European Culture and Politics ca Objective: Examine events from the Middle Ages to the mid-1700s from multiple perspectives.

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European Culture and Politics ca. 1750 Objective: Examine events from the Middle Ages to the mid-1700s from multiple perspectives. What s wrong with this picture??? What s wrong with this picture???

The Age of Enlightenment 1

The Age of Enlightenment & The Age of Revolutions Predictions: Directions: Below are six groups of people who had very different perspectives & up to, and during the Age of Enlightenment and Age of Revolutions. Try to imagine yourself as a member of each group when answering the questions. Questions What role did we play in causing the Age of Enlightenment & Age of Revolutions? How did our roles change as a result of the Age of Enlightenment & Age of Revolutions? Absolute Catholic Church (And the People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) (Wealthy landowners) Merchants Intellectuals (Artists, Philosophers, Scientists) (Farmers, workers, lower class People hated us and did not want us to oppress them People read the Bible for themselves and realized we lied sometimes We held all the wealth and the people didn t like that. We made a lot of money and wanted to make more by getting the monarch out pf our business We realized absolutism was harmful We were sick and tired of all the bad things the upper class did to us Less power Everyone can read the Bible, we can t (completely) lie to the parishioners. We became less powerful as people wanted independence We became more powerful as we became free to trade as we pleased We became more powerful as people listened to us We became more powerful as we stood together 2

Review Think-Pair-Share Topic Middle Ages Feudalism Renaissance Protestant Reformation Age of Absolutism Scientific Revolution 1. Think Independently, write anything you can remember about the topic from the timeline above. Dark Ages, black death, depressing Rich landowners, farming peasants, isolation Enlightenment, learning, knowledge, science Martin Luther, Theses, heretic, corruption, change Centralized control, wealth of monarchs, less isolated Rapid progress, change, and growth 2. Pair Explain everything you wrote in the Think column to a partner then, ask them to do the same. Add new information from your partner below. 3. Share With your partner, select the three most important facts for your classmates to know about each topic, then share them with the class. To prepare for sharing out, circle those three facts. 3

Review Topic #1- The Middle Ages and Feudalism (476-1500s) After the fall of Rome in 476 CE, Western Europe was in chaos. Without a centralized government, monarchs who ruled small kingdoms continuously fought wars against one another for more land and power. The Catholic Church became the unifying force and the feudal system ( feudalism ) brought order to each kingdom in Europe. The Catholic Church was the cultural, intellectual, and political center of Europe. were crowned by the Pope, most art and music was about Christianity and paid for by the Church, and the church was the source of all knowledge. The Bible was printed only in Latin which only the educated clergy members could read, so everyone relied on their interpretation to learn what they were supposed to do and how to live their lives according to God. Economically, Europe was isolated. Most people lived their whole lives on the manor (piece of land owned by a lord) because they could grow all of the food they needed there, the manor was self-sufficient. There was little trade between Western Europe and the rest of the world and as a result, there was a lack of new ideas and innovation. Catholic Clergy (People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) (wealthy landowners) Question How did the Middle Ages affect you? Barley matter, little power Extremely powerful, only centralized authority, very wealthy, largest landowner We control most people We do all the work for little money 4

Review Topic #2- The Renaissance: Trade and New Money Fuel a European Comeback The Renaissance, rebirth in French, was a cultural movement in the 14th-17th centuries during which European artists, scientists, and scholars, were inspired by Classical achievements of the Greeks and Romans, which they became aware of through ruins and Greco-Roman texts preserved by Islamic scholars in the Ottoman Empire. The Renaissance started in Italy in the 14th century (1300s), then its ideas and cultural trends spread slowly across Europe. The Renaissance marked the end of the Middle Ages. The end of the Middle Ages and start of the Renaissance occurred because of renewed trade connections and a great deal of wealth that was made off of that trade. The Crusades which took place during the Middle Ages, though destructive, connected Europeans with Islamic traders in the Middle East who had access to trade networks in Asia. As a result, Western European interest in the rest of the world grew. Italy was the connection between Western Europe and Islamic Empires in the Middle East. After the Crusades, Italian cities like Venice made strong trade connections with the Ottoman Empire. Wealthy merchants, like the Medici family, turned their interest to beautifying cities like Florence. They funded artists, architects, and scientists to study Greek and Roman buildings and texts, then to build new Italian achievements. Without money from trade the achievements of the Renaissance would not have been created. When the Black Death swept through Italy, a disease that spread through trade routes, it killed off a lot of the nobles. Merchants replaced the nobles as the wealthy people in Italy. The nobles held wealth in land, but the merchants made money through trade. also had new options since the nobles that controlled them under feudalism were no longer as strong and they could make money in businesses that made goods to trade. Over the course of the 14th, 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries, the wealth and cultural trends in Italy spread throughout Europe inspiring achievements in the arts and science in the Netherlands, England, France, and elsewhere, bringing Europe out of the Dark Ages and into the Modern Era. Question (wealthy landowners) Merchants Intellectuals (Artists, Philosophers, Scientists) How did the Renaissance affect you? Significant decline We become more useful as people became interconnected We begin to matter here, we spur change After black death, labor more scarce, we know do all the work for slightly more money 5

