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    Humanism and the Renaissance Founded on the ideals of Italian scholar and poet Francesco Petrarca during the late fourteenth century‚ Renaissance humanism centered itself on humanity ’s potential for achievement. Although God is credited for creating the universe‚ human beings are the ones credited for developing and sustaining it. The shift was away from understanding the world through faith and towards a broader intellectual and scientific understanding of it. A humanist‚ in this context‚ was

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    The town of Pisa is located in the Tuskany region on the western coast of Italy. From the 11th to the 13th centuries Pisa was the commercial empire of southern Italy‚ expanding Italy’s power over the islands of Corsica‚ Sicily‚ and Sardinia and controlling most of the Tuscan coast. During this time and subsequent centuries‚ Pisa built up its power and economic fortitude‚ and its wealth allowed for the construction of the gleaming white marble complex of religious buildings known as the Campo dei

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    American Renaissance

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    American Renaissance INTRODUCTION Also known as the New England Renaissance‚ the American Renaissance refers to a period of American literature from the 1830s to the end of the Civil War. The movement developed out of efforts by various American writers to formulate a distinctly American literature influenced by great works of European literature. Yet these novels‚ poems‚ and short stories utilized native dialect‚ history‚ landscape‚ and characters in order to explore uniquely American issues

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned the 1920s. At the time‚ it was known as the "New Negro Movement"‚ named after the 1925 anthology by Alain Locke. Though it was centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City‚ many French-speaking black writers from African and Caribbean colonies who lived in Paris were also influenced by the Harlem Renaissance.[1][2][3][4] The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1919 until the early or mid-1930s.

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    When I look at the conflicts that medieval European people faced and the conflicts that modern people face‚ I see a huge difference. Our government‚ economics‚ science‚ mobility‚ art‚ literacy and health are very different. Some aspects of religion are different‚ but not many. The Black Death and feudalism are some major contributions to the medieval times. The Black Death is known as a beneficial divider between the central and Middle Ages. The changes are numerous. They include the introduction

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Harlem Renaissance‚ a blossoming (c. 1918–37) of African American culture‚ particularly in the creative arts‚ and the most influential movement in African American literary history. Embracing literary‚ musical‚ theatrical‚ and visual arts‚ participants sought to reconceptualize “the Negro” apart from the white stereotypes that had influenced black peoples’ relationship to their heritage and to each other. They also sought to break free of Victorian moral values and bourgeois shame about aspects of

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    The Changing Role and Status of the Artist 1300 – 1600 To explore the changing role and status of the artist during the period 1300 – 1600 we have first to look at the period of time prior to this. For a thousand years before‚ Rome had ruled most of Europe‚ bringing new developments in technology‚ education and government‚ but after Rome fell to invaders in 542 CE‚ Western Europe became stagnant‚ a period we now term as the Middle Ages. Ordinary people did not venture far from their hamlets

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    Chapter 2: Europeans and the New World‚ 1492 – 1600 When humans entered the Iberian Peninsula almost 32000 years ago‚ the first civilization of Spain was formed. Since then‚ the country has traveled from an era of prehistoric Iberia to the Middle Ages to a rise as an empire and a member of the European Union . The main reason why Spain grew so much in power during the fifteenth century is because of a series of events that took place around that time. The first in such a series of events

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    Surgery‚ though crude and painful‚ did exist in the time of the Renaissance. Early Renaissance surgeons were ignorant of the human body and surgical procedures were almost never successful. They were continuously trying to unveil the mysteries of the body. How and why it functioned‚ its purposes‚ and its needs. Dissections uncovered the most knowledge of the body. However‚ dissections were rare because they were illegal and very risky. If a surgeon was going to dissect someone he did it at night

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Lewis’s celebrated account of the Harlem Renaissance‚ was published by Knopf in1981. The latest edition‚ a Penguin paperback with a luminous new preface added by the author‚ appeared in 1997. In Lewis’s view‚ the1919 Fifth-Avenue parade celebrating the return to Harlem from World War I of the famed 369th Regiment of the New York National Guard signaled the arrival of a black America ready for the phenomenon that became known as the Harlem Renaissance; and the bloody 1935 Harlem riot reflected

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