
AP Euro: Unit 7 - The Enlightenment (1715-1789, 18th Century)
AP Euro: Unit 7 - The Enlightenment (1715-1789, 18th Century)
The Enlightenment and Spread of Enlightenment Ideas
- the enlightenment:
- scientific revolution was catalyst
- movement of intellectuals that 'dared to know' and used reason and intellect
- applied scientific method to all aspects of life --> discovery of natural laws (ex: gravity, magnetism, etc.) which governed the natural world
- reason could also be used to reshape society's functions
- Enlightenment intellectuals believed new scientific discoveries warranted new approaches to social and cultural issues
- popularization of science:
- enlightenment thinkers were called philosophes (although the term was French, not all philosophes were French)
- made possible by the printing press
- concepts of scientific revolution were hard to grasp for everyday people
- Bernard de Fontenelle:
- wrote Plurality of Worlds which synthesized astronomical work through an imaginary conversation between lovers
- Madame Geoffrin:
- hosted gatherings of philosophes at her home in France
- put like-minded people together
- famous
- salons:
- enlightenment philosophes, skeptics, and economists shared views at solons (formal gatherings in the homes of elites)
- could share perspectives that were unwelcome at courts of kings and other high-ranking nobles
- as hostesses, women gained a new outlet to voice opinions
- they could formally exercise influence on political and social matters
- skepticism:
- key figures of the scientific revolution (like Galileo, Kepler, and Newton) were religious but their work was discovering nature's truths not questioning the Church
- philosophes of the enlightenment were alienated by religious wars and intolerance so they began to analyze Christianity
- majority of philosophes became skeptics of Christianity (ex: people fight wars and kill others to force people to convert and that's wrong)
- impact of travel and literature:
- more travel led to more exposure of different cultures
- philosophes viewed native cultures as closer to the existence of 'natural man' and were happier than Europeans
- this sparked a debate about nations and cultures once regarded as inferior
- cultural relativism:
- some Europeans preached cultural relativism:
- you shouldn't judge another society by standards of another/your society
- some Europeans preached cultural relativism:
- freedom to express ideas:
- publication of radical ideas led to the seizure of property and imprisonment for authors, publishers, and sellers of philosophe literature
- government censorship:
- govt chooses what literature is legal to be read and sold
- actually made literature more popular
- philosophes adopted pseudonyms, used terms/phrases with double meaning, used satire, and/or published in countries with no censorship (ex: Holland)
- Aristotle (classical):
- from Greece
- believed humans reach highest potential when in an ordered society
- favored small societies with educated citizens who participated in the govt
- believed kings should rule with the guidance of philosophes
- Plato (classical):
- from Greece
- believed talent determines each person's role in society, democracy was mob rule, and a philosophe king should be chosen for intelligence
- Elizabeth I of England:
- from England
- believed in divine right to rule but shared power with parliament
- believed each person was born in their proper place in society
- 'caring mother' to her people
- Louis XIV:
- from Paris/Versailles
- monarch
- believed in divine right absolute monarchy and that it was the most successful govt
- Mary Wollstonecraft:
- from England
- wrote Vindication for Rights of Women where she argued women should participate equally with men in home and civic life, education, business, etc.
- Thomas Hobbes:
- from England
- believed people were naturally evil, greedy, and selfish so they needed a strong govt to protect them from themselves
- John Locke:
- from England
- believed people were a product of their environment and should have natural, unalienable rights (life, liberty, and property)
- believed people have the ability to reason and make good decisions if given proper influence
- Baron de Montesquieu:
- from France
- believed successful govts share power between 3 separate, equal branches so no one could wield all the power
- Jean Jacques Rousseau:
- from Switzerland/France
- believed govt and governed enter into a social contact where govt provides for the benefit and security of the people, and in return, people give up some freedoms, and if govt can't protect/provide for the people, the people don't need to follow it
- Voltaire:
- from Paris
- believed govt and religion should be separate; mixing = disasters (wars, inquisitions, etc.)
