30
CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

Page 2: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 3: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 4: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

LORENZO DE MEDICI:

Page 5: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

HUMANISM: BIRTH OF VENUS BY BOTTICCELI

Page 6: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

PERSPECTIVE: THE ENTOMBMENT BY RAPHAEL

Page 7: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

CLASSICAL V. BAROQUE DURING RENAISSANCE

Page 8: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

CONSIDER THE STYLE OF ARCHITECTURE IN THESE PHOTOS. HOW CAN WE DETERMINE THESE ARE

EXAMPLES OF RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE? EXPLAIN.

Page 9: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE? WHY OR WHY NOT? EXPLAIN

Page 10: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

MICHELANGELO’S WORKS IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL

Page 11: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

HOW CAN ART, LITERATURE, AND WEALTH LEAD TO STRUGGLE, CONFLICT, AND CIVIL WAR?

Page 12: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

David by Michelangelo

Pieta by Michelangelo

Page 13: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

FLORENCE ITALY TODAY

Page 14: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

NEW WAYS OF RULE AND GOVERNMENT

• “Men in general judge more by the sense of sight than by the sense of touch, because everyone can see but few can test by feeling. Everyone sees what you seem to be, few know what you really are; and those few do not dare take a stand against the general opinion.”

Page 15: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

LEONARDO DA VINCI: THE RENAISSANCE MAN

Page 16: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

HIS CONTRIBUTIONS TO ENGINEERING, ARCHITECTURE, BIOLOGY, FLIGHT, ETC.

Page 17: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

THE LOUVRE IN PARIS AND THE MONA LISA

Page 18: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 19: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

WHAT ARE SOME POSSIBLE THEMES IN THESE ARTWORKS? WHICH WOULD BE AN EXAMPLE OF REALISM?

Page 20: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 21: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

RELIGION, REALISM, AND EVERYDAY LIFE

Page 22: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 23: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

CHRISTIAN HUMANISM AND NEW IDEAS FOR SOCIETY

Page 24: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: THE ENGLISH RENAISSANCE

Page 25: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

PLAYS AND POETRY DURING THE ELIZABETHAN AGE

Page 26: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

QUEEN ELIZABETH: ADMIRER OF THE ARTS AND RULER OF ENGLAND.

Page 27: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

THE GUTENBERG BIBLE: ONLY

Page 28: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY
Page 29: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

OTHELLO: THE MOORE OF VENICEINTERRACIAL RELATIONSHIPS, MANIPULATION, AND DEATH.

• Iago is considered to be the most wicked of all villains in Shakespeare’s works. What sort of methods does he use to drive Othello into rage? What makes him so Evil?

Page 30: CH1 SEC1: EUROPEAN RENAISSANCE1300-1600: ITALY

WORLD HISTORY CH1 SEC. 1 AND 2 STUDY GUIDE

• Contributions to the Rise of the Renaissance Period• Classical to Humanism teachings and values• Patrons and Renaissance Men and Women (Raphael, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Da

Vinci, etc.)• New Art (Perspective, Fresco, Baroque, etc.)• Niccolo Machiavelli and his approach to rule and government• Northern Renaissance (England) writers and painters such as Shakespeare,

Albrecht Durer, Pieter Bruegel, Jan VAN Eych, Thomas More (Their ideas and contributions)

• Shakespeare’s Plays: Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and Othello