WORLD HISTORY: 1350-1871 Flashcards
Origins of the Renaissance
- dates
- what the era saw
- started where and w/ who
- what caused this time
- the spread
a. defined as “rebirth” - 14th-17th c.
b. rediscovery of classical Greek and Roman philosophy, literature, and art. is credited w/ bridging the gap between the Middle Ages and modern-day civilization
- humanism
c. started in Florence, Italy w/ the Medici family
d. the Crusades, the fall of the Byzantine Empire, and the Black death played a role in developing this period.
e. the movement first expanded to other Italian city-states, then during the 15th c., Renaissance ideas spread from Italy to France and then western and northern EU
significant individuals of the EU Renaissance (pt. 1)
a. Leonardo da Vinci: italian painter, architect, inventor- painted the mona lisa and the last supper
b. Desiderius Eramus: scholar from Holland- defined the humanist movement in northern EU and translator of the New Testament into Greek
c. Rene Descartes: French philosopher and mathematician - the father of modern philosophy “I think therefor I am”
d. Galileo: Italian astronomer, physicist, and engineer. described the moons of Jupiter and rings of Saturn - placed under house arrest for his views of heliocentric universe
e. Nicolaus Copernicus: mathematician and astronomer who made first modern scientific argument for the concept of a heliocentric solar system
f. Thomas Hobbes: english philosopher and author of “Leviathan”
g. Geoffrey Chaucer: english poet and author of the “Canterbury Tales”
h. Dante: Italian philosopher, poet, writer, and political thinker
significant individuals of the EU Renaissance (pt. 2)
a. Niccolo Machiavelli: Italian diplomat and philosopher famous for writing “The Prince”
b. Titian: Italian painter celebrated for his portraits and religious and mythical paintings (i.e. Metamorphoses)
c. John Milton: English poet and historian who wrote the epic poem “Paradise Lost”
d. William Shakespeare: England’s national poet and the most famous playwright
e. Donatello: Italian sculptor celebrated for lifelike sculptures
f. Sandro Botticelli: Italian painter of “Birth of Venus”
g. Raphael: Italian painter who learned from Da Vinci and Michelangelo - painting “The School of Athens”
h. Michelangelo: Italian sculptor, painter and architect- painted the Sistine Chapel in Rome
5 major developments of the Renaissance
a. includes developments in:
- astronomy
- humanist philosophy
- the printing press
- vernacular language in writing, painting, and sculpture technique
- world exploration
origins of the Protestant Reformation:
- when, where, and who
- the indulgence system
- learning from the bible
a. a religious reform movement in EU
b. began in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517 when Martin Luther (a teacher and a monk) challenged the Catholic Church’s practices
- published “95 Theses”
c. he expressed his ideas on the indulgence system: people could purchase a certificate of pardon for the punishment for their sins (ticket to heaven) → others to share their thoughts on Catholicism
d. the printing press and translation of the bible into the vernacular language → learning directly from the Bible w/ out having to rely on a priest or the church
the leading reformers of the Protestant Reformation
( Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII)
a. Martin Luther
b. John Calvin: the most important figure of the second generation of the reformation - a french protestant in Geneva who redefined Protestant doctrines
- founded Calvinism
c. Henry VIII: broke from the Catholic Church and replaced the Pope as the head of the Church in England
response of the Catholic Church of Protestant reformers
a. the Counter-Reformation (1545): the Catholic church’s response to Luther’s and Calvin’s ideas
b. The Council of Trent (1545-1563) reformed the practices of the church
- clarified its teachings, corrected abuses, and attempted to win people back to Catholicism
c. the Protestant Union (1608) and the Catholic League (1609) were formed
how were the French wars of religion initiated?
