欧洲文化入门复习资料
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欧洲文化入门1.What did the Roman have in common with the Greeks?And what was the chief difference between them?1)The Romans had a lot in common with the Greeks.Both peoples had traditions rooted in the idea of the citizen-assembly,hostile to monarchy and to servility.Their religions were alike enough for most of their deities to be readily identified—Greek Zeus with Roman Jupiter,Greek Aphrodite with Roman Venus,and so on—and their myths to be fused. Their languages worked in similar ways and were ultimately related, both being members of the Indo-European language family which stretches from Bangladesh to Iceland.(2)There was one big difference.The Romans built up a vast empire. The Greeks didn’t,excepted for the brief moment of Alexander’s conquests,which soon disintegrated.1.What was the Hebrew’s major contribution to world civilization?The history of the Hebrews was handed down orally from one generation to another in the form of folktales and stories,which were recorded later in the Old Testament,which still later became the first part of the Christian Bible.The Hebrews’major contribution to world civizalation wan Judasam.2.Why do we say Judaism and Christianity are closely related?⑴it was the Jewish tradition which gave birth to Christianity;⑵both originated in Palestine.1.What happened in Western Europe after the decline of the RomanEmpire?After the Roman Empire lost its predominance,a great manyGermanic Kingdoms began to grow into the nations know as England,France, Italy,and Germany in its place.These nations of Western Europe were in the scene of frequent wars and invasions.The political unity had given way to widespread destruction and confusion.Hunger and disease killed many lives and village fell into ruin and great areas of land lay waste.There was no central government to keep the order.The only organization that seemed to unite Europe was the Christian church. Christianity was almost the all and the one of Medieval lives in western Europe and took lead in politics,law,art,and learning for hundreds years.2.What were the cultural characteristics of the period from500to1000?Above all,the cultural characters of this period were the heritage and achievement of Roman culture and the emergence of Hebrew and Gothic culture.1.What made Italy the birthplace of the Renaissance?Because of its geographical position,foreign trade developed early in Italy.This brought Italy into contact with other cultures and gave rise to urban economy and helped Italy accumulate wealth which was anessential factor for the flowering of art and literature.For two centuries beginning from the late15th century,Florence was the golden city which gave birth to a whole generation of poets,scholars, artists and sculptors.There was in Florence a revival of interest in classical learning and rising of humanist ideas.And to spread the new ideas,libraries and academies were founded.In the15th century printing was invented and helped to spread humanist ideas.2.What are the main elements of humanism?How are these elementsreflected in art and literature during the Italian Renaissance? Humanist is the essence of Renaissance.Humanists in renaissance believed that human beings had rights to pursue wealth and pleasure and they admires the beauty of human body.This belief ran counter to the medieval ascetical idea of poverty and stoicism,and shifted man’s interest from Christianity to humanity,from religion to philosophy,from heaven to earth,from the beauty of God to the beauty of human in all its joy,senses and feeling.The philosophy of humanism is reflected in the art and literature during the Italian Renaissance in the literature works of Boccaccio and Petrarch and in the art of Giotto,Brunelleschi,Donatello,Giorgione,daVinci,Michelangelo,Raphael,and Titian,etc.In their works they did not stress death and other world but call on man to live and work for the present.DIVISION ONE1.战争双方:1200B.C Greece(希腊)and Troy(特洛伊)The5th centry B.C colsed with civil war between Athens(雅典)and Sparta in Greece(希腊).146B.C.the Romans conquered Greece。
