Super Quiz: Renaissance
Terms
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copy deck
- Italian artist and art historian who coined the word "Rinascita" later called Renaissance
- Vasari
- Few essentials that reduce the period of the Renaissance
- rediscovery of man and the world; renewed sense of joy in life; asceticism and symbolism replaced by sensuousness and naturalism; idealism replaced by realism; experimentation in pursuit of knowledge displacing tradition
- Renaissance humanists offered a set of secular and cultural values that ______________ the power of the papacy
- threatened to replace
- The Renaissance humanists achieved what remarkable thing?
- pan-European culture and style that were won by sheer intelectual virtuosity
- France and England were born as nations after what war?
- Hundred Years' War
- The unity of Spain was cemented by what marriage?
- marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castille (1469)
- What did the smaller states, Germany and Italy, and nation-states,France and England, have in common?
- urge to develop strong communal loyalties
- By the end of 15th century, how many major states existed?
- 7
- What kingdom was a distputed territory between the Houses of Anjou and Aragon?
- Kingdom of Naples
- What house finally won the Kingdom of Naples and in what year?
-
House of Aragon, 1435
(also controlled Sicily) - The papal states acted as a buffer between the ________ south and the _________ north.
- feudal, commercial
- In the north of Italy, what large cities and principalities existed?
- Duchy of Ferrara, Republic of Florence, Republic of Siena, Venitian Republic, Milan
- In the north of Italy, what smaller cities and principilaties existed?
- Duchy of Mantua, Duchy of Modena, Florence (dominant)
- Where did the Renaissance first flourish?
- Northern Italy
- Since the late 13th century, Milan had been ruled by what family?
-
Visconti
(male line died in 1447) - What condotierro made himself Duke of Milan by starving the city into submission?
- Francesco Sforza
- The Duchy of Ferrara was governed by the ________ family.
- Este
- The Duchy of Mantua was governed by the ________ family.
- Ganzagas
- The papal states were never fully subjected to the papacy until the reign of what most immoral pope?
- Alexander VI
- Who was the "warrior pope"?
- Julius II
- Who was the successor of Pope Julius II?
- Leo X (Medici)
- What states were the outstanding republics?
- Florence, Venice, Siena
- What type of government governed Siena?
- oligarchy
- What type of government governed Venice?
- mercantile oligarchy
- In what state did the first manifestation of Renaissance begin?
- Florence
- What Italian state was the last Republic in the 16th century?
- Venice
- What Italian state had been the most stable than the othern states?
- Venice
- Why was Venice the most stable Italian state?
- uniform seafaring interest of the people, had a constitution
- Who were the Ghibellines?
- those who favored and relied on the old Imperial connection
- Who were the Guelphs?
- those who were opposed to the old Imperial connection and looked to the papacy for support
- What bourgeois were declining?
- Those that were tied up in the woolen guilds
- Why were the guilds losing influence in society?
- they lost control of their own members
- What were the high roads of wealth that were traveled by a minority?
- Individual and joint stock ventures
- What were the lower classes below the bourgesie?
- artisans, petit bourgeois, small farmers and tenants, copyholders
- Who were copyholders?
- people who enjoyed the use of land for certain terms of years in return for prescribed services
- What was another social transformation due to the Renaissance?
-
pacification of the nobility
(adjusted themselves to new conditions) - The Renaissance saw the quickening of a what process?
- laicization (secularize)
- Who wrote "The Divine Comedy"?
- Dante
- Antiquity was an ideal, a source of inspiration, and sometimes an ____________.
- obstruction
- What language became the universal language?
- Latin
- What devout classicists helped make their native Tuscan the language of Italy?
- Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio
- Humanists helped to set __________ by using them in their works.
- vernacular language
- These men settled the vernacular language in their nations by their works: _______ and _______ in England, _________ in France and _________ in Spain.
-
Wycliffe, Chaucer (England)
Rabelais (France)
Cervantes (Spain) - What does "humanitas" mean?
