AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

AP World History Chapter 23:The Transformation of Europe Flashcards

SAA Sophomore Year / Honors AP World History / The Transformation of Europe

Terms : Hide Images
8770944644What were the movements in Western Europe that made it a period of dramatic changes?- Renaissance - Reformation - Scientific Revolution - Enlightenment0
8770944645Western Europe remained an agricultural society but became unusually --- active and developed a --- sector.Commercially; Manufacturing1
8770944646--- increased their power: greater interest in military, conquest, and exploration.Governments2
8770944647Ideas of the --- also altered due to new commercial and social structure that developed.Family/Personality3
8770944648Increasingly, Europeans believe they are --- to other peoples - will have a powerful effect on how they interact with others they encounter.Superior4
8770944649What were some characteristics of the Italian Renaissance?- Urban and secular society - Renewed interest in the classical world - Glorifying the individual and individual achievements - Impact small minority of the population (wealthy elites) directly; some "trickle down" effect to ordinary people5
8770944650What are the results of the Renaissance?- New attitude towards life: spirit of curiosity, creativity, and confidence - Great achievements in art, literature, and science - Challenges to religious authority and long held beliefs6
8770944651What was the main theme of the Renaissance?Humanism7
8770944652What is humanism?- "Man as the center and measure of all things" - Developed as a result of Italy's urban, commercial environment - Drew from classical past - Intellectual and artistic endeavors - What you as a human are capable of/can accomplish - Not anti-Christian - Inspires people to think creatively and be more secular8
8770944653Who was Petrarch?- Father of Humanism - Wrote sonnets in Italian (not Latin) that emphasized love and other human emotions9
8770944654Who was Lorenzo de Medici?- Rich banking family - unofficially ruled Florence - Wealthy patron of the arts - Like mafia - Ruthless and ambitious - Got people elected to office and controlled them10
8770944655Who was Niccolo Machiavelli?- Author of The Prince - How to acquire and how to keep power - Advanced ideas similar to Chinese legalists - The ends justify the means - Believes Italy needs to be united11
8770944656Who was Johann Gutenburg?- Inventor of moveable type - Allowed the mass production of books, the spread of literacy and the spread of ideas (Renaissance and Reformation ideas)12
8770944657Describe characteristics of Italian Renaissance art.- Reflected humanism - Both religious and secular subject matter - Inspired by the classical world - Realistic13
8770944658Describe how Italian Renaissance art was both religious and secular subject matter.- Religious art created for churches and financed by Pope - Secular art included portraits and nudes financed by wealthy patrons14
8770944659Describe how Italian Renaissance art was inspired by the classical world.- Nudes - never portrayed in the art of the Middle Ages but very popular in Greek and Roman art - Greek columns and Roman arches both used in Renaissance architecture15
8770944660Describe how Italian Renaissance art was realistic.- Studied movement and anatomy to depict human body more accurately - Used linear perspective: 3 dimensional - they had depth, did not look like a flat surface - Distant objects were painted smaller to make them appear farther away to the viewer16
8770944661Describe Leonardo da Vinci.- High Renaissance artist - Thought of art as a science - wanted to discover the mathematical formula for beauty and perfection - Architect, engineer, inventor, painter, sculptor, scientist, musician, military advisor - Last Supper, Mona Lisa17
8770944662Describe Michelangelo.- High Renaissance artist - Art inspired by Christian beliefs (very religious man) - Painted/sculpted Christian themes but combined these themes with the classical nude - Sculptor/painter/architect - Sculptural philosophy: figure inside every piece of stone and was his job to free it from its prison - La Pieta, David, Sistine Chapel18
8770944663What caused the Northern Renaissance and where was it focused?- Due to decline in creativity and independence of Italy - Focused in France, the Low Countries, Germany and England beginning after 150019