Introduction (介绍)1、There are many elements constituting European Culture. 2、There are two major elements: Greco-Roman element and Judeo-Christian element. The The richness richness richness of of of European European European Culture Culture Culture was was was created created created by by by Greco-Roman Greco-Roman Greco-Roman element element element and and and Judeo-Christian Judeo-Christian element. Divison One Greek Culture and Roman Culture1、The 5th century closed with civil war between Athens Sparta. 2、The economy of Athens rested on an immense amount of slave labour. 3、Ancient Greece’s epics was created by Homer. 4、The Homer’s epics consisted of Iliad and Odyssey. 5、Drama in Ancient Greece was floured in the 5th century B.C.6、Three masters in tragedy 三大悲剧大师三大悲剧大师三大悲剧大师 ① Aeschylus Prometheus Bound —→Shelly Prometheus Unbound② Sophocles(之首) Oedipus Oedipus the the the King King King—→ —→ —→ Freud’s Freud’s “the “the Oedipus Oedipus Oedipus complex” complex” complex” ((恋母情结) —→ David Herbert Lawrence’s Sons and lovers③ Euripides A .Trojan W omen B .He is the first writer of “problem plays”(社会问题剧) C .Elizabeth Browning called him “Euripides human”(一个纯粹的人) D .Realis m can be traced back to the Ancient Greece. To be specific, Euripides. 7、 The only representative of Greek comedy is Aristophanes. Aristophanes writes about nature. Swift says of him “As for comic Aristophanes, The dog too witty and too profane is.”8、History (Historical writing) “Father of History” —→ Herodotus —→ war(between Greeks and Persians) This war is called Peleponicion wars. “The greatest historian that ever lived.” —→ Thucydides —→ war (Sparta, Athens and Syracuse) 9、① Euclid’s Elements 解析几何解析几何It was in use in English schools until the early years of the 20th century. ② Archimedes His His work work work not not not only only only in in in geometry geometry 几何学,but ,but also also also in in in arithmetic arithmetic 算术, , machanics machanics 机械, , and and hydrostatics.流体静力学流体静力学Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world.(Archimedes )10、The melting between Roman Culture and Greek Culture. (罗马征服希腊的标志) From 146 B.C., Latin was the language of the western half of the Roman Empire. Greek that of the eastern half. Both Latin and Greek belong to Indo-European language. 11、The dividing range in the Roman history refers to 27 B.C. 12、The year 27 B.C. Divided the Roman history into two periods: republic and empire. 13、The idea of Republic can be traced back to Plato’s republic. 14、In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was guaranteed by the Roman legions(罗马军团罗马军团) 15、In the Roman history, there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which which was known as Pax was known as Pax Romana.(神圣罗马帝国) 16、In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was guaranteed by the Roman legions, it was known as Pax Romana 17、The Roman Law protected the rights of plebeians (平民). 18、The important contribution made by the Romans to the European culture was the Roman Law. 19、After 395,the empire was divided into East (the Byzantine Empire) and West. 20、Cicero 西赛罗西赛罗 his legal and political speeches are models of Latin diction 拉丁语用词拉丁语用词 described as Ciceronian.西赛罗式的西赛罗式的an enormous influence(巨大影响) on the development of European prose. 21、Virgil: Aeneid 阿尼德阿尼德22、The pantheon was built in 27 B.C. The world’s first vast interior space.世界上第一所最大的室内场所世界上第一所最大的室内场所23、The representation form of Greek Democracy is citizen-assembly.古希腊民主的表现形式古希腊民主的表现形式24、The embodiment of Greek democracy is citizen-assembly. 古希腊民主的具体形式古希腊民主的具体形式25. Many of Plato’s ideas we re later absorbed into Christian thought. How did the Ancient Greek philosophy develop? (1)、Three founders 1、Pythagoras ① All things were numbers. ② Scientific mathematics. ③ Theory of proportion.比例的理论比例的理论2、Heracleitue ① Fire is the primary elements of the universe.火是万物之源火是万物之源② The theory of the mingling of opposites produced harmony.矛盾的对立统一矛盾的对立统一3、Democritus ① the atomic theory.第一个原子理论开拓者第一个原子理论开拓者② materialis materialism.m.唯物主义唯物主义(2)、Three thinkers 1、Socrates ① He hadn’t works. We can know him from Plato’s dialogues. ② The dialectical method was established by Socrates. 2、Plato ①The Academy is the first school in the world, it was established by Plato. ②He has four works. Dialogues, Apology, Symposium and Republic. 3、Aristotle ①The L yceum is the second school in the world, it was established by Aristotle. ②Aristotle is a humanist. (2)、Five contending schools 1、The Sophists 诡辩派诡辩派①Under the leadership of Protagoras. ②The representative of work is On the God.诸神论诸神论③His doctrine is “man is the measure of all things”. 2、The Cynics 犬儒派犬儒派①Under the leadership of Diogenes. ②The word “cynic” means “dog” in English. ③He proclaimed his brotherhood. And he had no patience with the rich and powerful. 3、The Sceptics 置疑学派置疑学派①Under the leadership of Pyrrhon. ②His thought is not all knowledge was attainable, and doubting the truth of what others accepted as true. 4、The Epicureans 享乐派享乐派①Under the leadership of Epicurus. ②Pleasure to be the highest good in life but not sensual enjoyment. Pleasure could be attained by the practice of virtue. Epicurus was a materialist. He believed that the world consisted of atoms. 