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Italy in the Mid-Fourteenth Century: The Rise of Humanism (mid 14th
century)
Summary
The cities of Italy prospered during the late Middle Ages, serving
as trading posts connecting Europe to the
Byzantine Empire and the Moslem world via the Mediterranean Sea.
Commerce enriched and empowered regions in which the
feudal system had not taken a strong hold, especially in
northern Italy. The most prosperous of these cities--Florence,
Venice, and Milan--became powerful city-states, ruling the regions
surrounding them. Further south, the Papal States, centered in Rome,
gradually grew to rival the wealth of the northern cities, and as
the seat of the papacy, exerted a tremendous influence over Italian
life and politics. Along with a few other minor centers of wealth
and power, including Urbino, Mantua, and Ferrara, these four regions
became the cradle of the Renaissance, beginning in the fourteenth
century to undergo political, economic, and artistic changes.
The beginning of the Renaissance in the mid-fourteenth century was
marked by a turn from medieval life and values dominated by the
Church toward the philosophical principles of
humanism. The Italian people, especially the educated middle
class, became interested in individual achievement and emphasized
life in this world, as opposed to preparation for life in the next
world, which was stressed by religion. They believed strongly in the
potential for individual accomplishment in the arts, literature,
politics, and personal life. Individuals began to be encouraged to
excel in a wide range of fields and showcase their talents.
Renaissance thinkers decried medieval life as primitive and
backwards, and looked further back in history, to the time of the
ancient Greeks and Romans, for inspiration.
One of the earliest and most prominent humanist writers was
Francesco Petrarch, often known as the founder of humanism. Many
historians cite April 6, 1341, the date on which Petrarch was
crowned Poet Laureate upon the Capitol in Rome, as the true
beginning of the Renaissance. Petrarch believed that true eloquence
and ethical wisdom had been lost during the Middle Ages, and could
only be found by looking to the writings of the ancients, especially
Virgil and Cicero. Petrarch wrote extensively, producing poetry,
biographies of historical figures, and wrote scores of letters, many
of which were eventually published and widely read. One of his most
popular letters, "The Ascent of Mount Vertoux," describes his
journey to the summit of a mountain, but more importantly, it is an
allegory comparing the hardships of the climb to the struggle to
attain true Christian virtue.
Commentary
Geography, more than anything else, gave Italy an advantage over
northern Europe in regard to potential for amassing wealth and
breaking free from the feudal system. Jutting into the Mediterranean
Sea, and strategically located between the majority of Europe and
the Byzantine Empire, Italian cities had almost no choice but to
participate in international trade and the market economy, and to
integrate the activities of commerce into daily life. In this way,
Italy became exposed to the large-scale flow of both goods and ideas
much earlier than most other regions in Europe. Thus, during the
later years of the Middle Ages, northern Italy flourished
economically and intellectually. Further, because Italy's maintained
its market economy while the rest of Europe developed a self-
contained barter economy of feudal territories spawned by agrarian
life, feudalism did not take hold in northern Italy as it did
elsewhere in Europe. In both society and mind, it can be argued,
northern Italy was more sophisticated and freer than the rest of
Europe.
The history and ideas of the ancient Greeks and Romans, cast into
shadow throughout Europe in medieval times, had perhaps remained
closer to the surface of contemporary thought in Italy than
elsewhere, due to the geographical location of the Italian
city-states, which had been built basically on top of the ruins of
the Roman Empire. However, this geographical proximity should not be
overstated. Even in the city of Rome, the buildings of the empire
had fallen into ruin, and many were covered by centuries of waste
and overgrowth. It seems unlikely, but even the citizens of Rome who
lived in the shadow of the Coliseum and the Pantheon had little
sense and less reverence for the history around them during the
Middle Ages. The Greek influence on the cities of northern Italy was
maintained by the trade with the Byzantine Empire, which had as its
byproduct the flow of ideas and history. The Greek influence grew
throughout the late fourteenth century and into the fifteenth, as
the Ottoman Turks increasingly threatened
Constantinople, the center of the Byzantine Empire, which
finally fell in 1453. This constant pressure forced many Greeks into
refuge in northern Italy, which benefited greatly from the treasures
and knowledge of ancient Greece that these refugee/immigrants they
brought with them. Many Italian and Greek contemporaries commented
that it seemed Constantinople had not fallen at all, but simply been
transplanted to Florence.
The influence of the revival of interest in Greek and Roman history
is undeniable, and contributed greatly to the spirit of the times.
Petrarch's writings demonstrate that while the intellectual focus of
the time was evolving and changing to reflect this influence, the
primary aspect of medieval life, the Church, remained powerful, and
religion continued to exert an extraordinary power over the thoughts
and actions of individuals. Petrarch and many other Renaissance
intellectuals thus often described feelings of being torn between
two sides of their personalities. Petrarch, like many Renaissance
intellectuals, was comfortable in the seclusion of pious monastery
life, but he also loved to travel. He believed in the Christian
ideal of self-denial, but also enjoyed the pleasures of the world.
He advocated study and learning, but feared that the accumulation of
worldly knowledge might prevent him from achieving salvation. This
was a common dilemma for Renaissance thinkers, as the principles of
humanism rose up to rival the doctrines of the Church.
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