The Republican Response to the Medicean Oligarchy “the best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of a passionate intensity” W.B. Yeats ‘The Second.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Michelangelo Born in Caprese near Arezzo, today Caprese Michelangelo 1488 apprenticed to Domenico del Ghirlandaio for 3 years continued.
Advertisements

Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
The Babylonian Captivity, the Great Schism, and the Hundred Years’ War
EVALUATING CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN THE ORGANISATION, DISTRIBUTION AND USE OF POWER POLITICS IN RENAISSANCE FLORENCE.
By: Emily Stevens. Florence, Italy is where Filippo Brunelleschi was born and raised. His father was a lawyer, and made sure his son had the appropriate.
115/10/11 Renaissance Italy THE EXAM SECTION A & B Renaissance Italy THE EXAM SECTION A & B.
The Prince Niccolò Machiavelli. From the Oxford English Dictionary:
Last Ruler of Golden Age Florence
 Papacy is the term that refers to the office and position of the Pope  Some (not all) Renaissance popes started to get distracted from Church matters.
The Italian City-States
Renaissance Italy Note: All other images are from Microsoft clip art.
 100 Years War and Black Death  Scientific Advances which contradicted the Church  The Corruption within the Catholic Church.
Warm-up #2 What is humanism? How was this idea different from Medieval times. What ancient trade route did Marco Polo and his family travel on?
Italian rebirth in the ’s. The word itself means “rebirth”. This period of time was marked by the return to the ancient greek and roman ways.
Pericles and the Golden Age of Athens
Florence Steven Dutch University of Wisconsin – Green Bay.
Politics: Who Gets What, and How?
The Renaissance Popes And a few other people of interest.
1 Year 8 Italian Culture Task By Patrick Conroy. 2 Venice- Tourist Sites  Four popular tourist sites in Venice that I would like to visit would be:
Machiavelli and Erasmus Humanism in Italy and beyond.
The Great City-States of Italy
FLORENCE. FLORENCE FLORENCE FOUNDED BY ROMANS ON ARNO RIVER IN TUSCANYFOUNDED BY ROMANS ON ARNO RIVER IN TUSCANY ECONOMY BASED ON AGRICULTURE AND TRADE.
The Church Wields Power. After crowning Charlemagne in 800, the church’s goal was to influence both spiritual & political issuesAfter crowning Charlemagne.
FLORENCE AS A REPUBLIC PART ONE: ITALY - A SHORT POLITICAL HISTORY.
Counter Reformation Jigsaw
Painting the Mona Lisa.. Visual gag (the real Mona Lisa behind the scenes).
Michelangelo Buonarroti He was one of the most important artists of the Italian Renaissance, a period when the arts and sciences flourished.
The Pre-Renaissance This freed the space behind the and above the altar for large paintings on wood panels. Like the manuscript illuminations,
Girolamo Savonarola (1452–1498)
Trinity College Dublin Evaluating the Quality of Northern Ireland’s Democracy.
THE RENAISSANCE Italy ( ). A New Beginning The disorder and chaos of the late Middle Ages seemed to mark the beginning of a long-term decline.
Map Link: Renaissance Italy: Map Link: Europe during the 15th Century:
5. How did the Renaissance affect the political system in Europe? A. commerce replacing the Catholic as the unifying force in Europe; B. decline of the.
World History Florence Leads the Way (15:2). Quattrocento  The century in which the Renaissance fully bloomed (1400’s)  This was the time in which history’s.
The Medici Family and Palazzo Vecchio Florence. Palazzo Vecchio.
 Scientific Advances which contradicted the Church  The Corruption within the Catholic Church.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni By David Ochoa.
Italy’s Political Decline The French Invasions from
Review GAME World History Midterm Review. Section 1, Quest. 1: Picture Identification.
The Church in the Renaissance. Objectives: End Schism Eradicate Heresy Reform the Church.
The Renaissance in Italy and the Rise of the City-States.
The Protestant Reformation. Causes of the Protestant Reformation Long Term Causes Roman Catholic Church becomes more worldly Humanists urged a return.
Michelangelo Buonarroti BY-. Who is Michelangelo?  Born on March 6, 1475  Caprese, Italy  Second of five sons.  Died on February 18, 1564 (Age 88)
Renaissance Papacy. Renaissance Popes Papacy is the term that refers to the office and position of the Pope Some (not all) Renaissance popes started to.
Chapter 10: Renaissance and Discovery Sec.1.1: The Renaissance in Italy.
Renaissance Florence “What a happy age we live in!” -- Vasari.
Health inequalities, social justice and HIA Professor Gareth Williams Wales Health Impact Assessment Support Unit, Cardiff University.
The Renaissance and Reformation Essential Questions How can new ideas, such as those during the Renaissance, lead to changes in governments,
Write down a question that related to last night’s reading that you would like to discuss.
Niccolo Machiavelli & The Prince. Machiavelli’s Life ( ) Early life ( )  Old Florentine family  Humanist education Rise in Florentine.
GIROLAMO SAVONAROLA BY: SIENNA HERNANDEZ & SOPHIA SCELZO.
Created By: Ryan Ankersen Published By: Little Brown Copyright:2008.
The Fall of Napoleon and the European Reaction What causes revolution? How does revolution change society?
Imagine being a historian in Florence, Italy in the late 1300s. In your writings you describe the wonders of your city today. But the place was very different.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni. Background He was born on march 6, 1475 in Caprese, Italy. His father was serving as a magistrate in Caprese.
 The Corruption within the Catholic Church  Prior to the Reformation all Christians were Roman Catholic  The [REFORM]ation was an attempt to REFORM.
Act. 3.2 The Spread of Protestantism The Middle Ages is also referred to as the Age of Faith. The Church was in a position of power. Reformers from both.
WORLD HISTORY II French Revolution. Background to the French Revolution Seen as a major turning point in European history An attempt to reform the political.
ORIGINS OF THE REFORMATION. Historical Context: The Reformation  The reformation in the 14-16th centuries was rooted in demands for spiritual renewal.
Rise & Fall of an Emperor
The Struggles of the Catholic Church
The Protestant Reformation
The Babylonian Captivity, the Great Schism, and the Hundred Years’ War
Italian Renaissance Art
Girolamo Savonarola Ryan kim & kylie nelson.
Renaissance Papacy.
Palazzo Vecchio.
The Medici and the arts.
The Protestant Reformation
Presentation transcript:

