteenth century. It involved an attempt to revive the principles of the classical era, including humanism, a spirit of scholarly enquiry, scepticism, and concepts of balance and proportion. Since the twentieth century the uniqueness and unity of the Renaissance has been challenged by historians, but significant changes in Scotland can be seen to have taken place in education, intellectual life, literature, art, architecture, music and politics.

Both Mary's son(James VI of Scotland and I of England) and father (James V of Scotland) gave patronage to some Scottish renaissance writers. As the generation before and after her were in contact with renaissance writers, it can be deduced that Mary, Queen of Scots did - in fact - live during the renaissance period.

Was there a renaissance?

There have been several renaissances throughout history, including the 16th century renaissance of Europe and the Harlem renaissance.

To what extent and in what ways did the Italian Renaissance result from Italy's geographic advantage in the world trade of the 15th centuries?

Italy was the only water route in and out of Europe and Asia at the time, giving them first dibs on all the imports and exports.

How did Machiavelli's work reflect political realities of renaissance Italy?

Although Machiavelli was forced into what turned into an early retirement from Florence, by changes in its government, he remained quite active in keeping up with the politics of the city. William refers to him as a modern day C-Span junkie. His farm work was perhaps spent with thoughts on Louis XII or the Pope, and how their various spheres of influence could interact to the best interests of the Italian peninsula. He desired the foreign powers, or barbarians, to be driven out of the peninsula altogether, and realized that since two of the five areas in Italy were not under the control of the same family, the Medici family ruling Florence and the Medici Pope Leo X in Rome, it was a perfect chance to bring law and order to the disorder everywhere about him. His letters to Francesco Vettori in Rome make this clear enough. This combination of political elements, and Machiavelli's contemplative lifestyle, produced a work he wrote in just his first several months on the farm in late in 1513; The Prince. He originally dedicated it to the de' Medici family who were in control of the government, led by Lorenzo II, but then he changed it to Lorenzo "the magnificent." The Prince is traditionally seen as a job application to the family, but we'll discuss that soon enough. One initial feeling one gets from the book is a sense of newness. Thus the reason for some view Machiavelli as the first modern man. Yet this type of book has been around for quite awhile actually. The popular genre of treatises of advise written for rulers is sometimes referred to as "mirrors of princes." Xenophon wrote one in 400 BCE, and William refers to a work read during his recent class on medieval history, where they read a document to Charlemagne, which was also of this genre. Princeton professor Maurizio Viroli suggests is not a work of flattery, but rather a deep criticism of the way the de' Medici are running the city. Not that it isn't a job application, but it was more in the way of honest advise than sucking up to the boss. Here we get into the area of William's expertise, the literary content. He is an expert on Dante, so one can see many parallels to Machiavelli here. The list of figures in The Prince falls into two categories, the ancient and modern. The ancient Greek and Roman figures include a wide range of names well know to us, and those which are obscure, though perhaps more well known to Machiavelli's contemporaries no doubt. The figures from Machiavelli's own time, or those who recently died, include some he worked with directly while working for the republic. This leaves the large gap of time between antiquity and the Renaissance, the middle ages. This term is coming from William, who is a medievalist, meaning that the time period of the late middle ages extends to the time of Machiavelli himself, but to a medievalist such as himself, it doesn't extend that far. The Renaissance began perhaps a century earlier and the middle ages ended. Thus the continual confusion in such terms. Regardless, there is a thousand year chunk of time from which no people appear in The Prince. There is no Louis IX of France, or Richard the Lionhearted, or Edward I the father of parliament. This was typical of other works from the Renaissance, since that period means so little to them. The ancients were followed by a period of decline, and now the contemporary period was looking back at them, emulating their era in ways the medieval folks never did. This continued through the Enlightenment, and William even points out how Harvard taught their history courses without a medieval historian until the 19th century when they hired Henry Adams! The Humanist thought of Machiavelli's day was influential indeed. Machiavelli steers clear of religious morality, salvation, and ethics, sticking with secular political players only. This doesn't imply he is an atheist, since he talks of God and Moses in these works, and William mentions that he does go to church. But he is not interested in theology as a guide to politics, in religious reasoning, or even as any motivational aspect. He does make a quote to a friend that "I love Florence more than my own soul," which may imply his priorities, or that he even believes that he has a soul. Getting back to the question of whether Machiavelli is the first modern man, this work of The Prince is stunningly original. It goes against some of the classic ideas built up by Aristotle and Cicero themselves, so its neither a repetition, nor a synthesis of previous works. Aristotle viewed the basis for any city-state to be the bond of friendship and trust. Machiavelli sees power resulting from fear and coercion to be the reality of the situation. This is quite a challenge to Aristotle's influential and traditional view. The bulk of Aristotle's work has been rediscovered back in the 12th and 13th centuries, so they were well integrated before the Renaissance. Dante of course refers to his as "the" philosopher. Aristotle gathered data on his works on such imperial topics, by going around and examining the surrounding city-states. Thus was in order to discover what ought to be. But Machiavelli breaks with that form, by being more descriptive about what actual reality is like. Situations change, so that what may be true in one case, of Aristotle, may not necessarily be true in another. Machiavelli in less interested in a model, than in order and power. There are similarities between the two, but not in gathering of evidence and goals. Cicero is quite an interesting case also, since he has declined greatly from Machiavelli's time when he was seen as the great Republican writer, the highest reputation one could get in the Renaissance. Dante bases his hell on concepts from Aristotle and Cicero, which we see the latter as a second rater compared to the former. But one must keep in mind, that it was hardly that way in Machiavelli's time. Cicero was seen as the greatest of all Roman sages by the Renaissance. Cicero argued that the political leaders must exercise the standard virtues, the four classical being wisdom, temperance, justice, and fortitude. Two other standards were honesty and magnanimity. To be a great man, one must exercise these virtues. To be a great leader, one must be loved, through their exercise of these same virtues. One could not be a great leader without being a great individual person, or family man. Fear plays no role in the process, since that won't save them from harm. Morality is the primary goal. Machiavelli argues that a prince must be prepared to act immorally, by lying, cheating, and acting cruelly. Acting as a Boy Scout will surely lead to failure. The surrounding would about Machiavelli is in disorder, and being nice guys will not change that. I'm not sure this implies the disorder came from people being nice and virtuous, but to create order, one had to go beyond that stage of Aristotle and Cicero. Machiavelli saw love and fear as being required by a leader over his subjects. Yet fear was the more important, and better of the two. Thus the challenge on a so far unchallenged principle. The disaster that would result from a good Dad exercising his virtues as a leader, would be something Machiavelli would loath. Personal and political reality are divorced from one another, since the priority of maintaining a state requires one to be flexible. If that includes immorality, deceptiveness, and cruelty, then so be it. There were significant influences in Renaissance Humanism, where autonomous rules could be created that apply on earth, rather than to heaven. Machiavelli applied these rules as never before, creating an autonomous reality for rulers, in opposition to personal morality. Thus the concept of his being the first modern man, though it's less useful for our purposes.