- literary refinement and mental cultivation that went beyond academic discipline
- Who wrote "The Courtier"?
- Castiglione
- What state had the "tripartite constitution"?
- Milan
- What were the 3 classes of Milan?
-
1.)great nobles
2.)lesser nobles
(knights & squires)
3.)non-nobles (plebians) - Who were the chief officers of the plebians?
- the captain and podesta of the people
- Who were the first despots of Milan?
- Della-Torre
- Who were the leaders of the Guelf faction in Milan?
- Della-Torre
- Who were the leaders of the Ghibelline faction?
- Visconti (rival of Della-Torre)
- In 1277, who became Lord of Milan?
- Archbishop Ottone Visconti
- The visit of what ruler to Italy was used by the Visconti to regain their dominant position from the Della Tore?
- Emperor Henry VII
- What family had a policy of territorial aggression, that constantly brought them into conflict with the papacy?
- Visconti
- Who were the most important acquisitions of the family?
- Pavia, Piacenza, Bergamo, Brescia, and Parma
- Why did the Visconti become popular with their subjects that resulted in their role as being recognized as hereditary?
- they looked after the prosperity and security of Milan
- The great period of the Visconti in 1354 began with what two joint brother-rulers?
- Galeazoo and Bernab
- Galeazoo recieved the ________ part of Milan and Bernab receieved the _________ part of Milan.
- western, eastern
- In what year did the brothers unite to take Pavia, where Galeazzo set up his residence and put up a university?
- 1359
- In 1378 Galeazzo died, leaving his domains to ________________, his son.
- Gian Galeazzo
- Bernab laid claim to ____ illegitimate children besides ____ legitimate children.
- 20,16
- Bernab is noted for his ______, working hard at the business of government, and issued game laws of inhuman severity.
- violence of temper
- Bernab was though of as the ____________.
- Defender of the poor
- In 1385, Gian Galeazzo took who prisoner where he died not long afterwards?
- Bernab
- Who was the greatest of the Visconti?
- Gian Galeazzo
- What title did Gian Galeazzo purchase from the Holy Roman Emperor?
- Duke of Milan
- Gian was able to dominate all of northern Italy,except what city-state?
- Venice
- Who was Milan's rival and enemy?
- Florence
- What causes Gian Galeazzo's failure of the siege against Florence in 1402?
- his sickness and death
- Who was Gian Galeazzo's heir?
- his oldest son, Giovanni Maria (murdered in church, 1412)
- Who was the heir Giovanni Maria?
- his brother, Filippo Maria
- Who was the last of the Visconti dukes?
- Filippo Maria
- When Filippo Maria died in 1447 without any provision for the succession, the people of Milan hired what mercenary captain to defend Milan?
- Franceso Sforza
- In 1450 Francesco Sforza laid siege against Milan with what state's assistance?
- Florence (ruler: Cosimo de Medici)
- What treaty in 1454 ended the conflict between Florence- Milan and Venice-Naples?
- Peace of Lodi
- From what nation did Sforza secured control of Genoa?
- France
- Who was Sforza's successor, who was latered murdered in church(1476) because of his absolute rule?
- Galeazzo Maria
- Who was the famous brother of Gian Galeazzo (Galeazzo Maria's son)?
- Ludovico the Moor
- Why was Ludovico the Moor important?
- established one of the most brilliant courts, encouraged the University of Pavia and helped Milan prosper by irrigation works
- What broke up the old alliance of Milan, Naples, and Florence?
- the marriage of Ludovico to a pricess of the ruling house of Naples, who became dissatisfied with her false position of duchess and begged her family for help
- Ludovico dealth with and encouraged what king, that brought a most ominous fate to Italy?
-
the French king, Charles VIII
(laid claim to the throne of Naples on the basis of the rule of the house of Anjou) - When were the islands of Venice settled by refugees from the mainland fleeing from Hunnish and German invaders?
- 15th century A.D.