The Republican Response to the Medicean Oligarchy “the best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of a passionate intensity” W.B. Yeats ‘The Second Coming’

Piero di Lorenzo He assumes power on the death of his father in April 1492 Parenti, Guicciardini and Cerretani all located the cause of Piero’s troubles in the resentment of the ottimati excluded from the inner circle Martines calls Piero a ‘gaffeur’

Piero’s exile after his incompetent attempts to negotiate with Charles V111, the Florentines threw him and his family out 60 years of Medici control ended

Charles V111 enters Florence

Florence in 1494 Lauro Martines says this was a period of ‘marked instability’ in Florentine political and social life Lorenzo Polizzotto says “the expulsion of the Medici released latent social, political and religious rivalries which it proved impossible to resolve”

Girolamo Savonarola Savonarola plays an important part in the negotiations with Charles and along with the resistance of the Florentine people Charles leaves Florence

Girolamo Savonarola

Immediate Post Medici Events Ottimati were in control A large practica recommended calling of a Parlemento The Cento and the Seventy were abolished

Donatello’s Judith and Holofernes commissioned by the Medici in 1460

Judith and Holofernes In 1495, the sculpture was placed on the Piazza della Signoria, at the side of main door the Palazzo Vecchio, in memory of the expulsion of Piero di Medici from Florence. The statue came to symbolize the expulsion of the Medici.

Savonarola’s political reforms He proposed a modified Venetian model, without the position of the doge He proposed the 16 standardbearers conduct political debates within their gonfalone and bring back their proposals to the Signoria

The Great Council In the Prologue to the law the Signoria announced its intention “to attend with all its ability and strength to the preservation of the liberty that was for so long nearly suppressed and has recently been recovered”

Eligibility All citizens of legitimate birth whose names had ever been drawn for the Signoria or Colleges whether or not they assumed office, (those seated or seen) or whose fathers, paternal grandfathers or great grandfathers who had been ‘seated’ or ‘seen’. Everyone approved of in the 1484 scrutiny members of the Councils of the Commune and the Popolo.

Hall of the Great Council No hall in the Palazzo Signoria was big enough to accommodate a council of this size. New Hall to be built as an addition to the Palazzo Signoria It was rapidly constructed and the first meeting was held in February 1496

Savonarolan Moral and Social Reforms He attempted to organise religious organisations of young boys to oppose sodomy. The Council resisted this He proposed self governance for women, within the quarters. This idea met with opposition He opposed usury and urged charity for the poor

Execution 1498 His criticism of the Papacy had brought upon him excommunication. Some Florentines supported the Papacy Executed by burning in the Piazza della Signoria

Savonarola’s execution in the Piazza della Signoria

Battle of Angiari 1505

Michelangelo’s David

Post Savonarolan political life Some members of the elite thought the great Council would not survive. Sortition was reinstated in 1499 for most political offices Power struggle between the ottimati and the popolo Demands for constitutional reform

Additional Reform Gonfalonier for life Guicciardini claimed that the reason for this was that if his appointment was for life he would act with the welfare of the city as his first concern.

Soderini as Gonfalonier a Vita Soderini held this position for 10 years from 1502 As Gonfalonier, Najemy says he was part of most aspects of government

Medici return 1512 Cardinal Giovanni de Medici returned to the city with the alliance of Pope Julius 11 and the Spanish Soderini escaped into exile in Pisa Break with the popular government symbolised by the treatment of the Hall of the Great Council