Chapter 2
The Renaissance in Italy
Jacob Burckhardt
19th century Swiss historian
Italian Renaissance- “prototype of the modern world”
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860)
Ancient learning in 14th and 15th century Italy gave rise to secular and scientific values
People adopted rational, empirical, and statistical approaches
Discovered latent creativity
Critics said he overlooked the continuity of the Middle Ages and Renaissance
The Italian City-State
Renaissance society happened in late medieval Italian merchant cities
Italy
Cultural Advantage
Natural gateway between East and West in geography
Venice, Genoa, and Pisa traded with near East throughout Middle Ages
11th century- mastered business skills of organizing, bookkeeping, developing new markets, and securing monopolies
15th century- trade-rich cities became bankers for Europe
Growth of City-States
Expansion of Italian cities and urban culture
Helped by pope and Guelf (pro-papal) vs. emperor and Ghibelline (pro-imperial)
Weakened one another which let merchant oligarchies thrive
Italian cities remained free to expand on their own
Became independent states, absorbing surrounding countryside and eliminating competitive states
5 major evolved states
Duchy of Milan
Republic of Florence
Republic of Venice
Papal states
Kingdom of Naples
Social strife and competition for political power evolved cities into despotism (tyranny) to survive
Venice stayed a merchant oligrachy
Controlled by Council of Ten (judicial body) and 300 member patrician senate to stop rival groups
Social Class and Conflict
Florence- prime example of social division and anarchy
4 distinguishable social groups
The old rich (grandi)
Noblemen and merchants who ruled
Newly rich merchant class
Capitalists and bankers
Popolo grosso, “fat people” who challenged old rich in 13th and 14th century
Middling burgher ranks
Guild masters, shop owners, professionals, small business people who sided with new rich against conservative policies of old
Popolo minuto, “little people”
Bottom of society
Lower socioeconomic classes
1457- 30,000 people listed as paupers with no wealth
Social divisions caused conflict
1378- Ciompi (poor class uprising)
Feuds between old and new rich
Social anarchy because of Black Death halving the population
Collapse of Bardi and Peruzzi great banking houses leaving poor vulnerable
Chaotic 4-year reign of power by lower classes
Stability did not return until Florentine banker and statesman Cosimo de’ Medici (1389-1464) in 1434
Despotism and Diplomacy
Cosimo de’ Medici
Wealthiest Florentine and natural statesman
Controlled the city through manipulating the constitution and influencing elections
Signoria (group of 6 then 8) governed the city
Men from powerful guilds, major clothing industries, and other strong groups (bankers, judges, doctors)
Cosimo kept loyal councilors in it
Cosimo’s grandson, Lorenzo the Magnificent (1449-1492, r. 1478-1492) ruled Florence
Totalitarian ruling during last quarter of 15th century
The Pazzi (rival family) who plotted with pope against the Medicis assassinated his brother
Lorenzo was a cautious, determined ruler
Despotism elsewhere was less subtle
To prevent internal social conflict and foreign interest from harming the city, dominant groups hired strongmen
or despots (podestà) which maintained law and order
Held executive, military, and judicial authority to maintain normal flow of business activity by whatever means necessary without a class prospering
Operated through mercenary armies by military brokers (condottieri)
Art of Diplomacy
City-states stayed with foreign military developments and had advantages over enemies without war with skilled diplomats
Also established embassies in 15th century to keep it that way
Represented at ceremonies and negotiations and became eyes and ears at rival courts
Italian Renaissance was promoted by despots, republicans, secularized popes, spiritual popes, tranquil Venice, democratic Florence, and despotistic Milan.
Supported by very great wealth
Humanism
Different meanings
A philosophy driven by the dignity of humankind, individualism, and secular values
Humanists- could have been champions of Catholic Christianity, opposing Aristotle and Scholasticism writings
Orators and poets who wrote original literature in classical and vernacular languages
Taught rhetoric in universities
Sometimes hired by royal and papal courts as secretaries, speechwriters, and diplomats
Neutral form of empirical-minded historical scholarship adopted to promote political liberty and civic responsibility
Studia humanitatis
Liberal arts program of study embracing grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, politics, and moral philosophy
Uses Latin and Greek classics and ancient Church Fathers’ works
Florentine humanist Leonardo Bruni (1370-1444) associated humanitas (“humanity) with the learning
Star pupil to Manuel Chrysoloras (1355-1415)
Taught Greek scholarship to Italian humanists when teaching in Florence (1397-1403)
Petrarch, Dante, and Boccaccio
Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374)
“Father of humanism”
Pursued letters and poetry in Avignon
Letters to the Ancient Dead
Personal letters to Cicero, Livy, Vergil, Horace about Rome
Africa
Latin epic poetic tribute to Roman general Scipio Africanus
Lives of Illustrious Men
Biographies of famous Roman men
Love sonnets, admiring a married woman
In a popular revolt in Rome
Served the Visconti family in Milan
Latter humanists featured his critical textual studies, elitism, contempt for learning Scholastics, Classical and Christian values, imagined dialogues with Saint Augustine, and defended personal immortality of soul against Aristotelians
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
Near-cintemporary
Vita Nuova and Divine Comedy (with the sonnets) made Italian vernacular literature
Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375)
Decameron
100 tales told by 3 men and 7 women in a safe country retreat away from plague that ravaged Florence in 1348 (Bubonic Plague)
Exposes sexual and economic misconduct
Sympathetic view on human behavior
Assembled an encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology
Educational Reforms and Goals
Humanists
Refused to be slaves to their own times
Made them innovative educators
Kept them in search of new sources to solve society’s ills
Created manuscript collections with past history, potent remedies for contemporaries, and sound advice for politicians and rulers
Goal of Humanist studies
Wisdom spoken: knowledge of the good and ability to persuade others of it
Learning shouldn’t be abstract and unpracticed
“Will the good rather than know the truth” - Petrarch taught
Learning ennobled people
Pietro Paolo Vergerio (1349-1420)
Author of influential Renaissance tract on education, On the Morals That Befit a Free Man
Humanist concept of liberal education- virtue and wisdom to develop body and mind gifts to ennoble people
Reforms in traditional education
Roman orator Quintilian’s (ca. 35-100) Education of the Orator (1416)
Basic classical guide for humanist curriculum
Vittorino da Feltre exemplified the ideas
Made his students read difficult works and had physical exercise and games
Baldassare Castiglione’s (1478-1529) Book of the Courtier
Rediscovered past knowledge modeled and challenged the present
Practical guide for court of Urbino (Italy) nobility
Highest ideals of Italian humanism
Merges ancient language knowledge and history with athletic, military, and musical skills
With good manners and moral character
Noblewomen promoted the new education and culture
Christine de Pisan (1363?-1434), daughter of French king Charles V’s physician and astrologer
Expert in classical, French, and Italian languages and literature
Married at 15 but widowed mother of 3 at 27
Wrote lyric poetry, read throughout European courts, to support herself
Famous work The Treasure of the City of Ladies
Accomplishments of great women in history
The Florentine “Academy” and the Revivial of Platonism
Revival of Greek studies in 15th century
1397- Manuel Chrysoloras came to Constantinople to promote Greek learning
1439- Council of Ferrara-Florence negotiated the reunion of the Eastern and Western churches which allowed Greek scholars and manuscripts to come from the West
1453- Constantinople fell to the Turks so many Greek scholars fled to Florence
Florentine Platonic Academy
Evolved under Cosimo de’ Medici, Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499), and Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494)
An informal gathering of influential Florentine humanists devoted to the revival of Plato and Neoplatonists’ works
Ficino edited and published Plato’s completed works
Platonism
Appealing because of its view on human nature
Eternal sphere of being and a perishable world in which humans actually live
Human reason preexisted in pristine world and still commune with it because of the theory supported by human knowledge of eternal mathematical and moral truths
Platonic influence
Pico’s Oration on the Dignity of Man
Most famous Renaissance statement on the nature of humankind
Introduction to 900 theses
Basis for public debate on all of life’s important topics
Depicts humans as the only creatures in the world who have the freedom to do and be whatever they choose
Published in Rome December 1486
Critical Work of the Humanists: Lorenzo Valla
Critics of tradition
Learned humanists because they had scholarly ideals of philological accuracy and historical truth
Shook long-standing foundations (medieval church)
Lorenzo Valla (1406-1457)
Elegances of the Latin Language (1444)
Standard Renaissance text on Latin philology
Reveals explosive character of the new learning
Good Catholic and hero to Protestant reformers
From Donation of Constantine and defense of predestination against advocates of free will
Donation (18th century)
Allegidly was a good faith grant of vast territories to the pope and church by Roman emperor Constantine (r. 307-337)
Valla did not mean for it to have the devastating force the Protestants attributed it to be
Proved in a careful, scholarly way
Filled with anachronistic terms (fief) and information not in a 4th century document --> a fraud
Also errors in Latin Vulgate (authorized version of the Bible for Western Christendom)
Still loyal to the church and faithfully fulfilled the office of apostolic secretary in Rome under Pope Nicholas V (r. 1447-1455)
Historical humanistic criticism served people far less loyal to the medieval church
These young humanists were the first identifiable group of Martin Luther’s supporters
Civic Humanism
Basic humanist criticism
Uselessness of so much of its content
Civis humanism
Education should promote individual virtue and self-sacrificing public service
Examples in Florence
Coluccio Salutati (1331-1406)
Leonardo Bruni (1370-1444)
Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459)
All rallied Florentines against their aggressors with rhetorical skills
Doubt that it was for civic activity instead of great power
End of Renaissance
Humanists became cliquish and snobish intellectual elites concerned about narrow Latin scholarly interests than civic and social ife
In response, Niccolò Machiavelli (1469-1527) and Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540) who wrote Italian and contemporary history as their primary source and subject matter
2 sides of humanism
Deep historical scholarship
Practical transparent politics
High Renaissance Art
Lay people had a leading role and created models for the clergy to follow
Mainly because of the church losing international power during late Middle Ages’ crises
Rise of national sentiment and national bureaucracies worked by laymen encouraged lay education over 14th and 15th century
Medieval Christians had a more this-worldly spirit and mission
High Renaissance (1450-1527)
Art and sculpture reached maturity
Embraced the natural world and human emotions
Medieval art- abstract and formulaic
Works had a rational (mathematical) order
Perfect symmetry and proportionality to reflect harmony of the universe
Artists
Helped by 15th century technical skill developments
Availability of oil paints
Two special techniques
Shading to enhance naturalness (chiaroscuro)
Adjustment of figure size to make a feeling of continuity (linear perspective)
Artists now portrayed space realistically and painted a natural world
3D canvases with energy and life instead of flat Byzantine and Gothic canvases
Giotto (1266-1336)
Father of Renaissance painting
Admirer of Saint Francis of Assisi and loved nature
Painted a more natural world
Still had religious seriousness but not abstract and unnatural
Artists who displayed the world literally and naturally
Painter Masaccio (1401-1428)
Sculptor Donatello (1386-1466)
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)
Exhibited the Renaissance ideal of the universal person
Advised Italian princes and French king Francis I (r. 1515-1547) on military engineering
Approached his work by observations
Self-taught botanist
Foresaw airplanes and submarines
Painted the Mona Lisa
Conveyed inner moods through complex facial expression
Raphael (1483-1520)
Man of great kindness and painter of sensitivity
Most famous for tender madonnas and great fresco in the Vatican, The School of Athens
Perfect example of Renaissance techniques
Plato and Aristotle surrounded by other philosophers and scientists of antiquity
Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564)
18-foot sculpture of David
Harmony, symmetry, and proportion to serve the glorification of the human form
Painting of frescoes in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel
Painted during term of pompus Pope Julius II (r. 1503-1513)
10,000 square feet and 343 figures (most over 10 feet tall)
Took four years to complete
Later works
More complex and reveal deep personal changes
Mark the passing of High Renaissance painting to new style mannerism
A style of art in the mid- to late-16th century allowing artists to express their own “manner” or feelings in contrast to the symmetry and simplicity of the art of the High Renaissance
Strange and abnormal
Made room for strange and abnormal
More rein to individual perception and feelings of the artist
Tintoretto and El Greco’s works are mannerism’s representatives
Slavery in the Renaissance
Slavery flourished
Western slave market- (since 12th century) Spanish sold Muslim slaves captured in raids and war to wealthy Italians
Contemporaries- slavery was merciful
Collective plantation slavery developed in eastern Mediterranean during High Middle Ages
Savannas of Sudan and Venetian estates on Cyprus and Crete had slaves cut sugarcane which set the model for slave plantations
After Black Death (1348-1350), the demand for slaves increased
Slaves were imported from Africa, Balkans, Constantinople, Cyprus, Crete, and surrounding Black Sea lands
Consisted of many races: Tatars, Circassians, Greeks, Russians, Georgians, Iranians, Asians, and Africans
Always a slave in the household
Used as dowry, in lieu of fees, and with priests
Italian law for slavery
Owners have complete dominion over slaves
Slaves cost = free servant wages for several years
Worth the cost
Tatars and Africans were worst treated
Ancient Greece and Rome
Slaves were accepted as family members and integrated into households
Few female slaves became mothers of the masters’ children
Fathers adopted children and raised them as legitimate heirs
Keep slaves happy and healthy to be useful and not a threat
Slaves
Foreign and suspected presence in Italy
Uprooted and resentful people
Italy’s Political Decline: The French Invasions (1492-1527)
Relied on internal cooperation for peace and safety from foreign invasion (Turks)
Treaty of Lodi (1454-1455)
Kept peace during second half of 15th century
Brought Milan and Naples (enemies) into alliance with Florence
Stood against Venice that joined the Papal states to maintain an internal balance of power
All five states could be a unified front if necessary
1490- Milan vs. Naples because of the rise of Milanese despot Ludovico il Moro
1494- Treaty of Lodiś peace was ended when Naples threatened Milan
Ludovico asked the French for aid (horrible decision)
French kings ruled Naples (1266-1442) before being kicked out by Duke Alfonso of Sicily
Allowed the French to enter Italy and take their dynastic claim to Naples
France also had dynastic claims to Milan that Ludovico did not know about
France now wanted lots of territory
Charles VIII’s March through Italy
Charles VIII (r. 1483-1498) cross the Alps (August 1494) to try and eager to conquer Florence, the Papal States, and Naples
Florentine ruler, Piero de’ Medici, handed over Pisa and Florentine possessions to stop Charles
Piero was exiled by citizenry revolutionized by Dominican preacher Girolamo Savonarola (1452-1498)
Convinced people that the king’s arrival was justified divine vengeance on their immortality
With Savonarola, Charles could enter Florence
Fatal flattery and large ransom payment allowed the city to escape destruction
Charles passed through
Savonarola now ruled Florence (4 years)
His moral rigor and antipapal policies prevented him from surviving in Italy
After Italian cities reunited and kicked out the French, in May 1498 Savonarola was imprisoned and executed
Terror in non-Italian hearts
Ferdinand of Aragon (r. 1479-1516)
Wanted to expand in Italy from sicily but became vulnerable to French-Italian axis
Created a new counteralliance, League of Venice
March 1495
Venice, Papal States, Emperor Maximilian I (r. 1493-1519), and Ferdinand vs. France
Set up France-Spain conflict until 1559
Ludovico il Moro
Realized the French threatened Italy
Joined the League of Venice
Now able to retreat Charles and end the trouble he brought to Italy
Pope Alexander VI and the Borgia Family
French returned to Italy under Louis XII (r. 1498-1515; Charles’ successor)
Italian ally, the Borgia pope Alexander VI helped
Most corrupt pope on papal throme
Promoted Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia’s political careers
His children before he was pope
Papal policy + his family’s effort to have a political base in Romagna in north central Italy
Venice (pope ally within League of Venice) fought Papal states for loyalty
French alliance would help Alexander control Venice/Romagna (Italy regions)
Alexander VI secured French favor
Annulled Louis XII’s marriage to Charles VIII’s sister
Louis then married Charles’ widow, Anne of Brittany
Political move to keep Brittany French
Cardinal’s hat given to archbishop of Rouen, Louis’s favorite
Promoted
Agreed to abandon League of Venice
Made league weak so French could conquer Milan
August 1499- Louis invaded Milan
Ludovico il Marco
Originally started French invasion
Rotted in French prison
1500- Louis and Ferdinand of Aragon divided Naples
Pope and Cesare Borgia conquered Romagnan cities without resistance
Cesare now “duke of Romagna”
Pope Julius II
Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere
Succeeded Alexander VI as Pope Julius II (r. 1503-1513)
Suppressed the Borgias (enemies)
Romagnan lands under papal jurisdiction
Gained title “warrior pope”
Brought Renaissance papacy to its peak of military prowess and diplomatic intrigue
Julius Excluded from Heaven
Described Julius’s unsuccessful attempts to convince Saint Peter he was admitted to heaven
Pope Julius drove Venetians out of Rogmagna (1509) and secured Papal States
Now tried to rid Italy of French invader
Holy League (October 1511)
Julius, Ferdinand of Aragon, and Venice + Emperor Maximilian I and Swiss
1512- French in retreat
1513- Swiss defeated France at Novara
Francis I (r. 1515-1547)
Louis’s successor
Invaded Italy 3rd time
Massacred Swiss soldiers of Holy League at Marignano, September 1515
August 1516- won Concordat of Bologna
French king controls French clergy and French recognition of pope superiority and right to college annates
Kept France Catholic after Protestant Reformation
Niccolo Machiavelli
Watched French, Spanish, and German armies wreak havoc on Italy
Virtú in Roman rulers and citizens
Ability to act decisively and heroically for the country’s good
Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540)
More sober historian who wrote truer chronicles of Florentine and Italian history
Held republican ideals
Strong and determined people could struggle successfully with fortune
Internal fueding causing self-destruction
“Machiavellian” epithet
Ruthless political expediency
Italy needed cunning dictators to help divided, selfish people
The Prince (1513)
Cynical satire how rulers behave but not recommendation of despotic rule
Kinda contradicts himself
But advises rulers to use advantages of fraud and brutality
Dedicated to Lorenzo de’ Medici
Wanted a strong ruler from the Medici family
Controlled the papacy in 1513 of Leo X (r. 1513-1521)
Controlled Florence
1527
Machiavelli’s death
Medici pope Clement VII (r. 1523-1534) watched as Emperor Charles V sacked Rome
Revival of Monarchy in Northern Europe
Shift from divided feudal monarchy to unified national monarchies
Dynastic and chivalric ideals of feudal monarchy did not disappear
Territorial princes and representative bodies stayed
Feudal monarchy of High Middle Ages
Divison of basic powers between king and semiautonomous vassals
Nobility and towns had different unity and success to stop royal centralization by evolving representative assemblies
English Parliament
French Estates General
Spanish Cortés
After Hundred Years’ War and Great Schism, nobility and clergy decreased
Towns allied with king
Townspeople staffed royal offices and became king’s lawyers, bookkeepers, military tacticians, and foreign diplomats
Broke feudal society
Possible rise of sovereign states
Sovereign States