Review Topic #3- The Protestant Reformation: A Challenge to the Church s Authority The Catholic Church s Authority In the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church was the cultural, intellectual, and political center of Europe. were crowned by the Pope, most art and music was about Christianity and paid for by the Church, and the church was the source of all knowledge. The Bible, which was the source of Catholic Church s power and knowledge was only written in Latin, a language that very few people outside of the clergy (educated members of the church) could read, so priests interpreted the Bible for everyone else and told them what it said they should do and how they should act. The Protestant Reformation Questions the Catholic Church The Protestant Reformation changed all of that. In 1517, a Catholic monk named Martin Luther started the Protestant Reformation by writing, publishing, and distributing his critiques of the church s selling of indulgences called the 95 Theses. Martin Luther believed that the only true word of God was the Bible and that people did not need a pope, bishops, or priests to interpret it for them. He felt that the Catholic Church had corrupted what the Bible actually said and that the selling of indulgences was just one example. In response, Luther had the Bible printed in the languages that most people spoke and created a new church called Lutheran Church. Later, many other Protestant churches were created by other leaders of the Reformation. Many monarchs especially in Northern Europe converted to Protestant religions as a way of freeing themselves from the power the Catholic Church held over them since the Middle Ages. Source: Adapted from http://www.biography.com/people/martin-luther-9389283#later-year Catholic Clergy (People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) Intellectuals (Artists, Philosophers, Scientists) Question How did the Protestant Reformation affect you? We finally rule more than the church We aren t in control anymore We prevailed over the Catholics, people are literate, they can read and learn now, we can write books We now know the truth 6

Review Topic #4- Political Life: Absolute Ruled in Most European Countries In the 1500s, 1600s and 1700s, some monarchs in Europe became very wealthy thanks to the increase in trade during the Renaissance and colonies established during the Age of Exploration. As a result, they were able to pay for large and powerful armies and expand their land and power. These kings and queens are known as Absolute. Most of the countries in Europe were ruled by absolute monarchs in the 17th and 18th centuries. Some of the absolute monarchs you studied last year were Louis XIV of France and Peter the Great of Russia. Charles I, being crowned by a hand from a cloud, possibly by God (1600s) A DEO REX, A REGE LEX The king is from God, and law is from the king. -James I Source: NYS Global History and Geography Regents Exam, June, 2012. Absolute monarchs and people they ruled believed in divine right. DIVINE RIGHT is the belief that one s authority to rule comes directly from God. Since the king received his authority to rule directly from God, this meant: The king had the 'right' to rule completely and totally without approval from the people The king was God s representative on earth Only God could judge the king Question Catholic Clergy (People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) (wealthy landowners) How did the rule of absolute monarchs affect you? Unless we do something really bad, we won t be challenged Directly, from God, that s not good for us The monarch wants to consolidate power from us to himself, not good Very little, we still do all the work, for little pay 7

Review Topic #5- Scientific Revolution (1600s- late 1700s): A New Way to Look at the World The Renaissance brought ideas from the Ancient Greeks and Romans, and from Asia, Northern Africa, and the Middle East to Western Europe. Those ideas, combined with religious doctrine from the Catholic Church became the basis of knowledge in the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries. As Martin Luther s Protestant Reformation changed the way people looked at religion in Western Europe, the Scientific Revolution changed the way people understood the world. The scientific revolution was the beginning of modern science when advances in mathematics, physics, astronomy and biology gave people a better understanding of the world around them and led them to question what they were being told by monarchs and the Catholic Church. Scientists, known as natural philosophers, used the scientific method to examine the world. To use the method a scientist generated an hypothesis, about solving a problem, experimented to test the hypothesis, observed and collected information based on the experiment, used reason and logic to draw conclusions, and then shared his or her findings with other scientists to discuss them. This process was very different that the way of finding truth in the Middle Ages, which was to ask a member of the clergy. Scientists in the 1600s and 1700s discovered natural laws, facts proven true through the scientific method, that disproved what the Catholic Church claimed. For example, Galileo Galilei, an astronomer whose ideas were based on an earlier scientist named Nicholas Copernicus, wrote about and taught that the sun was at the center of the solar system, an idea called the heliocentric theory. The church claimed that the Earth was at the center and that the sun revolved around it. In 1633, Galileo was convicted of heresy, teaching an idea the was in opposition to the church, was forced to state that he was wrong and spent the rest of his life under house arrest. Many other discoveries were made during the Scientific Revolution that changed human history including Isaac Newton s discovery of the laws of motion and gravity and advances in every field of science and technology. Question Catholic Clergy (People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) (wealthy landowners) How did the Scientific Revolution affect you? The peasants are getting smarter, that can t be good for me How dare they challenge us! The peasants are getting smarter, that can t be good for me Now that I m thinking about stuff, I may want a Bill of Rights or something. 8

Conclusion Questions Catholic Clergy (People who work for the church like the Pope, bishops, and priests) (Wealthy landowners) Merchants Intellectuals (Artists, Philosophers, Scientists) What are you concerned about in 1750? Losing power Losing power Losing land -> Losing power Losing money People not listening to us as much Nothing really changes for us, our situation is bad and will probably stay that way What do you hope will happen in the next hundred years? Regaining power Gaming more parishioners Getting mor e power back from the monarch Better trade routes People listen to us and make society better That society becomes better for us. 9