- deism:
- Voltaire was crucial in founding it
- God created universe and natural laws but plays no part in human affairs (same ideas as Newtonian World Machine)
- Adam Smith:
- from Scotland/UK
- believed in laissez-faire economics; govt shouldn't interfere with people's decisions
- if a country can supply another with cheaper goods, then you should be able to buy those goods tariff-free
- believed govt should only protect from invasion, defend against oppression, and maintain infrastructure
- believed labor is a country's wealth (not material wealth)
Culture and Society of the Enlightenment
- two worlds of culture:
- high culture:
- the literary, artistic, and social world of the educated men, women, and ruling classes
- wrote and spoke Latin to prove they are cultured and learned
- popular culture:
- written and oral lore of working class society
- more crude
- scoffed at but secretly loved by the wealthy class
- high culture:
- literature and printing:
- printing and publishing took off:
- 1730-1750 - over 500% increase in available titles to print
- fiction literature (novels), compilations of human history, magazines and newspapers meant to bring philosophy to casual, public places like coffee shops
- now possible to make a living out of writing without wealthy patrons
- printing and publishing took off:
- education:
- schools are still used to separate society into classes because most philosophes believed education was successful when you stayed in your social class
- upper classes learned Greek and Latin, math, and science
- middle class learned more practical skills such as bookkeeping, geography, and modern languages
- lower class literacy rose to ~50% (men) and 15% (women)
- medicine:
- hospitals were dangerous and a last resort
- dirty equipment
- unsanitary doctors, rooms, and procedures
- reused bandages
- majority of patients died due to infection after surgery
- people with money called a doctor to their home
- hospitals were dangerous and a last resort
- popular culture:
- carnival:
- 40 days leading up to Lent, people did activities they would abstain from in Lent
- people drank, ate, had affairs, wore masks, and mixed with all social classes freely
- songs 'unfit' for society were sung
- physical and verbal assault was common
- lots of alcohol (led to alcoholism in lower classes)
- carnival:
- religious tolerance:
- most religious hatred was aimed at Jewish and Muslim minority groups
- Jewish and Muslim groups would only survive at the whim of the local lord
- open attacks on Jews led to ethnic massacres/pogroms
- Jewish and Muslim groups were restricted from govt or high-ranking jobs
- most enlightenment thinkers favored assimilating Jews into society only if they convert to Christianity
- Austria - limited freedom and safety for Jews
- more profound experience:
- pietism:
- founded by Count Nikolaus von Zinzendorf who believed comprehending god with mind was atheism
- developed among Catholic clergy
- wanted more personal connection/experience with god
- Methodism:
- also experiencing deeper personal connection with god
- founded by John Wesley
- Protestant version of pietism
- pietism:
Art and Music in the Age of the Enlightenment
- new types of art:
- rococo:
- aristocrats enjoying leisure or parties
- soft colors and lines
- architecture and furniture - ornamental (ex: stuff at Versailles), curvy, accents to ceilings, roofs, and walls
- neoclassicalism:
- literally means new classical
- inspired by enlightenment ideas - depicts people demonstrating those ideals
- ditches religious undertones
- uses classical scenes from Greek and Roman times (sometimes to raise awareness on issues in their own time without getting in trouble)
- architecture - Greek/Roman designs such as columns
- romanticism (at end of era):
- about imagination, freedom, and emotion
- scenes of nature
- also literary and musical movement (ex: 3 Musketeers)
- development of a romantic hero:
- misfit in society
- based on Lord Byron
- often hid a secret and have grim ends
- usually mysterious
- rococo:
- music of the enlightenment:
- classical (1730-1820):
- some overlap with Romantic music
- more piano and brass
- less complex than Romantic pieces
- lighter tone
- less serious
- romantic (1800-1900):
- broader range of instruments - violins, woodwinds, choral arrangements
- pieces focus on god and spiritual matters
- composers acquire noble/royal patrons (like artists)
- notable composers:
- Mozart (classical)
- Bach (romantic)
- Frederick Handel (romantic)
- classical (1730-1820):
AP Euro: Unit 7 - The Enlightenment (1715-1789, 18th Century)
The Enlightenment and Spread of Enlightenment Ideas
