Renaissance and Reformation
Italian merchants and bankers had the wealth to acquire libraries and fine works of art.
They admired and encouraged art, literature and scholarship.
Sorrounded by reminders of ancient Rome -amphitheaters, monuments and sculptures- they took an
interest in classical culture and thought.
The Italian City-States
New Attitudes
Petrarch and other Renaissance humanists tried to understand the entire civilization of the
ancient world
Development of individual talents
Public service and politics
The role of women
The Printing Press
Bookmaking became much cheaper, which meant that more people could affor to own books
Bookmaking became faster, so that many more books could be published
Scholars had better access to one another works and to the great books of the ancient and
medieval worlds
Francesco Petrarch, an Italian poet born in 1304, led the early development of Renaissance
humanism.
He studied Roman literature and philosophy and encouraged to do the same.
A collector of ancient manuscripts, Petrarch rediscovered a number of Roman authors whose work
had been forgotten during the Middle Ages.
Petrarch: A Pioneer of Humanism
Subtopic