a. 1562-1598: a series of 8 conflicts between Protestants (Huguenots) and Catholics in France
b. 1562: Catherine de Medici issued the Edict of Saint-Germain, which gave the Huguenots right to worship as long as they did it outside of cities and stayed loyal to the king. but that angered many Catholics, and the first war began
the French wars of religion
- (1562-63): Duke Francois de Guise massacred a 100 protestants → war spread throughout the kingdom
- (1567-68): the Edict of Longjumeau ended the war
- (1568-70): Protestants moved into Spain, but the king of Spain said NO and helped the Catholics - the edict allowed freedom of worship anywhere for Protestants
- (1572-73): St. Bartholomew’s Day: Catholics killed thousands of Huguenots in Paris - the Edict of Boulogne granted freedom of worship in only 3 towns
- (1574-76): Protestants and moderate Catholics made an alliance known as the “Malcontents”
- the Edict of Beaulieu allowed freedom of worship except in Paris - (1576-77)
- (1579-80)
- (1587-89): the War of the Three Henrys
☆Edict of Nantes: signed by Henry IV - ended the war, established Catholicism as the state religion of France, but granted Protestants rights under the Catholics
the Age of Exploration (or Age of Discovery): date, what started it (hint: the Ottoman Empire) and the first to voyage
a. 15th-17th c
b. when the Ottoman Empire took control of Constantinople, it blocked EU access to the area, severely limiting trade (the Silk Road)
- also blocked access to North Africa and the Red Sea, 2 very important trade routes to the East
c. the first journeys were conducted by the Portuguese
- Prince Henry the Navigator
d. eventually, other EU countries began conducting their own ventures- seeking new trade routes and claiming foreign lands
Portuguese and their impacts during the Age of Exploration: purposes for exploration, Dias, Vasco De Gama, arriving in Asia, and Magellan
a. aimed at spreading Christianity and making Portugal rich w/ profits from gold, spices, and slaves
- Portugal’s largely responsible for the slave trade to the Americas
- made advanced ships known as caravels- shipping goods from Asia and Africa to EU
b. in 1487, Bartolomeu Dias, led the first successful sea voyage to the southern tip of Africa
c. 1498: Vasco de Gama voyaged across the Indian Ocean, reaching Calicut, India
- this opened the first water route to India from EU, paving the way for a new era of global trade and colonialism
- they established a Portuguese network of trading posts in eastern Africa and India, and using brutal force against local Muslim and Hindu populations
d. reached the Spice Islands (Indonesia) in 1512 and China in 1514
e. Fernando de Magalhes (Magellan) sought a western sea route to the Spice Islands (1512)
- he discovered the Strait of Magellan and became the first EU to cross the Pacific ocean
- landed in the PI where he was killed
- marked the end of Portuguese’s dominance of the sea
voyages of Christopher Columbus and the Treaty of Tordesillas
a. Columbus (a Genoese navigator) wanted to find the Indies by sailing west
- after being denied by the Portuguese king, Columbus sought support from Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain
b. 1492: Columbus set sail and reached the Bahamas and the island of Hispaniola (modern-day Haiti and Dominican Republic)
c. the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) divided the world in half between Spain and Portugal
d. Columbus’ journeys opened the door for Spanish conquest
- Hernan Cortes and Francisco Pizarro decimated the Aztecs of Mexico, the Incas of Peru, and other indigenous peoples of the Americas
impact EU exploration had on Native Americans
a. EU explorers brought deadly diseases such as smallpox, influenza, measles, chicken pox, etc.
- Natives had no immunity to this, as much as 90% of the population may have died
b. Natives started trading w/ the explorers→ natives becoming dependent of them for new goods which caused a lot of problems
c. one of the things of the new trade was slavery. before Africans, captured Indians were enslaved and purchased by settlers to work
- before 1700, the port city of Charleston shipped out many enslaved Natives to work in the Caribbean or sold in northern cities
impact the Spanish had on Native Americans:
- concentrated where in the US?
- Christianity
- epidemics
- military post
a. concentrated their efforts in southwestern and southeastern US
b. Catholic missionaries wanted to convert the Natives to Christianity
c. various epidemics were brought
d. established a military post in San Augustin (Florida)
- was multicultural crossroads where Indigenous peoples traded w/ Spaniards and intermarriage between Spanish men and Indian women were common
impact the French had on Natives:
- exploited who?
- the fur trade
- France’s competition
a. exploited existing inter-tribal alliances and rivalries to establish trade relationships w/ the Huron, Montagnais, and Algonquins
b. was interested in the fur trade
- French traders exchanged textiles, weapons, and metal goods for furs of various animals
c. 18th c.: the Dutch and English competed w/ the French for trade and territory, which gave locals continued economic, diplomatic, and military leverage
impact the Dutch had on Natives
- focused trade in what states
- fur trade alliance
a. they focused on trade w/ Natives in present-day NY and NJ
b. established a fur trade alliance w/ the Iroquois confederacy (the most powerful Native American empire in the 17th c.)
c. Dutch weapons helped the Iroquois to defeat the Huron
origins of the Scientific Revolution
- developments in?
- Copernicus’ heliocentric theory
a. period that marked the emergence of modern science during the early modern pd.
- developments in mathematics, physics, astronomy, biology, and chemistry transformed the views of society abt nature
b. 1543. Nicholas Copernicus determined the universe was heliocentric: the sun was the center
- this sparked further discoveries