- the enlightenment:
- scientific revolution was catalyst
- movement of intellectuals that 'dared to know' and used reason and intellect
- applied scientific method to all aspects of life --> discovery of natural laws (ex: gravity, magnetism, etc.) which governed the natural world
- reason could also be used to reshape society's functions
- Enlightenment intellectuals believed new scientific discoveries warranted new approaches to social and cultural issues
- popularization of science:
- enlightenment thinkers were called philosophes (although the term was French, not all philosophes were French)
- made possible by the printing press
- concepts of scientific revolution were hard to grasp for everyday people
- Bernard de Fontenelle:
- wrote Plurality of Worlds which synthesized astronomical work through an imaginary conversation between lovers
- Madame Geoffrin:
- hosted gatherings of philosophes at her home in France
- put like-minded people together
- famous
- salons:
- enlightenment philosophes, skeptics, and economists shared views at solons (formal gatherings in the homes of elites)
- could share perspectives that were unwelcome at courts of kings and other high-ranking nobles
- as hostesses, women gained a new outlet to voice opinions
- they could formally exercise influence on political and social matters
- skepticism:
- key figures of the scientific revolution (like Galileo, Kepler, and Newton) were religious but their work was discovering nature's truths not questioning the Church
- philosophes of the enlightenment were alienated by religious wars and intolerance so they began to analyze Christianity
- majority of philosophes became skeptics of Christianity (ex: people fight wars and kill others to force people to convert and that's wrong)
- impact of travel and literature:
- more travel led to more exposure of different cultures
- philosophes viewed native cultures as closer to the existence of 'natural man' and were happier than Europeans
- this sparked a debate about nations and cultures once regarded as inferior
- cultural relativism:
- some Europeans preached cultural relativism:
- you shouldn't judge another society by standards of another/your society
- some Europeans preached cultural relativism:
- freedom to express ideas:
- publication of radical ideas led to the seizure of property and imprisonment for authors, publishers, and sellers of philosophe literature
- government censorship:
- govt chooses what literature is legal to be read and sold
- actually made literature more popular
- philosophes adopted pseudonyms, used terms/phrases with double meaning, used satire, and/or published in countries with no censorship (ex: Holland)
- Aristotle (classical):
- from Greece
- believed humans reach highest potential when in an ordered society
- favored small societies with educated citizens who participated in the govt
- believed kings should rule with the guidance of philosophes
- Plato (classical):
- from Greece
- believed talent determines each person's role in society, democracy was mob rule, and a philosophe king should be chosen for intelligence
- Elizabeth I of England:
- from England
- believed in divine right to rule but shared power with parliament
- believed each person was born in their proper place in society
- 'caring mother' to her people
- Louis XIV:
- from Paris/Versailles
- monarch
- believed in divine right absolute monarchy and that it was the most successful govt
- Mary Wollstonecraft:
- from England
- wrote Vindication for Rights of Women where she argued women should participate equally with men in home and civic life, education, business, etc.
- Thomas Hobbes:
- from England
- believed people were naturally evil, greedy, and selfish so they needed a strong govt to protect them from themselves
- John Locke:
- from England
- believed people were a product of their environment and should have natural, unalienable rights (life, liberty, and property)
- believed people have the ability to reason and make good decisions if given proper influence
- Baron de Montesquieu:
- from France
- believed successful govts share power between 3 separate, equal branches so no one could wield all the power
- Jean Jacques Rousseau:
- from Switzerland/France
- believed govt and governed enter into a social contact where govt provides for the benefit and security of the people, and in return, people give up some freedoms, and if govt can't protect/provide for the people, the people don't need to follow it
- Voltaire:
- from Paris
- believed govt and religion should be separate; mixing = disasters (wars, inquisitions, etc.)
