High Renaissance

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    Filippo Brunelleschi is widely known as one of the founding fathers of Renaissance architecture, as well as the first modern engineer. Born in Florence, Italy in 1377 and died in April 14th, 1446, Brunelleschi was the second son to Brunelleschi di Lippo di Tura di Cambio Bacherini a notary and Giuliana di Giovanni Spini. Di Lippo’s family was from Ficarolo on the Po and was of importance and well known, as Di Lippo was also a diplomat. From a very young age Brunelleschi was taught mathematics…

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    A medical doctor named Andrew Still MD DO (1828-1917) from Missouri, America, discovered the significance of Living anatomy in health and disease. ‘‘Dr Still realized that optimal health is possible when all of the tissues and cells of the body function together in harmonious motion’’. ‘‘He reasoned that disease could have its origins in slight anatomical deviation from normal’’. (Osteopathy Australia, Our history, 2018/reference direct quote) Dr Still acknowledged that the human body is…

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    The Italian Renaissance: Not Just a Bunch of Pretty Pictures! How Great Italian Artists Reinvented Ancient Ideas and Changed the World The Renaissance, generally regarded as the period between late 1300’s and early 1600’s, is considered one of the most creative and influential periods in history. The word renaissance means “rebirth”; it was a period of looking back to classical times and the great intellectual and artistic works of Greece, Rome and the Near East. The dwindling power of the…

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    This is the most commonly cited source that is proposed to have been used for this composition by Titian and appears in the front to Arthur Pope’s analysis of the painting for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum where the painting resides. This text provides the most vital pieces of information; that the painting shows Zeus in the form of a bull who has seduced Europa with his beauty and kindness, only to run off with her against her will. This source is further connected to Titian because, in…

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    The eras of the Industrial Age and the Italian Renaissance were considered two of the most important times for humanities. Both eras had a huge impact on daily life, and introduced new styles of living. The two eras had many new inventions, cultures, and influences; however, the two were very different. The similarities between these two eras began because of the people. They wanted to improve their everyday lifestyles. Thus began with new inventions, machines, economic systems, politics, and a…

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    Humanism The Renaissance and Humanism developed in Italy in the 1300s and 1500s. It developed in Italy then spread north. “Renaissance” meaning rebirth began a new way of thinking throughout Europe. Merchants and traders influenced the Renaissance by promoting art and education. Although Petrarch was the “father” of Humanism, Dante included characteristics of humanism in his works during the Middle Ages. Dante Alighieri in the Divine Comedy provides little hints of the Renaissance and…

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    Greek Culture Dbq

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    Ancient Greece can be traced back to the Stone Age hunters (6000-2900 B.C.); however, Greek culture was much more notable from 1100-146 B.C., and likely had a more profound impact on Western civilization than any other culture. From 1100-750 B.C., a period known as the Dark Ages, Ancient Greece was immersed with wars and invasions and, over time, was divided into small, city states. During the Archaic Period (750-500 B.C.), art, the beginnings of democracy, and the knowledge and understanding of…

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    Europe changed as a result of the Renaissance and Reformation. The Renaissance, also called the rebirth of Europe, occurred between 1300 and 1600. Between the Renaissance time period, the Reformation happened. It took place between 1517 and 1648. Due to the Renaissance and Reformation taking place, the religious, political, and social conditions changed in Europe. During the Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church practices were questioned and religious views changed. A German priest named…

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    Tullio Lombardo

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    Encased in marble, is a man on the verge of giving into temptation. The statue is of Adam, the first man, holding the Forbidden fruit and readying to take a bite. Every inch of Adam shows the mastery of the artist behind the sculpture. In their article, “Adam by Tullio Lombardo,” Luke Syson, Chairman of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts; and Valeria Cafà, assistant curator, explain that Tullio Lombardo was commissioned to carve a statue of Adam for a Venetian doge (chief…

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    Hayden Vosseller Mrs. Mitchell World History Period 4 December 7, 2014 Florence In the Renaissance Source #1 History Alive pg. 324 leading cultural center birthplace of poet Dante Alighieri Michelangelo grew up there Leonardo da Vinci grew up there another Florentine, Donatello, made his mark special because of location Italy was divided into city-states Florence was one of these right on the Arno River, which made a center of trade and commerce the hub of woolen-cloth trading for Europe…

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