Italian Renaissance
N. Renaissance
Protestant Reformation
Counter Reformation
King Henry VIII
100

This wealthy Italian banking family controlled Florence and sponsored many Renaissance artists.

Medici

100

The Northern Renaissance spread to these regions: Flanders, Netherlands, northern France, England, and this country.

Germany 
100

This German monk started the Protestant Reformation by nailing 95 complaints about the Catholic Church to a church door.

Martin Luther

100

This was the Catholic Church's response to the Protestant Reformation, also known as the Catholic Reformation.

Counter Reformation 

100

Henry VIII created this church and named himself its head when the Pope refused to grant him a divorce.

Church of England 

200

This artistic technique creates the illusion of depth and volume on a two-dimensional surface using lines.

Perspective 

200

This German artist was famous for his detailed engravings and helped spread Renaissance art techniques northward.

Albrecht Durer

200

These certificates could be purchased with money to forgive people of their sins, which Luther strongly criticized.

Indulgences 
200

This Spanish reformer formed the Society of Jesus in 1540, whose members were called Jesuits.

Ignatius of Loyola

200

Henry VIII desperately wanted this from his marriages to secure the throne for his dynasty.

A male heir/son

300

This Renaissance master painted the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper, and designed helicopters and tanks centuries before they were built.

Leonardo da Vinci 

300

This English playwright was inspired by Greek and Roman classics and wrote Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, and Hamlet.

Shakespeare

300

This Protestant belief taught that salvation comes through faith in God alone, not through good deeds.

Justification by Faith 

300

Created in 1545 by Pope Paul III, this committee of Catholic leaders reviewed church practices and abolished the sale of indulgences.

Council of Trent

300
Act that declared Henry the head of the Church of England
Act of Supremacy 
400

This technique uses extreme contrast between light and dark to create dramatic effects in paintings.

Chiaroscuro 

400

This Flemish artist used oil-based paints to create subtle colors and unusually realistic details in his paintings.

Hubert van Eyck

400

This French reformer founded Calvinism and taught predestination - that God has determined people's futures before they were born.

John Calvin 

400

The Jesuits focused on these three main goals: educating priests, stopping Protestant spread, and this missionary activity.

Converting non Christians to Catholicism

400

This was Henry's third wife who finally gave him a son, Edward VI, but died shortly after childbirth.

Jane Seymore

500

This Renaissance belief emphasized human potential, dignity, and the capacity for truth and goodness, encouraging people to pursue meaningful lives on Earth.

Humanism 
500

This English humanist wrote "Utopia," criticizing English society by comparing it to an imaginary perfect society without greed, corruption, or war.

Thomas More

500

This document declared Luther an outlaw and heretic, stating that no one in the empire should give him food or shelter.

Edict of Worms 

500

This institution was used by the Catholic Church to accuse, hold trials, and punish heretics, with Spanish and Roman versions targeting Jews, Muslims, and Protestants.

Inquisition

500

Of Henry's six wives, these two met their end by execution, while two others were divorced, one died, and one survived.

Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard

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