1 / 7

Renaissance Beginnings

Renaissance Beginnings. 7.43 I can trace the emergence of the Renaissance, including influence from Moorish (or Muslim) scholars in Spain. Renaissance: Beginnings. AD 1350s to 1700 Mongols reopen Silk Road Marco Polo visits China, returns to Europe, writes a book

johnbiggs
Download Presentation

Renaissance Beginnings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Renaissance Beginnings 7.43 I can trace the emergence of the Renaissance, including influence from Moorish (or Muslim) scholars in Spain.

  2. Renaissance: Beginnings AD 1350s to 1700 • Mongols reopen Silk Road • Marco Polo visits China, returns to Europe, writes a book • Causes people to want to go there and get Chinese goods • Positives of Black Death • No damage to farmland, goods, metals • People are happy to be alive and spend money to erase memories of the plague (Medici Family) • Ottoman Turks conquer Byzantine Empire • Scholars flee to Italy with ancient texts of the Greeks and Romans

  3. Italy’s Location • Italy’s location made it a center of trade and commerce. • The Italian peninsula is surrounded by seas, making it a major area for ports. • Both products and new ideas passed through Italy.

  4. Renaissance: Italy • Major trading cities: Milan, Florence, Genoa, Venice • Florence wealthy from wool and banking • Medici family were bankers with political power • Hired artists and architects to make Florence great

  5. Renaissance Italy: City-States • Italy was divided into city-states during the Renaissance. • They did not want to be one country because they did not want a single leader, instead, each city-state had its own form of government. • They also did not want the Pope to have complete control of the entire area. • City-states became rich and powerful from trade.

  6. Renaissance Italy: Wealth • City-states became rich and powerful through trade and commerce. • Individuals who had a great deal of wealth hired artisans to create paintings, buildings, and other items. • The Roman Catholic Church also controlled much of the wealth and power.

  7. Renaissance Italy: Scholars • When the Byzantine Empire was conquered, scholars brought ancient Greek and Roman texts to Italy. • Muslim scholars in Spain were also responsible for preserving and translating ancient Greek and Roman texts. • Other European scholars eventually used these Arabic texts and translated them into Latin, the language of most European schools at the time.

More Related