5.1 The Renaissance - T -

5. 
The Time of 
Discoverers and Reformers
1.1  The Renaissance 
AGE 5. The Time of 
Discoverers and Reformers
Lesson 5.1: The Renaissance
THEORY
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This lesson contains 32 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 6 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

5. 
The Time of 
Discoverers and Reformers
1.1  The Renaissance 
AGE 5. The Time of 
Discoverers and Reformers
Lesson 5.1: The Renaissance
THEORY

Slide 1 - Slide

the Time of Discoverers and Reformers
1500 - 1600
Typical Aspects:



- the start of overseas European expansion
- the Renaissance and a changing world view
- the Protestant Reformation
- the Dutch Revolt and the birth of an independent Dutch  state




Early Modern Age




Slide 2 - Slide

Slide 3 - Slide

In this lesson:



  • Major changes between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age
  • The Renaissance: rebirth of Greek and Roman culture.
  • It started in Italy where rich merchants wanted to show off their wealth.
  • In 1453 the Turks conquered Constantinople. Refugees brought ancient knowledge from Antiquity back to Italy.
  • The new interest in the Greeks and Romans led to changes in thinking, religion, art, architecture and science.
  • Thanks to the invention of the printing press the Renaissance knowledge could spread across Europe.






Slide 4 - Slide

people in this lesson
Leonardo da Vinci
Johannes Gutenberg
Michelangelo
Nicolaus Copernicus

Slide 5 - Slide

After this lesson you have learned:
  • What is the Renaissance?
  • Why did the Renaissance start in Italy?
  • Why did the fall of Constantinople fuel the Renaissance?
  • How did peoples' worldview change during the Renaissance?
  • How did art change during the Renaissance?
  • How did Renaissance ideas spread across Europe?

Slide 6 - Slide

Important dates in this lesson:


1450: Johannes Gutenberg invents printing press
1453: Ottomans conquer Constantinople
1503: da Vinci starts painting the Mona Lisa
1543: Copernicus publishes his theory of a sun centered universe

Slide 7 - Slide

Word Duty





Antiquity: the time of the Greeks and Romans (Dutch: de (Klassieke) Oudheid)
scholar: a person who studies a subject in great detail. (Dutch: geleerde)
Homo Universalis: a person who is an expert in many different fields 
(for example: painting, sculpting, maths and anatomy).
Renaissance: a period in history that is seen as the rebirth of antiquity.
Memento Mori: Latin for 'remember that you will die'; the motto during the Middle Ages.
Worldview: the way a person interprets events in the world.
Carpe Diem: Latin for 'seize the day'; the motto during the Renaissance.
Artists: people that make works of art and are paid and respected for it.
Printing press: a device that made it possible to copy texts faster and more easily than before.
Heliocentrism: the idea that the earth rotates around the sun.
Geocentrism: the idea that the sun rotates around the earth.
Key words

Slide 8 - Slide

Historians talk about the Middle Ages ending at the end of the 15th century. 
That is because many things changed in the 16th century, which historians sometimes call the Early Modern Age.
Just a few changes that occurred:
 
1. The Byzantine Empire (the former eastern Roman Empire) with Constantinople as its capital, had been an important Christian stronghold against the Muslims. 
In 1453 a group of Turks called the Ottomans attacked and conquered Constantinople, renamed it Istanbul and made it the capital of a new Muslim empire called the Ottoman Empire.

picture: Turks attack the walls of Constantinople

Before we begin with lesson 5.1 we need to take a look at:
The End of the Middle Ages

Slide 9 - Slide

The End of the Middle Ages
(2)
2. The invention of the printing press, around 1440, meant that knowledge and ideas could spread more quickly.
 
3. In 1492 Columbus discovered America. This would change the people's old world view (that the earth is flat) completely.
 
4. Firearms were invented. Canons and rifles were primitive in the beginning, but this new way of warfare marked the beginning of a new Age. Castles were no longer a good defense against canons. After the Middle Ages castles would not be built anymore

Slide 10 - Slide

The End of the Middle Ages
(3)
5. The Black Death, a terrible disease that killed ⅓ of the European population in the 14th century, changed the way people looked towards religion and the church.

