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|  |  |  |  | Humanities in the Western Tradition , First Edition
Marvin Perry, Baruch College, City University of New York, Emeritus
J. Wayne Baker, University of Akron
Pamela Pfeiffer Hollinger, The University of Akron
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 |  | Review Questions
Chapter 12: The Late Middle Ages: Crisis, Continuity, and Change
- What was the Black Death, and how did it affect European society?
- How did the Babylonian Captivity and the Great Schism weaken the papacy?
- How did thought concerning the relationship between clerical and secular
authority develop during the Late Middle Ages?
- What were the traditional Christian literary themes? To what extent did
late-medieval literature continue to explore those themes? Use at least three
examples to illustrate your answer.
- How did a significant vernacular literature develop during the Late Middle
Ages? Who were the important authors to contribute to that development?
- How does late-medieval sculpture demonstrate continuity with earlier
sculptural tradition? What new interests and concerns does it show?
- What stylistic innovations did Giotto introduce, and what effect did
those have on the course of European painting?
- What were the principal innovations of the ars nova music? Why
did the church condemn them?
- In what ways did feudalism persist after the end of the Middle Ages?
How did it contribute to the development of modern ideas of liberty and the
rule of law?
- What are the principal differences between the medieval and modern views
of nature, society, the universe, and human reason?
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