1 / 15

New Social Order: Rise of the Bourgeois Class Europe 1300-1500 Overview: The Monarchy Nobility

New Social Order: Rise of the Bourgeois Class Europe 1300-1500 Overview: The Monarchy Nobility Bourgeois Middle Class Peasantry The Monarchy – Who’s in Power and What are they doing with it? England House of Plantagenet House of Lancaster House of York House of Tudor

havyn
Download Presentation

New Social Order: Rise of the Bourgeois Class Europe 1300-1500 Overview: The Monarchy Nobility

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. New Social Order: Rise of the Bourgeois Class • Europe 1300-1500 • Overview: The Monarchy • Nobility • Bourgeois • Middle Class • Peasantry • The Monarchy – Who’s in Power and What are they doing with it? • England • House of Plantagenet • House of Lancaster • House of York • House of Tudor • France • House of Capetian • Spain • Kingdoms of Castille, Aragon • Unification of Ferdinand and Isabella

  2. Holy Roman Empire Emperor vs Dukes House of Hapsburg Italy II. The New Nobility Super Knight The New Manor The Politician and Parliament III. The Bourgeois (Businessman) Class Rise of Merchant Cities Italian German Guilds Case Studies- The Venetian Galley Guild The Bourgeois How to make $? Trade, Banking, Industry Case Studies The Medici Family Jacques Coeur

  3. IV. Rise of the Middle Class Black Death never felt so good! Place in the Guilds New Soldier Risky Business! V. Peasantry Don’t Call me no Serf! Riskier Business! Significance: Who now has the $ and what will they do with it? The Kings The Nobility The Church! – HOW DARE YOU FORGET ABOUT THE CHURCH!!! The Bourgeois

  4. Italian Renaissance • Humanism- • Works with the church • Study the Humanities • Well Rounded Individuals • Study the Classics (Rome and Greece) – • Spend $ not on thyself but for the betterment of all humans • Spend time with friends and polite well mannered company • Case Studies. • Petrarch (Father of Humanism) • Letter to Posterity • Art • Giotto – • Masaccio • Donatello • Rapheal – School of Athens • Leonardo da Vinci “Jack of All Trades” Genius • Michelangelo – Perfectionist • David • Sistine Chapel • Government • Machiavelli

  5. Northern Renaissance Northern Humanism – wants to reform church Erasmus – Sir Thomas More: Utopia Artists: Albrecht Durer “the German Leonardo” Religious –but with realism Fascinated with nature – Madonna with Many Animals Pieter Brueghel (Flemish) Fantasy Moralism Landscapes Jan and Hubert van Eycks (Flemish) Inventions: Printing Press – Johann Gutenberg

  6. Masaccio-Trinity Martyrdom of St Denis, Jean Malouel and Henri Bellichose

  7. Donatello

  8. Raphael – School of Athens

  9. da Vinci

  10. Michelangelo Michelangelo – Sistine Chapel

  11. Albrecht Durer

  12. Pieter Brueghel

  13. Van Eyck – Arnol fini Wedding Portrait

  14. The Tower and The Bonfire – Tudor England and Religious Persecution Henry VII The Tudors come to Reign Descendants Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon The Church of England Anne of Boleyn Jane Seymour Anne of Cleves Catherine Howard Catherine Parr Edward VI - “God’s Imp” Lady Jane Grey Mary I (Bloody Mary) Elizabeth I – The Virgin Queen James I - The Stuart Line

More Related