5、The Stoics 斯多哥派斯多哥派①Under the leadership of Zeno. ②His thought is duty is the most important thing in life. One should endure hardship and misfortune with courage. Develop Developed into Stoics’ duty. ed into Stoics’ duty. He was also a materialist. What’s the difference between Plato and Aristotle in terms of their philosophical ideas(system)?1、For For one one thing, Aristotle emphasized direct observation of of nature nature nature and and insisted insisted that that theory theory should should follow fact.This is different from Plato’s reliance on subjective thinking.2、For another, he thought that “form” and matter together made up concrete individual realities. Here, too, he differed from Plato who held that ideas had a higher reality than the physical world 3、Aristotle thought thought happiness happiness was was men’s men’s men’s aim aim aim in in in life life , but not happiness in in the the vulgar vulgar sense, sense, but something that could only be achieved by leading a life of reason, goodness and contemplation. What is the great significance of Greek Culture on the later-on cultural development? There has been an enduring excitement about classical Greek culture in Europe and elsewhere.Rediscovery elsewhere.Rediscovery of of of Greek Greek Greek culture culture culture played played played a a a vital vital vital part part part in in in the the the Renaissance Renaissance Renaissance in in in Italy Italy Italy and and and other other European countries. 1、Spirit of innovation 创新精神创新精神The The Greek Greek Greek people people people invented invented invented mathematics mathematics mathematics and and and science science science and and and philosophy; philosophy; philosophy; They They They first first first wrote wrote wrote history history history as as opposed to mere mere annals; annals; They speculated freely freely about about the nature of of the the world world and and the ends of of life, life, without being bound in the fetters of any inherited orthodoxy. 2、Supreme Achievement 至高无上的成就至高无上的成就The The Greeks Greeks Greeks achieved achieved achieved supreme supreme supreme achievements achievements achievements in in in nearly nearly nearly all all all fields fields fields of of of human human human endeavour: endeavour: endeavour: Philosophy, Philosophy, science, epic poetry, comedy, historical writing, architecture, etc. 3、Lasting effect 持续的影响持续的影响①Countless writers writers have have quoted, quoted, borrowed borrowed borrowed from from from and and otherwise used Homer’s Homer’s epics, epics, the tragedies tragedies of of Aeschylus and Sophocles and Euripides, Aristophanes’s comedies, Plato’s Dialogues,ect. England alone, three young Romantic poets expressed their ②In the early part of the 19th century, in admiration of Greek culture in works which have themselves become classics经典之作: Byron’s Isles of Greece, Shelley’s Hellas and Prometheus Unbound and Keats’s Ode on a Grecian Urn. s modernist masterpiece ③In the 20th century, there are Homeric parallels in the Irishman James Joyce’Ulysses. Division TwoThe Bible and Christianity1、Christianity is by far the most influential in the West. m 2、Judeo-Christian tradition constitutes one of the two major components of European culture: Judaisand Christianity. 3、The Jewish tradition, which gave birth to Christianity. (犹太教是基督教的前身) Both originated in Palestine, which was known as Canaan. — the Hebrews. 4、The ancestors of the Jews 5、The Hebrews history was recorded in the Old Testament of the Bible. 6、The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. 7、The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. 8、The New Testament is about the doctrine of Jesus Christ. od and Man. 9、The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between G10、The Old Testament consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books, called Pentateuch.摩西五经摩西五经11、The Fall of Man was recorded in Genesis, Pentateuch, the Old Testament, The Bible. 12、Noah’s Ark was record ed in Genesis, Pentateuch, the Old Testament, The Bible. 13、The content of historical Books: 1200B.C. 586 B.C. B.C., till Dealing with history of the Hebrew people from their entry into Palestine around 1200 the fall of Palestine into hands of Assyrians and Chaldeans in 586 B.C. 14、The History Books ① The development of system of landed nobles. ② The development of monarchy. 君主专制君主专制两大王国的初步形成③ Establishment of the two Kingdoms. 两大王国的初步形成④ The settlement in the highlands ⑤ Age of great prosperity under Saul, David and Solomon. 