Monarch and his/her chosen agents decisions (national matters)
Taxation
War-making
Law enforcement
Monarch overcame decentralization that impedes nation-building
Last half of 15th century
Rulers made/used the law
Appointed civil servants (national vision now)
Names
Castile- corregidores
England- justices of the peace
France- bailiffs operating as well-drilled lieutenants
National Armies
Noble cavalry became infantry and artillery
“Kings army”
Mercenary soldiers from Switzerland and Germany
Professional soldiers were better than feudal vassals
Fought for pay
Consequence
Failed to meet payrolls had foreign troops to worry about
Growing warfare cost = new national sources of income need
Government taxation
Highest social class thought they were immune
It was an insult and humiliation to them
Revenues were now at expense of those not able to pay
Feudal lords
Collect rent from royal domains
Levy national taxes on food and clothing
Salt tax (gabelle) in France
10% sales tax (alcabala) on commercial transactions in Spain
Direct taxes on peasantry (taille)
Sale of public offices and issuances of high-interest government bonds
Borrow from rich and great bankers of Italy and Germany
Kings’ creditors and competitors were the privilege classes
France
France king Charles VII (r. 1422-1461) made great by people who served
Ministers created a permanent professional army
Inspired by Joan of Arc
Drove English out of France
Jacques Coeur
Independent merchant banker
developed an economy, diplomatic corps, and natinoal administration
helped his son Louis XI make France powerful
2 political cornerstones in 15th century
Collapse of English Empire in France after Hundred Years’ War
Defeat of Charles the Bold (r. 1467-1477) and duchy of Burgundy
Burgundy
Maybe Europe’s strongest political power in mid-15th century
Wanted to dwarf Franch and Holy Roman Empire
Could have if continental powers did not stop him
Charles died in defeat at Nancy in 1477 so Burgundian Empire died with him
Split between Louis XI and Hashburgs (got better part)
Louis secured the monarchy
Ended his reign with 2x the size he inherited
Harnessed the nobility, expanded trade and industry, created national postal system, and established a silk industry
2-edge sword
With secure and efficient govenrment, went to pursue that was ultimately a bad foreign policy
Conquests in Italy in 1490s and losing wars against Habsburgs in first half of 16th century had France (mid-16th century) as a defeated, divided nation
Spain
Union of Isabella of Castile (r 1474-1504) and Ferdinand of Aragon (r. 1479-1516) in 1469
Unified Castile and Aragon and now ruled properly in mid-15th century
Constitutionally separated with respective government agencies and cultural traditions
Subdued the realms, secured borders, ventured abroad militarily, Christianized Spain
Before had 3 religions (Islam, Christianity, Judaism)
1482-1492: conquered the Moors in Granada
1504- possessed Naples
Won allegiance of Hermandad (powerful league of cities and towns that went against noble landowners)
Portugal and France protested the marriage
Castile
5 million people
Sheep-farming industry
Run by Mesta
Government-backed industry
Centralized economic planning
Aragon
<1 million people
Spanish Church
Isabella and Ferdinand controlled
Appointed higher clergy and officers of Inquisition
Tomás de Torquemada (Isabella’s confessor) ran the officers’ national agency in 1479 to monitor activity of converted Jews (conversos) and Muslims (Moriscos)
Jews and Moors were exiled unless they converted
Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros (1437-1517) exiled Moors helped Spain remain a Catholic country
Secured an operation base for European Counter-Reformation
Their kids’ marriages
Eldest daughter Joanna
“The Mad”
1496- married Archduke Philip, son of Emperor Maximilian I
First kid, Charles I, ruled united Spain
Catherine of Aragon, second daughter
Married Authur, son of English king Henry VII
He died
Married future King Henry VIII (r. 1509-1547)
Failed which helped emerge the Anglican church and English Reformation
Overseas exploration
Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain sponsored Genoese adventurer Christopher Columbus (1451-1506)
Arrived at Caribbean islands while sailing west in search of shorter route to spice markets in Far East (East Indies)
Created Spanish Empire in Mexico and Peru
Made Spain Europe’s dominant power because of gold and silver mines in 16th century
England
After Hundred Years’ War, civil warfare brokeout between the House of York and the House of Lancaster
Roots of war lay in forced deposition of king Richard II
Wars of the Roses (York- white rose; Lancaster- red rose)
Lasted from 1455 to 1485
Duke of York challenged Lancastrian monarchy of Henry VI (r. 1377-1399)
1461- Edward IV (r. 1461-1483), son of York duke, seized power and instituted a strong arm rule
20 years straight without Henry’s short restoration
Increased monarchy’s power and finances
Edward’s brother, Richard III, took the throne from Edward’s son
Tudor dynasty took it after Richard died and portrayed him as a villain who murdered Edward’s sons in the Tower of London to get the throne
Shakespear’s Richard III
Richard’s reign got support for exiled Lancastrian Henry Turdor who defeated him in August 1485
Henry Turdor, ruled as Henry VII (r. 1485-1509)
1st of Turdor dynasty that dominated England in 16th century
Henry married Edward IV’s daughter, Elizabeth of York
United rival royal family and made offsprings’ claim uncontestable
Disciplined English nobility through Court of Star Chamber
Aimed to end perversion of English justice by powerful nobles who used intimidation and bribery to win favorable verdicts in court cases
King’s councilors sat as judges
Created a fair court system
Used English law to futher monarchy ends
Confiscated noble’s lands and fortunes so he did not depend on Parliament for royal funds
Helped develop monarchy into one of early modern Europe’s exemplary governments during his granddaughter Elizabeth I’s reign (r. 1558-1603)
The Holy Roman Empire
Germany
Territorial rulers and cities stopped national consolidation and unity
By late 15th century, hopelessly divided into 300 autonomous political entities
Golden Bull
7-member electoral college with archbishops of Mainz, Trier, Cologne; duke of Saxony; margrave of Brandenburg; count Palatine; king of Bohemia
Administrative body
Elected the emperor to cooperate to create transregional unity and administration
Gave a single ruler
Conditions of his rule and extent were negotiated at each election
Always balanced
Emperor Charles IV (r. 1346-1378) + major German rulers
Reichstag
Creation of an imperial diet to attempt to control incessant feuding in 15th century
National assembly of seven electors, non-electoral princes, 65 representatives from free cities
1495 assembly in Worms- members won an imperial ban on private warface, created Supreme Court of Justice to enforce internal peace, and created Council of Regency to coordinate German policy
Still poor substitute for national unity
16th & 17th century- territorial princes became sovereign rulers
Disunity helped religious dissent and conflict
Protestant Reformation broke out in 16th
The Northern Renaissance
Northern humanists
Created a climate for religious and educational reforms on Reformation
Came from diverse social backgrounds and more devoted to religious reforms than Italian counterparts
Wrote for lay audiences and narrow intelligentsia
Northern Humanism
Initially stimulated Italian learning by students who studied in Italy, merchants, and Brothers of the Common Life
Brothers of Common Life- lay religious movement started in the Netherlands that permitted men and women to live a shared religious life without formal vows of poverty, chastity, obedience
The Printing Press
15th century- literate lay public was created by expansion of schools and universities
Cheap way to manufacture paper
Made books economical
Manuscripts were written on vellum
Expensive and cumbersome
Carving words and pictures onto wook, inking it, and stamping out copies
A cheap modern poster
Johann Gutenberg
Invented printing in mid-15th century in Mainz, Germany
Books now had profund and practical topics
Everyone could have them
1500- printing presses operated in >60 German cities and >200 European cities
Helpful to humanists who now had international audiences
Literacy
Nurtured self-esteem and critical frame of mind
Rulers in church and state now dealt with more intelligent people (wanted answers and not naive)
Print useful for propaganda (political/religious)
A lot of indoctrinates, indulgences, and pamphlets
Erasmus
Desiderius Erasmus (1466?-1536)
Most famous northern humanist
Illustrates impact of printing press
Educational and (Catholic) religious reformer
Tutored well-to-do youths as a job
Used short Latin dialogues to teach them how to speak and live well and instill good manners and language through reading
Colloquies
Included anticlerical dialogues and satires on religious dogmatism and superstition
Adages
5,000 ancient, contemporary proverbs
with expressions like “leave no stone unturned”
Beliefs
Unite classical ideals of humanity and civic virtue with Christian ideals of love and piety
Could reform individuals and society
Summarized beliefs in philosophia Christi
Simple, ethical piety in imitation of Christ
Opposite of dogmatic, ceremonial, bullying religious practices of Middle Ages
Didn’t like Scholastics, Middle Ages and new Protestant ones, because dogma and argument was valued over Christian piety and practice
True idealist
Expected more from people than theologians believe them capable
Made ancient Christian sources available in original versions to recover moral and religious health the New Testaments promised
Edited Church Fathers’ works to produce Greek Edition (1516) and Latin edition (1519) of New Testament
Church authorities didn’t like it
All Erasmus’s works were on church’s Index of Forbidden Books in mid-16th century
His works were sturdy tools of reform in Protestant and Catholic reformers
Laid the groundwork for Luther to use
Humanism and Reform
Germany protestant reform
Rudolf Agricola (1433-1485)
“Father of German humanism”
Spent 10 years in Italy and introduced Italian learning to Germany
Conrad Celtis (1st poet laureate) and Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523), fiery knight
Gave German humanism a nationalist coloring hostile to non-german cultures, Roman cultures
Von Hutten illustrated union of humanism, German nationalism, and Luther’s religious reform and attacked indulgences
Reuchlin affair
Brought von Hutten onto historical stage and unified reform-minded German humanists
Johann Reuchlin (1455-1522)
Europe’s Christian authority on Hebrew and Jewish learning
Wrote the 1st Hebrew grammar and attracted to Jewish mysticism
