Europe I. General Info A. Facts 1. birthplace of western civilization 2. influential on world development a. history - exploration b. philosophy - religion [ religious backgrounds in US & Latin America come from Rome ] c. ideology - gov [ democracy comes from Ancient Greece ] 3. continent - subregions a. Eastern (Central) b. Western B. Geography 1. major cities~refer to map 2. 2nd smallest Australia‚ 2.9) -4 sq. miles 3. population of 700 million +‚ density 65 ppl/sq
Premium Europe European Union World War II
Elizabeth Barrett Browning Sonnet 1 Theme: Unexpectedness of love Falling in love with Robert and his returning of her love came as a great surprise to Elizabeth‚ considering past her circumstances. Analysis: Reworks the traditional sonnet sequence by transforming gender roles. She utilises the female voice instead of the traditional male voice. She assumes the role of epic hero. She adopts the petrachan sonnet style. The octet’s strict rhyming pattern reflects how she feels her life
Premium Iambic pentameter Poetry Sonnet
Italian/Northern Renaissance | | Medici Family | They dominated Florence during the 15th century and were interested in industry‚ trade‚ and banking. The first was Giovanni di Bicci de’Medici (1360-1429)‚ and the most famous was Lorenzo the Magnificent (1449-1492)‚ the great grandson of Giovanni. Medici power fell after Savonarola (1452-1498)‚ a Franciscan friar‚ gained power‚ and therefore‚ Florence was never the same. | Humanism | England: * Started taking hold in early 15th century taught
Premium World War II Thirty Years' War
influenced Chaucer’s work‚ and Petrarch. In or around 1378‚ Chaucer began to develop his vision of an English poetry that would be linguistically accessible to all—obedient neither to the court‚ whose official language was French‚ nor to the Church‚ whose official language was Latin. Instead‚ Chaucer wrote in the vernacular‚ the English that was spoken in and around London in his day. Undoubtedly‚ he was influenced by the writings of the Florentines Dante‚ Petrarch‚ and Boccaccio‚ who wrote in the
Free The Canterbury Tales
Banha University Faculty of Arts English Department A Guiding Model Answer for Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Poetry Second Grade First Term (January 13‚ 2011) Faculty of Arts Prepared by Mohammad Al-Hussini Mansour Arab‚ Ph.D. University of Nevada‚ Reno (USA) Banha University Second Grade Faculty of Arts
Premium Love
RENAISSANCE How can the Renaissance be used as a springboard for defining modernity? With the Renaissance‚ the interest shifted to the earthly realm of nature. In some respects‚ this was a good thing: nature received a more proper place. From a biblical viewpoint nature is important because it has been created by God‚ and is not to be despised. The things of the body are not to be despised when compared with the soul. The things of beauty are important. Sexual things are not evil of themselves
Premium Soviet Union World War II
The Canterbury Tales Summary by Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales Summary The Canterbury Tales begins with the introduction of each of the pilgrims making their journey to Canterbury to the shrine of Thomas a Becket. These pilgrims include a Knight‚ his son the Squire‚ the Knight’s Yeoman‚ a Prioress‚ a Second Nun‚ a Monk‚ a Friar‚ a Merchant‚ a Clerk‚ a Man of Law‚ a Franklin‚ a Weaver‚ a Dyer‚ a Carpenter‚ a Tapestry-Maker‚ a Haberdasher‚ a Cook‚ a Shipman‚ a Physician‚ a Parson‚ a Miller
Premium The Canterbury Tales
Biography of GEOFFREY CHAUCER GEOFFREY CHAUCER‚ English poet. The name Chaucer‚ a French form of the Latin calcearius‚ a shoemaker‚ is found in London and the eastern counties as early as the second half of the 13th century. Some of the London Chaucers lived in Cordwainer Street‚ in the shoemakers’ quarter; several of them‚ however‚ were vintners‚ and among others the poet’s father John‚ and probably also his grandfather Robert. Legal pleadings inform us that in December 1324 John Chaucer was
Free The Canterbury Tales
The Literary Criticism of D. H. Lawrence Author(s): René Wellek Source: The Sewanee Review‚ Vol. 91‚ No. 4 (Fall‚ 1983)‚ pp. 598-613 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27544211 . Accessed: 28/12/2010 10:04 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR’s Terms and Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR’s Terms and Conditions of Use provides‚ in part‚ that unless you have
Premium Literary criticism
Mr. Dunbar AP European History Chapter 10 Outline: Renaissance and Discovery Section One: The Renaissance in Italy * Section Overview * Jacob Burckhardt‚ a Swiss historian‚ described the Renaissance as the “prototype of the modern world” in his book Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860) * In Italy blossomed new secular and scientific views * People became to approach the world empirically and draw rational conclusions based on observation
Premium Renaissance Florence