15、Towards the end of the fourth century four accounts were accepted as part of the New Testament, which tells the beginning of Christianity. 16、The Birth of Jesus was recorded in Matthew (马塞福音书) 17、The first English version of whole Bible was translated from the Latin V V ulgate in 1382 and was Latin copied out by hand by the early group of reformers led by John Wycliff. What difference between Christianity and the other religions? Christianity based itself on two forceful beliefs which separate it from all other religions. 1、One is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and that God sent him to earth to live as humans live, suffer as humans suffer, and die to redeem mankind. 2、The The other other is is that that God God gave gave his only begotten son, so that that whosoever whosoever whosoever believes believes believes in in in him him him should should not perish, but have everlasting life. (加尔文主义也有这样的观点) What is the great significance of the translations of the bible? 1、It It is generally accepted that the English Bible and Shakespeare are two great reservoirs of Modern is generally accepted that the English Bible and Shakespeare are two great reservoirs of Modern English. 2、Miltion’s Miltion’s Paradise Paradise Paradise Lost Lost Lost , , , Bunyan’s Bunyan’s Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Pilgrim’s Pilgrim’s Progress, Progress, Progress, Byron’s Byron’s Byron’s Cain, Cain, Cain, up up up to to to the the the contemporary contemporary Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and Steinbeck’s East of Eden. Division ThreeThe Middle Ages1、 the Middle ages In European history, the thousand-year period following the fall of the Western Roman Empire Empire in in the fifth century is called the Middle Ages. The The middle middle middle ages ages is is so so so called called called because because it it was was was the the the transitional transitional period(过渡时期) ) between between ancient times and modern times. To be specific, from the 5th century to 15th century. 2、In 476 A.D. a Germanic (日耳曼日耳曼) general killed the last Roman emperor and took control of the government. 西罗马476灭,东罗马1653年灭年灭3、Feudalis m in Europe was mainly a system of land holding (土地所有) — a system of holding land in exchange for military service (军事力量). The word “feudalis m” was derived from the Latin “feudum”, a grant of land. 4、5、The The Catholic Catholic Catholic Church Church Church made made made Latin the official Latin the official language and helped to preserve and pass on the heritage (传统传统) of the Roman Empire. 6、The word “catholic” meant “universal”.(广泛的,无处不在的) 7、St. St. Jerome, Jerome, Jerome, who who who translated translated into into Latin Latin Latin both both Old Old and and New New Testament Testament Testament from from from the the Hebrew Hebrew and and and Greek Greek originals. Vulgate (拉丁语圣经拉丁语圣经) 8、Augustine —→ “Confession” and “The City of God” 9、The most important of all courses was Jerusalem. (耶路撒冷) 10、Crusades went on about 200 years. There were altogether eight chief Crusades. 11、The crusades ended up with the victory of Moslems.(穆斯林) By By 1291 1291 1291 the the the Moslems Moslems Moslems ((穆斯林) ) had had had taken taken taken over over over the the the last last last Christian Christian Christian stronghold. stronghold. stronghold. They They They won won won the the crusades and ruled all the territory in Palestine that the Crusaders had fought to control. 12、Carolingian Renaissance Carolingian Renaissance Renaissance is is is derived derived derived from from Charlemagne’s name in Latin, Carolus. Carolus. The The The most most interesting interesting facet facet facet ((一面) ) of of of this this this rather rather rather minor minor minor renaissance renaissance renaissance is is is the the the spectacle spectacle spectacle ((有见解) ) of of of Frankish Frankish Frankish or or Germanic Germanic state state state reaching reaching reaching out out to to assimilate assimilate (吸收) the the riches riches riches of of the the Roman Roman Classical Classical and and and the the Christianized Hebraic culture. 13、National Epics(民族史诗运动民族史诗运动) The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly used form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages —that is, the languages of various national states (民族国家) that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics. 14、Chaucer (乔叟乔叟) 的诗歌特点:的诗歌特点: ① power of observation (观察) ② piercing irony (敏锐的讽刺) ③ sense of humour ④ warm humanity (温暖的人性) 15、Gothic ① The Gothic style started in France and quickly spread through all parts of Western Europe. ② It lasted from the mid-12th to the end of 15th century and, in some areas, into the 16th. More churches were built in this manner than in any other style in history. ③ The Gothic was an outgrowth (丰富与发展) of the Romanesque.