Early Modern Period


c. general warming of the climate



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c. general warming of the climate

d. Asia/Europe grew fastest

3. Growth in China

a. 80 million in 1400 to 160 million in 1600

4. Causes of improved population growth

a. Bringing more land under cultivation

b. New strands of rice

c. Improved farming methods

d. Cessation of frequent conflicts/invasions

e. lack of widespread outbreaks of disease

f. new crops improve nutrition

5. Growth of urban populations

a. always magnets for people from the countryside wanting better, more exciting life

b. new start for people driven off land

1. Famine (French farmers late 1700s)

2. Enclosure movement (English farmers 1500s)

3. Too little productive land for too many people (English farmers 1500s)

6. African Slave Trade

a. Causes massive demographic shifts

1. Brutal separation from family/culture

2. Even if survived, absorbed into foreign culture that considered them property

1. Many Christianized, but…

2. Maintained parts of their language and culture

3. Unique cultural synthesis – African music, dress, and mannerisms mixed with Spanish and indigenous cultures in the Americas

b. forever alters racial and genetic make-up of the world

E. Environmental

1. Americas

a. Chief goal – exploitation of natural resources

1. Precious metals

a. 185,000 kilograms (400,000 pounds) of gold

b. 16 million kilograms (45 million pounds) of silver

IX. Cultural and Intellectual Developments

A. Cultural/Intellectual thought before 1450

1. Life before

a. Dominated by Christianity for 1000 years

b. Feudal system dominated political/social structure for 500 years

i. Dominated by concern for local issues

a. salvation

b. territorial disputes

c. Black Death

d. lack of education outside monasteries

e. small-scale trade

c. Greece/Rome essentially forgotten

2. What influenced shift

a. Crusades exposed Christians to advanced Islamic Civilization

b. Countries unified under centralized world

c. Increased trade fueled contacts with other worlds

d. Universities became centers of learning

e. Scholasticism – exposed to rest of world and Europe’s past

f. Byzantine and Islamic empires preserved the past

i. added to knowledge of math and science

3. Four major movements – Renaissance, Protestant Reformation, Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment

4. Shift in thought

a. No longer backward, isolated, self-involved region on edge of major civilizations

b. the dominant civilization in the world

c. shift in exploration and expansion caused and caused by shifts in thought

d. Not quick, broad or in equal proportions

i. long time to penetrate into all circles

ii. people with power jealously guarded it

iii. peasant class didn’t participate

a. not educated

b. not in position to learn about

B. Renaissance

1. Why the Renaissance?

a. Black Death subsides – populations increase

b. People move to cities

c. Demand for products

d. Middle Class emerges – bankers, merchants, traders

e. Huge influx of money

f. Interactions with Muslim world

i. preservation of Greco-Roman learning by Muslims occupying Spain

g. Weakening Byzantine Empire

i. Allowed for more interactions between Muslim/European traders

h. Northern Italian city-states getting rich

i. wealthy from supplying goods to Crusaders

ii. transporting goods to Crusaders

iii. Byzantines no longer dominating trade

iv. Italy a patchwork of feudal domains

i. Scholars uncovering long-forgotten Roman and Greek written works

j. Location on site of former ruins - Italy

2. Humanism – focus on human endeavor

a. Life useless, goal salvation – suck it up and hopefully you’ll die and go to heaven

b. Revisited texts from past

i. Role of humanity – personal accomplishments, personal happiness

ii. Literature/history of Greece/Rome has tons of examples

c. Shift from afterlife to here and now

d. Impact – focus on individuals means less of a focus on institutions – ie. Church

e. Renaissance Man – multifaceted, multitalented – da Vinci – artist, scientist, musician, architect, engineer

3. Characteristics of Renaissance Art

a. themes before primarily religious, now more secular

b. subjects = monarchs, popes, merchants, Greek/Roman deities, contemporary events, ordinary

c. human figure shown more realistically – study of anatomy

d. use perspective – three dimensional

e. use of tempera replaced with oil paints

3. Rebirth in the arts

a. Powerful families in city-states – Florence, Venice, Milan, Rome

i. Medici – other families became patrons

ii. Competed to show off who had the latest/best artists

b. Human figure is realistic

i. Not flat, two-dimensional, not proportional to surroundings

ii. Light, shadow

iii. autopsies

c. Linear perspective

i. Nearby objects drawn bigger

ii. Focal point

d. Roman Church embraces

i. Art adorns palaces/cathedrals

ii. Huge domes from architects

e. Spread North

i. More religious – colors/symbols

ii. Famed portraitists

f. Compared to before

i. Religious vs. religious and secular

ii. Art in cathedrals vs. public plazas/homes

iii. Flat and stiff vs. realistic, softer, human, 3-D



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