1506- Pfefferkorn and Dominican order tried to suppress Jewish writings and attacked Reuchlin
German humanists rushed to Reuchlin’s defense
In name of academic freedom and good scholarship
Martin Luther was attacked in 1517 so Germans saw it as a repetition and rushed to his side too
Controversy lasted for years and produced satire Letters of Obscure Men (1515)
England protestant reform
English scholars and merchants brought Italian learning to England
English humanism maturation
Lectures by William Grocyn and Thomas Linacre at Oxford and Erasmus at Cambridge
John Colet (1467-1519)
Dean of Saint Paul’s Cathedral
Patronized humanist studies for the young and promoted religious reform
Thomas More (1478-1535)
Best-known English humanist
Close friend of Erasmus
Utopia (1516)
Conservative criticism of contemporary society
Rivals Shakespeare plays as most read in 16th century
Imaginary society based on reason and tolerance that overcame social and political injustice by holding all property and goods in common and requiring people to work for bread
One of Henry VIII’s trusted diplomats
Act of Supremacy (1534)
England king was head of English church
Refusal to recognize king’s marriage to Anne Boleyn led to his execution, July 1535
France protestant reform
French invasions of Italy helped Italian learning spread to France
French humanism
Leaders- Guillaume Budé (1468-1540) and Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples (1454-1536)
Lefèvre
Works exemplified critical scholarship and influenced Luther
Guillaume Briconnet and Marguerite d’ Angouleme
Cultivated a generation of young reform-minded humanists
Including Protestant reformer John Calvin
Spain
Entered the service of the Catholic Church
Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros (1437-1517)
After 1508, “Grand Inquisitor”
Could enforce strict religious orthodoxy
Founded University of Alacala near Madrid in 1509
Printed New Testament Greek edition
Translate religious tracts to reform clerical life and direct lay piety
Complutensian Polyglot Bible
Greatest achievement
Six-volume work that placed the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin versions of the Bible in parallel columns
Scholarly projects + internal church reforms + Ferdinand and Isabella’s repressive measures = Catholic Spain
During Age of Reformation
Voyages of Discovery and the New Empires in the West and East
The Portuguese Chart the Course
Prince Henry “the Navigator” (1394-1460) captured the North African Muslim city of Cueta
77 years before Columbus
Motives- mercenary and religious
Wanted gold and spices but also saving souls of Muslims and pagans with no knowledge of Christ
Began Portuguese exploration of a sea route from Africa to Asia’s spice markets
Pepper and clover specifically
Africans slaves were taken in replace of horses, grain, and cloth and brassawre
2nd half of 15th century, 150,000 slaves went to Europe
Spice market
Before sea route to East, only found through Venetians, who got them from Muslim merchants in Egypt or Ottoman Empire
Land routes were too rough but sea ones were dangerous and unknown
Every success gave knowledge for future ones
Allies against Muslims (Western Europe’s archenemies)
1455- pope gave Portuguese explorers land, goods, and slaves (spoils of war) of Guinea to Indies in East Asia
Exploration = mass conversions
Christian coup and mercantile advantage
Kept an eye out for Eastern Christian ruler Prester John
Bartholomew Dias (ca. 1450-1500)
Pioneered Eastern Portuguese Empire after rounding Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s tip in 1487
Vasco da Gama (1469-1525)
1498- went to India
Carried cargo of spices worth 60x the voyage cost
Portuguese had colonies in Goa and Calcutta on Indian coast
Challenge Arabs and Venetians for spice trade control
The Spanish Voyages of Columbus
Columbus landed on San Salvador in eastern Bahamas
33 days after Canary Islands
October 12, 1492
Thought he was on outer island of Japan
Believe Marco Polo’s 13th century account of his years in China and Martin Behaim’s spherical map of only ocean and Japan between Europe and Asia
1498 (3rd voyage)- realized that Cuba was not Japan and South
America was not China
Taino Indians met him on the beaches
Naked and friendly
Spoke a variant of Arawak
Thought he was in India so called them Indians
Freely gave him corn, yams, and sexual favors
Thought they were easy to enslave
Amerigo Vespucci (1451-1512) and Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521)
Explored South American coastline
Proved that it was an unknown continent that opened to Pacific Ocean
Magellan made to around South America and to Philippines
His squad made it back to Spain, 1st people to sail across the globe
Intended and Unintended Consequences
Voyage of discovery became expeditions of conquest
Like warfare Christian Aragon and Castile had against Islamic Moors
Reconquista
Ended in 1492 so the Spanish explorers wanted to conquere and convert more
Created Europe’s largest and longest surviving trading bloc and convinced other countries to have their own colonial ventures
Lots of wealth gained from American
Financed Spain’s religious and political wars in 16th and 17th century
Fueled Europe’s economic expansion
Europe’s expansion
New species of fruits, vegetables, and animals into the Americas
American species were brought to Europe
Spread European disease
A lot of Native American died from measles and smallpox epidemics
Europeans died from a form of syphilis
Probably from Americas
Spanish rule left a lasting imprint of Roman Catholicism, economic dependency, and hierarchical social structure
The Spanish Empire in the New World
The Aztecs in Mexico
12th century- Aztecs arrived in Valley of Mexico
1428- imperial expansion
Spanish conquest- Aztecs rules most of Mexico from their capital Tenochtitlán (mexico city)
Demanded heavy tribute in goods and labor
Gods must be fed with human blood to guarantee sunshine and fertility
Took thousands of captives each year for human sacrifice
Bred resentment and fear
1519- Hernán Cortés (1485-1547) landed in Mexico with crew
Aztec emperor Moctezume I (1466-1520) may have thought he wwas god Quetzalcoatl, who was driven away only to promise to return
Hesitated to confront him
Tried to appease him with gold
Allied with subjects and Tlaxcala (independent state and traditional enemy of the Aztecs)
Went with Cortés to Moctezuma
Cortés seized Moctezuma and he died mysteriously
Aztecs now were hostile to Spaniards
Driven from Tenochtitlán and almost wiped out
1521- Spaniards retaliated and defeated Aztecs and Cuauhtemoc (1495-1525)
Raised Tenochtitlán and proclaimed Aztec Empire as New Spain
The Incas in Peru
2nd great Native American civilization
15th century- expanded rapidly
Subjects worked regularly
1532- Francisco Pizarro (1478-1541) landed on western coast of South America with 200 men
Inspired by Cortés
Lured Atahualpa (1500-1533), Inca ruler, into a conference then seized him and killed hundreds of his followers
Imprisioned Atahualpa to ransom for gold
Executed in 1533
Spaniards captured Cuzco, Inca capital
Inca resistended until 1570s
The Church in Spanish America
Roman Catholic priest accompained explorers
New World- Christian humanism and Erasmus’s concept of “the philosophy of Christ”
Also bring European learning and civilization
Most priests (friars) disagreed with conquerors’ tactics
Bartolomé de Las Casas (1474-1566), Dominican
Outspoken clerical critic of Spanish conquerors
“Black Legend”
All Spanish treatment of Native Americans was unprincipled and inhumane
Exaggerated some because the native empire rulers were also cruel to their subjects
End of 16th century- Spanish American church was an institution upholding the colonial status quo
Priests defended Indian people’s rights
Colonial church
Spanish elite eploited resources and peoples of New World
Economic and spirtual life
Indicated that Spanish America was conquered
Critics were only for extreme modes of economic exploitation
The Economy of Exploration
Mining
Conquistadores (“conquerors)
Interested in gold but by mid-16th century, silving mining was metallic wealth
Mining centers
Potosí in Peru
Northern Mexico
Spanish crown received ⅕ (quinto) of mining revenues
Monopoly over mercury production and sale
Exploring for silver continued through colonial era and helped the extractive economy
Agriculture
Hacienda
Large landed estate owned by persons originally born in Spain (peninsulares) or persons of Spanish descent born in America (creoles)
Usually legally bound to owner and could not go from one landowner to another
Its economy produced:
foodstuffs for mining areas and urban centers
leather goods for mining machinery
Basic agricultural unit
West Indies- plantation
Cuba, Hispanola, Puerto Rico, and other islands- labor of black slaves to produce sugar
Urban service occupations
Major area of economic activity
Government offices, legal profession, shipping
The people were peninsulares (mainly) or creoles
Labor Servitude
Encomienda
Formal grant of the right to the labor of Indians for a particular period
In decline mid-16th century because the Spanish monarchs thought the holders would be too powerful
Humanitarian objections too
Repartimiento
Adult male Indians had to devote some days of labor annually to Spanish economic enterprises
Peruvian mines- named mita, Inca tax for labor tax
Often harsh and some died
Limitation on labor time had managers abusing their workers to have fresh workers replace them
Eventual shortage of workers and crown’s pressure against extreme forced labor led to free labor
More of an appearance than reality
Free laborers had to purchas goods from landowner or mine owner, then become indebted
Debt peonage
Black Slavery
Last forced labor in New World
Spain and Portugal- african slaves
West Indies and Brazil- sugar plantations
The Impact on Europe
Columbus’s Discovery
Folishness of relying on a fixed body of presumed authoritative knowledge
Made cooperation, civility, and peace among different people of the world
Inflation
Influx of spices and precious metals contributed to a rise in prices in 16th century
2% per year for inflation rate
Supply from Americas increated European production so more coinage was needed
Fed inflation
Prices doubled, triple, quadrupled in 16th century
New wealth
Sponsor research and expansion of printing, shipping, mining, tactile, and weapon industries
Ventures in French silk industry and Habsburg-Fugger development of mines in Austria and Hungary
Capitalist institutions and practices
Entrepreneurs created monopolies in basic goods
High interest on loans
“Capitalist” virtues of thrift, industry, and orderly planning were everywhere to permit accumulation of wealth
15th/16th century- maturation of capitalism with social problems
Raised expectations of poor and ambitiosu and wealthy’s reactionary tendencies
Aggravated traditional social divisions
