The Renaissance in the North

 

I. Conditions in Northern Europe.

A. Slower growth in the North, but trade and commerce eventually brought Italian ideas northward.

B. The northern merchant class prospered and became the primary source of artistic patronage, not the nobles or the church (as in the case of the Medici family or the Papacy in Italy)

C. Due to remoteness of Rome/the Vatican and the Pope, anticlericalism was very strong in Northern Europe.

D. Commercial centers of Ghent and Bruges in the Low Countries (Belgium, the Netherlands).

II. Technological and Scientific Advancements.

            A. The “age of exploration” and navigational techniques.

            B. Francis Bacon and the “Scientific Method”
                 (cf. Aristotle’s empiricism).

C. Nicholas Copernicus and the heliocentric universe (as opposed to the geocentric or anthropocentric).  What does this do to theological assumptions?

D. Guttenberg and the printing press.  Before this, what did they do?

III. Theology and the Church.

            A. Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation.

            B. John Calvin: Reformed theology and the Protestant Ethic.

            C. Albrecht Zwingli and the Anabaptists.

            D. Henry VIII of England and the Pope.

            E. Iconoclasm, for good or for ill.

            F. Erasmus and Humanism: “The Praise of Folly.”

IV.  All of these conditions and events set the stage in Northern Europe for a strong spirit of individualism: the “trinity” of politics, economics and religion.

            A. Politics: the fragmentation of Europe in nation-states.

            B. Economics: Protestantism as capitalism.

            C. Theology: personal piety, not institutional allegiance.

V. Northern European Oil Painting and Printmaking.

            A. Robert Campin (ca. 1375-1444): Merode Altarpiece (1426)

B. Jan van Eyck (ca. 1390-1441): Ghent Altarpiece (1425-32), Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife Giovanna Cenami (1434).

C. Hieronymus Bosch (ca. 1450-1516): Death and the Miser (ca. 1485-90), Hay Wain (ca. 1495-1500), Garden of Earthly Delights (ca. 1505-10).

D. Pieter Bruegel the Elder (ca. 1525-1569): Peasant Wedding (ca. 1566-67), The Wedding Dance (ca. 1566-67), The Blind Leading the Blind (1568).

            E. Mathias Grunewald (1460-1528): The Small Crucifixion
   
              (ca. 1511-20).

F. Albrecht Durer (1471-1528): Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1497-98), Adam and Eve (1504), Knight, Death, and the Devil (1513).

VI. Literature: Shakespeare.

            A. The Elizabethan Sonnet: Sonnet 130

            B. Hamlet.

VII. Renaissance Music: The Madrigal.

            A. Characteristics.

            B. Thomas Morley (1557-1603): Now Is the Month of Maying

            C. Orlandus Lassus (1532-1594): Matona Mia Cara

 

| Back to Homepage | HUM 146 Syllabus |