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Explore the vibrant era of the Italian Renaissance, defined by secular art, humanist ideals, and political upheavals. From wealthy patronage to influential literary works, discover the cultural revival that shaped Western civilization.
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The Italian Renaissance Renaissance – def – French word meaning “rebirth” A rebirth of what? GRECO-ROMAN PERIOD RESUME GR./ROMAN CIVILIZATION DARK AGES
RENAISSANCE IN ITALY * Almost purely secular * Italian cities were the largest and busiest in Europe *Florence - chief city of Renaissance, home of the powerful Medici family
Why Italy? 1.Merchant Oligarchies – no kings to interfere w/ business 2. Great Schism – The Church was preoccupied 3. Wealth – trade generated a wealthy patron class that funded art, literature, and technical innovation Patron – def – a person who lends financial support to a person, organization, cause, or activity
Italian Renaissance – a secular focus Art/Lit of the Middle Ages – focused on Religion Greco-Roman period included pre-Christian topics that were embraced by Renaissance scholars
Renaissance artists focused on individuality Humanity was presented as beautiful and worthy of contemplation – contrasted w/ Middle Ages focus on faith and the afterlife
VIRTU – Def. – The well-rounded ideal of the “Renaissance Man”– well schooled in the classics, court etiquette, politics, and swordsmanship
Baldassare Castiglione – wrote The Book of the Courtier – defined the Renaissance Man Cas Lorenzo Valla– a founder of literary criticism – proved the “Donation of Constantine” to be a forgery
BELLINI’S CONDOTTIERE A RENAISSANCE MAN
HUMANISM • Literature no longer created solely for religious or mechanical teaching – poetry & prose were art in and of • themselves - Art & Literature focused on the human condition, human potential - Art and Literature revisited Greco-Roman themes - Combined Christian Piety w/ an appreciation of the pagan past
POLITICS IN THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE - Italy failed to develop effective political institutions - Politics were provincial, self-centered, ruthless, lacked national interest • Most of Italy was eventually conquered by larger • neighboring powers
MACHIAVELLI - Admired political unity of France and England - Feared Italy would suffer for its lack of unification
Machiavelli’s THE PRINCE - 1513 - Most well-known work of the Renaissance - Freed politics from religion and moral philosophy - Showed that successful politicians were often immoral & opportunistic - Viewed as a work of evil by some for “promotion” of immoral politics