Super Quiz
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- Who posted the Ninety-Five Theses on the door of the Castle Church?
- Martin Luther in 1517
- Charles, the archduke of Austria, is also known as?
- Roman Emperor Charles V
- Ferdinand Magellan was from where?
- Portugal
- Who overthrew the Aztec Empire in 1521?
- Hernando Cortes
- When did Charles V Defeat Francis I?
- 1525
- What were the Jews accused of in 1510 in Brandenburg, Germany?
- Stealing and stabbing the Host
- What made the people belive their souls were being saved but was actually a scam.
- Indulgences
- What was Frederick the Wise of Saxony's "hobby"?
- To collect holy relics
- Dutch Scholar Desiderius Erasmus and English Lawyer Thomas More reprisented what?
- Christian Humanists
- Who became chancellor to King Henry VIII?
- Thomas More
-
He used movable type of blocks to print papal documents and the first printed version of the Bible.
Who was he? - Johannes Gutenberg
- The Praise of Folly was written by which Humanist?
- Desiderius Erasmasus
- Italian Humanist also called?
- Civic Humanist
- Northern Humanist were against's preaching in that they spoke out against a broad range of political, social, economic, and religious evils. True or False?
- True
- The most significant figure in English humanist ?; he wrote ___ which is the first description of an ideal state since Plato's republic.
- Sir Thomas More, Utopia.
- Where did the magnetic needle and compass come from, and when?
- Arabs, 12th Century
- Why did explorers want to find a direct route to India?
- They wanted to obtain spices such as pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, etc.
- Who was Columbus referred to for a patron for his vogage?
- Ferdinand V &
- Ferdinand Magellan left Spain and crossed ________.
- Cape horn, and Zebu
- Vasco de Gama explored?
- Cape of Good Hope, and Lisbon
- When Hernando Cortez went to Mexico, their population was reduced from 25 million to ___.
- 2 million
- Francisco Pizzaro conquered ____________.
- The Incan Empire of Peru
- Petrarch Influences
- Cicero & Agustine
- Which language did Humanist focus in redescovering?
- Latin
-
What kind of reasoning does this phrase use?
" All humans are animals. Socrates is human. Therefore, Socrates is an animal" - Syllogism
- What did Cicero argue was the greatest profession?
- Orator
- The ability to persuade others by using the arts of language.
- Eloquence
- Known for his work in discovering and dissembling classical literature.
- Petrarch
- Who was a prominent civil humanist?
- Leonardo Bruni &/or Leon Battista Alberti
- Provided a program of study in eloquence and composition
- "The Eloquence of the Latin Language"
- who was the greatest collector of Greek works?
- Giovanni Aurispa
- What was the purpose of the Council of Constance?
- Central place for recovering ancient text.
- Valla's work "On Pleasure" features three speakers which are?
-
A stoic
an Epicurean
and a Christian - Which religion did Salutati Followed?
- Christianity
- What influenced the writing of history in Christian Europe?
- The Bible and Augustine's "City of God"
- Who was Livy?
- Ancient Roman Historian
- Found a Relationship between Roman freedom and Roman Literature
- Leonardo Bruni
- What was Henry VIII recognized for by the Catholic Church?
- Defender of the Faith.
- The year Henry decided he would divorce CAtherine of Aragon to marry Anne Boleyn.
- 1527
- Why could Henry not divorce Cathorine easily?
- Catherine's brother, Charles V, sent his armies to Rome and Pope Clement VII didn't want to have Charles destroy him.
- Francois Rabelais(1494-1553, a French humanist is best remembered for?
- Gargantua and Pantagruel
- coarse humor or bold caricature-burlesque humor, what term means that?
- Rabelaisian
- He blended zeal for relegious reform and German nationalist feelings, he wanted to unite Germany under the emperor, led a tumultuous life as a wandering Greek scholar and satirist.
- Ulrich von Hutten
- What is the Tripartite Constitution of Milan?
- Each of the three main classes had its own political organization.
- In what year did Archbishop Ottone Visconti become lord of Milan?
- 1277
- Who was the family who dominated the Milan during the much of the thirteenth century?
- Della Torre
- In what year did the Visconti brothers become joint rulers?
- 1354
- In what year did Aquinas die,of what,and how old was he?
- Year 1274, died of fever, and was barely 50 yrs old.
- What is Aquinas theory of knowledge?
- A sober statement of how men know the world.
- Aquinas wanted to understand the intelligibility of the individual human soul.Therefore his focus was on man. what was Augustines focus on?
- The world
- Who was Aquinas?
- A Medieval Philosopher
- since what century did Theology develope?
- the 2nd and 3rd century
- Who was the heir of Henry VIII?
- Edward VI.
- What religion was Edward VI rasied in?
- Protestant.
- Why did Henry not complain about the religious ordeal with Edward.
- He feared England would revert back to Roman (Catholic) power.
- What was abolished under Edward's uncle, Sir Wailliam Paget, that was essentially the only religious act by Henry VIII?
- Act of Six Articles.
- What was the Act of Six Articles?
- Six conservative views by Henry VIII.
- Who succeeded Edward?
- Mary I.
- What was she so famous for?