During the epidemic, people believed the Black Death was a punishment from God for the sins of the people. They turned to the church for help. The church did not have any answers, nor could it stop the disease.
Before the Black Death people had put their faith into the pope, the church and the clergy unquestionably. But afterwards they started to doubt the church. No longer would they accept everything the pope told them as the absolute truth.
 
A New Age was about to start......

Slide 11 - Slide

One of the most brilliant men that ever lived was born in 1452, near the small village of Vinci, close to the Italian city of Florence. He is known to be a perfect example of a Homo Universalis, a person that is an expert in many different fields. This man was a sculptor, a painter, an architect, an anatomist, a poet, a writer, an engineer and much more. Even during his lifetime he was a legend, although many of his works remain a mystery. His name was Leonardo da Vinci

One of the most brilliant men that ever lived was born in 1452, near the small village of Vinci, close to the Italian city of Florence. He is known to be a perfect example of a Homo Universalis, a person that is an expert in many different fields. This man was a sculptor, a painter, an architect, an anatomist, a poet, a writer, an engineer and much more. Even during his lifetime he was a legend, although many of his works remain a mystery. His name was Leonardo da Vinci

You can watch a video about 
Leonardo da Vinci at the 
end of this lesson...
Lesson 5.1: Introduction

Slide 12 - Slide

The rebirth of antiquity 

Leonardo da Vinci was the father of many inventions, like a parachute, a tank, a mechanical knight and musical instruments. 
But he was also a very skilled artist. His most famous paintings, the Mona Lisa and the Last Supper, still draw millions of art lovers to museums. Da Vinci lived in a period that is now called the Renaissance, which lasted from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century. 
Renaissance is a French word which means 'rebirth' in English. During this period it was people like da Vinci who started to rediscover the knowledge and art of classical antiquity. 
This 'rebirth' of the culture of the Greeks and Romans started in Italy, but eventually spread across Europe. 

How did this cultural shift take place and 
why did it start in Italy?

Slide 13 - Slide

Powerful Italian city-states 

To find out why the Renaissance started in Italy we have to start in the late Middle Ages. Last year you learned that new cities started to develop all over Europe between the eleventh and fifteenth century. Italian cities like Florence, Genoa and Venice flourished and became rich and powerful city-states. Most of their wealth was gained through trade. Because of this, the merchants, bankers and other civilians became the ones with power and money. These rich inhabitants were not only interested in trade and war, but also in the remains of the Roman ancestors that lived in Italy during antiquity. They wanted to know more about them, and it just so happens this knowledge was about to arrive from the east.

Lorenzo de Medici, lord of Florence, belonged to the most powerful and wealthy Italian merchant family.

Slide 14 - Slide

Knowledge from the east 

Thousands of soldiers poured into the streets of Constantinople in the year 1453. 
The armies of the Turkish sultan Mehmed II had broken through the gate, and by conquering the city they destroyed the last part of the Eastern Roman empire. 

Thousands of refugees fled from Constantinople to the Northern Italian city-states. Among them were scholars, architects, poets, astronomers, scientists and artists who brought their money, books and skills. Most knowledge of antiquity had been lost in Europe, but the people of Constantinople had been able to copy and preserve it. Now they brought the knowledge to the Italian city-states. The money of rich merchants and bankers, the remains of ancient buildings and the knowledge of the refugees fuelled the interest in antiquity.

Slide 15 - Slide

A changing worldview 

During the Middle Ages, people mainly saw life as a test. Their motto was memento mori ('remember that you will die'). They believed that God would decide if they would earn a place in heaven or not. Because of this they feared death, for if they did not live their life according to the words of the priests, they would be sent to hell. 

During the Renaissance, people in the Italian city-states developed new views on religion, humans, and the world. Scholars started to study ancient texts, which made them change their worldview. No longer did they focus on the mystical power of God or the fear of going to hell, but on the ability of humans to think for themselves. 

The people in the Italian city-states started to discuss and philosophise, becoming less influenced by the church. They also started to enjoy life: carpe diem ('seize the day') became their new motto. This meant that people should enjoy life by having elaborate parties, buying fancy clothing and hiring skilled artists and architects to make beautiful paintings, sculptures and buildings. 

