The Renaissance: Contributions And Achievements Of The Renaissance

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The Renaissance was a time of rebirth where it renewed the interests in classical learning and writing of ancient Greece and Rome. The Renaissance was a time where the greatest literature, art, medicine, discoveries, and many other great accomplishments were made. Many 15th century scholars were credited for the numerous achievements as well as many ideas and beliefs that are still with us till this day that are also known as the “Renaissance Men”. First and Foremost, before the Renaissance, known as the “Medieval Period”, wasn’t a good period to live in consequentially because of the plagues, inhumanity, and darkness within that time. Then came the “rejuvenation” where the plagues, inhumanity, and darkness slowly began to fade, yet it took …show more content…

Many European scholars had forgotten the Greek Language. Very few ordinary people could not read due to the encouragement to concentrate in texts promoting the church doctrine. Many classified the time before the Renaissance as dark and harsh in which education nor innovation were promoted. In addition, humanity became more important during the renaissance. People began to see themselves as individuals, but as a whole. Art became much more live with an impression to it. A well-known famous painting of this time was the “Mona Lisa” painted by a famous Renaissance man known as Leonardo da Vinci. Many have said that the Renaissance was the beginning of the modern age. Not only was The Renaissance a time of just education and art, but a time of discoveries. During the 1400s and 1600s many set sailors began to seek new routes to Asia, that later instead took them to North America and south America. When many of these sailors began to land on new land they …show more content…

One Renaissance man was Desiderius Erasmus, born October 27, 1946 and died on July 12,1536. Desiderius Erasmus was a humanist who was arguably one of the greatest writers in the Northern Renaissance, and taught as well at Cambridge University. Erasmus used his great methods that helped lay the cornerstone the Greek New Testament. Along with his Great educational writings that helped encourage many reforms as well as scholastic curriculums. Another Great Renaissance man was none other than Sir Thomas More. Thomas More lived from 1477 to 1536 or so around that time. He wrote the famous book “Utopia” in 1516 a couple of years before his death. More was knighted in which he was given a special honor and title by the king. He became one of the king’s chief ministers, but was later beheaded by king henry VIII in 1535. Alongside Sir Thomas More is the man who is credited for the Mona Lisa, Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo da Vinci was an architect, painter, and a painter who lived from 1452 to 1519. He kept many secrets notebooks filled with numerous inventions. Inventions created or thought of by Leonardo still linger with us today such as the invention of the bicycle, the airplane and the helicopter that were developed by a mechanism that was similar of that to a bat’s flying capability. As for his paintings and sculptures only a few survived and two of those are the famous “Mona Lisa” and “The Last

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