Why did the renaissance first began in italy?
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RENAISSANCE BEGAN FIRST IN FLORENCE, ITALY
It started around 1350 and ended around 1600. During the Renaissance (a word that means "rebirth"), people experienced changes in art, learning, and many other things.
IT STARTED IN ITALY COZ OF
*This act started first at italy as the poet of itlay influence many people to start thinkig practilly rather than believing on the pop of church.
**because pope powers are forcing Italian people to obey their rules
HOPE IT HELPS :)
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PRIME LOCATION
One major reason the Renaissance began in Italy is linked to geography. The city-states of Italy, positioned on the Mediterranean Sea, were centers for trade and commerce, the first port of call for both goods and new ideas.
REFUGE OF SCHOLARS
Secondly, Italy was the core of the former Roman empire, and, at the collapse of the Byzantine empire in 1453, became the refuge for the intellectuals of Constantinople who brought with them many of the great works of the ancient Greeks and Romans, works that had been lost to the West during the Dark Ages. Prior to this, scholars in Italy had been examining the works of the ancients, but they were of poor quality and often incomplete.
VACUUM OF LEADERSHIP
The third reason was political. Due to various political intrigues, the Holy Roman Empire had essentially lost power in northern Italy, the papal states were governed by various leading families within each region, and the city of Naples dominated the South. This vacuum of leadership allowed merchant families to gain considerate power within each city-state and thus revised the laws governing banking, commerce, shipping, and trade. This freer atmosphere led to a busy exchange of both goods and ideas.
INFLUENCE OF THE CHURCH
The Renaissance was a rebirth of ancient Greek and Roman thinking and styles, and both the Roman and Greek civilizations were Mediterranean cultures, as is Italy. The best single reason for Italy as the birthplace of the Renaissance was the concentration of wealth, power, and intellect in the Church. In that time, the Church controlled so much of the political, economic, and intellectual life of Europe, that it gathered most of the best minds, wealthiest men, and most powerful leaders unto itself in Rome at one time or another. The noble merchants of various Italian cities had built up so much wealth over the centuries that they could better afford to patronize the arts and sciences than almost anyone else.
ABUNDANCE OF THEORIES
However, the Renaissance is a very complex period with no well-defined beginning or end and no simple root causes. There are many theories. Some claim that the trade routes coming from the Middle East and China that terminated in Venice and Genoa had great influence by bringing foreign ideas; others cite the lack of centralized control as exercised by a king that allowed the nobles and the middle class more latitude to compete; others cite the influence of the Kingdom of Sicily that had so long kept educated Moslems in high positions; and finally, for the Humanistic values that permeated the Italian Renaissance, some cite the proximity of the corrupt Papal Court in Rome. Seeing supposed men of God, who were saying that only the next life should be enjoyed, living a very comfortable life tended to lead the Italians to listen less to Papal dogma.
One major reason the Renaissance began in Italy is linked to geography. The city-states of Italy, positioned on the Mediterranean Sea, were centers for trade and commerce, the first port of call for both goods and new ideas.
REFUGE OF SCHOLARS
Secondly, Italy was the core of the former Roman empire, and, at the collapse of the Byzantine empire in 1453, became the refuge for the intellectuals of Constantinople who brought with them many of the great works of the ancient Greeks and Romans, works that had been lost to the West during the Dark Ages. Prior to this, scholars in Italy had been examining the works of the ancients, but they were of poor quality and often incomplete.
VACUUM OF LEADERSHIP
The third reason was political. Due to various political intrigues, the Holy Roman Empire had essentially lost power in northern Italy, the papal states were governed by various leading families within each region, and the city of Naples dominated the South. This vacuum of leadership allowed merchant families to gain considerate power within each city-state and thus revised the laws governing banking, commerce, shipping, and trade. This freer atmosphere led to a busy exchange of both goods and ideas.
INFLUENCE OF THE CHURCH
The Renaissance was a rebirth of ancient Greek and Roman thinking and styles, and both the Roman and Greek civilizations were Mediterranean cultures, as is Italy. The best single reason for Italy as the birthplace of the Renaissance was the concentration of wealth, power, and intellect in the Church. In that time, the Church controlled so much of the political, economic, and intellectual life of Europe, that it gathered most of the best minds, wealthiest men, and most powerful leaders unto itself in Rome at one time or another. The noble merchants of various Italian cities had built up so much wealth over the centuries that they could better afford to patronize the arts and sciences than almost anyone else.
ABUNDANCE OF THEORIES
However, the Renaissance is a very complex period with no well-defined beginning or end and no simple root causes. There are many theories. Some claim that the trade routes coming from the Middle East and China that terminated in Venice and Genoa had great influence by bringing foreign ideas; others cite the lack of centralized control as exercised by a king that allowed the nobles and the middle class more latitude to compete; others cite the influence of the Kingdom of Sicily that had so long kept educated Moslems in high positions; and finally, for the Humanistic values that permeated the Italian Renaissance, some cite the proximity of the corrupt Papal Court in Rome. Seeing supposed men of God, who were saying that only the next life should be enjoyed, living a very comfortable life tended to lead the Italians to listen less to Papal dogma.
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