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Unit 7a Italian Renaissance

Unit 7a Italian Renaissance

Assessment

Presentation

Social Studies

7th Grade

Medium

Created by

Mithuiel Barnes

Used 24+ times

FREE Resource

39 Slides • 21 Questions

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The Italian Renaissance
(& beyond)

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Poll

What is your mood today?

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A time of:

Renaissance - What was it?

  • Artistic creativity & innovation

  • Political, cultural, social & economic change

  • Renewed interest in the Classical World (Greece & Rome)

  • Secularism

  • Classics

  • Humanism

Remember "SCHool"

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Multiple Select

What civilizations did people become interested in again? (Choose 2)

1

Ancient Greece

2

Ancient China

3

Ancient Rome

4

Medieval Japan

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Multiple Choice

The acronym SCHool helps to remember:

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Secularism, Cuisine, Hilarity

2

Society, Classics, Humanism

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Society, Culture, Humanism

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Secularism, Classics, Humanism

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​Begins in Florence, around 1350 (give or take).
Will incorporate the Counter-Reformation (the Catholic Church's response to the Reformation)

​​Italian Renaissance

Spreads to Northern Europe by around 1450, lasts until around 1600.
Sort of includes the Reformation, though the two movements have VERY different ideas.

​​Northern Renaissance

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Open Ended

Given what you know of the Reformation (under the influence of Martin Luther and John Calvin), HOW do you think the Northern Renaissance will be different?

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Powerful city-states like Florence & Venice give rise to Kings, Lords, or Nobles who have both power AND money;
they use it to support art & artists

Italy is Fractured

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Fill in the Blank

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Multiple Choice

To what larger region did the Renaissance spread?

1

Asia

2

Europe

3

Africa

4

The Americas

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Multiple Choice

True or False: Italy was a unified country when the Renaissance started.

1

True

2

False

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Remember, in the Middle Ages, Italy was THE center of trade, banking, & commerce (Florin)
Powerful city states like Milan, Venice, Florence, and Rome became wealthy

Why Italy?

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Multiple Choice

Which of these was a city-state in Italy?

1

Milan

2

Paris

3

London

4

Lawndale

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Multiple Choice

These city-states were very wealthy in the Middle Ages because they were centers of trade.

1

True

2

False

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Secularism

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secularism (n) 1. the principle of separation of the state from religious institutions. 2. indifference to or rejection or exclusion of religion and religious considerations.

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Multiple Choice

Secularism means:

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A merging of religion and politics

2

Religion becomes less important in day to day life

3

People hate the church

4

People hate religion

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As more thinkers learn more about the natural world, religion holds fewer answers

New understanding of the world

The same anger that would later fuel the Reformation in the North led to secularism in the Italy

Frustration w/Church

Why the move away from religion?

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...begin to reflect human concerns, human struggles in the world (even those of ordinary folk!), and to value human life and experience. Religion begins to separate from government.

Art & Literature

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Don't mistake secularism with denouncing religion! People just start to think differently about religion and its role in their lives.

BUT: people are STILL deeply religious!

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Classicalism

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classicism(n) 1. the principles or style embodied in the literature, art, or architecture of ancient Greece and Rome 2. classical scholarship, including the study of Greek, Latin, and classical works

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People think medieval artists were not able to draw realistically. That is false; it was a creative choice. In the Ren. artists took inspiration from Greek & Roman realism

Realism

While many works were being written or translated into vernacular (common language), more secular writers looked to Latin works and/or wrote in Classical Latin

Language

As secularism and the influence of Classical thinkers expanded, emphasis on two ideas grew: the importance of reason, and the value of human excellence (areté)

Philosophy

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Multiple Select

The Renaissance was inspired by which cultures?

1

Romans

2

Chinese

3

Mongols

4

Indians

5

Greeks

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With the push against religion, the reasons for shame or modesty seemed more abstract, leaving room for a more positive idea of the human body

Secularism

It was commonly believed that the mind, body, and soul each had to be developed for a person to live a life of arete, so physical excellence was a virtue to be celebrated

Areté

A word about nudity in art: why?

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Multiple Choice

Areté means that humans should be:

1

healthy and athletic

2

well-educated

3

spiritually grounded

4

all of these

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Multiple Choice

The purpose of nudity in Renaissance art was:

1

To be gross and upset decent people

2

To be scandalous and 'edgy'

3

To celebrate the natural beauty of the human form

4

To make people think about s*x all the time

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And that leads us to...



Humanism


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Humanism

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humanism (n) 1. an outlook that puts importance on human rather than divine matters. 2. a belief that stresses the value of human beings 3. philosophy that emphasizes common human needs, and seeks rational (rather than divine) solutions to human problems.

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Multiple Choice

Humanism says that humans are basically what?

