Top Banner
Reformation and Renaissance
45

Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Reformation and

Renaissance

Page 2: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals

• European population recovered following Black Death in 1348.– Population grew to 120 million by 1750.– Much of Europe was divided politically into independent or autonomous units.

• Competition between states and units– Particularly France and Habsburg Spain.

• Sixteenth century began with consolidation of power.– France took over Burgundy and attempted to take over Italian cities.– Habsburg Charles V proclaimed Holy Roman Emperor, and acquired Bohemia

and part of Hungary.

• Some states acquired power and land: – Poland, Prussia, Sweden, and Russia.

Page 3: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 4: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 5: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Military innovations of the seventeenth century led to larger and more uniform armies.– Flintlock muskets– Uniforms– Peacetime training

• Sweden introduced the line infantry, of three lines of muskets.

• New larger militaries required more taxpayer money.– New taxes limited by opposition of noble classes, cities, and villagers.– Tax limits led many countries to borrow money or sell offices.

• • Netherlands was an exception.

– As its urban population grew, it increased fees, and revenues from charters.

Page 6: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Ivan IV1533 – 1547

Charles V1516 – 1558

Suleiman 1529 – 1566

Henry VIII1509 – 1547 Francis I

1515 – 1547

Humayun1530 – 1556

Page 7: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

The Hapsburg Empire

– Flanders– Burgundy,– Naples– Sicily– Austria– Spain– Aztec Empire– Inca Empire

Page 8: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Who were the Hapsburgs?

Charles I (of Spain)Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor

Philip II, “the Handsome” Joanna, “the Mad”

Ferdinand II and Isabella I(Spain)

Maximilian I, Holy Roman EmperorMary, Duchess of Burgundy

(Austria, Burgundy and Burgundian Netherlands)

Page 9: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 10: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Religious Discontent• Laypeople and lower clergy uneasy about alliances

between upper clergy and rulers.– Papacy trying to regain power after Great Schism.– Lay piety growing,

• printing press (from c. 1450) • popularity of devotional tracts.

• Church Schisms– East-West Schism - 1058– Western Schism - 1378 – 1418 – Reformation - Begins in 1517

Page 11: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Throughout the fifteenth century, laity of all classes was involved with faith,– Donations, – Mass– Sacraments– Study groups.

Page 12: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Papacy involved with politics

• . . . supported by dues and sale of indulgences.

Indulgence:“. . . the extra-sacramental remission of the temporal punishment due, in God's justice, to sin that has been forgiven, which remission is granted by the Church . . .”

Page 13: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Johann Tetzel, a Dominican, began to sell indulgences in Germany

"As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs."

Page 14: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 15: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Martin Luther (1481 – 1546) • An Augustinian monk in Wittenberg , Saxony

• In 1517 wrote a letter to his archbishop with 95 theses about the sale of indulgences, which he saw as contrary to scripture.– Theses translated into German and the Protestant Reformation began.

• Luther proposed four reforms of the church (the basis of Protestantism).– Salvation by faith alone.– Priesthood of all believers, and no separate clergy as mediators.– German princes should reform the church in their lands.– Bible translated into German and made available to all.

Page 16: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• The Duke of Saxony supported Luther’s reforms and created a state church.

• Emperor Charles V opposed Luther, – but his attention was divided

between Ottoman threat and rivalry with France.

• Peasants across Germany supported Luther, which led to the Peasants’ War and the death of 100,000 people.

• Some German princes, the Danish and Swedish kings, and Henry VIII of England created national Protestant churches.

Page 17: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Francis I of France – Supported the pope– Exiled French Protestants.

• John Calvin, a French lawyer, went into exile in Switzerland.– Created Protestant cities, such as Geneva.– Wrote the Institutes of the Christian Religion.

• In contrast to Luther, Calvin believed in:– Predestination– Enforced morality– Independent congregations not run by the state.