- Venice was governed by tribunes, overseen by a duke or _____.
- doge
- The merchant oligarchy of Venice later exercised its power through what two councils?
- Great Council, Small Council
- What was the Great Council?
- seat of sovereignty, in which surpreme power resided and from which the other government bodies were formed
- By the 14th cenutry what government body was the center of public administration?
- the Senate
- The victory of the aristocracy was sealed by the "closing" of the _____ ______ in 1297.
-
Great Council
(restricted eligibility to the members of about 200 of great merchant families) - What goverment body was formed due to the serious conspiracy against the government in 1310?
- Council of Ten
- What did the Council of Ten do to Venice?
- gave the government outlines such as watching over the affairs of the state and ferreting out and punishing any and all conspiracies
- What was the most famous conspiracy that happened in 1355?
- conspiracy of the doge Marino Faliero, it failed and he was executed
- What did Venice do in order to recoup from their lost of relations between them and the emperor of the East?
- diverted the Fourth Crusade (1204)and successfully attacked Constantinople
- In 1294 what dangerous rival for the eastern trade did Venice declare war against?
- Genoa
- By what year did Genoa and Venice declare peace?
- 1381
- Who was the most famous Venetian merchants who lived in the Mongol Empire as an official of the Great Khan from 1275 to 1292?
- Marco Polo
- In what century was Venice at the height of its glory?
- 15th century
- What was the gold coin of Venice called, minted since 1284?
- ducat
- What reasons were for the long decline of Venice?
-
1.)advance of Ottoman Turks into eastern Europe
2.)Portuegese took over eastern trade in spices which had belonged to Venice
3.)Entrance of the French, Dutch and English into eastern trade
4.)outbreak of the plague
5.)exhaustion of supply of timber for shipbuilding - What were some of the motives for Venice to aquire control over territory on Italian mainland?
-
1.)secure routes of trade and Venetian food supply
2.)recoup losses in the East - Venice allied with Florence against Milan, but because of the coming of who did Florence abandon Venice and helped Milan?
- Francesco Sforza
- Venice remained independent until who conquered the state at the end of the 18th century?
- Napoleon
- What professor has shown that the conscious expression of Venetian republicanism came largely in the 16th century?
- Professor William J. Bouwsma
- Until what event and year did Florence struggle against the attempts of emperor to take over the city?
- death of the last great medieval emperor, Frederick II (1250)
- What was the Florentin coin that started to flourish in 1252?
- florin
- Florence became a ________ city, which means that it was on the side of the papacy in its struggle against the empire.
- Guelf
- In what year did the merchants and bankers take over the government in Florence?
- 1282-1283
- After the merchants and bankers took over, what was the new ruling class called?
- the "popolo", or people
- The "popolo" was divided into ____ greater guilds and _____ lesser guilds.
- 7,14
- The members of the greater guilds were commonly known as the ______ _____, or fat people.
- "popolo graso"
- The members of the lesser guilds were called "popolo minuto" or _____ ______.
- little people
- What kinds of classes were among the greater guilds?
- wool manufacturers, wool finishers, silk merchants, and bankers
- What body of government did the greater guilds create?
- executive body of priors (6)
- What was the term of office for the executive body of prior?
- two months (chosen by lot)
- Florence, though bearing the name of the republic, can with more justification be called a(n) __________.
- oligarchy
- There was also a large class with no political power, who belonged to this class?
- workers (suffered more in economic depression)
- What act of 1293 penalized the members of the former ruling class of magnates?
-
Ordinances of Justice
(magnate=powerful or influential person) - What position was established as the 7th prior and chief of the priors, with the function of executing sentences pronounced in court against the nobles?
- "gonfaloniere" (standard-bearer)
- What was the one way to attack political enemies?
- have them officially declared magnates
- What two factions did the Guelf split into?
- Black and White
- With the help of Pope Boniface VIII and what French prince did the Blacks win the Whites in 1301?
