Reflections of renaissance ideas of education in the plays of Shakespeare

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Rich, Ruth Melissa

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That the period of the Middle Ages seems to have been one of exceeding gloom and stagnation is probably because of the contrast between it and that most brilliant age known as the Renaissance which followed. Many scholars are of the opinion, however, that the Middle Ages must not be regarded as years of darkness, for during this epoch in history foundations were laid for the rich development which came with the Renaissance. The term "Renaissance" refers to that period in history when there was a realization that the literature essentially but also the law, the philosophy, and the science of the ancient world, including Greece, Rome, and the East provided the best models for a permanent culture. Furthermore, the Renaissance was a period when men in Italy, France, and England made an attempt to construct a vernacular literature and a philosophy that would rival or surpass that heritage of the ancient world which Rome had transmitted to them. Meres' Palladis Tamia is a declaration that the Renaissance was accomplished for England. For five centuries after the death of St. Augustine, European culture had remained practically stationary and little was known of the classical attainments of ancient Greece.In fact, had it not been for a few monasteries where ancient manuscripts were preserved, the older civilization would have become extinct.

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Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1932

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