Impact of the Renaissance

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The term Renaissance has, over the years, become synonymous with ideas of expanding civilisation, rebirth, and cultural expansion. The most renowned example of a country’s cultural renaissance was that of the Italians; however this is only one example of such a cultural and philosophical paradigm. To begin with, a “renaissance” is a revolution of the rebirth of ideals within a country’s individuals: self-awareness, art, architecture, religion and science, to name a few. For it is these ideas that have given civilisations the drive and perseverance to rise from a period wrought with fallow and of social, cultural, and economical regression. Many prominent world powers today, and subsequently in the past, have went through a period of renaissance, which was preceded by what many call a dark age; it is through this time of upheaval that the ideas and socio-political philosophies flourished, paving the way towards each nations’ renaissance. To this, the Renaissance should not only be seen as an essential part of European history, but its ideals should also be credited philosophically for improving and influencing different developing societies through the ages.

Throughout history, these ideologies found in the Renaissance, and those found in the classical period as well, proved to be immense factors in the development of different nations. The term ‘renaissance’, used synonymously with the word ‘rebirth’, not only implies a certain chapter in European history but also denotes a stage of advancements in moral, ethical, educational, and all-around societal thoughts. Other such periods then, can be accredited with the term ‘renaissance’, such as the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, or even the progression of some developed nations to...

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...nce, have never showed any signs of stopping. That is the strength of a renaissance; it is not just a period in time or a “thing”, whether tangible or intangible, but rather it is a force that lives of human energy: once set in motion it can never be stopped, so long as a French, Italian, English, (and all the other societies that have undergone a form of renaissance) national stands, there will never be an end to their renaissance. This is the testament to just how incalculably substantial a renaissance is. It is an imprinted philosophy that drives man not only through strife, but also teaches man to be great through the strife, to attain goals and status of recognition; it plays off man’s greatest vices and turns them into metaphysical gold, a searing testament to man’s persistence which, at one point or another, may plague us, but ultimately in the end, drive us.

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