- Bringing Catholicism back to England.
- Who succeeded Mary I?
- Elizabeth I
- What made Elizabeth I so important?
- She fought a great war with Sctoland and Catholicism came back to a lot of Europe.
- What happened after the defeat?
- A victory.
- Did Mary win in the end (1568)?
- No.
- What is another word for dogmatism?
- Conformity
- What was the name of the god they thought was evil?
- Jehovah
- What was the name of the God that they said was the good one and that went thru persecution and crucifixion?
- Jesus Christ
- Why was the clash between reason and faith inevitable?
- Because of intellectual,social,economic,and cultural changes for the 12th and 13th century.
- In what century was Aquinas certainly the New Aristotle?
- In the 13th century
- When was Charles V born?
- February 24, 1500.
- When did Charles V's father die?
- When Charles was 6.
- Who thought Charles that "authorities may clash," according to one historian.
- Those who took care of him when his father died, his aunt Margaret of Austria, regent of the Netherlands, and his chamberlain, Sieur de Chievres.
-
What activities did he like?
Which did he despise? -
hunting, music, singing, art, and architecture,
Latin, Greek, or any other ancient language. - The age Charles became ruler of the Netherlands.
- 15
- Year Charles became Holy Roman Emperor.
- 1519
- Year Charles V summoned Martin Luther to later declare him beyond rehabilitation.
- 1521
- War with France. (There are details of the war on page 56)
- 1521-29
- Year Charles V was crowned Holy Roman Emperor at Bologna.
- 1530
- Year Paul III convened the Council of Trent from within to make it more tolerant of other practices. This did not have a large impact.
- 1545
- Year Charles brought England into the Spanish orbit by marrying Philip II to the Catholic English queen. It would all be for nothing when Mary died in 1558 and Phillip could not be recognized as an idependent monarch leading to no children.
- 1554
- Charles left the bulk of his possessions to Philip II and retired to a monastary.
- 1555
- Charles V died.
- January of 1556
- What year was both the year of Lorenzo Medici's marriage and the death of his father Piero?
- 1469
- What is Niccolo Machiavelli's noted book?
- _The Prince_
- What was the Signoria?
- A body of nine men, relected every two months, which controled Florence.
- How were the Medici Brothers different from princes?
- Princes could command and expect to be obeyed by subjects. The Medici brothers could only adbise, cajole, persuade, and hope to be followed.
- The Florentine Republic was no democracy but an oligarchy of ___________.
- rich merchants
- What were some of the sources of Medici Power? (name at least 1)
-
Manipulation in the selection of the Signoria,
Backing of foreign princes,
looking after clients' intrests, posting coat of arms - Who ruled Milan after Galeazzo died in 1378?
- Gian Galeazzo
- How did Gian Galeazzo become the ruler of the whole Milanese state?
- He tricked his uncle, Bernarb, and put him in jail where he died.
- Who were the two brother who ruled Milan?
- Galeazzo and Bernarb
- Who purchased the Holy Roman Emperor the title of Duke of Milan?
- Gian Galeazzo
- Who received the title of duke after Gian Galeazzo?
- Giovanni Maria
- Last notable french skeptic developed a new literary form an gave what name?
- the Essay
- The most famous work by by Miguel de Servante is?
- Don Quixote de la Mancha
- This author, at the reign of Queen Elizabeth produced thirty seven plays-comedies, histories, tragedies, and romances. Who is he?
- William Shakespeare
- Flemish painter was famous for "the full flowering of the spirit of the late late MIddle Ages"
- Jan van Eyck
- This German painter was influenced deeply by Italian art. Who is he?
- Albrecht Durer
- His work doesn't live up to the humanistic ideal of history as literature
- Flavio Biondo
- Who thought learning "must be voluntary, that ir must be interspersed with holidays and games"?
- Quintilian
- Put into Practice Quintlian's ideas.
- Vittorino da Feltre &/or Guarino da Verona
- A detail portrait of the ideal product of a himanistic education can be found in
- Il Cortegiano (The Courtier)
- il Cortegiano (The courtier) was written by
- Baldassare castiglione
- what position does the pope holds in the Renaissance?
- Rulers of the church and head of an italian city-state
- became the head of a conspiracy to take over the city for the "people"
- Cola di Rienzo
- first humanist pope and the real founder of the Vatican Library
- Nicolas V
- wrote in favor of the council of basil but then he changed sides and supported the pope
- Arneas Sylvius
- Spanish Cardinal who became pope and had 2 children Lucrezia and Caesar; became synonimous with the moral degradation.
- Rodrigo Borgia &/or Alexander IV
-
Renaissance Platonism was considered as a school or even a coherent movement.
True or False? -
False
it was not a program of education or constitute normal studies nor did it ever become a program of study or curriculum. -
the first to undertake translating and transmitting Plato to the rest of Europe was Cardinal Bessarion.
True or False? - True
- who was Marsilio Ficino?
- the most important of the Renaissance Neoplatonists
- Ficino was the founder of what?
- of the Academy in Firenze under the auspices of Cosimo de'Medici
-
Pico Della Mirandola was both a Neoplatonist and a humanist.
