Art from The Middle Ages to The Renaissance

The transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance reflects a time of great change in the way of life at the time. During the Middle Ages life was in constant turmoil and bleak. After the Fall of the fall of the Roman Empire Europe suffered a multitude of tragedies, such as the black plague, Viking attacks and looting, and barbarian invasions. Throughout these hardships, the glimmer of hope that people clung to was the church. As dark times began to fade the people found a new hope "homo Faber est quisque fortunate Suae" This phrase is saying that each man is the creator of his own future.... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Irfan Ajvazi
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Schlagwörter: 815396:Art and history:Topic / 547528:Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire (Belgium):Corporate Name / 1424028:Exhibition catalogs:Form/Genre
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28939122
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.17613/jsq1-nt03

The transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance reflects a time of great change in the way of life at the time. During the Middle Ages life was in constant turmoil and bleak. After the Fall of the fall of the Roman Empire Europe suffered a multitude of tragedies, such as the black plague, Viking attacks and looting, and barbarian invasions. Throughout these hardships, the glimmer of hope that people clung to was the church. As dark times began to fade the people found a new hope "homo Faber est quisque fortunate Suae" This phrase is saying that each man is the creator of his own future. This is a juxtaposition to the common ideal in the Roman Catholic religion "God the Creator" and also exhibits the change in ideology between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. During the Middle Ages, there was a surplus in the faith of the Roman Catholic, this was in part because the primary unifying factor between the people happened to be religion. This allowed the Church to take more of an authoritative rule over society.