Section 4. Objectives

Similar documents
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Medieval Culture and Achievements

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Monarchs, nobles, and the Church all struggled for power. As monarchs amassed power, the foundations for modern law were laid.

Trade, Towns and Financial Revolution

Chapter 6, lesson 3 CULTURE of the MIDDLE AGES

Cultural Achievements of Western Europe During the Middle Ages

Chapter 10.3 Christianity and Medieval Society

Sacraments and Salvation in the Middle Ages

Learning and Culture Flourish

CHAPTER 9. Medieval Civilization

The High Middle Ages ( )

Chapter 12: Crusades and Culture in the Middle Ages

The High Middle Ages

The Dark Ages, Middle Ages or Medieval Times?

AKA the Medieval Period with knights, castles and the Black Plague. 8/12/2012 1

Feudalism and the manor system created divisions among people. Shared beliefs in the teachings of the Church bonded people together.

The following pages will be the study guides. I will update this attachment with worksheets as they get added.

The Christian Church was central to life in the Middle Ages.

The Renaissance Begins AN AGE OF ACCELERATING CONNECTIONS ( )

The Significance of Paris. Center of Western civilization ( ) Distinct cultural expression. Chapter Ten: High Middle Ages

n_ - - -:-.^--^^- - --

The Crusades and the Wider World

What had life been like for Europeans during the Medieval period?

Learning Goal: Describe the major causes of the Renaissance and the political, intellectual, artistic, economic, and religious effects of the

Western Europe Ch

Renaissance and Reformation. Chapter 15

Name Date Period Class. Quaestio: Revival of Late Medieval Europe. Directions: Read each selection and answer the questions that follow.

Assessment: The Roman Catholic Church in Medieval Europe

AP European History - Chapter 11 Crisis of the Later Middle Ages Class Notes & Critical Thinking

Throughout the Middle Ages, France experienced the slow deterioration of law, order,

Section 3. Objectives

Study Guide: The Middle Ages

KS3 Accompanying Notes

+ To Jesus Through Mary. Name: Per. Date: Eighth Grade Religion ID s

Chapter Summary Crusades and Culture in the Middle Ages

Dark Ages High Middle Ages

Set up a new TOC for the 2 nd 6 weeks

Katz English 11:8. Canterbury Cathedral was first built in 597 A.D. due to the coming of the first

Gothic was a label placed on this style since it broke drastically from the Classical ideal. It was an insult given by Renaissance architects and it

History of The Catholic Church Part II

STUDY GUIDE # 16 : EUROPEAN LATE MIDDLE AGES

Europe in the Middle Ages. Unit 6

Europe in the Middle Ages. Unit 6

The Medieval Period. English: The Formative Years

The Renaissance. The Rebirth of European Progress

Islam Islamic Scholarship

3. Which institution served as the main unifying force of medieval Western Europe?

Time Periods for this chapter include:

The Renaissance and Reformation

Renaissance and Reformation Review

Chapter 12 Renaissance and Reformation Section 1 The Italian Renaissance The word renaissance means rebirth. The Italian Renaissance, which

Renaissance and Reformation. ( ) Chapter 5

By: Gina Sanson. French Cathedrals

Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

Europe s Cultures Teacher: Mrs. Moody

Old Western Culture A Christian Approach to the Great Books. Year 3: Christendom. Unit 3. Aquinas and Dante. Exam Answer Key

1. What key religious event does the map above depict? 2. What region are the arrows emanating from? 3. To what region are 3 of the 4 arrows heading?

The Later Middle Ages

Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

Church and Society. The

Ch. 14 Quiz. 1. Which action led most directly to divisions in Christianity in western Europe?

secular humanism Francesco Petrarch

Geoffrey Chaucer (1343?-1400) Prepared by M Dyer

13. Upheaval in Western Christendom,

Essential Question: What was the Renaissance? What factors led to the rise of the Renaissance?

World History (Survey) Chapter 14: The Formation of Western Europe,

Student ID: MAKE SURE YOU BUBBLE THE STUDENT ID ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET. Unit 1: Europe Quiz

The European Middle Ages CE

Arabic language palaces, schools, how to make reason and logical orphanages, hospitals, mosques, and proof agree with their faith. other buildings.

Advanced Placement European History Enrollee

New Religious Orders

The Formation of Western Europe, The Formation of Western Europe, Church Reform and the Crusades.

