I do believe so I understand them from my point of view so That I think they had a lousy time so they gave up on jesus and God itself in a total.
The Renaissance was a return to the traditional outlook of the Ancient Greeks and Romans who were far less theocratic than society had been during the Middle Ages.
It depends on what you mean by your question. If you are asking whether the Renaissance focused on secular and un-religious arts, that is true.
whats the difference of secular and humanism
the relation ship was .......................
secular festivals are wide word and they are not religious example carnival , crop over and more thanks for asking .
It really wasn't important in the Renaissance, but it was just starting. When something is secular that means it discourages religion in government and other things. The Catholic Church was still very powerful in the Renaissance and it is the time that they still ruled the monarchs of Europe. The paintings in the Sistine that Michelangelo painted showing the Neoplatonic view of the world was truly revolutionary. Yet, the pope was still able weld power and most of the art shows a religious theme. The work of Da Vinci shows Mary with Jesus, St. Ann, and Michelangelo's David as well as the Pieta are all religious works.
It became more secular.
Humanism
It became more secular.
Humanism
It was more secular.
During the Renaissance Era the art changed by: Art became less focused on religion. Art became more humanist. Art became more secular.
For the most part, art during the Renaissance was religious. However, portraiture as well as mythological themes were also popular (secular) themes.
true
Weren't they more SECULAR; because in the Renaissance, people began to think about humanism, so i think you mean the Reformation.
It depends on what you mean by your question. If you are asking whether the Renaissance focused on secular and un-religious arts, that is true.
Northern Renaissance humanists focused on more religious ideas, compared to the Italian Renaissance's secular focus. The Northern Renaissance was more concerned with church reform and returning to the ways of the early Christian Church.
madrigal