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The Late Middle Ages & The Renaissance

Explore the major events and transformations during the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance period, including the Black Death, the Hundred Years War, challenges to the Church, the evolution of Italian Renaissance, social classes, gender roles, child rearing, and demographic changes.

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The Late Middle Ages & The Renaissance

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  1. The Late Middle Ages & The Renaissance Unit 1 Lecture Notes

  2. The black death • The Black Death: Plague that struck Europe in 1347 and killed roughly 1/3 of the population. • Spread by fleas on black rats & poor sanitary conditions • primarily seen in cities • No class differentiation (rich & poor) • Seen by many as a punishment from God. • Thousands of Jews were blamed and executed as “cause” of plague.

  3. The Hundred Years War (1337-1453) • Background: • French duchy of Aquitaine became English by marriage (1152) • Treaty of Paris 1259  reaffirmed English claims to Aquitaine, but as a vassal to French crown • Primary Causes: • Questions over line of succession to the French crown (Edward III vs. Philip VI) • Philip VI (France) confiscated Edward III’s (England) holding of Aquitaine -1337 • Wool trade

  4. Challenges to the Church • The Babylonian Captivity (1309-1376) • Period when Popes resided in Avignon, France rather than in Rome. • Popes return to Rome in 1377 • Urban VI anti-corruption campaign  antagonizing • Cardinals secretly elect new pope to reside in France (Clement VII) • Great Schism (1378-1417)  period of two and then three popes • Kings supported popes based on political considerations • Cardinals depose all three popes in 1417, and elect new pope to reside in Rome (Marin V)

  5. Society in the Later Middle Ages • Later Middle Ages saw the trend of delayed marriage (late 20s) • Economic independence before marriage • Late marriage/prohibition  urban unrest • Brothels became part of urban life • Fur-Collar Crimes • Nobles turned to robbery & extortion to maintain standard of living • Usually got away with crimes

  6. Vernacular • Later Middle Ages saw an increase in the development of ethic identities & tension. • Statute of Kilkenny (1366) • Vernacular: literature written in national languages national consciousness • Dante’s Divine Comedy • Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales

  7. The Evolution of the Italian Renaissance • How do we define “Renaissance”? • French word meaning “rebirth,” used to describe the rebirth of the culture of classical antiquity in Italy during the 14thto 16th centuries.

  8. Communes & Republics • Communes: Sworn associations of free men in Italian cities led by merchant guilds that sought political and economic independence from local nobles. • Began in the 12th century to seek political and economic independence from local nobles. • Marriage between rural nobles & mercantile aristocracy • New social class: Urban nobility

  9. Communes & Republics • Popolo: Disenfranchised common people in Italian cities who resented their exclusion from power. • Majority of men did not qualify for citizenship in the communes (property, years of residence, social connections). • Couldn’t hold public office. • Movements for Republican governments failed • In the 15th century, political power and elite culture centered on the princely courts: • Signori: one-man rulers • Oligarchies: the rule of merchant aristocracies

  10. Balance of power: Italian City-States Why did Renaissance Italians struggle to develop one unified state? • Patronage: Financial support of writers and artists by cities, groups, and individuals, often to produce specific works or works in specific styles. • Interconnection of economics, politics, and culture • The Medici family & Florence (1434-1494)

  11. Intellectual Hallmarks of the renaissance • Humanism: a program of study designed by Italians that emphasized the critical study of Latin and Greek literature with the goal of understanding human nature. • Virtu: The quality of being able to shape the world according to one’s own will. • Secularism: Basic concern with the material world instead of with the eternal world of spirit.

  12. Class • Social class is usually synonymous with people having the same social, economic, cultural, political or educational status, but there are conflicting opinions when it comes to the definition of ‘class.’ • Topics: • How do social classes change over time? • Peasants, merchants, clergy, nobility • Working class? • Middle class? • Upper class? • How do people advance up the hierarchy? • How do living standards for different social classes change over time?

  13. Gender • Gender history focuses on the categories, discourses and experiences of femininity and masculinity as they develop over time. • Topics: • The Status of Women? • Marriage? • Prostitution?

  14. Child Rearing • What was life like for children, and how did attitudes toward childhood evolve? • Topics: • Infant mortality rates? • Connection to parents? • Mini-adults vs. children? • Education?

  15. Demographics • How have populations shifted over time? We’ll be looking at the impact have these changes had on European cultures, as well cultures around the world. • Topics: • How does war change populations? • How does disease change populations? • How did colonial expansion influence demographic changes? • What causes populations to move from rural to urban areas?

  16. Education • Not only has access to education changed over time, but the emphasis on what should be studied has shifted as well. • Topics: • Who has access to education? • What role do churches play in education? • Should women be educated? • Should children be educated? • What subjects should be studied?

  17. The Renaissance in the north • Christian Humanists: Northern humanists who interpreted Italian ideas about and attitudes toward classical antiquity and humanism in terms of their own religious traditions. • Desiderius Erasmus (Dutch) • Thomas More (English) • Civic Humanism: Modeled on Cicero, the belief that it was an intellectual's civic duty to be involved in politics and help the community. • Niccolo Machiavelli most well known example from the Renaissance • Thomas More as well?

  18. Pre-Renaissance State Building • The High Middle Ages saw the beginnings of the modern state • Juries • Representative assemblies • Sheriffs • State building required a strong monarchy • Absent during 100 Years’ War • No effective leadership across Europe

  19. France • Charles VII (r. 1422-1461) • Royal council elevated the influence of middle class men • Created the first permanent royal army • Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges • Superiority of a general council over the papacy • French crown > French church • Louis XI (r. 1461-1483) • Expanded royal authority to unify the kingdom (Burgundy, Maine, etc.) • King Francis I & Pope Leo X (1516) • Pope gets $$$ -> King appoints church officials

  20. England • War of the Roses (1455-1471) • The houses of York defeat the houses of Lancaster • Edward IV (York), Richard III (York), and Henry VII (Tudor/Lancaster) • Restored royal prestige • Crushed the power of the nobility (didn’t need the $$$) • Established order • Machiavellian methods -> ruthlessness, efficiency, and secrecy

  21. England • The Royal Council • Center of royal authority, which governed at the national level • Most men were from lesser land-owning classes & educated in law • “Middle Class” • The Court of Star Chamber • Judicial offshoot of the royal council. • Brutal tactics • Against common law practices, but effective • Henry VIIdistrusted the nobility • Still met with Parliament, but mainly to confirm laws • The Tudors gained support of upper-middle class by promoting peace and social order • Promoted diplomacy and trade to build economic strength

  22. Spain • Spain remained a conglomerate of independent states until 1700(ish) • Individual parliaments, laws, courts, and taxation • Ferdinand of Aragon & Isabella of Castile(r. 1474-1516) • Dynastic union of two royal houses • Restructured the royal council to curb aristocratic power. • Full executive, judicial, and legislative powers under the monarchy • Hermandades: popular groups given authority to act as local police & judicial tribunals. • Curb rebellious and warring aristocracy

  23. Spain • Spain’s Jewish minority population seen as ‘dangerous’ to many • Resentment of Jewish influence and wealth • Rise of anti-Semitic feelings during the 14th century • Spanish Inquisition • 15th century Spanish nationalism • Used by the crown as a politically unifying tool • 1492: All practicing Jews expelled from Spain • Religious orthodoxy and purity of blood at the roots of the Spanish national state

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