1

Corrupt

2

Greedy

3

Good

4

Sinful

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Multiple Select

Humanism suggests that the best way to solve human problems... (check al that apply)

1

Appealing to god and the saints for divine help

2

Recognizing human abilities AND limitations

3

Trusting to luck because humans are powerless

4

Applying reason or a rational approach

5

Total trust in the goodness of humans

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Humanism posits that humans have incredible potential, and that a good society is one that helps all people reach their potential

Human potential

Rather than the dominant doctrine of the sinfulness of humans, humanism believes humans are inherently good, and that it is circumstances that lead to evil (like poverty, injustice, hardship)

Human goodness

Humanism believes in the value of human reason, and values rationality over faith. Instead of praying to solve a problem, a humanist would look for a solution with reason

Human reason

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We know little about individual artists before the Renaissance. Now, artists are known for their work, and work is signed by the artist.
Why? (hint: think about those wealthy nobles...)

Art is signed!

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Meanwhile, back in Italy:

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The Renaissance really starts in Florence.
-Dante, Petrarch, Brunelleschi, Machiavelli
A Republic where a very wealthy middle class of merchants and guilds held most of the power
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Florence

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Of those families, the Medicis were some of the most powerful figures in all of Europe

The de Medici

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Cosimo, the leader of the de Medici family, gained control over Florence's government in 1434.
From then, the Medicis ruled Florence for 300 years, and were vital patrons of art, science, and culture

Cosimo de Medici

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Cosimo's grandson, brilliant if unattractive, would become even more influential, ruling Florence as a prince. He, too, was a great patron of the arts

Lorenzo de Medici (aka Lorenzo the Magnificent)

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Niccolo Machiavelli was a Florentine politician and writer. When Lorenzo de Medici took over Florence, Machiavelli was devastated. He was a strong supporter of the Republic (a form of democracy).

Machiavelli & Lorenzo

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Making the best of a bad situation, he wrote a guide for how the Prince should rule. Some have called his advice cruel, immoral, and tyrannical. Others have noted that his practical and clear-eyed approach is in fact, quite ethical.

The Prince

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Some of the artists the
De Medicis patronized:

Verocchio, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Fra Angelico, Donatello and countless others

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Patronage

  • Wealthy upper class supported the arts

  • Patronage = to support the arts (heard of Patreon?)

  • Wealthy patrons or even cities bought art to show prestige

  • The Catholic Church was a major patron of arts, AND science, learning, etc.

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Multiple Choice

Someone who supports an artist financially is known as a:

1

Subscriber

2

Patron

3

VTuber

4

Buyer

42

Multiple Choice

Lorenzo de' Medici was a patron of the arts for which of these artists?

1

Leonardo

2

Michelangelo

3

Raphael

4

Donatello

43

Multiple Choice

The Medici Family were patrons of the arts and ruled over what city-state in Italy?

1

Venice

2

Milan

3

Florence

4

Rome

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Dominican Friar, fanatically devout, preacher, and in his own eyes, a reformer and prophet. He was passionately opposed to everything the Italian Renaissance stood for.

Not everyone loved this stuff!Enter: Girolamo Savonarola

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Convinced people to bring out and burn art, books, musical instruments, cosmetics, clothes, playing cards, etc.

Hint: The ones buring books and art are, historially NEVER the good guys.

"Bonfire of the
vanities" (1497)

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Multiple Select

"Bonfire of the Vanities" was used as the title for: (select all that apply)

1

A novel by Tom Wolfe

2

A 1990 movie with Tom Hanks & Bruce Willis

3

An episode of 'Stranger Things'

4

A scene in the Assassins Creed II game

5

A hit rap song from 2012

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People got tired of his antics, decided art, books, music, etc. were actually good, and turned on Savonarola.

He was arrested, charged with heresy, and burned in the same plaza in which he'd burned so many treaures.

Didn't last long (shocking, right?)

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These changes were not JUST cultural or political. They were reflected in the art of the time.

Developments in Art

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Possible in part because of new discoveries in anatomy, many of them made by studying cadavers, or dead human bodies.

Realism

Much of Renaissance art & architecture reflects Roman themes, images, and styles. Even the buildings and clothing shown in paintings are Roman in style.

Roman Style

Realism also grew from the use of these to make a painting look like it had real depth, something we take for granted.

Perspective, Light & Shading

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Multiple Choice

What philosophy was depicted in Renaissance art?

1

Daoism

2

Nationalism

3

Humanism

4

Anti-disestablish-mentarianism

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Multiple Choice

Renaissance art utilized new techniques such as

1

Pointillism, or using tiny dots of color to make a picture from a distance

2

Underpainting, or putting a layer of dark paint and then adding lighter colors

3

Perspective and new ways to shade/use light

4

Assemblage, or adding many types of material onto a canvas

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What do you notice here?

Michelangelo: The Peita

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Michelangelo: The Creation of Adam (Sistine Chapel)

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​Michelangelo: Sistine Chapel

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What do you notice here?

DaVinci: Madonna

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DaVinci
Anatomy Sketch

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Raphael: The School of Athens

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Botticelli: Primavera

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Botticelli: Birth of Venus

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The Italian Renaissance
(& beyond)

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