Page 18: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 19: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Counter-Reformation was the church’s attempt to reform while reaffirming belief in:– Good works– Priestly mediation– Monasticism– Centralized control.

• Sale of indulgences were phased out along with other “corrupt” practices.

• Papal inquisition revived – Index of Prohibited Books published.

• Jesuit order, created by Ignatius Loyola, devoted itself to education and missionary work in converting Protestant and non-Christians.

Page 20: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• French Calvinists, known as Huguenots, represented 10 percent of the French population.– Too many to imprison and execute– Organized as a separate church.

• Catholics and Huguenots often fought, and interrupted each other’s services.

• Queen mother, Catherine de’Medicis, acting as regent for her son, made Huguenot worship legal as long as it took place outside cities.– Duke of Lorraine killed 74 Huguenots in violation of this order.– Violence escalated to a civil war from 1562 to 1598.

• “The Wars of Religion”

Page 21: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Catherine arranged a marriage between her daughter and the leader of the Huguenots, King Henry III of Navarre.

– On St. Bartholomew’s Day (August 24, 1572), shortly after the wedding,

– Catholics killed thousands of Huguenots across France.

Page 22: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

The War of the Three Henrys1587 – 1589

• The Catholic League: Henry, Duke of Guise– Supported by Spain – Assassinated by the King’s guards

• The Royalists: Henry III of France– Assassinated by a fanatic monk

• The Huguenots: Henry IV of Navarre– Becomes King of France

Page 23: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• In 1589, Henry became Henry IV of France and a Catholic.– “Paris is worth a Mass.”

– Henry issued the Edict of Nantes allowing religious freedom for Protestants.

– In 1685 Louis XIV revoked the Edict.

Page 24: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Spain and Holland

• Many in the Netherlands converted to Calvinism.

• Philip II, king of Spain, became the ruler of the Netherlands in 1556.– Encouraged Jesuits and the Inquisition to persecute Calvinists.– Dutch Protestants turned war of religion into war of liberation

from Spain.

• United Provinces of the Dutch Republic created– A mixed religious population and tolerant.

Page 25: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Charles V abdicated in 1555

His son, Phillip II: Spain The Netherlands Lombardy Naples – Sicily

His brother, Ferdinand: The Hapsburg holdings Title of “Emperor”

Page 26: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Henry VIII made England Protestant– “Church of England little changed from the Catholic

Church– Not reformed enough for radical “Puritans.”

• Edward VI retains the Church of England

• Mary – Restores the Catholic Church– Marries Phillip II of Spain

• Elizabeth restores the Church of England

Page 27: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• James VI of Scotland became James I of England in 1603.– Collected taxes without summoning Parliament, who became

resentful.– Puritans had a small majority in the House of Commons

• wanted more religious reform • fiscal control.

• English Civil War, 1642 – 1651 – Charles I (son of James) executed in 1649– Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell became “Lord Protector.”

• Moderates recalled Stuarts (Charles II) in 1661– but problems with Parliament and Catholicism.– James II deposed in 1688 in the Glorious Revolution – William of Orange and Mary Stuart, the new monarchs

• Subordinate to Parliament

Page 28: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• K. Thirty Years’ War began with tensions in Bohemia between Catholic emperor Ferdinand

• II and Calvinists.• 1. Catholic princes suppressed Bohemian Protestants and chased their leader

into• Northern Germany.• a. Took advantage of the opportunity to capture Lutheran territories.• 2. Catholics successful until Lutheran King Gustavus II Adolphus of Sweden• intervened to help German Lutherans.• a. Gustavus also trying to create a fiscal-military state around the Baltic.• b. Louis XIII of France, although Catholic, supported Gustavus to prevent• Ferdinand from gaining more power.• 3. French intervention kept war going until Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, which• allowed religious freedom in Germany.

Page 29: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• L. Louis XIV, king of France in 1643, created an absolutist state.

• 1. Reduced power of nobles; required them to be in residence at Versailles.

