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Religion

McKaye Renaissance Notes

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Art and the Artist: -art manifested corporate power -merchants were dominant in the community -Michelangelo sculpted David (Hebrew hero and king) -religious themes dominated art; intended to spread a doctrine, act as a profession of faith or recall sinners to a moral way of living -individuals and oligarchs sponsored art -merchants, bankers, popes, and priests supported art glorifying themselves and their families (patrons) -lots of money was spent on art -art reveals changing patterns of consumption in Renaissance Italy -less military spending (medieval times), more of an urban culture -art became a means of displaying wealth -Strozzi family spent most of their money on home furnishings -wealthy Florentines had chapels Subjects and Style:

AP Chapter 15 outline

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Spielvogel, chapter 15 State Building?Review List Witchcraft craze?why? ?Malleus Maleficarum??handbook on witchcraft Who was accused? Why women? Impact of social conditions on the frequency of accusations? 1609?Twelve Years? Truce United Provinces Thirty Years? War (1618-1648) ?Last of the Religious Wars? Causes: France?threatened by surrounding Habsburg lands Spain?determined to regain the Netherlands Austrian Habsburgs?wanted to consolidate holdings and stamp out Protestantism Holy Roman Emperor?wanted to regain real control over the German states German princes?wanted their ?German liberties? Religion?Catholics vs Calvinists and Lutherans Protestant League?the Protestant Union Catholic League of German States Four Phases of the War

Congregationalist Flyer

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Congregationalists A consciousness of our powerlessness should cast us upon Him who has all power. Here then is where a vision and view of God?s sover- eignty helps, for it reveals His sufficiency and shows us our insufficiency. -Arthur W. Pink The great awakening had a major impact on the reformation of congregationalism which split into two groups: the ?new lights? and the ?old lights.? Walt Disney
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World History 10.2 notes

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World History 10.2 Notes Muhammad?s Successors Spread Islam Muhammad had not named a successor or instructed his followers how to choose one. The Muslim community elected Abu-Bakr as the first caliph Rightly Guided Caliphs Abu-Bakr, Umar Uthman, and Ali were known as the rightly guided caliphs. Their rule was called a caliphate After M?s death tribes on Arabian Peninsula abandoned Islam, and others refused to pay taxes. A few individuals declared themselves prophets. Used military to keep people in order- this developed effective mobile army When AB died the Muslim state controlled all of Arabia Under Umar- conquered Syria and lower Egypt, and parts of Persian Empire Next 2 conquered further westward and eastward and gained the military support of the conquered lands

Edgar Cayce

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Edgar Cayce was born on March 8, 1877 in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. He was born to mother Carrie Cayce and father Leslie B. Cayce as their second child. Edgar was the first child of his parents to live because their first child died shortly after her first birthday from unknown causes. Edgar grew up with three sisters on a farm in Kentucky. Many things happened in Edgar Cayce?s childhood. When he was only four, he witnessed the accidental drowning of his grandfather at his family farm. For some years there after, Edgar experienced many mystical ?visits? from his grandfather. (XXIII)

Significance of Salem Witch Trials

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The Salem witch trials of 1692 constitute a formative event in the evolution of American civil society. They expressed a theocratic mind-set supported by civil power over life and death. The significance of the Salem witch trials can be seen chiefly in the fact that they serve as an object lesson in governance. History has thoroughly discredited them as state murder. The key issue of importance in the Salem witch trials has to do with the proper role of government and religion in civil society and the power ratios between and among individuals and between individuals and the social structure they inhabit. To see how these elements come together, a recital of the facts is in order. Between May and October of 1692, 20 women and men in Salem, Massachusetts, were executed for witchcraft.

elizabeth I

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Elizabeth I - Ruled from 1558–1603 - Established tolerant religious settlement - More interested in politics than religion. - Protestant, but didn’t condemn Catholics - Elizabeth orders Mary Queen of Scots executed because she was leading plots against Elizabeth. When Elizabeth dies, she names Mary’s son, James VI of Scotland, as her heir - Daughter of Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII Marriage: - Never married - Had always ruled alone, with few advisors - Believed that marrying would decrease her influence and power over England - Began to use marriage as a diplomatic ploy rather than personal idea - Was asked to marry in 1563 by Parliament but refused

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