文艺复兴-英文简介-ppt课件.ppt
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1、RENAISSANCE1ppt课件 The Renaissance refers to the period in European civilization towards the end of the Middle Ages, which was characterized by a surge of interest in classical learning and values. The Renaissance emerged when social instability, economic sluggishness and intellectual depression beca
2、me so intolerable that most of the people, especially the intellectuals could no longer accept the worsening situation. The Renaissance as a movement first started in Florence and then expanded to Venice, Rome and other Italian cities before it swept the rest parts of Europe. Painting and sculpture
3、were the most sensitive fields to the change with their subjects and tastes, shifting from dullness, stagnation, lack of emotion and divinity to dynamics, enthusiasm and humanitarianism. Literature and ideology soon followed Get Started_1.2Get Started2ppt课件Get Started_1.3Get Startedas other importan
4、t areas proceeded and the movement further separated itself from feudalistic tyranny, ecclesiastic bondage and sought intellectual freedom and ideological emancipation. The Renaissance is characterized by seeking ideological emancipation, intellectual freedom and political awareness, based on cultur
5、al production and religious reformation. All these were undertaken or unfolded gradually but widely, extending its influences to every corner of Europe, with more and more people getting involved. The achievements were seen principally in six areas, namely, painting, sculpture, poetry, fiction, dram
6、a and religious reformation as well as the change in the cultural and intellectual climate.3ppt课件Text Study _II_1.2Text StudyMain IdeasMain IdeasFeature: The Renaissance is characterised by seeking ideological emancipation, intellectual freedom and political awareness, based on cultural production a
7、nd religious reformation. All these were undertaken or unfolded gradually but widely, extending its influences to every corner of Europe, with more and more people getting involved. The most striking feature of the Renaissance was doubtlessly the flourish of humanism.4ppt课件Get Started_1.4Get Started
8、 The Renaissance was an important stage in the historical process of the Western civilization and indicated a transitional period from the Middle Ages to the modern era in the development of Western culture. Economic and intellectual changes during the Renaissance both helped to speed up Western soc
9、ial and cultural development and prepared the necessary conditions for the rapid progress in political, social and ideological areas of the Modern Age.5ppt课件Summary of RenaissanceAfter the middle ages began a period of “rebirth” in Europe, a period which began in the city-states of Italy. The new sp
10、irit of the era was that of humanism, which was much different from the highly religious period that came before it. 6ppt课件Humanism Humanism is an approach in study, philosophy, worldview or practice that focuses on human values and concerns. It was a cultural movement in Italy based on and inspired
11、 by the study of classical works.7ppt课件How would you compare the Middle Ages to Renaissance Italy?8ppt课件Middle Ages vs. Renaissance400-1400 Religious Rural culture Arts are God-centered Poor Intellectual stagnation1400-1600 “Humanist” Urban culture Arts more human-centered Wealthy New ideas are disc
12、ussed9ppt课件What are the main causes of the Renaissance in Italy?10ppt课件What are the main causes of the Renaissance in Italy? The invention of the printing press 1440 The siege of Constantinople 1453 Italian urban culture Italian trade and contact with other cultures11ppt课件Printing Press - 1440A prin
13、ting press is a device for applying pressure to an inked surface resting upon a print medium (such as paper or cloth), thereby transferring the ink. Typically used for texts, the invention of the printing press is widely regarded as the most influential event in the second millennium AD, revolutioni
14、zing the way people conceive and describe the world they live in, and ushering in the period of modernity.12ppt课件Printing Press - 1440The man who invented the printing press was Johannes Gutenberg, from Germany. This image shows what is known as the Gutenberg edition of the Bible, the first wide-spr
15、ead edition of the Bible. Before, monks in monastaries would have to write the Bible by hand, so they were more difficult to come by for the average person.13ppt课件Movable type14ppt课件Printing PressThis is a pair of workers at a press. Using the new invention, they could print about 3,600 pages per da
16、y.15ppt课件Why did the printing press help lead to the Renaissance?16ppt课件Siege of Constantinople 1453君士坦丁堡的陷落 Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul in Turkey) was the capital of the Byzantine Empire, the last vestige of the Eastern Roman Empire. 17ppt课件Siege of Constantinople - 1453The Ottoman Empire (
17、also known as the “Turks”) laid siege to the city for over a month, and it finally fell under their control. Here you can see the cannon, a relatively new weapon.18ppt课件How did the fall of Constantinople lead to the Renaissance?19ppt课件Italian Urban CultureItaly at this time was divided into many sma
18、ller kingdoms. Like the rest of Europe, there was no real centralized monarchy. But in Italy, these smaller states usually had a large urban area (unlink Medieval kingdoms, which tended to be much more agrarian and rural). These were called city-states, and also tended to be wealthier than the place
19、s in northern Europe. This was due in part to its focus on trade with other nations.20ppt课件Map of Italian City-States(1494)21ppt课件Italian contact with other culturesBecause of its convenient location in the Mediterranean, Italian city-states had an advantage over Northern Europe (the Hanseatic Leagu
20、e) in that they were in the ideal location to trade with the rest of the world. The Mediterranean sea (地中海) is an ideal place to trade with other nations of vastly different culture.22ppt课件Italian contact with other culturesIn the 1200s and 1300s, Italian city-states did a lot of trade, shipping thi
21、ngs from the famous “Silk Road”, with products that came from China and India. This of course brought Italy into contact with other cultures and helped the city-states accumulate wealth (think of Marco Polo of the Venetian Republic). For the upper-classes, the wealth enabled a new “bourgeois culture
22、” characterized by leisure and self-cultivation, and the contact with other cultures brought an “openness” in Italy not seen in other European places at the time.23ppt课件Patronage of the Arts 提倡艺术The most famous patron of the arts was Lorenzo de Medici, a leader of Florence and a member of the wealth
23、y Medici family. Due to the spending of people like the Medicis, art of the Renaissance was able to flourish as sculptors, architects, and artists were able to focus their attention on their work instead of trying to find a way to make money.24ppt课件FlorenceFlorence (of Tuscany) is known as the “City
24、 of Flowers.” This city is usually considered the birthplace and center of the Italian Renaissance, and is known for its wealthy Medici family who ruled the city through the period.25ppt课件Medici Chapels26ppt课件27ppt课件28ppt课件MilanCenter of “Lombardy”29ppt课件Venice30ppt课件Genoa31ppt课件Literature of the Re
25、naissance Giovanni Boccaccio The Decameron Nicolo Machiavelli The Prince Francesco Petrarch Various Love Poetry32ppt课件Famous Men of the Renaissance Leonardo da Vinci Michelangelo Donatello Raphael33ppt课件 Leonardo Michelangelo Donatello Raphael 34ppt课件Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) Leonardo da Vinci w
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