Chapter 19: The Eighteenth Century Flashcards

1
Q

Enlightenment

A

A philosophical movement of the late 17th and 18th centuries that challenged tradition, stressed reason over blind faith or obedience, and encouraged scientific thought.

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2
Q

enlightened despots

A

In reflecting their greater concern for the welfare of their people, these new, more liberal monarchs, often known as “enlightened despots,” undoubtedly braked the growing demands for change—for a while. Inevitably, however, by drawing attention to the injustices of the past, they stimulated an appetite for reform that they were in no position to satisfy. Furthermore, for all their claims—Frederick the Great, for example, described himself as “first servant of the state”—their regimes remained essentially autocratic. These enlightened despots, however, brought Enlightenment philosophers, scientists, writers, artists, and intellectuals into their royal circle and supported their endeavors.

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3
Q

Jacobin

A

a member of a fairly exclusive political club of mostly well-off men who supported individual and collective rights for the citizens of France

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4
Q

Louis XIV death marked the beginning of the end of what

A

absolute monarchy

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5
Q

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s opera The Marriage of Figaro and William Hogarth’s series of paintings Marriage à la Mode

A

satirical art pieces on the aristocracy and the marital ethics of the British upper class respectively

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6
Q

Poussinistes

A

created surfaces with a smooth, mirrorlike finish

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7
Q

Rubenistes (colorists)

A

characterized by vigorous, textural brushstrokes

more popular and there style is called ROCOCO

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8
Q

leading architect of the day

A

Balthasar Neumann

Among the many palaces and churches he designed, none is more spectacular than the Vierzehnheiligen (“fourteen saints”) near Bamberg, Germany. The relative simplicity of the exterior deliberately leaves the visitor unprepared for the spaciousness and elaborate decoration of the interior with its rows of windows and irregularly placed columns

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9
Q

Cesare Beccaria

A

On Crimes and Punishments (1764), the first application of rationalist principles to the study of criminal punishment; it led to reforms in the criminal-justice systems of many European countries. Beccaria argued that prison sentences should fit the crimes and should be used to deter crime and rehabilitate criminals rather than solely to exact retribution. He also spoke vehemently against the death penalty for reasons that echo in opponents’ voices even today: no one (and no state) has the right to take the life of another, and the death penalty does not deter crime any more than other forms of punishment.

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10
Q

Adam Smith

A

individual liberty—for his new economic theory in The Wealth of Nations; it was published in 1776, the year that the American colonies declared independence from Britain. Smith promoted an economic approach called laissez-faire—“let it be.” He believed that if market forces were allowed to operate without state intervention, an “invisible hand” would guide self-interest for the benefit of all.

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11
Q

Neo-Classicism

A

An 18th-century revival of Classical Greek and Roman art and architectural styles, generally characterized by simplicity and straight lines.

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12
Q

historical reasons for the rise of Neo-Classicism

A

The excavation of the buried cities of Herculaneum and Pompeii, beginning in 1711 and 1748, respectively, evoked immense interest in the art of Classical antiquity in general and of Rome in particular. The wall paintings from Pompeian villas of the first century ce were copied by countless visitors to the excavations, and reports of the finds were published throughout Europe. The German scholar Johannes Winckelmann (1717–1768), who is sometimes called the Father of Archaeology, played a major part in creating a new awareness of the importance of Classical art; in many of his writings, he encouraged his contemporaries not only to admire ancient masterpieces but also to imitate them.

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13
Q

The aims and ideals of the Roman Republic

A

freedom, opposition to tyranny, valor

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14
Q

The painter who best represents the official revolutionary style

A

Jacques-Louis David

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15
Q

style galant

A

A style of elegant, lighthearted music that was popular in France during the early part of the 18th century.

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16
Q

Classical music

A

A term for music written during the 17th and 18th centuries; more generally, referring to serious music as opposed to popular music.

17
Q

The figure chiefly responsible for the change from Classical to Romantic music

A

Beethoven

18
Q

minuet

A

A slow, stately dance for groups of couples.

19
Q

sonata form

A

A musical form having three sections: exposition (in which the main theme or themes are stated), development, and recapitulation (repetition) of the theme or themes.

20
Q

allegro

A

In music, a quick, lively tempo.

21
Q

Father of the Symphony

A

Franz Joseph Haydn

22
Q

polyphonies

A

Music with two or more independent melodies that harmonize or are sounded together.

23
Q

Augustans

A

The principal English writers, writers like Virgil and Horace, subsequently commemorated Augustus’s achievement in works intended for a sophisticated public

24
Q

French thinker and writer Denis Diderot

A

conceived the preparation of a vast encyclopedia that would describe the state of contemporary science, technology, and thought and provide a system for the classification of knowledge.

25
Q

Rousseau

A

humans were good and society was bad