The Renaissance in Italy
Jacob Burckhardt
19th century Swiss historian
Italian Renaissance- “prototype of the modern world”
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860)
Ancient learning in 14th and 15th century Italy gave rise to secular and scientific values
People adopted rational, empirical, and statistical approaches
Discovered latent creativity
Critics said he overlooked the continuity of the Middle Ages and Renaissance
The Italian City-State
Renaissance society happened in late medieval Italian merchant cities
Italy
Cultural Advantage
Natural gateway between East and West in geography
Venice, Genoa, and Pisa traded with near East throughout Middle Ages
11th century- mastered business skills of organizing, bookkeeping, developing new markets, and securing monopolies
15th century- trade-rich cities became bankers for Europe
Growth of City-States
Expansion of Italian cities and urban culture
Helped by pope and Guelf (pro-papal) vs. emperor and Ghibelline (pro-imperial)
Weakened one another which let merchant oligarchies thrive
Italian cities remained free to expand on their own
Became independent states, absorbing surrounding countryside and eliminating competitive states
5 major evolved states
Duchy of Milan
Republic of Florence
Republic of Venice
Papal states
Kingdom of Naples
Social strife and competition for political power evolved cities into despotism (tyranny) to survive
Venice stayed a merchant oligrachy
Controlled by Council of Ten (judicial body) and 300 member patrician senate to stop rival groups
Social Class and Conflict
Florence- prime example of social division and anarchy
4 distinguishable social groups
The old rich (grandi)
Noblemen and merchants who ruled
Newly rich merchant class
Capitalists and bankers
Popolo grosso, “fat people” who challenged old rich in 13th and 14th century
Middling burgher ranks
Guild masters, shop owners, professionals, small business people who sided with new rich against conservative policies of old
Popolo minuto, “little people”
Bottom of society
Lower socioeconomic classes
1457- 30,000 people listed as paupers with no wealth
Social divisions caused conflict
1378- Ciompi (poor class uprising)
Feuds between old and new rich
Social anarchy because of Black Death halving the population
Collapse of Bardi and Peruzzi great banking houses leaving poor vulnerable
Chaotic 4-year reign of power by lower classes
Stability did not return until Florentine banker and statesman Cosimo de’ Medici (1389-1464) in 1434
Despotism and Diplomacy
Cosimo de’ Medici
Wealthiest Florentine and natural statesman
Controlled the city through manipulating the constitution and influencing elections
Signoria (group of 6 then 8) governed the city
Men from powerful guilds, major clothing industries, and other strong groups (bankers, judges, doctors)
Cosimo kept loyal councilors in it
Cosimo’s grandson, Lorenzo the Magnificent (1449-1492, r. 1478-1492) ruled Florence
Totalitarian ruling during last quarter of 15th century
The Pazzi (rival family) who plotted with pope against the Medicis assassinated his brother
Lorenzo was a cautious, determined ruler
Despotism elsewhere was less subtle
To prevent internal social conflict and foreign interest from harming the city, dominant groups hired strongmen
or despots (podestà) which maintained law and order
Held executive, military, and judicial authority to maintain normal flow of business activity by whatever means necessary without a class prospering
Operated through mercenary armies by military brokers (condottieri)
Art of Diplomacy
City-states stayed with foreign military developments and had advantages over enemies without war with skilled diplomats
Also established embassies in 15th century to keep it that way
Represented at ceremonies and negotiations and became eyes and ears at rival courts
Italian Renaissance was promoted by despots, republicans, secularized popes, spiritual popes, tranquil Venice, democratic Florence, and despotistic Milan.
Supported by very great wealth
Humanism
Different meanings
A philosophy driven by the dignity of humankind, individualism, and secular values
Humanists- could have been champions of Catholic Christianity, opposing Aristotle and Scholasticism writings
Orators and poets who wrote original literature in classical and vernacular languages
Taught rhetoric in universities
Sometimes hired by royal and papal courts as secretaries, speechwriters, and diplomats
Neutral form of empirical-minded historical scholarship adopted to promote political liberty and civic responsibility
Studia humanitatis
Liberal arts program of study embracing grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, politics, and moral philosophy
Uses Latin and Greek classics and ancient Church Fathers’ works
Florentine humanist Leonardo Bruni (1370-1444) associated humanitas (“humanity) with the learning
Star pupil to Manuel Chrysoloras (1355-1415)
Taught Greek scholarship to Italian humanists when teaching in Florence (1397-1403)
Petrarch, Dante, and Boccaccio
Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374)
“Father of humanism”
Pursued letters and poetry in Avignon
Letters to the Ancient Dead
Personal letters to Cicero, Livy, Vergil, Horace about Rome
Africa
Latin epic poetic tribute to Roman general Scipio Africanus
Lives of Illustrious Men
Biographies of famous Roman men
Love sonnets, admiring a married woman
In a popular revolt in Rome
Served the Visconti family in Milan
Latter humanists featured his critical textual studies, elitism, contempt for learning Scholastics, Classical and Christian values, imagined dialogues with Saint Augustine, and defended personal immortality of soul against Aristotelians
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
Near-cintemporary
Vita Nuova and Divine Comedy (with the sonnets) made Italian vernacular literature
Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375)
Decameron
100 tales told by 3 men and 7 women in a safe country retreat away from plague that ravaged Florence in 1348 (Bubonic Plague)
Exposes sexual and economic misconduct
Sympathetic view on human behavior
Assembled an encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology
Educational Reforms and Goals
Humanists
Refused to be slaves to their own times
Made them innovative educators
Kept them in search of new sources to solve society’s ills
Created manuscript collections with past history, potent remedies for contemporaries, and sound advice for politicians and rulers
Goal of Humanist studies
Wisdom spoken: knowledge of the good and ability to persuade others of it
Learning shouldn’t be abstract and unpracticed
“Will the good rather than know the truth” - Petrarch taught
Learning ennobled people
Pietro Paolo Vergerio (1349-1420)
Author of influential Renaissance tract on education, On the Morals That Befit a Free Man
Humanist concept of liberal education- virtue and wisdom to develop body and mind gifts to ennoble people
Reforms in traditional education
Roman orator Quintilian’s (ca. 35-100) Education of the Orator (1416)
Basic classical guide for humanist curriculum
Vittorino da Feltre exemplified the ideas
Made his students read difficult works and had physical exercise and games
Baldassare Castiglione’s (1478-1529) Book of the Courtier
Rediscovered past knowledge modeled and challenged the present
Practical guide for court of Urbino (Italy) nobility
Highest ideals of Italian humanism
Merges ancient language knowledge and history with athletic, military, and musical skills
With good manners and moral character
Noblewomen promoted the new education and culture
Christine de Pisan (1363?-1434), daughter of French king Charles V’s physician and astrologer
Expert in classical, French, and Italian languages and literature
Married at 15 but widowed mother of 3 at 27
Wrote lyric poetry, read throughout European courts, to support herself
Famous work The Treasure of the City of Ladies
Accomplishments of great women in history
The Florentine “Academy” and the Revivial of Platonism
Revival of Greek studies in 15th century
1397- Manuel Chrysoloras came to Constantinople to promote Greek learning
1439- Council of Ferrara-Florence negotiated the reunion of the Eastern and Western churches which allowed Greek scholars and manuscripts to come from the West
1453- Constantinople fell to the Turks so many Greek scholars fled to Florence
Florentine Platonic Academy
Evolved under Cosimo de’ Medici, Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499), and Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494)
An informal gathering of influential Florentine humanists devoted to the revival of Plato and Neoplatonists’ works
Ficino edited and published Plato’s completed works
Platonism
Appealing because of its view on human nature
Eternal sphere of being and a perishable world in which humans actually live
Human reason preexisted in pristine world and still commune with it because of the theory supported by human knowledge of eternal mathematical and moral truths
Platonic influence
Pico’s Oration on the Dignity of Man
Most famous Renaissance statement on the nature of humankind
Introduction to 900 theses
Basis for public debate on all of life’s important topics
Depicts humans as the only creatures in the world who have the freedom to do and be whatever they choose
Published in Rome December 1486
Critical Work of the Humanists: Lorenzo Valla
Critics of tradition
Learned humanists because they had scholarly ideals of philological accuracy and historical truth
Shook long-standing foundations (medieval church)
Lorenzo Valla (1406-1457)
Elegances of the Latin Language (1444)
Standard Renaissance text on Latin philology
Reveals explosive character of the new learning
Good Catholic and hero to Protestant reformers
From Donation of Constantine and defense of predestination against advocates of free will
Donation (18th century)
Allegidly was a good faith grant of vast territories to the pope and church by Roman emperor Constantine (r. 307-337)
Valla did not mean for it to have the devastating force the Protestants attributed it to be
Proved in a careful, scholarly way
Filled with anachronistic terms (fief) and information not in a 4th century document --> a fraud
Also errors in Latin Vulgate (authorized version of the Bible for Western Christendom)
Still loyal to the church and faithfully fulfilled the office of apostolic secretary in Rome under Pope Nicholas V (r. 1447-1455)
Historical humanistic criticism served people far less loyal to the medieval church
These young humanists were the first identifiable group of Martin Luther’s supporters
Civic Humanism
Basic humanist criticism
Uselessness of so much of its content
Civis humanism
Education should promote individual virtue and self-sacrificing public service
Examples in Florence
Coluccio Salutati (1331-1406)
Leonardo Bruni (1370-1444)
Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459)
All rallied Florentines against their aggressors with rhetorical skills
Doubt that it was for civic activity instead of great power
End of Renaissance
Humanists became cliquish and snobish intellectual elites concerned about narrow Latin scholarly interests than civic and social ife
In response, Niccolò Machiavelli (1469-1527) and Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540) who wrote Italian and contemporary history as their primary source and subject matter
2 sides of humanism
Deep historical scholarship
Practical transparent politics
High Renaissance Art
Lay people had a leading role and created models for the clergy to follow
Mainly because of the church losing international power during late Middle Ages’ crises
Rise of national sentiment and national bureaucracies worked by laymen encouraged lay education over 14th and 15th century
Medieval Christians had a more this-worldly spirit and mission
High Renaissance (1450-1527)
Art and sculpture reached maturity
Embraced the natural world and human emotions
Medieval art- abstract and formulaic
Works had a rational (mathematical) order
Perfect symmetry and proportionality to reflect harmony of the universe
Artists
Helped by 15th century technical skill developments
Availability of oil paints
Two special techniques
Shading to enhance naturalness (chiaroscuro)
Adjustment of figure size to make a feeling of continuity (linear perspective)
Artists now portrayed space realistically and painted a natural world
3D canvases with energy and life instead of flat Byzantine and Gothic canvases
Giotto (1266-1336)
Father of Renaissance painting
Admirer of Saint Francis of Assisi and loved nature
Painted a more natural world
Still had religious seriousness but not abstract and unnatural
Artists who displayed the world literally and naturally
Painter Masaccio (1401-1428)
Sculptor Donatello (1386-1466)
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)
Exhibited the Renaissance ideal of the universal person
Advised Italian princes and French king Francis I (r. 1515-1547) on military engineering
Approached his work by observations
Self-taught botanist
Foresaw airplanes and submarines
Painted the Mona Lisa
Conveyed inner moods through complex facial expression
Raphael (1483-1520)
Man of great kindness and painter of sensitivity
Most famous for tender madonnas and great fresco in the Vatican, The School of Athens
Perfect example of Renaissance techniques
Plato and Aristotle surrounded by other philosophers and scientists of antiquity
Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564)
18-foot sculpture of David
Harmony, symmetry, and proportion to serve the glorification of the human form
Painting of frescoes in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel
Painted during term of pompus Pope Julius II (r. 1503-1513)
10,000 square feet and 343 figures (most over 10 feet tall)
Took four years to complete
Later works
More complex and reveal deep personal changes
Mark the passing of High Renaissance painting to new style mannerism
A style of art in the mid- to late-16th century allowing artists to express their own “manner” or feelings in contrast to the symmetry and simplicity of the art of the High Renaissance
Strange and abnormal
Made room for strange and abnormal
More rein to individual perception and feelings of the artist
Tintoretto and El Greco’s works are mannerism’s representatives
Slavery in the Renaissance
Slavery flourished
Western slave market- (since 12th century) Spanish sold Muslim slaves captured in raids and war to wealthy Italians
Contemporaries- slavery was merciful
Collective plantation slavery developed in eastern Mediterranean during High Middle Ages
Savannas of Sudan and Venetian estates on Cyprus and Crete had slaves cut sugarcane which set the model for slave plantations
After Black Death (1348-1350), the demand for slaves increased
Slaves were imported from Africa, Balkans, Constantinople, Cyprus, Crete, and surrounding Black Sea lands
Consisted of many races: Tatars, Circassians, Greeks, Russians, Georgians, Iranians, Asians, and Africans
Always a slave in the household
Used as dowry, in lieu of fees, and with priests
Italian law for slavery
Owners have complete dominion over slaves
Slaves cost = free servant wages for several years
Worth the cost
Tatars and Africans were worst treated
Ancient Greece and Rome
Slaves were accepted as family members and integrated into households
Few female slaves became mothers of the masters’ children
Fathers adopted children and raised them as legitimate heirs
Keep slaves happy and healthy to be useful and not a threat
Slaves
Foreign and suspected presence in Italy
Uprooted and resentful people
Italy’s Political Decline: The French Invasions (1492-1527)
Relied on internal cooperation for peace and safety from foreign invasion (Turks)
Treaty of Lodi (1454-1455)
Kept peace during second half of 15th century
Brought Milan and Naples (enemies) into alliance with Florence
Stood against Venice that joined the Papal states to maintain an internal balance of power
All five states could be a unified front if necessary
1490- Milan vs. Naples because of the rise of Milanese despot Ludovico il Moro
1494- Treaty of Lodiś peace was ended when Naples threatened Milan
Ludovico asked the French for aid (horrible decision)
French kings ruled Naples (1266-1442) before being kicked out by Duke Alfonso of Sicily
Allowed the French to enter Italy and take their dynastic claim to Naples
France also had dynastic claims to Milan that Ludovico did not know about
France now wanted lots of territory
Charles VIII’s March through Italy
Charles VIII (r. 1483-1498) cross the Alps (August 1494) to try and eager to conquer Florence, the Papal States, and Naples
Florentine ruler, Piero de’ Medici, handed over Pisa and Florentine possessions to stop Charles
Piero was exiled by citizenry revolutionized by Dominican preacher Girolamo Savonarola (1452-1498)
Convinced people that the king’s arrival was justified divine vengeance on their immortality
With Savonarola, Charles could enter Florence
Fatal flattery and large ransom payment allowed the city to escape destruction
Charles passed through
Savonarola now ruled Florence (4 years)
His moral rigor and antipapal policies prevented him from surviving in Italy
After Italian cities reunited and kicked out the French, in May 1498 Savonarola was imprisoned and executed
Terror in non-Italian hearts
Ferdinand of Aragon (r. 1479-1516)
Wanted to expand in Italy from sicily but became vulnerable to French-Italian axis
Created a new counteralliance, League of Venice
March 1495
Venice, Papal States, Emperor Maximilian I (r. 1493-1519), and Ferdinand vs. France
Set up France-Spain conflict until 1559
Ludovico il Moro
Realized the French threatened Italy
Joined the League of Venice
Now able to retreat Charles and end the trouble he brought to Italy
Pope Alexander VI and the Borgia Family
French returned to Italy under Louis XII (r. 1498-1515; Charles’ successor)
Italian ally, the Borgia pope Alexander VI helped
Most corrupt pope on papal throme
Promoted Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia’s political careers
His children before he was pope
Papal policy + his family’s effort to have a political base in Romagna in north central Italy
Venice (pope ally within League of Venice) fought Papal states for loyalty
French alliance would help Alexander control Venice/Romagna (Italy regions)
Alexander VI secured French favor
Annulled Louis XII’s marriage to Charles VIII’s sister
Louis then married Charles’ widow, Anne of Brittany
Political move to keep Brittany French
Cardinal’s hat given to archbishop of Rouen, Louis’s favorite
Promoted
Agreed to abandon League of Venice
Made league weak so French could conquer Milan
August 1499- Louis invaded Milan
Ludovico il Marco
Originally started French invasion
Rotted in French prison
1500- Louis and Ferdinand of Aragon divided Naples
Pope and Cesare Borgia conquered Romagnan cities without resistance
Cesare now “duke of Romagna”
Pope Julius II
Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere
Succeeded Alexander VI as Pope Julius II (r. 1503-1513)
Suppressed the Borgias (enemies)
Romagnan lands under papal jurisdiction
Gained title “warrior pope”
Brought Renaissance papacy to its peak of military prowess and diplomatic intrigue
Julius Excluded from Heaven
Described Julius’s unsuccessful attempts to convince Saint Peter he was admitted to heaven
Pope Julius drove Venetians out of Rogmagna (1509) and secured Papal States
Now tried to rid Italy of French invader
Holy League (October 1511)
Julius, Ferdinand of Aragon, and Venice + Emperor Maximilian I and Swiss
1512- French in retreat
1513- Swiss defeated France at Novara
Francis I (r. 1515-1547)
Louis’s successor
Invaded Italy 3rd time
Massacred Swiss soldiers of Holy League at Marignano, September 1515
August 1516- won Concordat of Bologna
French king controls French clergy and French recognition of pope superiority and right to college annates
Kept France Catholic after Protestant Reformation
Niccolo Machiavelli
Watched French, Spanish, and German armies wreak havoc on Italy
Virtú in Roman rulers and citizens
Ability to act decisively and heroically for the country’s good
Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540)
More sober historian who wrote truer chronicles of Florentine and Italian history
Held republican ideals
Strong and determined people could struggle successfully with fortune
Internal fueding causing self-destruction
“Machiavellian” epithet
Ruthless political expediency
Italy needed cunning dictators to help divided, selfish people
The Prince (1513)
Cynical satire how rulers behave but not recommendation of despotic rule
Kinda contradicts himself
But advises rulers to use advantages of fraud and brutality
Dedicated to Lorenzo de’ Medici
Wanted a strong ruler from the Medici family
Controlled the papacy in 1513 of Leo X (r. 1513-1521)
Controlled Florence
1527
Machiavelli’s death
Medici pope Clement VII (r. 1523-1534) watched as Emperor Charles V sacked Rome
Revival of Monarchy in Northern Europe
Shift from divided feudal monarchy to unified national monarchies
Dynastic and chivalric ideals of feudal monarchy did not disappear
Territorial princes and representative bodies stayed
Feudal monarchy of High Middle Ages
Divison of basic powers between king and semiautonomous vassals
Nobility and towns had different unity and success to stop royal centralization by evolving representative assemblies
English Parliament
French Estates General
Spanish Cortés
After Hundred Years’ War and Great Schism, nobility and clergy decreased
Towns allied with king
Townspeople staffed royal offices and became king’s lawyers, bookkeepers, military tacticians, and foreign diplomats
Broke feudal society
Possible rise of sovereign states
Sovereign States