8770944664How was the Northern Renaissance different from the Italian Renaissance?- Feudalism still in existence although on the decline - More centralized power in form of kings - Northern Humanists more religious - Little change in terms of economic life and values of ordinary people20
8770944665Who was Jan van Eyck?- First to use oil paints - Realism through minute detail - Religion in everyday objects21
8770944666Describe the Protestant Reformation.- Starts as a reform movement but ends splitting the Christian church into Catholics and Protestants - Were problems in Catholic church but church doesn't want to reform so they split - Church selling indulgences; not meeting spiritual needs of people22
8770944667Describe Martin Luther.- 95 Theses (written in Latin) - Through faith alone you can achieve salvation - Bible, not Pope, is chief guide to religious truth - Priests allowed to get married, no monks/nuns/saints; reject a lot of the ceremony - Not only Bible but mass is in vernacular23
8770944668Why did some political leaders support Martin Luther?- Taking away power of the Pope - Gives more power to kings - Church land now belongs to king - Taxes to Pope are now done24
8770944669Why did some ordinary people support Martin Luther?- Couldn't afford buying indulgences or paying taxes - Saw Protestant Reformation as equalizing them25
8770944670Describe John Calvin.- Calvinism (AKA Puritans in England and New World) - Predestination: God already knows whether you are going to heaven/hell; can't change your fate - Stressed participation of all believers in church affairs - thus influenced attitudes toward government26
8770944671Describe Henry VIII of the Tudor family.- Anglican Church or Church of England - Wants to divorce his wife - Doesn't adopt Reformation ideas for religious reasons; mainly for personal/political reasons27
8770944672Who were the six wives of Henry VIII?- Catherine of Aragon - Anne Boleyn - Jane Seymour - Anne of Cleves - Kathryn Howard - Katherine Parr (in order: divorced, beheaded, and died, divorced, beheaded, survived)28
8770944673Briefly describe Catherine of Aragon.- Gave Henry one daughter Mary - He divorced her29
8770944674Briefly describe Anne Boleyn.- Gives him one daughter Elizabeth - Can't get divorced and accuses her of adultery - Beheaded30
8770944675Briefly describe Jane Seymour.- Gives him son Edward & Edward is sickly & eventually dies - Jane dies in childbirth31
8770944676Briefly describe Anne of Cleves.- German princess - Marries without meeting her - Thinks she's ugly and divorces her32
8770944677Briefly describe Kathryn Howard.- She is 19 he is 49 - She sleeps around - Beheaded33
8770944678Briefly describe Katherine Parr.- She survives! - Raises the 3 sons - Brings peace to the palace34
8770944679Describe the Catholic Reformation.- Response to Protestant Reformation - Aims: to strengthen Catholicism throughout the world and check the spread of Protestantism - Jesuits and St. Ignatius Loyola - Council of Trent35
8770944680Describe Jesuits and St. Ignatius Loyola- An order of priests founded by St. Ignatius - In response to Protestant Reformation - Take vow of poverty, chastity, obedience, loyalty (especially) to Pope - Instrumental in spreading Catholic faith - Known for education/being educators - Travel all over spreading Catholic faith - Create schools, colleges - Act as missionaries in distant lands36
8770944681What were the results of the Reformation?- Split in Christian Church and creation of many different Protestant sects - Persecution - Europe divided according to religion - Religious Wars37
8770944682Describe how there was persecution.- Both Catholics and Protestants were intolerant - Witch hunts38
8770944683Describe how Europe was divided according to religion.- Catholic: Italy, Spain, Portugal, Southern Germany, Ireland - Protestant: England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Norway - Mixed: France39
8770944684Describe religious wars.- Internally within countries (France and England) - Between Catholic and Protestant countries (Spain and England) - Affected balance of power in Europe as well as political structures40
8770944685Religious wars were also --- wars and led to political, as well as religious, changes.Political41
8770944686Religious upheaval influenced the balance of --- in Europe.Power42
8770944687Describe the religious upheaval in France.- France has vocal, strong minority Protestant - Calvinists (Huguenots - Protestants in France) - Fighting Catholics - Protestant king wins but ends up converting to Catholicism - Edict of Nantes - declaration by Henry IV; France and he are Catholic but Protestants are allowed to worship freely; ends religious wars43