- Charles of Valois
- What famous person belonged to the White faction that was exiled after the Blacks won?
- Dante
- In what year did Florence reach a peak of prosperity?
- 1338
- According to what chronicler, was the Florentine populaton 90,000, making it one of the largest cities in Europe?
- Giovanni Villani
- Based on what commodity was the Florentine wealth immense?
- woolen cloth
- Because of what two banker families' loan to the king of the England, Edward II, did Florence's financial structure become weakened?
- Bardi and Peruzzi
- What duke of Athens was called in by Florence to take temporary charges of the city, but was driven out in 1343 because of his tyranny?
- Walter of Brienne, member of the ruling family of Naples
- How many years were the lesser guilds of Florence able to exercise dominant power in the city?
- 35
- What war from 1375 to 1378 was an event in which Florence and the Pope were actually at war?
- War of the Eight Saints
- In the 1340s, what two catastrophic events helped to shatter the well-being of the city?
-
1.)Bardi and Peruzzi families went bankrupt
2.)the Black Death plague - In what year did the Revolt of the Ciompi take place, in where the poor workers rose up and were able for a few years to take over the government?
- 1378 (ended in 1382)
- Under what government did Florence face the threat of Gian Galeazzo Visconti from Milan?
- mercantile oligarchy
- During what century did Florence claim to be defending freedom in the expulsion of tyrants from their city?
- 14th century
- Why did Florence break its alliance with Venice against Milan during 1425?
-
Venetian expansion into Milan territory
(defending freedom) - In what century did "civic humanism" develop in Florence?
- 15th century (first half)
- What ideal did humanistic scholars of Florence adopt?
- active civic life in the service of the state
- The beginnings of the city of Florence was traced to what event during the last years of the Roman Republic?
- settlement by Sulla's soldiers
- During what year did Cosimo de' Medici came to power in Florence?
- 1434
- From 1434 to his death in _____, Cosimo was the effective ruler of Florence?
- 1464
- What did Cosimo do in order to leave the appearance of Florentine republican freeedom?
- took no title (nor did he change the established organs of government)
- What did he do to his enemies?
- destroyed their power and confiscated their possessions
- In what location did Cosimo establish the first public library in Europe?
- monastery of San Marco
- Who were the most famous people that Cosimo patronized?
- Brunelleschi, Donatello and Fra Angelico(painter)
- What is the inscription on Cosimo de' Medici's grave?
- "Pater Patriae," the Father of the Fatherland
- Who was the successor of Cosimo de' Medici?
- Piero de' Medici
- Who brought the Medici family bank to the height of its prosperity?
-
Piero
(died after 5 yrs of rule) - Who was Piero de' Medici's successor?
- Lorenzo de' Medici (20yrs old)
- Who was later called the Magnificent?
- Lorenzo
- Lorenzo was poet, but less successful as a ___________.
- businessman
- What family developed the conspiracy and assassination plan to kill both Lorenzo and his brother Guiliano?
- Pazzi (encouraged by Pope Sixtus IV)
- On April 26, 1478 the plotters succeeded in murdering ___________, but failed to kill __________.
- Guiliano, Lorenzo
- During the December of 1479, what did Lorenzo do in order to take back the control of Florence from the Pope?
-
negotiated with the Neapolitan king, Ferrante
(w/out prior consultation with Florenting goverment) - Whose death brought peace to Italy?
- sultan, Mohammed II
- What two bodies of government did Lorenzo create and controlled in 1480 and 1490?
- Council of Seventy, Committee of Seventeen
- What did Lorenzo do in order to create disconcent in Florence?
- used public money for private purposes
- After whose death in 1492 was Italy forced to submit to foreign domination?
- Lorenzo de Medici
- Who was the only king in Italy?
- king of Naples
- What kingdom was a vassal state of the papacy?
- kingdom of Naples
- Who was rewarded king of Naples and Sicily in result of his freeing the pope from the German imperial family of Hohenstaufen?
