Renaissance
New Monarchies
Protestant Reformation
English Reformation
Religious Wars
100

This Italian family were major patrons of the arts and ruled Florence during the Renaissance.

The Medici

100

This Spanish monarch helped unify Spain through his marriage to Isabella of Castile

Ferdinand of Aragon

100

This man is known for posting his 95 Theses, challenging the Catholic Church's practices.

Martin Luther

100

This English king initiated the Reformation in England by separating from the Catholic Church.

King Henry VIII

100

This 1555 agreement allowed German princes to choose either Lutheranism or Catholicism for their states.

Peace of Augsburg

200

This Renaissance figure wrote The Prince, a guide on political power

Niccolò Machiavelli

200

This French king strengthened royal authority by creating a standing army and reducing the power of the nobility.

Louis XI

200

This practice of selling indulgences was one of the main issues Martin Luther protested against.

selling of indulgences

200

The Act of Supremacy (1534) declared this person as the head of the Church of England.

Henry VIII, not Elizabeth

200

This war, lasting from 1562 to 1598, was between Catholics and Huguenots in France.

French Wars of Religion

300

This technique, used by Renaissance artists, involves making distant objects appear smaller to create depth.

perspective

300

This term describes monarchs who centralized power, reduced the influence of nobility, and established modern states.

New Monarchs

300

This Reformer established a theocracy in Geneva and believed in predestination.

John Calvin

300

This queen attempted to restore Catholicism in England and earned a bloody nickname.

Mary I

300

The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre targeted this religious group in France in 1572.

Huguenots

400

Known for his sculpting, he created David and painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling

Michelangelo

400

Known as the "Most Catholic King," he launched the Spanish Armada against England in 1588.

Philip II

400

This reformer from Zurich introduced a branch of Protestantism in Switzerland that emphasized a symbolic interpretation of the Eucharist, differing from Martin Luther’s views.

Ulrich Zwingli

400

This religious compromise under Elizabeth I aimed to establish a middle ground between Catholics and Protestants.

Elizabethan Religious Settlement

400

This treaty ended the Thirty Years' War in 1648 and redrew the political map of Europe.

Peace of Westphalia

500

What does Renaissance mean? How does it live up to it's name?

Rebirth

Brings back classical ideals

500

This document, signed by Charles V, recognized the legal right of princes to determine the religion of their territories within the Holy Roman Empire.

Peace of Augsburg

500

This radical Protestant group believed in adult baptism and rejected infant baptism, making them distinct from both Lutherans and Catholics.

Anabaptists

500

This influential group sought further reforms of the Church of England after Elizabeth I’s rule, wanting to purify it of Catholic elements.

Puritans

500

This 1618 event, where Protestant nobles threw two Catholic officials out of a castle window in Prague, sparked the Thirty Years' War.

Defenestration of Prague

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