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The Renaissance
Wealth and Power in Renaissance
Italy
Homework
• Read each slide
• Add a picture
• Then answer the short answer question right
onto slide 3.
What economic and political developments in
Italy provided the setting for the
Renaissance?(p. 374)
Map of Italian City States
c. 1500
A. Trade and Prosperity
• By the middle of the
twelfth century
Venice, supported by a
huge merchant
marine, had grown
enormously rich
through overseas
trade, as had Genoa
and Milan.
• Important advances in
shipbuilding allowed
those cities’ ships to sail
all year long at
accelerated speeds and
carrying ever more
merchandise.
• Florence, another
commercial leader, was
situated on the fertile
soil along the Arno
River, in a favorable
location on the main
road northward from
Rome that made it a
commercial hub.
• Florentine merchants
loaned and invested
money, and they
acquired control of
papal banking toward
the end of the
thirteenth century.
• The profits from
loans, investments, and
money exchanges that
poured back to Florence
contributed to the city’s
economic vitality and
allowed banking
families to control the
city’s politics and
culture.
• Despite several crises
that hit Florence in the
fourteenth century, the
basic Florentine
economic structure
remained stable.
• Wealth allowed many
people greater material
pleasures, a more
comfortable life, and
the leisure time to
appreciate and
patronize the arts.
• The rich came to see life
more as an opportunity
to be enjoyed than as a
painful pilgrimage to
the City of God.
B. Communes and Republics of
Northern Italy
• The northern Italian
cities were
communes, sworn
associations of free
men who began in the
twelfth century to seek
political and economic
independence from
local nobles.
• The merchant guilds
that formed the
communes built and
maintained the city
walls, regulated
trade, collected
taxes, and kept civil
order.
• This merger of the
northern Italian feudal
nobility and the
commercial elite
created a powerful
oligarchy, yet rivalries
among these families
often made Italian
communes politically
unstable.
• The common people
(the popolo) were
disenfranchised and
heavily taxed, and they
bitterly resented their
exclusion from power.
• Throughout most of the
thirteenth century, in
city after city, the
popolo used armed
force and violence to
take over the city
governments and
establish republican
governments in which
political power
theoretically resided in
the people and was
exercised by their
chosen representatives.
• Because the popolo
could not establish civil
order within their
cities, merchant
oligarchies reasserted
their power and
sometimes brought in
powerful military
leaders
called condottieri to
establish order.
• Many cities in Italy
became signori, in
which one man ruled
and handed down the
right to rule to his son.
• These oligarchic
regimes maintained a
façade of republican
government, but the
judicial, executive, and
legislative functions of
government were
restricted to a small
class of wealthy
merchants.
• The rulers of many
northern Italian cities
transformed their
households into courts
and displayed their
wealth by becoming
patrons of the arts, hiring
architects to build private
palaces and public city
halls, artists to fill them
with paintings and
sculptures, and musicians
and composers to fill
them with music.
• Ceremonies connected
with visiting rulers or
with family
births, baptisms, marria
ges, and funerals
offered occasions for
magnificent pageantry
and elaborate ritual.
• Rulers of nation-states
later copied and
adapted all these
aspects of Italian courts.
C. City-States and the Balance of
Power
• Renaissance Italians had
a passionate
attachment to their
individual city-
states, which hindered
the development of a
single unified state.
• In the fifteenth century
Venice, Milan, Florence,
the Papal States, and
the kingdom of Naples
dominated the Italian
peninsula.
• Though Venice was a
republic in name, an
oligarchy of merchant-
aristocrats actually ran
the city.
• Milan was also called a
republic, but the
condottieri turned
signori of the Sforza
family dominated Milan
and several smaller
cities in the north from
1447 to 1535.
• In Florence the form of
government was
republican, but in
reality the great Medici
banking family held
power almost
continually for
centuries.
• Most Renaissance
popes were members of
powerful Italian
families, selected for
their political skills, not
their piety.
• South of the Papal
States, the kingdom of
Naples was under the
control of the king of
Aragon.
• Whenever one Italian
state appeared to gain a
predominant position
within the
peninsula, other states
combined to establish a
balance of
poweragainst the major
threat.
• Whenever one Italian
state appeared to gain a
predominant position
within the
peninsula, other states
combined to establish a
balance of
poweragainst the major
threat.
• One of the great
political achievements
of the Italian
Renaissance was the
establishment of
permanent embassies
with resident
ambassadors in capitals
where political relations
and commercial ties
needed continual
monitoring.
• When Florence and
Naples entered into an
agreement to acquire
Milanese territories
near the end of the
fifteenth century, Milan
called on France for
support, and the French
king Charles VIII (r.
1483–1498) invaded
Italy in 1494.
• In Florence, the French
invasion was
interpreted as the
fulfillment of a
prophecy by the
Dominican friar
Girolamo Savonarola
(1452–1498), who had
predicted that God
would punish Italy for
its moral vice and
corrupt leadership.
• For a time Savonarola
was wildly popular, but
eventually people tired
of his moral
denunciations, and he
was excommunicated
by the
pope, tortured, and
burned at the stake.
• The French invasion
inaugurated a new
period in European
power politics in which
Italy became the focus
of international
ambitions and the
battleground of foreign
armies, particularly
those of France and the
Holy Roman Empire in a
series of conflicts called
the Habsburg-Valois
Wars.
• The failure of the city-
states to form a federal
system, to
consolidate, or at least
to establish a common
foreign policy led to
centuries of subjection
by outside invaders.