- deism:
- Voltaire was crucial in founding it
- God created universe and natural laws but plays no part in human affairs (same ideas as Newtonian World Machine)
- Adam Smith:
- from Scotland/UK
- believed in laissez-faire economics; govt shouldn't interfere with people's decisions
- if a country can supply another with cheaper goods, then you should be able to buy those goods tariff-free
- believed govt should only protect from invasion, defend against oppression, and maintain infrastructure
- believed labor is a country's wealth (not material wealth)
Culture and Society of the Enlightenment
- two worlds of culture:
- high culture:
- the literary, artistic, and social world of the educated men, women, and ruling classes
- wrote and spoke Latin to prove they are cultured and learned
- popular culture:
- written and oral lore of working class society
- more crude
- scoffed at but secretly loved by the wealthy class
- high culture:
- literature and printing:
- printing and publishing took off:
- 1730-1750 - over 500% increase in available titles to print
- fiction literature (novels), compilations of human history, magazines and newspapers meant to bring philosophy to casual, public places like coffee shops
- now possible to make a living out of writing without wealthy patrons
- printing and publishing took off:
- education:
- schools are still used to separate society into classes because most philosophes believed education was successful when you stayed in your social class
- upper classes learned Greek and Latin, math, and science
- middle class learned more practical skills such as bookkeeping, geography, and modern languages
- lower class literacy rose to ~50% (men) and 15% (women)
- medicine:
- hospitals were dangerous and a last resort
- dirty equipment
- unsanitary doctors, rooms, and procedures
- reused bandages
- majority of patients died due to infection after surgery
- people with money called a doctor to their home
- hospitals were dangerous and a last resort
- popular culture:
- carnival:
- 40 days leading up to Lent, people did activities they would abstain from in Lent
- people drank, ate, had affairs, wore masks, and mixed with all social classes freely
- songs 'unfit' for society were sung
- physical and verbal assault was common
- lots of alcohol (led to alcoholism in lower classes)
- carnival:
- religious tolerance:
- most religious hatred was aimed at Jewish and Muslim minority groups
- Jewish and Muslim groups would only survive at the whim of the local lord
- open attacks on Jews led to ethnic massacres/pogroms
- Jewish and Muslim groups were restricted from govt or high-ranking jobs
- most enlightenment thinkers favored assimilating Jews into society only if they convert to Christianity
- Austria - limited freedom and safety for Jews
- more profound experience:
- pietism:
- founded by Count Nikolaus von Zinzendorf who believed comprehending god with mind was atheism
- developed among Catholic clergy
- wanted more personal connection/experience with god
- Methodism:
- also experiencing deeper personal connection with god
- founded by John Wesley
- Protestant version of pietism
- pietism:
Art and Music in the Age of the Enlightenment
- new types of art:
- rococo:
- aristocrats enjoying leisure or parties
- soft colors and lines
- architecture and furniture - ornamental (ex: stuff at Versailles), curvy, accents to ceilings, roofs, and walls
- neoclassicalism:
- literally means new classical
- inspired by enlightenment ideas - depicts people demonstrating those ideals
- ditches religious undertones
- uses classical scenes from Greek and Roman times (sometimes to raise awareness on issues in their own time without getting in trouble)
- architecture - Greek/Roman designs such as columns
- romanticism (at end of era):
- about imagination, freedom, and emotion
- scenes of nature
- also literary and musical movement (ex: 3 Musketeers)
- development of a romantic hero:
- misfit in society
- based on Lord Byron
- often hid a secret and have grim ends
- usually mysterious
- rococo:
- music of the enlightenment:
- classical (1730-1820):
- some overlap with Romantic music
- more piano and brass
- less complex than Romantic pieces
- lighter tone
- less serious
- romantic (1800-1900):
- broader range of instruments - violins, woodwinds, choral arrangements
- pieces focus on god and spiritual matters
- composers acquire noble/royal patrons (like artists)
- notable composers:
- Mozart (classical)
- Bach (romantic)
- Frederick Handel (romantic)
- classical (1730-1820):