What group ran the Italy during the time of the Renaissance?

During the Renaissance, Italy consisted of a large number of small states, usually city state, with all sorts of governments, so by the Church, some by nobility, and some run by republican governments. Wealthy merchant and banking families such as the Medicis were particularly powerful.

What are examples of machiavellian tactics?

Machiavellian tactics are more like life principles. For example, be bold, avoid yes-men, user your own judgment, and be aware of ambitious people. Machiavellian tactics involve secrecy and strength to achieve power and political advantages.

Was Reformation a reason for the Renaissance?

No. The Reformation was less connected to the Renaissance than other things. The Renaissance was connected to exploration and new inventions like the printing press. It was a time of new thinking and ideas. A bit of the Reformation did add to the Renaissance because there was new thinking about man and God, but it wasn't a direct cause. I think it was more of a reflection on the whole.

The idea of the Italian renaissance were spread to northern Europe by?

the first renaissonce painter was not Italian it was Robert campin and he was from the Netherlands also Italy was not a united country then

Why does a course in modern European history begin with the Renaissance 1450?

The course in modern history starts with the Renaissance because the intellectual transformation during the Renaissance resulted in it being viewed as a bridge between the Middle Ages and the Modern Era.

So basically the intellectual transformation sets it apart from earlier history.

How many people died of the plague in two different European countries?

Over 3/4 of Europe died. Whole towns. Reports have as many as 6,000 people a day in some places.

Which statements best describes the Renaissance?

There are many characteristics to describe the Renaissance. A notable one was the encouragement of using creativity in the arts.

By the fifteenth century where were most African slaves in Europe found?

In the 15th century, there were hardly any African slaves to be found in Europe at all, with the exception of Portugal. Most 'slaves' in Europe were the (European!) serfs that were working the farm lands on a Lord's estate in the more backward regions of eastern Europe.

A sizable number of Africans had been taken home by Portuguese explorers, to be given to the King and his nobles as a sort of curios. Other Africans were mostly employed in and around the city of Lisbon. Occasional Africans would have been sent from Portugal to friendly Courts such as those of Spain and serve in the same capacity. Their number was neglectible, and even in later centuries black slaves in Europe would never number more than a few thousand in all, mostly serving as pages or guards in a rich person's household.

Why did the Renaissance in northern Europe lag behind the Renaissance in Italy?

At the beginning of the Renaissance, Paris and France were still seen as the center of European culture. But it is true that the Renaissance originated and first developed in Italy. As to 'why': it was a re-appraisal of their own Roman Empire's classical art and culture. Another factor for in particular Florence's early prominence in this field was the fact that Florence's ruling family, the Medici, lavishly supported and patronized the arts - including the innovations based on the rediscovery of classical art - in its city.

Northern Europe was however quick to pick up on developments: within a matter of decades, Renaissance thinking had spread all over Europe and artists from northern Europe arrived in droves to acquaint themselves with these new techniques and styles.