Back to AI Flashcard MakerEducation /Barron's AP World - Chapter 13 Renaissance and Reformation
humanism
emphasized reason
admired Greco-Roman civilization as a model
concerned itself with everyday human problems
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Key Terms
Term
Definition
humanism
emphasized reason
admired Greco-Roman civilization as a model
concerned itself with everyday human problems
Renaissance
a rebirth of learning and awareness, both culturally, artistically, socially, and intellectually, in Europe
Medici family
a noteworthy family in Florence who were initially bankers, then leaders of their city-state; they were major patrons of the arts
Francesco Petrarch
a 14th-century Renaissance poet who admired the ethical example of the Romans and wrote that leading a full life on earth was more important than devo...
Dante
an early (13th-century) writer in the Italian vernacular (common language), he wrote books such as “The Divine Comedy” and “The Inferno,” which offere...
Leonardo da Vinci
a 14th-century artist, architect, musician, mathematician, and scientist; his most famous paintings include the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper
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| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
humanism | emphasized reason
admired Greco-Roman civilization as a model
concerned itself with everyday human problems |
Renaissance | a rebirth of learning and awareness, both culturally, artistically, socially, and intellectually, in Europe |
Medici family | a noteworthy family in Florence who were initially bankers, then leaders of their city-state; they were major patrons of the arts |
Francesco Petrarch | a 14th-century Renaissance poet who admired the ethical example of the Romans and wrote that leading a full life on earth was more important than devotion to heavenly pursuits |
Dante | an early (13th-century) writer in the Italian vernacular (common language), he wrote books such as “The Divine Comedy” and “The Inferno,” which offered a fictional account of a soul’s journey to heaven and hell |
Leonardo da Vinci | a 14th-century artist, architect, musician, mathematician, and scientist; his most famous paintings include the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper |
Michelangelo | a16th-century sculptor noted for his statues of David and Moses, as well as his painting of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican; he also designed the dome of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome |
Raphael | a 16th-century Renaissance painter known for his frescoes in papal chambers and for his madonnas |
Titian | with the king of France and the Holy Roman Emperor as his patrons, he (16th-century) was known for his use of rich colors; his most famous work was The Assumption of the Virgin |
Donatello | a 15th-century sculptor who admired Greek and Roman statues; his statue of Saint George is a model of realism |
Northern Renaissance writers | Desiderius Erasmus (16th century), the greatest humanist of northern Europe; he criticized the lack of spirituality of the contemporary Roman Catholic Church
Thomas More (16th century), his book “Utopia” described an imaginary, ideal society
William Shakespeare (16th century), considered the greatest poet and playwright of the English language
Francois Rabelais (16th century), a French political writer |
Northern Renaissance artists | Rembrandt (17th century), known for his contrasting of light and shadows
Albrecht Durer (16th century), copper engravings and woodcuts
Jan Van Eyck (1400s), painted in oils on canvas
Pieter Bruegel (mid-1500s), used paintings or rural scenes to criticize societal intolerance |
indulgences (as practiced during the High Middle Ages) | paper whose purchase were said by the Church to guarantee forgiveness of sins; they were used to pay for the rebuilding of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome |
justification by faith | the doctrine of Martin Luther, which stated that heaven could be achieved through faith alone, without works |
Peace of Augsburg | following the rise of Lutheranism, Charles the 5th sent his armies out against the Protestant Princes in Germany; this treaty declared that each German ruler could choose the religion for his state |
Henry the 8th | the ruler of England who wanted to divorce his wife because she had failed to bear a son; when the Pope refused, he persuaded Parliament in 1529 to place him a the head of a new Church, the Church of England (the Anglican Church) |
Ulrich Zwingli | a Catholic priest from Zurich who began the Swiss Reformation; his work was continued by John Calvin |
John Calvin | a theologian who believed in justification by faith and taught the doctrine of predestination |
predestination | the belief that God, from the beginning, had chosen some people for heaven and others for hell |
John Knox | the founder of the Presbyterian Church |
Anabaptists | Christians who stressed adult baptism and the separation of church and state, they were persecuted by both Catholics and Protestants, and eventually split into a number of denominations (Mennonites, Amish, Quakers, and Baptists) |
Huguenots | French Protestants who had been subjected to persecution, including a massacre by French Catholics in 1572 |
Edict of Nantes | an edict that granted religious freedom to the Huguenots in 1598 |
St. Ignatius of Loyola | the founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in 1534 |
Inquisition | a church court that was established to try accused heretics and punish the convicted |
Spanish Inquisition | an especially powerful arm of the Catholic Church that was known for excess and brutality |
Council of Trent | a council convened in 1545 to examine the teachings and practices of the Roman Catholic Church; it affirmed the following things:
the Church's interpretation of the Bible is the final authority
both faith in Christ and good works are necessary for salvation
both the Bible and Church tradition are important authorities
indulgences are expressions of faith, and cannot be sold
creation of the Index of Forbidden Books |
Index of Forbidden Books | a list of books that were considered to be theologically incorrect, and which Catholics were banned from reading; this prohibition was abolished in 1966 by the Second Vatican Council |