1 / 11

UNIT 6 Chapter 17 – European Renaissance & Reformation

UNIT 6 Chapter 17 – European Renaissance & Reformation. THE RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION. OBJECTIVES. CORE OBJECTIVE : Explain the conditions in Europe that brought upon the Renaissance and the Reformation. Objective 6.5 : Explain the developments of the Protestant and Catholic Reformation.

agalia
Download Presentation

UNIT 6 Chapter 17 – European Renaissance & Reformation

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. UNIT 6Chapter 17 – European Renaissance & Reformation THE RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION

  2. OBJECTIVES • CORE OBJECTIVE: Explain the conditions in Europe that brought upon the Renaissance and the Reformation. • Objective 6.5: Explain the developments of the Protestant and Catholic Reformation. • THEME: Two movements, the Renaissance and the Reformation, usher in dramatic social and cultural changes in Europe.

  3. CHAPTER 17: European Renaissance and Reformation, 1300–1600 Two movements, the Renaissance and the Reformation, usher in dramatic social and cultural changes in Europe. Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance SECTION 1 SECTION 2 The Northern Renaissance Luther Leads the Reformation SECTION 3 The Reformation Continues SECTION 4

  4. THE REFORMATIONCONTINUES CHAPTER 17 SECTION 4 As Protestant reformers divide over beliefs, the Catholic Church makes reforms.

  5. CALVIN CONTINUES THE REFORMATION • Religious Reform in Switzerland • Swiss Catholic priest Huldrych Zwingli calls for Church reforms (1520) • Wanted followers to have more influence over the Church • War breaks out between Catholics, Protestants; Zwingli killed (1531) • Calvin Formalizes Protestant Ideas • John Calvin was French, only 8 when Luther posted 95 Theses • John Calvin writes Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536): • we are sinful by nature and cannot earn salvation • God chooses who will be saved — predestination • Calvinism— religion based on Calvin’s teachings WRITE THIS DOWN!

  6. CALVINISM SPREADS • Calvin Leads the Reformation in Switzerland • Calvin says ideal government is theocracy — rule by religious leaders • Geneva protestants ask Calvin to lead city (1541) • becomes a strict Protestant theocracy led by Calvin • Ran a very strict society • Calvinism Spreads • John Knox brings Calvinism to Scotland, followers are Presbyterians • Church governed by laymen called presbyters, or elders • Calvin’s followers in France called Huguenots • Catholics massacre 12,000 Huguenots in Paris (1572) WRITE THIS DOWN!

  7. THE ANABAPTISTS • People are encouraged to read Bible to discover religious truths, new protestant group have different interpretations • Anabaptists believe in separation of church and state, oppose wars, share possessions • They were persecuted as radicals by Catholics & Protestants • Forerunners of Mennonites and Amish; influenced Baptists

  8. THE CATHOLIC REFORMATION • A Counter Reformation • Catholic Reformation — seeks to reform Catholic Church from within • Ignatius of Loyola • Leading Catholic reformer • His Spiritual Exercises (1522) calls for meditation, prayer, and study • Pope creates Society of Jesus religious order, the Jesuits • Jesuits follow Ignatius, start schools, convert non-Christians, & attempted to stop Protestantism WRITE THIS DOWN!

  9. REFORMING POPES • Pope Paul III and Pope Paul IV lead reforms • Paul III calls Council of Trent to lay out Catholic Church reforms: • Church’s interpretation of Bible is final • Christians need faith and good works for salvation • Bible and Church traditions equally important • Indulgences are valid expressions of faith • Use Inquisition to seek out heresy • Paul IV issues Index of Forbidden Books (1559); books burned WRITE THIS DOWN!

  10. LEGACY OF THE REFORMATION • Religious and Social Effects of the Reformation • Catholic Church is unified; Protestant denominations grow • Catholics and Protestants create schools throughout Europe • Status of women does not improve • Political Effects of the Reformation • Catholic Church’s power lessens, power of monarchs and states grow • Reformation’s questioning of beliefs brings intellectual ferment • Late 18th century sees a new intellectual movement — the Enlightenment

  11. MAIN POINTS! #1 - The Renaissance is a return of learning in Europe • Lasted from 1300–1600 #2 - Starts in Italy for 3 reasons: Small City-States, Wealthy Merchant Power, Greco-Roman Literature #3 - Writing, Art focus on realism/individual

More Related