(罗马式)(罗马式)16、The Canterbury Tales: ① The Canterbury Tales was written by Chaucer. ② Chaucer introduced French and Italy writing the English native alliterative verse. ③ Both Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales are the best representative of the middle English. 17 In the middle ages, what cultures began to merge ?Classical, Hebrew and Gothic heritages merged (文化融合). It paved the way for the development of what is the present-day European culture. Why is the middle ages is called Age of Faith (信仰的年代)?1、During the Medieval times there was no central government to keep the order. The only organization that seemed to unite Europe was the Christian church. 2、The Christian church continued to gain widespread power and influence. 3、In the Late Late middle ages, almost everyone in western Europe was a Christian and a middle ages, almost everyone in western Europe was a Christian and a member of the Christian Church. Christianity took the lead in politics, law, art, and learning for hundreds of years. 4、It shaped people’s lives. That is why the middle ages is also called the “Age of Faith”. How did Feudalism develop in Europe in middle ages? 1、feudalis m in Europe was mainly a system of land holding — a system of holding land in exchange for military service. The word “feudalis m” was derived from the Latin “feudum”, a grant of land. 2、In order to seek the protection of large land-owners, the people of s mall farms mall farms or or land gave their farms and land to large land-owners, but they still had freedom, they were called freemen. 3、While the people from towns and cities did not possess farms or land. They had nothing but their freedom to be given to large land-owners, and then they lost their freedom for protection. They were called serfs. 4、In Feudalism, the ruler of the government redivided the large lands into small pieces to be given to chancellors or soldiers as a reward for their service. The subdivisions were called fiefs. The owne rs of the fiefs was call vassals. 5、There came a form of local and decentralized (分散) government. 6、As a knight, he were pledged to protect the weak, to fight for the church, to be loyal to his lord and to respect women of noble birth. These rules were known as code of chivalry, from which the western idea of good manners developed. What positive influence does the Crusades exert on the European Culture? (What is the great significance of the Crusades?) 1、The crusades brought the East into closer contact with the West. And they greatly influenced the history of Europe. (拉近了东西方的交流) 2、During During the the wars wars while while while many many many of of of the the feudal feudal lords lords lords went went went to to fight fight in in in Palestine, Palestine, Palestine, kings kings at at home home home found found opportunities opportunities to to strengthen strengthen themselves. themselves. themselves. Thus Thus Thus among among among other other other things, things, things, Crusades Crusades Crusades helped helped helped to to to break break break down down feudalis m, which, in turn led to the rise of the monarchies. (取而代之的是君主专制) 3、Besides, Besides, through through through their their their contact contact contact with with with the the the more more more cultured cultured cultured Byzantines Byzantines Byzantines and and and Moslems, Moslems, Moslems, the the the western western Europeans changed many many of of of their their their old old old ideas. ideas. ideas. Their Their Their desire desire desire for for for wealth wealth or or p p ower ower began began to overshadow their religious ideals. 4、The The Crusades Crusades also resulted resulted in in in renewing renewing people’s people’s interest interest in in learning learning learning and and invention. By By the the 13th century, universities had spread all over Europe. Such knowledge as Arabic numerals (阿拉伯数字), algebra (代数代数), and Arab medicine (医学) were introduced to the West. 5、As trade increased, village and towns began to grow into cities. And the rise of towns and trade in western Europe paved the way of the growth of strong national governments. How did literature develop in the middle ages? 1、The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly used form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages —that is, the languages of various national states (民族国家) that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin Latin culture culture culture to to to a a a culture culture culture that that that was was was the the the combination combination combination of of of a a a variety variety variety of of of national national national charact charact eristics. eristics. Both Both Beowulf and song of Roland were the representative works of the National Epics. 