The Renaissance as a Time of Change

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The Renaissance as a Time of Change The Renaissance was a time of social and economic change, feudalism was nearly abolished and money became a heavy commodity rather than loyalty and promises. The church became secularized and people put more emphasis on science and arts. Ideas and values enveloped the land. At this time the peasant population was around ninety percent of the overall population. In this time, the Renaissance adopted Roman arts, literature and even architecture. Education was also on the rise as to the many universities being erected. Great wealth lead to the purchasing of ancient arts, manuscripts, books and anything that reflected Roman civilization. Europeans translated Greek mathematics, medicine, geography, natural sciences and astronomy. The magic of divine beings and devils slowly drained away. Scientific techniques and methods started to come into place over the accepted ideas of the church. All of the sciences took a portion of the power away from the church and it dropped a wedge into the values of the church. During the Renaissance previous ideas of politics took a heavy blow, the once unchallenged ideas of feudalism lay in near shambles as the Renaissance monarchies grew over it in its place. The Renaissance monarchies were considered to be ruled by kings that were more competent than their medieval predecessors. These monarchies developed in France, England, Spain, Hungary, Sweden, and some petty German states. The pope once revered in politics had very little influence in it and it was declining still. After the fall of the Roman empire it fragmented many European political units. "Early modern states were ramshackle affairs, full of holes and vague zones where local powers claimed ancestral privileges." Religion, which was the most important thing to anyone in the medieval times, now was secularized. This meant that less emphasis was put on the church then there had been before.

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