the renaissance moves north objectives: -to analyze the contributions of the northern renaissance...

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The Renaissance

Moves

NorthObjectives:

-To analyze the contributions of the Northern Renaissance artists, thinkers and innovators-To assess the impact of the printing press.

Albrecht Dürer • Albrecht Dürer traveled to Italy in 1494 to study the techniques of the Italian masters.

• Returning to Germany he employed these methods in paintings and, especially, in engravings.

Peasant and His Wife

• In this form of art, an artist etches a design on a metal plate with acid.

• The artist then uses the plate to make prints.

• Like the Italian artists of the Renaissance, Durer tried to achieve a standard of ideal beauty that was based on a careful examination of the human form.

“Feet of An

Apostle”

Hands

of

Horus

“German Leonardo”

• Through his art and his essays, Dürer helped spread Italian Renaissance ideas in his homeland.

• Due to his interests that extended far beyond art, he is sometimes called the “German Leonardo.”

Northern Humanists

• Northern European humanists, like Italian humanists, stressed education and classical learning.

• At the same time, they still emphasized religious themes.

• The revival of ancient learning was believed to bring about moral and religious reform- this was different than the Southern European humanists who did not stress religion.

The Dutch:

Erasmus

• Desiderius Erasmus, the great Dutch priest and humanist wrote a new Greek edition of the New Testament.

• He also called for a translation of the Bible into the vernacular, or everyday language of ordinary people.

• What is our vernacular?

• What are words that you use that are unique to your generation or group of friends?

• What are the benefits of information in your language?

• To Erasmus an individual’s chief duties were to be open-minded and of good will toward others.

• He was disturbed by corruption in the Church and called for reform.

More• Erasmus’s friend, the English humanist Thomas

More, also pressed for social reform.

• In Utopia, More describes an ideal society in which men and women live in peace and harmony.

• No one is ideal, all are educated, and justice is used to end crime rather than to eliminate the criminal.

• Today, the word utopian has come to describe an ideal society.

• Why do you think that peasants would like the book Utopia?

• What song(s) can you think of that reflects the ideas of Utopia?

Rabelais

• Had a varied career as a monk, physician, Greek scholar, and author.

• Gargantua and Pantagruel, chronicles the adventures of two gentle giants.

• On the surface the novel is a comic tale of travel and war.

• But Rabelais uses his characters to offer opinion on religion, education, and other serious subjects.

Shakespeare

• Poet and playwright

• Between 1590 & 1613, he wrote 37 plays that are still performed around the world.

• He wrote comedies, historic plays, tragedies

• Shakespeare’s love of words vastly enriched the English language.

• More than 1,700 words appeared for the first time in his works, including bedroom, lonely, generous, gloomy, heartsick, hurry, and sneak.

Have you seen Shakespeare?

The following modern movies are loosely based on famous

Shakespearean works…• The Lion King

• 10 Things I Hate About You and Deliver Us From Eva

• She’s the Man/Mulan/ Big Momma

• “O”

• West Side Story/Teen Beach Movie

HamletThe Taming of the Shrew

The Twelfth NightOthelloRomeo and Juliet

The 13 Most Influential Inventions

in History•Harnessing/Applying

Electricity •The computer•The internet

•The steam engine• Steel

• Gunpowder• The atomic bomb

• The car• Radio

• Telephone• Television

•The printing press

• What do you think the most influential inventions have been?

• Johann Gutenberg of Germany, printed a complete edition of the Bible using movable type metal type on a machine called a printing press.

• The use of this invention TRANSFORMED EUROPE!!!!!

• Prior to the printing press books were written by hand and were very expensive- taking between 6 months and a year to write just one book.

Immense Changes• Printed books were cheaper

than hand copied books.• More people learned to read.• Readers gained access to a

variety of subjects.• Exposed educated Europeans

to new ideas.• Contributes to the religious

turmoil that swept Europe in the 1500s.

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