True or False - True
- What led to the reformation?
- religious questioning
- The advent of printing was brought by
- the desire to communicate and disseminate
- What was the spelling punctuation, abbreviation, and Gothic and Roman letter forms were drawn from the
- medieval manuscript tradition
- Why did the printers diminish its attachment to the manuscript tradition?
- competition forced it to adopt new printing methods
- Who made the printing press?
- Guttenberg
- Who succeeded Giovanni Maria?
- Fillipo Maria
- Who assisted Francesco Sforza in laying siege to Milan in 1450?
- Florence's ruler Cosimo de' Medici
- What was the Peace of Lodi of 1454?
- It ended the conflict between the city-states.
- How was Galeazzo Maria killed, the son and successor of Sforza until 1476?
- He was murdered in church
- Who was the duke of Milan in name, but not in power?
- Gian Galeazzo
- When did the assembly of the people become formally abolished?
- In the fifteenth century.
- The merchant oligarchy of Venice exercised its power through a _____________ ___________ and a _______________ _____________.
- Great Council, Small council
- In 1310, in Venice, what act led to a serious conspircay against the government?
- The "closing" of the Great Council in 1297.
- What was the purpose of the Council of Ten?
- To guard against further attempts of conspiracy against the government.
- What was the ducat?
- Venice's gold coin.
- In what year did the Turks took Constantinople from Venice?
- 1453.
- How was Venice's position decline towards the end of the sixteenth century?
- Continued war with the Turks, outbreak of the plague, and exhaustion of the supply of timber for shipbuilding.
- What were some of the essential defining features of the Renaissance?
- “The rediscovery of man and the world, a renewed sense of joy in life, realism replacing idealism, and experimentation with the pursuit of knowledge displacing traditionalism and obscurantismâ€
- Where were the first manifestations of the Renaissance?
- Florence
- Why was Venice the most stable of the Italian city states?
- It’s constitution, the impenetrable position of the island, and the uniform sea oriented interests of its people.
- In what year did Copernicus publish his book of astronomy and Vesalius in anatomy?
- 1543
- The scientific revolution took place during what century?
- 16th, 17th, 18th
- In 1687 Newton publish this book of astronomy and physic.
- Principia
- Who said "the heart has its reason, which reason does not know"
- Blaise Pascal 1623-62
- In Advancement of Learning, Francis Bacon describe two causes in nature, what are they and which time period use them?
-
1: Medieval philosopher focus on intention, the "final cause"
2: Modern scientist focus on consequences, "physical cause" - How did some of the scientist of the 16th century explain nature?
- They use mathematical, in term of quantities instead of qualities
- What are fixed stars?
- Star beyond the planets that instead of having annual movement like the known planets, only circle the earth daily
- When did Copernicus live?
- 1473-1543
- Why were the concept of excentic and epicycle use?
- planet distance from earth, speed, retrograde (movement opposite of normal one)
- In a epicycle, what is the larger circle call?
- The Deferent
- From 1454-1504 lived an Italian astronomer who rejected the Ptolenaic system
- Domenico Maria Novara
- What is the Platomic Pythagoren thought?
- thought the universe as basically mathematical, made up of a simple and harmonious system
- After moving back to Poland as a preiest, Copernicus continue to work with the revolution of the earth, he publish this book in 1543 on the planetary system
- " Six books Concerning the Revolutionof Heavenly Sphere" aka De revolutionibus
- Dane Tycho Brache (1546-1601) rejected heliocentic system for what reason?
- The earth is too heavy and contradict the bible, his explanation become that the planet revolve around the sun the sun revolve around the earth
- After his death in 1601, Tycho turned his study to this man who worked with him at the Court of Emperor Rudolf II in Prague
- Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
- With his passion for the sun, Kepler created this to explain the harmonious movement of the planet
- 3 laws of planetary motion
- What is Kepler's 3 laws?
-
1: planet revolution around the sun is ellipses
2: radius vector draws from the sun to the planet describes equal areas in periods of time
3: the square of the periodic times of the planets are proportional to the cubes of their mean distance from the sun - In what year did Galileo introgated by the Holy Office for this advocacy of Copernicus's system
- 1633
- Who was the first to make an accuarte drawing of human embryo
- Leonardo
- Galen (c.129-c.200) focused on what mostly?
- Finding the purpose of body part authority in the field of anatomy physiology and medicine
- During the middle ages in Europe, what was the material use to make manuscript book?
- Parchment or Vellum
- During what century did paper making technique using linen rag and hemp spread from Arabs to Spain?
- 13-14th century
- Why did the development of paper and printing press develope so slowly before the mid 15 century?
- The rise in literacy throughout Europe during the Renaissance
- Where did the technology of printing spread?
- from Mainz to strasburg, up and down Rhine Valley, to Swiss city Basel and Antwerp, down to Basin to Italy Venice, where the development of modern type font, to paris Lyon in 1470, Spain in Scadinavia in 1500
- What are the 6 effect of European Culture by the printing press?
-
1: some text effect on scholarship
2: effect for science development of idea
3: education, learn more with book, need no memorizing
4: Art spread greatly
5: National and stable/sharp language
6. Laws