World History. 1st Quarter Notes

AP EUROPEAN HISTORY SUMMER READING STUDY GUIDE

The Roman Catholic Church. World History (Wednesday, November 2 nd, 2011)

# 9: The Era of Papal Domination, part 3

Welcome to Selective Readings in Western Civilization. Session 9

How To Read A Church: A Guide To Symbols And Images In Churches And Cathedrals PDF

The Renaissance Introduction to the Renaissance

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

The High Middle Ages

Renaissance. Humanism (2) Medici Family. Perspective (2)

Church and Politics. Importance of the Church. Church. Church and. and Society. Church and Daily Life

COURSE OUTLINE History of Western Civilization 1

The Premodern World. Outline 1000 C.E C.E. 30/01/2014. From Antiquity to the Scientific Revolution

CHAPTER 3: The Humanist Approach

Timeline to the Renaissance

Section 3. Objectives

1. Base your answer to the question on the cartoon below and on your knowledge of social studies.

2. What invention made the Northern Renaissance possible? a. fork b. caravel c. compass d. printing press

The Role of the Church in Medieval Europe

Rebirth. Responses to the changing demographics and increases in wealth also manifested themselves in art and thinking the Renaissance.

INTRODUCTION. SECTION I REVIVAL OF TRADE ROUTES (page ) TRADE ROUTES MARKETS AND FAIRS MONEY AND BANKING

Reformation, Renaissance, and Exploration. Unit Test

Fiero, Gloria. The Humanistic Tradition (6th Ed.). Book 2: Medieval Europe and the World Beyond. McGraw-Hill, New York: 2010, ISBN #

Unit: The Rise and Spread of Islam

Chapter 13. Reformation. Renaissance

Reformation, Renaissance, and Exploration. Unit Test

Reformation, Renaissance, and Exploration. Unit Test

Transcription:

Objectives Explain the emergence of universities and their importance to medieval life. Understand how newly translated writings from the past and from other regions influenced medieval thought. Describe the literature, architecture, and art of the High and late Middle Ages.

Terms and People scholasticism in medieval Europe, the school of thought that used logic and reason to support Christian beliefs Thomas Aquinas a famous scholastic who wrote the Summa theologica and concluded that faith and reason exist in harmony vernacular the everyday language of ordinary people Dante Alighieri Italian poet who wrote the Divine Comedy

Terms and People (continued) Geoffrey Chaucer English writer of The Canterbury Tales Gothic style a style of architecture that used flying buttresses to support higher, thinner walls and left space for stained-glass windows flying buttresses stone supports that stood outside the church illumination the artistic decoration of books

What achievements in learning, literature, and the arts characterized the High and late Middle Ages? Universities began springing up in Europe in the 1100s. They brought prestige and profit to their cities. As economic and political conditions improved, learning and culture began to flourish.

By the 1100s, the European food supply had grown more reliable, and trade had increased. Royals needed literate, educated men to run their growing bureaucracies. To supply them, schools appeared, and some became universities.

The earliest universities were founded at Salerno and Bologna in Italy, in Paris, and at Oxford. Student s lives were far from comfortable. They rose early and worked hard to memorize Latin texts. 5:00 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 5:00 P.M. Prayers, then five hours of class First meal, then seven hours of class Light supper, study until bed

A typical program of study included arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music, grammar, rhetoric, and logic. Women were not allowed to attend university. Some received education in convents.

One exception to this was Christine de Pisan, a woman writer who lived from about 1364 to 1403. She received an excellent education from her family and supported herself through writing. She promoted women s rights and accomplishments.

Prior to the 1100s, Muslim scholars had translated and spread the work of Aristotle and other Greeks. These were eventually translated into Latin and reached Western Europe. The ancient texts challenged Christian scholars, because they championed reason.

To resolve the conflict between reason and faith, Christian scholars developed a method called scholasticism, which used reason to support Christian beliefs. Reason Faith The most famous scholastic was Thomas Aquinas, who wrote the Summa theologica.

Scientific works from ancient Greece and Rome also reached Europe at this time. Europeans adopted Hindu-Arabic numerals to replace Roman numerals. Science made little progress, however, because people believed knowledge had to fit with Christian teachings.

New writings began to appear in the vernacular language. Dante Alighieri s Divine Comedy takes readers on a journey through hell, purgatory, and heaven. Geoffrey Chaucer s Canterbury Tales describes a group of pilgrims traveling to St. Thomas s tomb.

Builders developed the Gothic style of architecture in the 1100s. Flying buttresses allowed for thinner walls and large windows. Gothic cathedrals, such as Notre Dame in Paris, contain beautiful stained-glass windows.

Other arts flourished during this time. Gothic style applied to the decoration of books, known as illumination. Artists also created woven wall hangings called tapestries to keep the cold out of castles. Gothic religious paintings in churches and in wealthy homes were not realistic but symbolized religious ideas.

Section Review QuickTake Quiz Know It, Show It Quiz