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World history

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Term
Definition
Renaissance   "rebirth"; following the Middle Ages, a movement that centered on the revival of interest in the classical learning of Greece and Rome; 1300 - 1650 CE  
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Humanism   an intellectual movement during the Renaissance that focused on the study of worldly subjects, such as poetry and philosophy, and on human potential and achievements  
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Humanities   study of subjects such as grammar, rhetoric, poetry, and history, that were taught in ancient Greece and Rome  
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Florence   a city in the Tuscany region of northern Italy that was the center of the Italian Renaissance  
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Patron   a person who provides financial support for the arts  
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Perspective   artistic technique used to give paintings and drawings a three-dimensional effect  
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Leonardo da Vinci   (1452 - 1519) Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, and scientist; his interests and talents spanned numerous disciplines; painted the Mona Lisa  
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Michelangelo Buonarroti   (1475 - 1564) Italian Renaissance sculptor, architect, painter and poet; he sculpted the Pieta and the David, and he painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel  
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Raphael   (1483 - 1520) Italian Renaissance painter; he painted frescos, his most famous being The School of Athens  
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Donatello   (1386 - 1466) Master of sculpture in both marble and bronze; one of the greatest of all Renaissance artists  
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Niccolo Machiavelli   (1469 - 1527) Italian political philosopher and statesman; he wrote The Prince, which advised rulers to separate morals from politics. He insisted that a ruler do whatever is necessary to succeed and that the ends would justify the means.  
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Baldassare Castiglione   (1479 - 1529) Italian diplomat and writer; he wrote The Courtier, one of the most important books of the Renaissance, in which in delineates the rules and correct behaviors for a courtier to adopt in order to win favor from a ruler.  
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Johann Gutenberg   (c. 1397 - 1468) German inventor and printer; he invented movable type. His first printed publication was a 1,282-page Bible.  
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Albrecht Durer   (1471 - 1528) German painter, engraver, and theoretician; he combined Italian Renaissance techniques of realism and perspective with elements unique to the northern Renaissance, such as the use of oils in his painting  
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William Shakespeare   (1564 - 1616) English dramatist and poet; he is considered one of the greatest dramatists of all time and wrote such works as Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and A Midsummer Night's Dream.  
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Vernacular   everyday language of ordinary people  
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Martin Luther   (1483 - 1546) German monk whose protests against the Catholic Church in 1517 (the Ninety-Five Theses) led to calls for reform and to the movement known as the Reformation.  
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Heresy   an opinion that goes against the teachings of a church  
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Heretic   a dissenter from established dogma  
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Indulgences   pardons issued by the pope of the Roman Catholic Church that could reduce a soul's time in purgatory; from the 1100s to the 1500s, they could be purchased, which led to corruption.  
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Protestant Reformation   a religious movement in the 1500s that split the Christian church in western Europe and led to the establishment of a number of new churches  
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Pope   title given to the head of the Roman Catholic Church  
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Henry VIII   (1491 - 1547) King of England from 1509 to 1547; his desire to annul his marriage led to a conflict with the pope, England's break with the Roman Catholic Church, and its embrace of Protestantism. He established the Church of England in 1532.  
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Scientific Revolution   a transformation in European thought in the 1500s and 1600s that called for scientific observation, experimentation, and the questioning of traditional opinions  
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Scientific Method   a method of inquiry that promotes observing, measuring, explaining, and verifying as a way to gain scientific knowledge  
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Isaac Newton   (1642 - 1727) English mathematician and natural philosopher; he discovered the law of gravity as well as laws on the physics of objects.  
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Galileo Galilei   (1564 - 1642) Italian astronomer, mathematician, and physicist; he discovered the law of motion of falling objects and invented the first working telescope; his discoveries put him into conflict with the Roman Catholic Church.  
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Nicolaus Copernicus   (1473 - 1543) Polish astronomer; he proposed the heliocentric, or sun-centered, theory of the universe.  
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Heliocentric theory   scientific theory that has the sun as the center of the universe with the earth rotating around the sun  
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Jesuits   members of a Catholic religious order, the Society of Jesus, founded by Ignatius Loyola in 1534  
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Inquisition   institution of the Roman Catholic Church that sought to eliminate heresy by seeking out and punishing heretics; especially active in Spain in the later 1400s and 1500s  
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