8770944688Describe the English Civil War.- Between 2 Protestant groups (Puritans and Anglicans) who each supported a diff side in a political power struggle (Parliament and King Charles I) - Ended with execution of King Charles I and rule under Oliver Cromwell44
8770944689Catholic countries tend to have a(n) --- monarchy.Absolute45
8770944690Protestant countries tend to have a --- monarchy.Limited46
8770944691Describe absolute monarchy.- Monarch has absolute power - No constraints because of the justification of divine right - France, Prussia, Austria, Spain47
8770944692Describe limited monarchy.- Monarch's power is restrained by Parliament or a similar institution that represents "the people" - Britain48
8770944693How are absolute and limited monarchies the same?- Both develop as a result of the growth of the idea of a nation-state - Bring together people who speak a common language and have a common culture and history - sense of loyalty to king and country although many within absolute monarchy rioted against it - Nation states still competitive and fighting49
8770944694Describe the Scientific Revolution.- Questioning attitude of Renaissance and Reformation led to a revolution in science - Questioning previously accepted ideas about nature, the world and the human body (both Church and ancient ideas) - Began to rely on the scientific method (observation and experimentation) to answer their questions - The West became the leading center for scientific advance, seeing science as the key to gaining knowlege50
8770944695Describe some leading figures of the Scientific Revolution.- Copernicus: Heliocentric Theory - Johann Kepler: proves Copernicus correct; elliptical orbit - Galileo: first telescope; proves Copernicus and Kepler are correct; publishes findings & is excommunicated - William Harvey: heart is what pumps blood - Rene Descartes: do not believe anything before proving it for yourself - Isaac Newton: laws of motion, gravity, calculus51
8770944696Describe the Enlightenment.- The aftermath of the Scientific Revolution - Intellectual/philosophical revolution centered in France - Coincided with the growth of centralized monarchies and argued against those - Thinkers continued scientific research and applied scientific methods to the study of human society - Produced basic set of principles: humans are naturally good, reason is the key to truth, intolerant/blind religion is wrong52
8770944697Who was Thomas Hobbes?- Wrote book Leviathan - Lived during English Civil War - Negative view of human nature - Not enlightened - State of Nature (no gov): perpetual state of war53
8770944698Who was John Locke?- Lived during Glorious Revolution - Agree to give up your power to gov but gov owes you protection - People can rebel if they feel gov has abused power54
8770944699Who was Montesquieu?- Giving power to one person is terrible and leads to abuse - Separation of powers; checks and balances55
8770944700Who was Rousseau?- French living during reign of Louis XIV - Wrote Social Contract - Government has to listen to people - General will56
8770944701Who was Mary Wollstonecraft?- A Vindication of the Rights of Women - The more a woman follows the rules the more oppressed she is57
8770944702Describe commercial revolution in Europe.- Fundamental redefinition of Western economic structure - Beginnings of mass consumerism: new goods available - New World gold and silver forced prices up and product demand surpassed availability = inflation - Stimulated creation of trading companies and manufacturing since borrowing was cheap when money was losing value - Led to population and urban growth which led to creation of new rural and urban poor; prosperity for all58
8770944703Describe cultural reorientation in Europe.- Result of changes, new ideas and commercial revolution - Challenge to aristocracy as investments - not property - signaled wealth - Rise of the proletariat due to new economy and technology = new social classes and social tensions, popular rebellions - Wave of witchcraft - Change in family structure59
8770944704Describe the rise of the nation-state in Europe.- Politically divided Europe - competitive - Different forms of gov but in all cases feeling that they are obligated to help their people60
8770944705Timeline of Europe and France61

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!