A world lit only by fire: the medieval mind and the Renaissance : portrait of an age

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A world lit only by fire: the medieval mind and the Renaissance : portrait of an age Page 34

by William Manchester


  1503

  Julius II: the Warrior Pope

  New universities include Wittenberg and Frankfurt an der Oder

  Leonardo da Vinci: Mona Lisa

  1505

  Death of Russia’s Ivan the Great

  1506

  First stone of St. Peter’s Basilica laid

  1507

  Violent death of Cesare Borgia

  Waldseemüller christens “America”

  Martin Luther ordained a Catholic priest

  1508

  First English translation of Thomas à Kempis’s De imitatione Christi

  1509

  Aged 18, Henry VIII becomes England’s king

  Humanist Erasmus: Encomium moriae

  His books encourage critics of Rome

  Beginnings of slave trade in America

  Judenspiegel: an eruption of anti-Semitism

  1510

  Da Vinci discovers principle of water turbine

  Two speakers of the House of Commons beheaded

  Da Vinci’s Anatomy

  1512

  Michelangelo completes Sistine Chapel ceiling

  1513

  Balboa sights the Pacific

  Ponce de Leon reaches Florida

  Machiavelli’s Il principe, inspired by Cesare Borgia

  1514

  Copernicus postulates the solar system in De hypothesibus … commentariolus

  Heroides Christianae: humanist blasphemy

  1515

  Raphael named chief architect of St. Peter’s

  England’s Thomas Wolsey made cardinal and lord chancellor

  1516

  More’s Utopia

  Birth of the future Bloody Mary

  Raphael: The Sistine Madonna

  1517

  Wolsey hangs 60 May Day rioters

  Strangling of Cardinal Petrucci

  Turks sack Cairo

  Pope Leo X’s jubilee sale of indulgences

  Martin Luther brands Tetzel a fraud

  Luther posts Ninety-five Theses on church door

  1518

  He defies Cardinal Cajetan

  Titian: The Assumption

  1519

  Luther vs. Eck

  Erasmus refuses to support Luther

  Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian dies

  Spain’s King Carlos becomes Emperor Charles V

  Magellan leaves to sail around the world

  1520

  San Julián mutiny against Magellan

  He finds and negotiates Strait of Magellan

  Rome hurls Exsurge Domine at Luther

  He publishes Adel deutscher Nation

  The pope excommunicates him

  Aleandro’s witchhunt of Erasmus begins

  Henry VIII and France’s Francis I meet on Field of the Cloth of Gold

  Erasmus is Europe’s most popular author

  German gunsmith invents the rifle

  Scipione del Ferro solves cubic equation

  1521

  Diet of Worms; Luther becomes a fugitive

  Germany rises in support of him

  Magellan crosses the Pacific

  He dies in Philippines

  1522

  The voyage of circumnavigation ends, vindicating Copernicus

  Protestantism sweeps northern Europe

  Archbishop slays Von Sickingen in battle

  1524

  Peasants’ revolt in Germany

  1525

  Tyndale’s translation of New Testament

  Jakob Fugger II dies worth 6 million guilders

  1527

  Second sack of Rome; end of Renaissance

  1528

  Plague sweeps England

  1529

  Fall of Wolsey; More made lord chancellor

  1533

  Henry VIII divorces Catherine, marries pregnant Anne Boleyn; she gives birth to the future Elizabeth I

  1534

  Rabelais: Gargantua

  Defiant Luther translates Bible into German

  1535

  Sir Thomas More beheaded for treason

  1536

  Pietro Aretino’s pornographic Ragionamenti

  Queen Anne Boleyn found guilty of adultery and incest and beheaded

  Tyndale burned at the stake

  Death of Erasmus; his books banned

  Calvin: Christianae religionis institutio

  * Because of the complex method used to determine when Easter would fall each year, Easter tables reckoned the future dates of the celebration. Easter in turn determines the dates of all other movable feasts in the Christian calendar.

  * This is a rough conversion. Providing modern equivalents of original currencies is extremely difficult. The sort of basic consumption items for which we have figures—e.g., grain, oil, wine—have tended to grow absolutely less expensive with the productivity of modern agriculture. Moreover, there were at least twenty distinct ducats afloat in the sixteenth century, each with a different value, and a similar number of florins, guilders, livres, pounds, et cetera. The florin and the ducat with the largest circulation had the same value. For the purpose of this narrative, that value may be considered analogous to twenty-five dollars today.

  * The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, as it was called after the mid-1400s, was also the First Reich, a cultural nation (Kulturvolk) of some three hundred different sovereign states. After Prussia’s victory in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, Otto von Bismarck created the Second Reich, a nation-state (Staatsvolk) over which the Hohenzollerns reigned until its defeat in 1918. The Third Reich (1933–1945) was, of course, Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany.

  * Thais was an Athenian hetaira (courtesan) who, in the fourth century B.C., became Alexander the Great’s mistress. She is said to have persuaded him to burn down the Achaemenian capital of Persepolis during a drunken revel. Dryden’s Alexander’s Feast is based on the incident, which is probably apocryphal.

  * In a letter to Duke George of Saxony. Here, for the first time, he gave his movement the name by which history knows it.

  * Most German universities remained loyal to the Church. Two exceptions were Erfurt, where Luther had been a student, and Wittenberg, where he taught.

  * Appearing this early, the word “Protestant” is slightly anachronistic. It would not enter the language for another eight years. In 1529 at a Speyer Reichstag, a Catholic bloc voted to rescind toleration of Lutheranism, which had been granted three years earlier. The protesting minority were called Protestants. The term is introduced here because even at the outset of the Reformation not all Protestants were Lutherans.

  * In the 1560s the Council of Trent, after rescinding many of the bans, allowed dissemination of most of his works in expurgated editions.

  * “Resist not evil; but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also,” and “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you.”

  * He was also the last non-Italian elected pope until John Paul II (Karol Wojtyla of Poland) in 1978.

  * “Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her Other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith.”

  * Who became Henry’s third wife and deserves to be remembered as one of the few genuine ladies of the age. The sister of the duke of Somerset, Jane spurned the king’s advances as long as his queen lived. She asked him never to speak to her when they were alone and returned his letters and gifts unopened. Her first act as queen was to reconcile Henry and Catherine’s daughter.

  * Or Aranda de Duero, also in Castile, or Barcelona, in Aragón. Since the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella, uniting Castile and Aragón, the court had become a traveling circus. Madrid did not become the capital of Spain until 1561.

  * Vespucci claimed that he had sailed to fifty degrees south latitude in 1502, but he has never been taken seriously.
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  * He christened the islands San Lázaro. Twenty years later they were renamed for Philip II, “the most Catholic of kings.”

  * Comparable distances: Columbus’s first crossing, 3,900 miles; Liverpool to New York, 3,576 miles; San Francisco to Yokohama, 5,221 miles.

 

 

 


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