The Renaissance comes from the French word
meaning "to be reborn" was a cultural movement that spanned roughly
from the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the Late Middle Ages
and later spreading to the rest of Europe. Though availability of paper and the
invention of metal movable type sped the dissemination of ideas from the later
15th century, the changes of the Renaissance were not uniformly experienced
across Europe. As a cultural movement, it encompassed innovative flowering of
Latin and vernacular literatures, beginning with the 14th-century resurgence of
learning based on classical sources, which contemporaries credited to Patriarch,
the development of linear perspective and other techniques of rendering a more
natural reality in painting, and gradual but widespread educational reform. In
politics the Renaissance contributed the development of the conventions of
diplomacy, and in science an increased reliance on observation. Although the
Renaissance saw revolutions in many intellectual pursuits, as well as social
and political upheaval, it is perhaps best known for its artistic developments
and the contributions of such polymaths as Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo,
who inspired the term "Renaissance man".
There is a
consensus that the Renaissance began in Florence, Italy, in the 14th century.
Various theories have been proposed to account for its origins and
characteristics, focusing on a variety of factors including the social and
civic peculiarities of Florence at the time; its political structure; the
patronage of its dominant family, the Medici and the migration of Greek
scholars and texts to Italy following the Fall of Constantinople at the hands
of the Ottoman Turks.
The Renaissance
has a long and complex historiography, and in line with general scepticism of
discrete periodizations, there has been much debate among historians reacting
to the 19th-century glorification of the "Renaissance" and individual
culture heroes as "Renaissance men", questioning the usefulness of Renaissance as a term and as a
historical delineation. The art historian Erwin Panofsky observed of this
resistance to the concept of Renaissance.
It is perhaps no
accident that the factuality of the Italian Renaissance has been most
vigorously questioned by those who are not obliged to take a professional
interest in the aesthetic aspects of civilization but only exceptionally by
students of literature and hardly ever by historians of Art.
Some have called
into question whether the Renaissance was a cultural "advance" from
the Middle Ages, instead seeing it as a period of pessimism and nostalgia for
the classical age, while social and economic historians of the longue durée
especially have instead focused on the continuity between the two eras, linked,
as Panofsky himself observed, "by a thousand ties".
The word Renaissance has also been extended to other
historical and cultural movements, such as the Carolingian Renaissance and the Renaissance
of the 12th century.
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