• 358• 2. Relied on salaried bureaucrats to collect taxes.• a. Sold privileges of collecting taxes and

bureaucratic jobs, in exchange for estates,• titles, or hereditary offices.

Page 30: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• M. Tsar Peter I (1682–1725), the Great, Westernized and modernized Russia.

• 1. Paid Western advisors and administrators in estates, which came with serfs.

• 2. Reorganized the military, made up of landed nobility and conscripted soldiers.

• a. Took a census to determine tax collection, and reclassified many former free

• Russians as serfs.

Page 31: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• N. Hohenzollern dynasty of Prussia used army to centralize authority over aristocracy.

• 1. Becoming kings in 1701, the Hohenzollerns set out to expand Prussia’s land holdings

• through an aggressive military.• O. English model of constitutionalism contrasts with absolute

monarchies.• 1. Still a fiscal-military state, but dominated by Parliament rather

than monarch.• 2. Central Bank of England used for tax collection and

distribution of revenue.• 3. Powerful navy supplemented with mercenary land troops.

Page 32: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

The Renaissance

Page 33: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Italy more aware of classical past– led to Renaissance thought called Humanism.– Italian scholars invited Byzantines to bring manuscripts of Plato and Aristotle, and other

Greek and Hellenistic writings.– Technical innovations aided in the translations:

• new simplified Latin script• paper from Islamic Spain• Printing press

– Flood of new books and translations inspired the study of philology.

• Erasmus published a Greek and Latin translation of the New Testament.

• Medieval documents such as the Donation of Constantine proven to be a fraudbased on language and textual research.

• Renaissance political theory also became sharply critical of the traditional.– Machiavelli wrote of an intuitive political ability called virtu.– Successful rulers used any means necessary to retain power.

Page 34: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Renaissance art also looked to the classical past for models.– Donatello and Brunelleschi inspired by Roman imperial statues

and ruins.– Followed da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael.

• Renaissance style also flourished in northern Germany, in music, and theatre.– Musical innovations include development of counterpoint.– Theatrical changes include secular themes, as in commedia

dell’arte.– Shakespeare typifies the new theatre: Greek and Roman models

with contemporary themes and characters.

Page 35: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.
Page 36: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Pietro Perugino (1481–82)

Page 37: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Donatello, 1386 - 1466

Page 38: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Brunelleschi, 1377 – 1446

Page 39: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Leonardo da Vinci, 1452 - 1519

Page 40: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Michelangelo Buonarroti, 1475 – 1564

Page 41: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

Raphael Sanzio da Urbino, 1483 -1520

Page 42: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

New Science• . . . replaced centuries of Aristotelian belief in an earth-centered

universe.• Nicholas Copernicus

– challenged traditional Aristotelian–Ptolemaic thought about the universe.

– conceived of a heliocentric universe instead.

• Galileo used the new telescope and supported Copernican heliocentrism.– Counter-Reformation Inquisition objected apparent contradiction to the

Bible.– In 1632 Galileo placed under house arrest and renounced heliocentrism.

Page 43: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• Isaac Newton (d. 1727) made two important contributions to New Science: – calculus– a unified theory of physics and astronomy.

• Theory of a deterministic universe governed solely by mathematical principles.

Page 44: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• New Science used and created technical innovations– Telescope– Microscope– Thermometer– Air pumps– Barometer.

• Barometer used by Torricelli and Pascal to discover the vacuum, which will contribute to the development of the steam engine.– Piston driven by steam first developed by French Huguenot Papin.

Page 45: Reformation and Renaissance. Fiscal-Military States and Religious Upheavals European population recovered following Black Death in 1348. – Population.

• New Science led others to challenge scholastic theology and Aristotelian thought.– Rene Descartes decides that the only reliable thought was

mathematical– Sensory knowledge could not be trusted.– “Cartesian rationalism”

• Francis Bacon invented the empirical method and inductive reasoning.– Experimentation and observance of phenomena must

precede theory.