-
Same. Historical background and social conditions.
nature with spearhead objects.
Seek and absorb nourishment.
Relationship with the ruler.
Different. On the issue of people.
On the issue of faith and religious tolerance.
Mass base. In the attitude towards religion.
Compare the Renaissance.
Similarities and differences with the Reformation.
Same: The background is that both took place in Western Europe with the disintegration of feudalism and capitalism.
the Rise of the Age; nature, all growing bourgeoisie.
the anti-feudal struggle in the realm of ideas;
After its rise, it quickly spread to the whole of Western Europe, promoted the emancipation of people's minds and the prosperity of modern culture, and had a great influence on the bourgeoisie.
Differences: The Renaissance was an ideological movement, the Reformation was a social movement;
The Renaissance was the promotion of the bourgeois worldview in the form of reviving classical culture, and the Reformation was the anti-feudal struggle of the emerging bourgeoisie under the cloak of religion. The mass base was different: the Renaissance was an aristocratic movement, the Reformation was a popular movement;
The results were different: the Renaissance freed people from the bondage of religion, promoted exploration, and led to the emergence of modern natural science, while the Reformation led to peasant wars.
The establishment of the principle of religion following the state is the gradual prevalence of religious freedom.
Understanding: Economy is the foundation of politics, and politics is the concentrated reflection of economy.
-
The essence is the struggle of the emerging bourgeoisie to safeguard its own interests.
-
Yes: 1The Renaissance preached man-centeredness, the exploration of nature, and the pursuit of reason, while the Reformation emphasized God's plan of salvation, the perfection of human morality, and the purification of the church.
2.The Renaissance rediscovered and developed the essence of classical civilization, and the Reformation provided an important avenue for salvation and salvation from the faith. 3.
The Renaissance absorbed the power of religion into the aura of art, permeating every form of artistic expression, and the Reformation led to the further development of art, providing inspiration for other forms of culture. 4.Both the Renaissance and the Reformation changed the way of thinking about society and the world at that time, and they helped to allow human beings to examine themselves in a way that transcends time and culture.
-
It is reflected in the following aspects: 1Both the Renaissance and the Reformation were equally important.
The Renaissance gave people a sense of hope and the art and joy of life, while the Reformation gave people a religious belief and became a tool for them to gain insight into the truth. 2.The Renaissance led to the expansion of the Reformation.
Renaissance works, such as the Divine Comedy, prompted a re-examination of religion, while the Reformation opened up moral, social, and political developments that created a new arena for the Renaissance. 3.Both the Renaissance and the Reformation were transnational movements.
The Renaissance spread from Italy to all of Europe, and the Reformation spread from Europe to the whole world. Both movements influenced the history and culture of the time, and both began to change new religious beliefs, social systems, and cultural attitudes in different countries.
-
The complementarity of the Renaissance and the Reformation is manifested in the fact that they are seen as organisms in the same line. They are the legacy of medieval hailstones and the betrayal of the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages, in which they are connected, were an awkward era, and the political triumph of the time was the beginning of its religious failure.
-
The complementarity of the Renaissance and the Reformation coincided with the fact that the Renaissance and the Reformation were seen as organisms of the same lineage.
They are a legacy of the Middle Ages and a betrayal of the Middle Ages. The Middle Ages in which they are connected was an awkward era, and the time of political triumph was also the beginning of the failure of religion.
I can only help you from a visual arts perspective;
First of all, Italy is the core of the Renaissance, the Italian Renaissance came earlier than the rest of Europe, the origin was the end of the 13th, the early Renaissance focused on returning the visual focus of the public to human beings themselves, and its representative task in the fine arts was Giotto, the main difference between him and the previous painters was that his paintings of religious themes were full of life in Canada, which formed a strong contrast with the early Byzantine style. It can be understood that one is a religion full of humanism, and the other is a religion full of this sense of distance and mysticism. >>>More
The first is the discovery of man. In contrast to the Middle Ages, the Renaissance brought about a series of great changes in the ideological realm. The most striking change is about the change in human values. >>>More
Most opinions suggest that the Renaissance originated in Italy in the fifteenth century and then spread throughout Europe. The Renaissance represented the connection between Western and ancient (pre-medieval) classical cultures, the assimilation of Arab knowledge, especially mathematical knowledge. The Renaissance led people to focus on the quality of life in the world (e.g., humanism). >>>More
1) It promoted the Reformation in Western European countries, struck at the authority of the Roman Church, broke through the shackles of theology, emancipated people's minds, created a democratic academic atmosphere for the development of natural science, and provided materialist methods of understanding. >>>More
Both the Renaissance and the Great Discoveries developed from "geography" (here geography includes astronomy). >>>More