Monarch and his/her chosen agents decisions (national matters)
Taxation
War-making
Law enforcement
Monarch overcame decentralization that impedes nation-building
Last half of 15th century
Rulers made/used the law
Appointed civil servants (national vision now)
Names
Castile- corregidores
England- justices of the peace
France- bailiffs operating as well-drilled lieutenants
National Armies
Noble cavalry became infantry and artillery
“Kings army”
Mercenary soldiers from Switzerland and Germany
Professional soldiers were better than feudal vassals
Fought for pay
Consequence
Failed to meet payrolls had foreign troops to worry about
Growing warfare cost = new national sources of income need
Government taxation
Highest social class thought they were immune
It was an insult and humiliation to them
Revenues were now at expense of those not able to pay
Feudal lords
Collect rent from royal domains
Levy national taxes on food and clothing
Salt tax (gabelle) in France
10% sales tax (alcabala) on commercial transactions in Spain
Direct taxes on peasantry (taille)
Sale of public offices and issuances of high-interest government bonds
Borrow from rich and great bankers of Italy and Germany
Kings’ creditors and competitors were the privilege classes
France
France king Charles VII (r. 1422-1461) made great by people who served
Ministers created a permanent professional army
Inspired by Joan of Arc
Drove English out of France
Jacques Coeur
Independent merchant banker
developed an economy, diplomatic corps, and natinoal administration
helped his son Louis XI make France powerful
2 political cornerstones in 15th century
Collapse of English Empire in France after Hundred Years’ War
Defeat of Charles the Bold (r. 1467-1477) and duchy of Burgundy
Burgundy
Maybe Europe’s strongest political power in mid-15th century
Wanted to dwarf Franch and Holy Roman Empire
Could have if continental powers did not stop him
Charles died in defeat at Nancy in 1477 so Burgundian Empire died with him
Split between Louis XI and Hashburgs (got better part)
Louis secured the monarchy
Ended his reign with 2x the size he inherited
Harnessed the nobility, expanded trade and industry, created national postal system, and established a silk industry
2-edge sword
With secure and efficient govenrment, went to pursue that was ultimately a bad foreign policy
Conquests in Italy in 1490s and losing wars against Habsburgs in first half of 16th century had France (mid-16th century) as a defeated, divided nation
Spain
Union of Isabella of Castile (r 1474-1504) and Ferdinand of Aragon (r. 1479-1516) in 1469
Unified Castile and Aragon and now ruled properly in mid-15th century
Constitutionally separated with respective government agencies and cultural traditions
Subdued the realms, secured borders, ventured abroad militarily, Christianized Spain
Before had 3 religions (Islam, Christianity, Judaism)
1482-1492: conquered the Moors in Granada
1504- possessed Naples
Won allegiance of Hermandad (powerful league of cities and towns that went against noble landowners)
Portugal and France protested the marriage
Castile
5 million people
Sheep-farming industry
Run by Mesta
Government-backed industry
Centralized economic planning
Aragon
<1 million people
Spanish Church
Isabella and Ferdinand controlled
Appointed higher clergy and officers of Inquisition
Tomás de Torquemada (Isabella’s confessor) ran the officers’ national agency in 1479 to monitor activity of converted Jews (conversos) and Muslims (Moriscos)
Jews and Moors were exiled unless they converted
Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros (1437-1517) exiled Moors helped Spain remain a Catholic country
Secured an operation base for European Counter-Reformation
Their kids’ marriages
Eldest daughter Joanna
“The Mad”
1496- married Archduke Philip, son of Emperor Maximilian I
First kid, Charles I, ruled united Spain
Catherine of Aragon, second daughter
Married Authur, son of English king Henry VII
He died
Married future King Henry VIII (r. 1509-1547)
Failed which helped emerge the Anglican church and English Reformation
Overseas exploration
Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain sponsored Genoese adventurer Christopher Columbus (1451-1506)
Arrived at Caribbean islands while sailing west in search of shorter route to spice markets in Far East (East Indies)
Created Spanish Empire in Mexico and Peru
Made Spain Europe’s dominant power because of gold and silver mines in 16th century
England
After Hundred Years’ War, civil warfare brokeout between the House of York and the House of Lancaster
Roots of war lay in forced deposition of king Richard II
Wars of the Roses (York- white rose; Lancaster- red rose)
Lasted from 1455 to 1485
Duke of York challenged Lancastrian monarchy of Henry VI (r. 1377-1399)
1461- Edward IV (r. 1461-1483), son of York duke, seized power and instituted a strong arm rule
20 years straight without Henry’s short restoration
Increased monarchy’s power and finances
Edward’s brother, Richard III, took the throne from Edward’s son
Tudor dynasty took it after Richard died and portrayed him as a villain who murdered Edward’s sons in the Tower of London to get the throne
Shakespear’s Richard III
Richard’s reign got support for exiled Lancastrian Henry Turdor who defeated him in August 1485
Henry Turdor, ruled as Henry VII (r. 1485-1509)
1st of Turdor dynasty that dominated England in 16th century
Henry married Edward IV’s daughter, Elizabeth of York
United rival royal family and made offsprings’ claim uncontestable
Disciplined English nobility through Court of Star Chamber
Aimed to end perversion of English justice by powerful nobles who used intimidation and bribery to win favorable verdicts in court cases
King’s councilors sat as judges
Created a fair court system
Used English law to futher monarchy ends
Confiscated noble’s lands and fortunes so he did not depend on Parliament for royal funds
Helped develop monarchy into one of early modern Europe’s exemplary governments during his granddaughter Elizabeth I’s reign (r. 1558-1603)
The Holy Roman Empire
Germany
Territorial rulers and cities stopped national consolidation and unity
By late 15th century, hopelessly divided into 300 autonomous political entities
Golden Bull
7-member electoral college with archbishops of Mainz, Trier, Cologne; duke of Saxony; margrave of Brandenburg; count Palatine; king of Bohemia
Administrative body
Elected the emperor to cooperate to create transregional unity and administration
Gave a single ruler
Conditions of his rule and extent were negotiated at each election
Always balanced
Emperor Charles IV (r. 1346-1378) + major German rulers
Reichstag
Creation of an imperial diet to attempt to control incessant feuding in 15th century
National assembly of seven electors, non-electoral princes, 65 representatives from free cities
1495 assembly in Worms- members won an imperial ban on private warface, created Supreme Court of Justice to enforce internal peace, and created Council of Regency to coordinate German policy
Still poor substitute for national unity
16th & 17th century- territorial princes became sovereign rulers
Disunity helped religious dissent and conflict
Protestant Reformation broke out in 16th
The Northern Renaissance
Northern humanists
Created a climate for religious and educational reforms on Reformation
Came from diverse social backgrounds and more devoted to religious reforms than Italian counterparts
Wrote for lay audiences and narrow intelligentsia
Northern Humanism
Initially stimulated Italian learning by students who studied in Italy, merchants, and Brothers of the Common Life
Brothers of Common Life- lay religious movement started in the Netherlands that permitted men and women to live a shared religious life without formal vows of poverty, chastity, obedience
The Printing Press
15th century- literate lay public was created by expansion of schools and universities
Cheap way to manufacture paper
Made books economical
Manuscripts were written on vellum
Expensive and cumbersome
Carving words and pictures onto wook, inking it, and stamping out copies
A cheap modern poster
Johann Gutenberg
Invented printing in mid-15th century in Mainz, Germany
Books now had profund and practical topics
Everyone could have them
1500- printing presses operated in >60 German cities and >200 European cities
Helpful to humanists who now had international audiences
Literacy
Nurtured self-esteem and critical frame of mind
Rulers in church and state now dealt with more intelligent people (wanted answers and not naive)
Print useful for propaganda (political/religious)
A lot of indoctrinates, indulgences, and pamphlets
Erasmus
Desiderius Erasmus (1466?-1536)
Most famous northern humanist
Illustrates impact of printing press
Educational and (Catholic) religious reformer
Tutored well-to-do youths as a job
Used short Latin dialogues to teach them how to speak and live well and instill good manners and language through reading
Colloquies
Included anticlerical dialogues and satires on religious dogmatism and superstition
Adages
5,000 ancient, contemporary proverbs
with expressions like “leave no stone unturned”
Beliefs
Unite classical ideals of humanity and civic virtue with Christian ideals of love and piety
Could reform individuals and society
Summarized beliefs in philosophia Christi
Simple, ethical piety in imitation of Christ
Opposite of dogmatic, ceremonial, bullying religious practices of Middle Ages
Didn’t like Scholastics, Middle Ages and new Protestant ones, because dogma and argument was valued over Christian piety and practice
True idealist
Expected more from people than theologians believe them capable
Made ancient Christian sources available in original versions to recover moral and religious health the New Testaments promised
Edited Church Fathers’ works to produce Greek Edition (1516) and Latin edition (1519) of New Testament
Church authorities didn’t like it
All Erasmus’s works were on church’s Index of Forbidden Books in mid-16th century
His works were sturdy tools of reform in Protestant and Catholic reformers
Laid the groundwork for Luther to use
Humanism and Reform
Germany protestant reform
Rudolf Agricola (1433-1485)
“Father of German humanism”
Spent 10 years in Italy and introduced Italian learning to Germany
Conrad Celtis (1st poet laureate) and Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523), fiery knight
Gave German humanism a nationalist coloring hostile to non-german cultures, Roman cultures
Von Hutten illustrated union of humanism, German nationalism, and Luther’s religious reform and attacked indulgences
Reuchlin affair
Brought von Hutten onto historical stage and unified reform-minded German humanists
Johann Reuchlin (1455-1522)
Europe’s Christian authority on Hebrew and Jewish learning
Wrote the 1st Hebrew grammar and attracted to Jewish mysticism
