UNIT VIII – THE RENAISSANCE (AD1400’s & AD1500’s)

Pope Leo X on Humanism: Nothing more excellent or useful has been given to men

by the Creator, if we except the true knowledge and worship of Himself, than these studies.

TERMS TO KNOW

·  RENAISSANCE – literally “rebirth” or “revival,” a cultural and political movement originating in Italy in the 14th century

·  TRIVIUM – the three basic branches of Middle Ages education: grammar, rhetoric, and logic

·  QUADRIVIUM – four more advanced branches of Middle Ages education: arithmetic, geometry, astonomy, and music

·  SCHOLASTICISM – system of education which builds on the wisdom of the Fathers of the Church and the philosophy of Aristotle and Plato

·  HUMANISM – 14th Century movement focusing on the human spirit over the theological understanding of man

·  SECULAR – that which belongs to this life or the world; typically in contrast and opposition to things of the Church

DATES TO KNOW

·  AD1453 – Fall of Constantinople

PEOPLE TO KNOW

·  St. Thomas Aquinas – Dominican priest, Scholastic educator, and Doctor of the Church who gives the Church the clearest and most brilliant combination of philosophy and theology

·  Nicolo Machiavelli – Italian writer and philosopher most famous for a book which promoted the use and, when necessary, the abuse of political power

·  Erasmus of Rotterdam – a Dutch Catholic priest known for embracing humanist philosophy within a Catholic worldview

The World of the Renaissance

The word “Renaissance” literally means: ______

Originates in ______in the 14th century and from there spread to the rest of Europe

Focuses on: ______

I. RENAISSANCE: ARTS & CULTURE

Spiritual renewal led to a renewal of ______

New ideas and culture introduced from ______

All aspects of life and culture connected with ______

The Arts…

Included things like: ______

Art an object for ______

Arts explore beauty in ______to the Faith

Renaissance: Architecture

Cathedral of Florence, Italy Cathedral of St. Paul-Minneapolis Cathedral of Turin, Italy

Renaissance: Arts & Literature

Raphael – best known for his ______and his paintings in the ______apartments

Petrarch – called the “______” (but NOT a Father of the Church)

Dante Aleghieri – author of ______

Michelangelo – showed grandeur of ______

Leonardo da Vince – the man who wanted to know everything.

A Painter & an inventor: Painted ______& ______

II. RENAISSANCE: LEARNING

From Monastery & Cathedral schools to Universities

Universities started by ______because the monastery & cathedral schools were ______

Students studied under expert teachers, eventually ______their disciplines

The goal of a university was to give students ______

The Papacy had a key role in establishing & supporting Universities

Various universities

Paris – most influential European University (known for: ______)

Bologna (known for: ______)

Salerno (known for: ______)

Many ______leaders were educated in Universities

Led to great flowering of Renaissance culture

Studied “liberal arts”

·  Trivium – grammar, rhetoric, logic

·  Quadrivium – arithmetic, geometry, music, & astronomy

Scholasticism – approach to learning used in Universities

St. Anselm of Canterbury was one of the first to use this method

His famous principle: Fides quarens intellectum

[meaning: ______]

What is St. Anselm’s starting point for all learning? ______

He synthesizes ______

SCHOLASTIC METHOD

(1) Raising a disputed question

(2) Hearing arguments on both sides

(3) Giving a harmonized answer

(4) Offering a response to objections

St. Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church – ______

So named because he had an intellect as advanced as ______

St. Albert the Great: This dumb ox shall bellow so loud that his bellowings will fill the world

Thomas' s ______is illegible. It is unreadable.

He was the high-point of Scholasticism

Able to see the relationship and harmony between what 2 sets of things?

1. ______2. ______

Both stem from the ______

Used Aristotle’s philosophy to understand the Catholic Faith

Ex. used Aristotle’s understanding of matter to show the ______

This will be VERY important next semester…

Aristotle begins with the ______, but Plato and Plotinus dismissed the senses.

Renaissance: Literature & Learning

Scholars turned to ______and ______classics

Caused a desire to return to the Greco-Roman world in ______

Bl. J. H. Cardinal Newman: Greco-Roman civilization is the “the soil in which Christianity grew up.”

Principle of Middle Ages: ______

After Black Death, began to question this

Leads to less focus on ______, more on ______

Scripture & Tradition don’t ______

Humanism

Scholasticism, because it was closely tied to the Church, became ______

Humanism became ______

Denotes a certain mood and intellectual climate

More ______than Scholasticism

Fascination w/human achievement and individual’s ability to ______

The HUMANIST THINKER

The purpose of education is to make one wiser and more virtuous … ______

Focus was more on one’s relationship to the world instead of God… ______

EFFECTS OF HUMANISM ON EDUCATION

Sometimes caused inordinate reverence for ______

Caused some to focus on secular to the exclusion of ______

______no longer played a role in every aspect of daily life

Less influential in political and academic sphere

One good effect was that a true Christian (______) humanism also developed

A Christian Response to Humanism

The union of ______and ______

Christian Humanism focuses that a person is made in ______

Christ, as the Perfect Man, is obviously key…

III. RENAISSANCE POLITICS

NICOLO MACHIAVELLI

Founder of modern ______

Developed concept of “the ends justify the means.”

Over-emphasis on ______

Cast down Christian virtues from preeminent position

ERASMUS OF ROTTERDAM

Friend of ______

Extolled the primacy of ______

·  Deep desire for reform and progress through ______

·  Suggested a more personal and subjective ______

Encouraged study of the ______

IV. RENAISSANCE POPES

Often lived more like worldly princes than ______

Papacy cannot look ______as it has before

Servus servorum Dei (St. Gregory the Great) is gone; it’s now about ______

Pope Nicholas V – GOOD!

Preserved many ancient documents, founded Vatican Library

Successfully integrated new humanism with ______

The Good (Pius III, Julius II**), the Bad (Leo X), and the Ugly (Alexander VI)

Julius II – peak of Renaissance Papacy – moral, but ______; patron of the arts

More like secular rulers than spiritual Fathers

Spent much time ruling, defending, exploiting, and expanding ______

NOTE: the Pope possessed the Papal States from AD750-AD1870

V. THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE – AD1453

Background

Byzantium never really recovered after ______& the powerful Muslim Turks

Minor Council called to reunite East & West

BUT Latin bishops wanted to ______

Never discussed uniting against ______

Eastern emperor pressured Eastern bishops to come to an agreement

Temporary re-unification

Laity ______the reunification, causing more resentment of ______

“Better the turban of the Prophet than the Pope’s tiara”

Papal ships arrived ______with aide (too late), but Constantinople fell on May 29, 1453

Effects

MARKS END OF ROMAN EMPIRE!

Solidified split between ______

Italian city-states’ trade benefited greatly

Trade shifted from Constantinople to ______

Refugees brought a new infusion of life into the ______