- Charles of Anjou, brother of King Louis IX of France
- What climactic event in 1282 delivered Sicily to Aragonese rule?
- Sicilian Vespers
- Who unified Sicily and the Naples under his rule in 1442?
- Alfonso of Aragon, aka Alfonso the Magnanimous
- At his death, Alfonso divded Naples and Sicily. He left Sicily and Sardinia to _________ and left Naples with ____________.
- John (brother), Ferdinand or Ferrante (illegitimate son)
- Which graddaughter of Ferrante's married the young duke of Milan and helped to precipitate the chain the events that brought the French into Italy in 1494?
- Isabella
- Who did Lorenzo de'Medici marry on June 6, 1469?
- Clarice Orsini
- Who was Lorenzo's mother?
- Lucrezia de'Medici
- Who is Lorenzo's brother, that became his major support?
- Guiliano de'Medici
- What were Lorenzo's and Guiliano's striking characteristics?
-
Lorenzo-ugly, big nose, intellectual, cultural
Guiliano-handsome, sportsman, businessman - What famous writer and lawyer was born on May 3, 1469?
- Niccolo Machiavelli (republican)
- Who was Lorenzo's grandfather?
- Cosimo de'Medici
- Nearly half the population of Florence was under the age of ____.
- 20
- Florentines were not permitted to enter public life and government until they were at least _____.
- 30
- Who was the wealthiest man in Europe at his death?
- Cosimo de'Medici
- Who was the heir of Cosimo de'Medici?
- Piero
- At what age did Lorenzo have to represent his father at Ippolita Sforza's marriage, because of his father's ill-health?
- 15
- At 16 years old, Lorenzo took his father's place on a ______, an emergency council and on the influential ______, the Council of One Hundred.
- "Balia," and "Cento"
- Effective political power in Florence laid in the ________, a body of nine men, re-elected every two months.
- "Signoria"
- Of the 10,000 families who lived in Florence, only about ________ mattered politically , and of these only _____ families had real political influence.
-
3,000
100 - What percent of the city's wealth did the 100 families control?
- 25%
- The best of Lorenzo's English biographers, who said that that Lorenzo was not a prince, but a "corporate" decision maker?
- Judith Hook
- What steps did Lorenzo take to keep the power that the Medici had?
-
1.) manipulate the selection of the "Signoria"
2.)gain the support of foreign princes
3.)gain support of Florentine citizens - Who was the patron saint of Florence?
- San Giovanni (St. John the Baptist)
- Who were the "fanciulli"?
- wealth adolescent males b/t the ages of 13 and 24, formed brigades
- The _______ _______ _______ was an elaborate joust with the finest of horses, costumes and armour.
- "Stanze della Giostra"
- What was Giuliano de' Medici's brigade called?
- Company of the Magi
- Why were the Pazzi angry at the Medici?
- the Pazzi lent the pope money when the Medici bank refused; Lorenzo changed the laws of inheritance to the disadvantage of the wife of Giovanni de' Pazzi, thus preventing a huge fortune from passing into their control
- Why was the third attempt of assassination of the Medici brothers almost abandoned?
- Because Giuliano did not attend Mass
- How many times was Giuliano de Medici stabbed?
- 19
- Who was one of Giuliano's assasin, that was later dragged naked from his hiding place and hung from a window of the Palace of the "Signoria"?
- Francesco de' Pazzi
- How did Lorenzo react to the assassinationi of his brother?
- constitutional reforms of April 1480, developed the Council of Seventy
- What was the courtesy title that was given to Lorenzo, that was usually given to a large number of distinguuised men, not used in their lifetime?
- "Il Magnifico"
- Who was Lorenzo's intelligent second son, who grew up to become Pope Leo X?
- Giovanni de' Medici
- Who was Giuliano's mistress?
- Fioretta
- Who was Giuliano's illegitimate son who later became pope and took the title of Clement VIII?
- Giulio de' Medici?