How Did The Middle Ages Influence The Renaissance

458 Words1 Page

A time way back around the 1400s is an era we call the Renaissance. The Renaissance was a significant time period, following up the Middle Ages, impacting science, art, and philosophy, and making way for the modern world. Many think that nothing happened during the Middle Ages since nothing was written down. However, the Middle Ages did have a pretty significant effect and an influence on the Renaissance. This was a time a creativity and innovation in Europe. Many institutions were established in law, government, and education. Artwork in the Middle Ages consisted of detailed miniature illuminations adorned with gold leaf, fresco paintings, and cathedrals with intricate stained glass windows. Inventions such as buttons, mechanical clocks, and eyeglasses came about, as well as systems of banking, credit, bookkeeping, and insurance. Philosophers such as Aristotle came up with new logic. An important document, the Magna Carta, was written in this time, which stated that even the …show more content…

Great scientists of this time questioned church doctrine, finding in their studies information that contradicted what they had always been taught. Copernicus, for example, determined that the earth traveled around the sun, rather than the other way around. Scientists often faced criticism for their ideas, but later on, these ideas were proven and considered fact. Art during the Renaissance was actually very much related to mathematics as the architects rediscovered laws made by Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. Their architecture was sophisticated to a degree that many of their structures are still standing to this day. It was also artists that began studying small things to find scientific truths. Realism was one major focus of Renaissance art. Philosophy was impacted, too, in that thought shifted from scholastic and theological to empiricism. This was the first sign of a split between science and

Open Document