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment
Renaissance notes with first assignment

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Renaissance notes with first assignment

  • 1. The Renaissance Wealth and Power in Renaissance Italy
  • 2. Homework • Read each slide • Add a picture • Then answer the short answer question right onto slide 3.
  • 3. What economic and political developments in Italy provided the setting for the Renaissance?(p. 374)
  • 4. Map of Italian City States c. 1500
  • 5. A. Trade and Prosperity
  • 6. • By the middle of the twelfth century Venice, supported by a huge merchant marine, had grown enormously rich through overseas trade, as had Genoa and Milan.
  • 7. • Important advances in shipbuilding allowed those cities’ ships to sail all year long at accelerated speeds and carrying ever more merchandise.
  • 8. • Florence, another commercial leader, was situated on the fertile soil along the Arno River, in a favorable location on the main road northward from Rome that made it a commercial hub.
  • 9. • Florentine merchants loaned and invested money, and they acquired control of papal banking toward the end of the thirteenth century.
  • 10. • The profits from loans, investments, and money exchanges that poured back to Florence contributed to the city’s economic vitality and allowed banking families to control the city’s politics and culture.
  • 11. • Despite several crises that hit Florence in the fourteenth century, the basic Florentine economic structure remained stable.
  • 12. • Wealth allowed many people greater material pleasures, a more comfortable life, and the leisure time to appreciate and patronize the arts.
  • 13. • The rich came to see life more as an opportunity to be enjoyed than as a painful pilgrimage to the City of God.
  • 14. B. Communes and Republics of Northern Italy
  • 15. • The northern Italian cities were communes, sworn associations of free men who began in the twelfth century to seek political and economic independence from local nobles.
  • 16. • The merchant guilds that formed the communes built and maintained the city walls, regulated trade, collected taxes, and kept civil order.
  • 17. • This merger of the northern Italian feudal nobility and the commercial elite created a powerful oligarchy, yet rivalries among these families often made Italian communes politically unstable.
  • 18. • The common people (the popolo) were disenfranchised and heavily taxed, and they bitterly resented their exclusion from power.
  • 19. • Throughout most of the thirteenth century, in city after city, the popolo used armed force and violence to take over the city governments and establish republican governments in which political power theoretically resided in the people and was exercised by their chosen representatives.
  • 20. • Because the popolo could not establish civil order within their cities, merchant oligarchies reasserted their power and sometimes brought in powerful military leaders called condottieri to establish order.
  • 21. • Many cities in Italy became signori, in which one man ruled and handed down the right to rule to his son.
  • 22. • These oligarchic regimes maintained a façade of republican government, but the judicial, executive, and legislative functions of government were restricted to a small class of wealthy merchants.
  • 23. • The rulers of many northern Italian cities transformed their households into courts and displayed their wealth by becoming patrons of the arts, hiring architects to build private palaces and public city halls, artists to fill them with paintings and sculptures, and musicians and composers to fill them with music.
  • 24. • Ceremonies connected with visiting rulers or with family births, baptisms, marria ges, and funerals offered occasions for magnificent pageantry and elaborate ritual.
  • 25. • Rulers of nation-states later copied and adapted all these aspects of Italian courts.
  • 26. C. City-States and the Balance of Power
  • 27. • Renaissance Italians had a passionate attachment to their individual city- states, which hindered the development of a single unified state.
  • 28. • In the fifteenth century Venice, Milan, Florence, the Papal States, and the kingdom of Naples dominated the Italian peninsula.
  • 29. • Though Venice was a republic in name, an oligarchy of merchant- aristocrats actually ran the city.
  • 30. • Milan was also called a republic, but the condottieri turned signori of the Sforza family dominated Milan and several smaller cities in the north from 1447 to 1535.
  • 31. • In Florence the form of government was republican, but in reality the great Medici banking family held power almost continually for centuries.
  • 32. • Most Renaissance popes were members of powerful Italian families, selected for their political skills, not their piety.
  • 33. • South of the Papal States, the kingdom of Naples was under the control of the king of Aragon.
  • 34. • Whenever one Italian state appeared to gain a predominant position within the peninsula, other states combined to establish a balance of poweragainst the major threat.
  • 35. • Whenever one Italian state appeared to gain a predominant position within the peninsula, other states combined to establish a balance of poweragainst the major threat.
  • 36. • One of the great political achievements of the Italian Renaissance was the establishment of permanent embassies with resident ambassadors in capitals where political relations and commercial ties needed continual monitoring.
  • 37. • When Florence and Naples entered into an agreement to acquire Milanese territories near the end of the fifteenth century, Milan called on France for support, and the French king Charles VIII (r. 1483–1498) invaded Italy in 1494.
  • 38. • In Florence, the French invasion was interpreted as the fulfillment of a prophecy by the Dominican friar Girolamo Savonarola (1452–1498), who had predicted that God would punish Italy for its moral vice and corrupt leadership.
  • 39. • For a time Savonarola was wildly popular, but eventually people tired of his moral denunciations, and he was excommunicated by the pope, tortured, and burned at the stake.
  • 40. • The French invasion inaugurated a new period in European power politics in which Italy became the focus of international ambitions and the battleground of foreign armies, particularly those of France and the Holy Roman Empire in a series of conflicts called the Habsburg-Valois Wars.
  • 41. • The failure of the city- states to form a federal system, to consolidate, or at least to establish a common foreign policy led to centuries of subjection by outside invaders.