Slide 16 - Slide

Renaissance art 

This change in worldview also led to a change in art. During the early Middle Ages, painters and sculptors were seen as craftsmen and almost all art was commissioned by the church. Their arts had to represent a Christian theme, such as the crucifixion of Jesus or the last supper.

This changed during the Renaissance. The citizens ruled the Italian city-states and they fuelled the change in art. Painters, sculptors and architects were hired by bankers and merchants who wanted to enjoy life. They needed someone to decorate their homes or to make building plans for new palaces. Craftsmen increased their skills, which made their art look more realistic and it dazzled with colour and depth. They felt more connected to their work and started to be seen as artists

Another change that occurred during the Renaissance is that the subjects of artworks shifted from biblical themes to scenes from antiquity. Statues and paintings of Greek and Roman gods, philosophers and heroes became popular. The painting 'Primavera' is a good example of this. 

Slide 17 - Slide

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Slide 18 - Video

painting: School of Athens, by the painter Rafael, who was an artist from the Renaissance. In the middle you see Plato and Aristotle having a discussion.

Slide 19 - Slide


Renaissance architects also looked at the remains of ancient buildings. In their new designs, they included copies of Roman columns, arches and domes. The change in view on humans also made it possible for painters to portray people as individuals. 

Leonardo da Vinci's most famous painting, the Mona Lisa, is of the wife of a silk merchant, and not a picture of a Christian saint. 

The Renaissance artists saw it as their goal to make their artworks as realistic as possible. It is known from some artists that they cut up bodies and studied them. By doing this they could get a good picture of what the body looked like so they could make their art even more natural, just like the Greeks and Romans did. Muscles and arteries made statues lifelike and sometimes they had divinely beautiful bodies, in a Greek style.

A
B

Slide 20 - Slide

The interest in antiquity did not mean the end of Christian art. Some popes became the biggest buyers of Renaissance art. In Florence, a huge church was built with an amazing dome. The sculptor Michelangelo made a famous statue of David and painted the ceiling of the famous Sistine chapel.
Michelangelo's statue of David and his painting of the ceiling of the Sistine's Chapel.

Slide 21 - Slide

Nicholas Copernicus

Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543) was born in Poland and educated in Poland and Italy. He is famous for showing that the sun rotates around the earth (heliocentrism), not the Sun around the Earth (geocentrism). 
He was qualified as a mathematician, an astronomer and a doctor. He studied classical books on many subjects.
He advised various rulers on government and the economy. 
He worked as a military leader and a government official and trained as a priest. 
His theory that the Earth went round the Sun was built on the theories of earlier Arab and Greek thinkers. For hundreds of years before this everyone in Europe believed the Earth was at the centre of the universe and everything else revolved around it. Copernicus' careful calculations led to him drawing up charts to show how the planets moved around the Sun.


Watch the video about geocentrism in the next slide

Slide 22 - Slide

Slide 23 - Video

The spread of Renaissance 

Around 1450, Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press

Before this invention, all books had to be copied by hand, which was mostly done by monks in monasteries. By using the printing press, texts could be copied more easily, enabling knowledge to be spread faster. 

Because of this, the inhabitants of other European countries also came in contact with the Renaissance from Italy. These new ideals encouraged scholars throughout Europe to study the ancients. It even inspired merchants and adventurers to learn more about the world and to leave their homes in search of unknown lands.

Watch the video about Gutenberg's 
invention in the next slide

Slide 24 - Slide

Slide 25 - Video

Summary 5.1


Fill in the gaps to make a summary

Slide 26 - Slide

Finished with the summary?
Now make a printscreen of the finished summary
and upload it here.

Slide 27 - Open question

You have finished with this lesson, meaning:
- You have read the texts
- You have made the summary
- You have done the practise questions.
Are you well prepared for a quiz / test or do you need extra help?

If you still need help, if something is not clear, you can ask your question here.

Slide 28 - Open question

congratulations
congratulations

Slide 29 - Slide

Slide 30 - Video

Slide 31 - Video

Slide 32 - Video