Document Analysis: The Renaissance AP European History 2014

Please use the information within the documents, the historical context and the information from last nights’ reading to answer both the individual document questions and the summative questions at the end. You can work with a partner or in a small group but each person needs to show their own work.

Historical Context

During the late Middle Ages, Europe suffered from both war and plague. Those who survived wanted to celebrate life and the human spirit. They began to question institutions of the Middle Ages, which had been unable to prevent war or to relieve suffering brought by the plague. Some people question the Church, which taught Christians to endure suffering while they awaited their rewards in heaven. In northern Italy, writers and artists began to express this new spirit and to experiment with different styles. These men and women would greatly change how Europeans saw themselves and their world.

Task: Read each of the following documents and complete the activities on the attached page. As you examine each of the following documents, consider how the ideas expressed represent the ideals of the age of the Renaissance and Renaissance Humanism.

Document One: Baldassare Castiglione The Courtier (Primary Source)

Let the men we are seeking be very bold stern and always among the first, where the enemy are to be seen; and in every other place, gentle, modest, reserved, above all things avoiding ostentation (showiness) and that impudent (bold) self-praise by which men ever excite hatred and disgust in all who hear them… I would have him more than passably accomplished in letters, at least in those studies that are called the humanities, and conversant not only with the Latin language but for Greek, for the sake of the many different things that have been admirable written therein. Let him be well versed in the poets, and not less in the orators and historians, and also proficient in writing, prose and verse.

Document Two: Christine de Pizan, The Book of the City of Ladies, 1405 (Primary Source)

I am amazed by the opinion of some men who claim that they do not want their daughters, wives, or kinswomen to be educated because of their morals would be ruined as a result…Here you can clearly see that not all opinion of men are based on reason and that these men are wrong.

Document Three: Excerpt from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2, 1603 (Primary Source)

What piece of work is a man, how noble in reason, how infinite in faculties, in form and moving, how express and admirable; in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god, the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals.

Document Four: Jacob Burchardt The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, 1878 (Secondary Source)

In the Middle Ages both sides of human consciousness lay dreaming or half awake beneath a common veil. The veil was woven of faith, illusion, and childish prepossession…Man was conscious of himself only as a member of a race , people, party, family or corporation-only through some general category. In Italy this veil first melted into air…man became a spiritual individual, and recognized himself as such. In the same way the Greek had once distinguished himself from the barbarians… When this impulse to the highest individual development was combined with a powerful and varied nature…Than arose the “all sided man”…in Italy at the time of the Renaissance we find artists who in every branch created new and perfect works, and who also made the greatest impression as men.

Document Five: A.J. Froude, Erasmus, Life and Letters 1894(Secondary Source) Erasmus was a Renaissance Humanists

The world is waking out of a long deep sleep. The old ignorance is still defended. Time was when learning was only found in religious orders. The religious order nowadays care only for money and sensuality while learning has passed to secular prices and peers and courtiers. Shame on all of us! The tables of priest and divines run with wine and echo with drunken noise and jest, while in prices’ halls in heard only the grave and modest conversation on points of morals or knowledge…

Document Six: Petrarch Epistolae metricae 1360’s

Living, I despise what melancholy fate has brought us wretches in these evil years. Long before my birth time smiled and may again, for once there was, and yet will be, more joyful days. "But in this middle age time's dregs sweep around us, and we beneath a heavy burden of vice. Genius, virtue, glory now have gone, leaving chance and sloth to rule. Shameful vision this! We must awake or die!"

Document Seven: Michelangelo’s David 1401-1405 ( Primary Source)

Document Eight: Ballini, Portrait of a Young Man, late 15c (LEFT); Raphael, Portrait of a Young Man With An Apple, 1503-1504 (RIGHT).

Document Activities

APPARTS of Document Analysis: Select TWO of the above PRIMARY SOURCE documents (do not use #4) and answer the following questions. (Your answers do not need to be in complete sentences)

Document # ______

A- Who is the author of the document? What might the author’s point of view be and how might that form their ideas about the Renaissance?

P- What is the purpose of the document? Why was it written or created?

P- Prior knowledge- What do you know about the time period that might help you gain a deeper understanding of the document?

A- Who is the audience? For whom is this document written?

R- What is the root or main idea of the document?

T- What is the tone of the document? Excited? Angry? Passionate? Why is this important?

S- What is the significance of the document? How and why would this document answer the question that is asked? How do the ideas expressed in the documents represent the ideals of the age of the Renaissance and Renaissance Humanism?

Document # ______

A- Who is the author of the document? What might the author’s point of view be and how might that form their ideas about the Renaissance?

P- What is the purpose of the document? Why was it written or created?

P- Prior knowledge- What do you know about the time period that might help you gain a deeper understanding of the document?

A- Who is the audience? For whom is this document written?

R- What is the root or main idea of the document?

T- What is the tone of the document? Excited? Angry? Passionate? Why is this important?

S- What is the significance of the document? How and why would this document answer the question that is asked? Consider asking yourself “so what”?

How do the ideas expressed in the documents represent the ideals of the age of the Renaissance and Renaissance Humanism?

Summative Question: Using the information gained from the homework reading and your understanding of these documents, be prepared to discuss the following question in class on Friday.

How and in what ways were the ideals of Renaissance Humanism a representation of the “Re-birth” of Europe?