Book

The Renaissance in Europe

by  Margaret L King

Table Of Contents

  • Italy and Rome: from roman republic to Secondo Popolo (c.500 B.C.E.-1300 C.E.)
  • The Romanization of Italy
  • Invasion and destruction
  • Cathedral and monastery
  • Emperor and pope
  • Commerce and reurbanization
  • The communnal revolution
  • The coming of the Popolo
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • An age of republics (c.1250-c.1350)
  • Florence: Banking and wool
  • Venice: Shipbuilding and trade
  • Urban renewal: Walls, buildings and spaces
  • Vita civile: Urban culture in a republican age
  • Dante and Giotto: Innovators before the dawn of the Renaissance
  • Boccaccio and Petrarch: Inaugurators of Renaissance thought
  • Republics and principalities
  • The black death
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • Human Dignity and humanist studies: the career of humanism (c.1350-c.1530)
  • The recovery of classical antiquity
  • The "Studies of Humanity"
  • The dignity of man
  • Civic humanism
  • Women and humanism
  • Humanism, Philosophy, and scholarship
  • The sociology of humanism
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • New visions (c.1350-c.1530)
  • Breakthroughs in style
  • Perspective: The artful construction of reality
  • Patronage and patrons
  • Architecture and urbanism
  • Portraits and personality
  • Art and the everyday
  • From Artisan to genius: The evolution of the artist
  • The high Renaissance (c.1500-1530)
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • At home and in the Piazza (c.1350-c.1530)
  • Public life
  • Private life
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The church and the people (c.1350-c.1530)
  • Statecraft and warcraft (c.1305-c.1530)
  • Papacy and Papal state
  • Popular religion
  • Holy women
  • Pastors of the flock
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The tide of despotism
  • Balance of power
  • Invasion and conquest
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The crisis and beyond (c.1500-c.1650)
  • The machiavellian moment
  • Courts and princes: Castiglione's The courtier
  • The states of Italy after c.1530
  • Ideas and the arts in late Renaissance Italy
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The Renaissance and the two reformations (c.1500-c.1650)
  • Visitors and emissaries
  • Printing humanism, and reform
  • Erasmus, more, and vives
  • The reformations and the humanist tradition
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The Renaissance beyond the Alps: cities, courts, and kings (c.1500-c.1700)
  • contexts: Kingdoms, courts, and cities
  • Centers of the Renaissance beyond the Alps
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • The Renaissance and new worlds (c.1500-c.1700)
  • The new world in the ocean sea
  • New heavens, new earth
  • Toward enlightenment
  • Conclusion
  • Suggested readings and links
  • Map 1: The peoples of roman Italy
  • Map 2: Lombard and Byzantine Italy, c.700
  • Map 3: Decentralized power in Italy, c.1000
  • Map 4: the communes emerge in Italy, C.1100
  • Map 5: Political diversity in Italy, c.1250-1340
  • Map 6: Italian humanism
  • Map 7: Patronage patterns
  • Map 8: The Renaissance church
  • Map 9: Italy, c.1500
  • Map 10: Europe, c.1530
  • Map 11:sixteenth-century religious heterogeneity and conflict
  • Map 12: Europe, c.1650
  • Map 13: European penetration of the Americas, 1700
  • Map 14: European penetration of Africa and Asia, 1700

Subject

History / Renaissance / Europe

Details

Published London : Laurence King, 2003
Language English
Material xv, 368 p.
ISBN 1856693740
Location
TCDC Bangkok - Closed Stack2
In Process - TCDC Bangkok Transit

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