1506- Pfefferkorn and Dominican order tried to suppress Jewish writings and attacked Reuchlin
German humanists rushed to Reuchlin’s defense
In name of academic freedom and good scholarship
Martin Luther was attacked in 1517 so Germans saw it as a repetition and rushed to his side too
Controversy lasted for years and produced satire Letters of Obscure Men (1515)
England protestant reform
English scholars and merchants brought Italian learning to England
English humanism maturation
Lectures by William Grocyn and Thomas Linacre at Oxford and Erasmus at Cambridge
John Colet (1467-1519)
Dean of Saint Paul’s Cathedral
Patronized humanist studies for the young and promoted religious reform
Thomas More (1478-1535)
Best-known English humanist
Close friend of Erasmus
Utopia (1516)
Conservative criticism of contemporary society
Rivals Shakespeare plays as most read in 16th century
Imaginary society based on reason and tolerance that overcame social and political injustice by holding all property and goods in common and requiring people to work for bread
One of Henry VIII’s trusted diplomats
Act of Supremacy (1534)
England king was head of English church
Refusal to recognize king’s marriage to Anne Boleyn led to his execution, July 1535
France protestant reform
French invasions of Italy helped Italian learning spread to France
French humanism
Leaders- Guillaume Budé (1468-1540) and Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples (1454-1536)
Lefèvre
Works exemplified critical scholarship and influenced Luther
Guillaume Briconnet and Marguerite d’ Angouleme
Cultivated a generation of young reform-minded humanists
Including Protestant reformer John Calvin
Spain
Entered the service of the Catholic Church
Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros (1437-1517)
After 1508, “Grand Inquisitor”
Could enforce strict religious orthodoxy
Founded University of Alacala near Madrid in 1509
Printed New Testament Greek edition
Translate religious tracts to reform clerical life and direct lay piety
Complutensian Polyglot Bible
Greatest achievement
Six-volume work that placed the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin versions of the Bible in parallel columns
Scholarly projects + internal church reforms + Ferdinand and Isabella’s repressive measures = Catholic Spain
During Age of Reformation
Voyages of Discovery and the New Empires in the West and East
The Portuguese Chart the Course
Prince Henry “the Navigator” (1394-1460) captured the North African Muslim city of Cueta
77 years before Columbus
Motives- mercenary and religious
Wanted gold and spices but also saving souls of Muslims and pagans with no knowledge of Christ
Began Portuguese exploration of a sea route from Africa to Asia’s spice markets
Pepper and clover specifically
Africans slaves were taken in replace of horses, grain, and cloth and brassawre
2nd half of 15th century, 150,000 slaves went to Europe
Spice market
Before sea route to East, only found through Venetians, who got them from Muslim merchants in Egypt or Ottoman Empire
Land routes were too rough but sea ones were dangerous and unknown
Every success gave knowledge for future ones
Allies against Muslims (Western Europe’s archenemies)
1455- pope gave Portuguese explorers land, goods, and slaves (spoils of war) of Guinea to Indies in East Asia
Exploration = mass conversions
Christian coup and mercantile advantage
Kept an eye out for Eastern Christian ruler Prester John
Bartholomew Dias (ca. 1450-1500)
Pioneered Eastern Portuguese Empire after rounding Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s tip in 1487
Vasco da Gama (1469-1525)
1498- went to India
Carried cargo of spices worth 60x the voyage cost
Portuguese had colonies in Goa and Calcutta on Indian coast
Challenge Arabs and Venetians for spice trade control
The Spanish Voyages of Columbus
Columbus landed on San Salvador in eastern Bahamas
33 days after Canary Islands
October 12, 1492
Thought he was on outer island of Japan
Believe Marco Polo’s 13th century account of his years in China and Martin Behaim’s spherical map of only ocean and Japan between Europe and Asia
1498 (3rd voyage)- realized that Cuba was not Japan and South
America was not China
Taino Indians met him on the beaches
Naked and friendly
Spoke a variant of Arawak
Thought he was in India so called them Indians
Freely gave him corn, yams, and sexual favors
Thought they were easy to enslave
Amerigo Vespucci (1451-1512) and Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521)
Explored South American coastline
Proved that it was an unknown continent that opened to Pacific Ocean
Magellan made to around South America and to Philippines
His squad made it back to Spain, 1st people to sail across the globe
Intended and Unintended Consequences
Voyage of discovery became expeditions of conquest
Like warfare Christian Aragon and Castile had against Islamic Moors
Reconquista
Ended in 1492 so the Spanish explorers wanted to conquere and convert more
Created Europe’s largest and longest surviving trading bloc and convinced other countries to have their own colonial ventures
Lots of wealth gained from American
Financed Spain’s religious and political wars in 16th and 17th century
Fueled Europe’s economic expansion
Europe’s expansion
New species of fruits, vegetables, and animals into the Americas
American species were brought to Europe
Spread European disease
A lot of Native American died from measles and smallpox epidemics
Europeans died from a form of syphilis
Probably from Americas
Spanish rule left a lasting imprint of Roman Catholicism, economic dependency, and hierarchical social structure
The Spanish Empire in the New World
The Aztecs in Mexico
12th century- Aztecs arrived in Valley of Mexico
1428- imperial expansion
Spanish conquest- Aztecs rules most of Mexico from their capital Tenochtitlán (mexico city)
Demanded heavy tribute in goods and labor
Gods must be fed with human blood to guarantee sunshine and fertility
Took thousands of captives each year for human sacrifice
Bred resentment and fear
1519- Hernán Cortés (1485-1547) landed in Mexico with crew
Aztec emperor Moctezume I (1466-1520) may have thought he wwas god Quetzalcoatl, who was driven away only to promise to return
Hesitated to confront him
Tried to appease him with gold
Allied with subjects and Tlaxcala (independent state and traditional enemy of the Aztecs)
Went with Cortés to Moctezuma
Cortés seized Moctezuma and he died mysteriously
Aztecs now were hostile to Spaniards
Driven from Tenochtitlán and almost wiped out
1521- Spaniards retaliated and defeated Aztecs and Cuauhtemoc (1495-1525)
Raised Tenochtitlán and proclaimed Aztec Empire as New Spain
The Incas in Peru
2nd great Native American civilization
15th century- expanded rapidly
Subjects worked regularly
1532- Francisco Pizarro (1478-1541) landed on western coast of South America with 200 men
Inspired by Cortés
Lured Atahualpa (1500-1533), Inca ruler, into a conference then seized him and killed hundreds of his followers
Imprisioned Atahualpa to ransom for gold
Executed in 1533
Spaniards captured Cuzco, Inca capital
Inca resistended until 1570s
The Church in Spanish America
Roman Catholic priest accompained explorers
New World- Christian humanism and Erasmus’s concept of “the philosophy of Christ”
Also bring European learning and civilization
Most priests (friars) disagreed with conquerors’ tactics
Bartolomé de Las Casas (1474-1566), Dominican
Outspoken clerical critic of Spanish conquerors
“Black Legend”
All Spanish treatment of Native Americans was unprincipled and inhumane
Exaggerated some because the native empire rulers were also cruel to their subjects
End of 16th century- Spanish American church was an institution upholding the colonial status quo
Priests defended Indian people’s rights
Colonial church
Spanish elite eploited resources and peoples of New World
Economic and spirtual life
Indicated that Spanish America was conquered
Critics were only for extreme modes of economic exploitation
The Economy of Exploration
Mining
Conquistadores (“conquerors)
Interested in gold but by mid-16th century, silving mining was metallic wealth
Mining centers
Potosí in Peru
Northern Mexico
Spanish crown received ⅕ (quinto) of mining revenues
Monopoly over mercury production and sale
Exploring for silver continued through colonial era and helped the extractive economy
Agriculture
Hacienda
Large landed estate owned by persons originally born in Spain (peninsulares) or persons of Spanish descent born in America (creoles)
Usually legally bound to owner and could not go from one landowner to another
Its economy produced:
foodstuffs for mining areas and urban centers
leather goods for mining machinery
Basic agricultural unit
West Indies- plantation
Cuba, Hispanola, Puerto Rico, and other islands- labor of black slaves to produce sugar
Urban service occupations
Major area of economic activity
Government offices, legal profession, shipping
The people were peninsulares (mainly) or creoles
Labor Servitude
Encomienda
Formal grant of the right to the labor of Indians for a particular period
In decline mid-16th century because the Spanish monarchs thought the holders would be too powerful
Humanitarian objections too
Repartimiento
Adult male Indians had to devote some days of labor annually to Spanish economic enterprises
Peruvian mines- named mita, Inca tax for labor tax
Often harsh and some died
Limitation on labor time had managers abusing their workers to have fresh workers replace them
Eventual shortage of workers and crown’s pressure against extreme forced labor led to free labor
More of an appearance than reality
Free laborers had to purchas goods from landowner or mine owner, then become indebted
Debt peonage
Black Slavery
Last forced labor in New World
Spain and Portugal- african slaves
West Indies and Brazil- sugar plantations
The Impact on Europe
Columbus’s Discovery
Folishness of relying on a fixed body of presumed authoritative knowledge
Made cooperation, civility, and peace among different people of the world
Inflation
Influx of spices and precious metals contributed to a rise in prices in 16th century
2% per year for inflation rate
Supply from Americas increated European production so more coinage was needed
Fed inflation
Prices doubled, triple, quadrupled in 16th century
New wealth
Sponsor research and expansion of printing, shipping, mining, tactile, and weapon industries
Ventures in French silk industry and Habsburg-Fugger development of mines in Austria and Hungary
Capitalist institutions and practices
Entrepreneurs created monopolies in basic goods
High interest on loans
“Capitalist” virtues of thrift, industry, and orderly planning were everywhere to permit accumulation of wealth
15th/16th century- maturation of capitalism with social problems
Raised expectations of poor and ambitiosu and wealthy’s reactionary tendencies
Aggravated traditional social divisions