Renaissance and Humanism
The Renaissance was a movement of cultural and intellectual renewal that began in Italy in the fourteenth century, centered on the revival of classical antiquity and the humanist program of learning.
Definition
A cultural and intellectual movement, originating in late-medieval Italy and spreading through Europe, marked by renewed engagement with classical antiquity and the humanist emphasis on the studia humanitatis.
Scope
This topic examines the Renaissance as a historical phenomenon: the rediscovery of Greek and Roman texts, the rise of humanist scholarship and education (the studia humanitatis), patronage and the arts in cities such as Florence and Venice, the diffusion of these ideas across Europe, and the long debate over what the Renaissance was and whether it constituted a coherent period. It treats both the cultural achievements and the historiographical controversies surrounding the concept.
Core questions
- What did humanists mean by reviving classical antiquity, and how did it change scholarship and education?
- Was the Renaissance a distinct break with the Middle Ages or a continuation of medieval developments?
- How did patronage shape artistic and intellectual production?
- How and why did Renaissance ideas spread beyond Italy?
Key concepts
- studia humanitatis
- classical revival
- civic humanism
- patronage
- philology
Key theories
- The Renaissance as the birth of the modern individual
- Jacob Burckhardt argued that Renaissance Italy gave rise to a new, self-conscious individualism and a 'modern' view of the state and the world, an interpretation that defined the field while drawing later criticism.
- Humanism as a program of rhetoric and the studia humanitatis
- Paul Oskar Kristeller reconceived humanism not as a philosophy but as a professional and educational movement rooted in grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, and moral philosophy based on classical authors.
History
The idea of a 'Renaissance' as a historical period was popularized by nineteenth-century historians, above all Burckhardt, building on earlier humanist self-descriptions of a rebirth of letters. Twentieth-century scholars including Kristeller and Hans Baron refined and contested this picture, examining humanism's classical roots and its civic dimensions.
Debates
- Continuity versus rupture with the Middle Ages
- Medievalists challenged Burckhardt's sharp divide, pointing to 'renaissances' in earlier centuries and to medieval roots of Renaissance culture, while others defend the period's distinctiveness.
- What humanism was
- Scholars dispute whether humanism was primarily a philosophy, an educational and rhetorical program, or a broader cultural sensibility, with Kristeller's narrower definition widely influential but not universally accepted.
Key figures
- Jacob Burckhardt
- Paul Oskar Kristeller
- Peter Burke
- Hans Baron
- Francesco Petrarca
Related topics
Seminal works
- burckhardt1860
- kristeller1979
- burke2014
Frequently asked questions
- When and where did the Renaissance begin?
- It is conventionally traced to fourteenth-century Italy, especially Florence, and spread across Europe over the following two centuries, though the timing and definition are debated.
- Is 'humanism' here the same as modern secular humanism?
- No. Renaissance humanism was chiefly a scholarly and educational movement centered on classical texts; most Renaissance humanists were Christians, and the term differs from later secular or atheist humanisms.