2、Dante Alighieri and The Divine Comedy: (但丁与神曲) ① His masterpiece, The Divine Comedy, is one of the landmarks of world literature. ② The poem expresses humanistic ideas which foreshadowed (预示) the spirit of Renaissance. ③ Dante wrote his masterpiece in Italian rather than in Latin. (只用意大利语创作) 3、Geoffery Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales: (乔叟与坎特布雷集) ① The Canterbury Tales were his most popular work. ② Most of of the the tales are are written written in in verse verse (诗) ) which which which reflects(reflects(反映) ) Chaucer’s Chaucer’s Chaucer’s innovation innovation (改革) by introducing into the native alliterative verse (压头韵) the French and Italian styles. ③ Chaucer Chaucer is thus to be , regarded as the is thus to be , regarded as the first short story teller and the first modern poet in English literature.短篇写作第一人短篇写作第一人④ Chaucer and the Canterbury Tales were representative of the Middle ages. Division FourRenaissance and Reformation1、 Renaissance Generally speaking, Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th century. The word “Renaissance” means revival (复兴), specifically in this period of history, revival of interest in ancient Greek Greek and and Roman Roman culture. culture. culture. Renaissance, Renaissance, in in essence essence (从实质上讲), ), was was was a a a historical historical historical period period period in in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts (试图) to get rid of conservatism (保守主义思想) ) in feudalist Europe and introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising in feudalist Europe and introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie bourgeoisie ((资产阶级), ), to to to lift lift lift the the the restrictions restrictions restrictions ((禁忌) in in all all all areas areas areas placed placed placed by by by the the the Roman Roman Roman church church authorities.(权利威信) Generally speaking, Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th century. Renaissance started in Florence and V enice with the flowering of paintings, sculpture (雕塑) and architecture. 最早开始于painting 2、 In Renaissance literature of Italy, Petrarch (彼得拉克) was the representative poet. 3、 Intellectuals became closely tied up with the rising bourgeoisie. (人文主义兴起的重要原因人文主义兴起的重要原因 Humanistic ideas to develop) 4、 At the heart of the Renaissance philosophy was the assertion of the greatness of man.(以人为本—人文主义的核心) 5、Last Supper adapted from the New Testament of the Bible. 6、Michelangelo ———— David David ———— Sistine Chapel (from the First book of the Bible, the Genesis ) Sistine Chapel (from the First book of the Bible, the Genesis ) ———— Dying Slave ( Dying Slave (垂死的奴隶) ———— Moses ( Moses (摩西) 7、Raphael was best known for his Madonna. (圣母玛利亚) He painted his Madonnas in different postures against different backgrounds. 8、One One of of of the the the famous famous paintings besides the Madonnas is is School School School of of of Athens Athens (雅典学派). ). Plato Plato Plato and and Aristotle engaged in argument. 9、Titian ———— The V The V e nus of Urbino (enus of Urbino (断臂的维纳斯) Man with the Glove (带手套的人) ☆10、John Wyclif —————— translation of the Bible into English for the first time. translation of the Bible into English for the first time. 11、Martin Luther —————— translation of the whole Bible with the vernacular language. translation of the whole Bible with the vernacular language. 12、The reformation get its victory first in England. 13、Reformation The The Reformation was a 16th century religious movement as well as a socio Reformation was a 16th century religious movement as well as a socio -political (社会政治) movement. movement. It It It began began as Martin Martin Luther Luther Luther posted posted on the door door of of of the the castle church at at the the the University University University of of Wittenberg his 95 thesis. This movement which swept over the whole of Europe was aimed at opposing the absolute authority of the Roman Catholic Church and replacing it with the absolute authority of the Bible. The reformists engaged themselves in translating the Bible into their mother tongues. 宗教改革的实质是:反对罗马天主教,直接形式是用母语翻译圣经宗教改革的实质是:反对罗马天主教,直接形式是用母语翻译圣经14、Calvinis m Calvinis m was established by Calvin in the period of Renaissance. Presbyterian government (长老会). Only those specially elected by God can be saved (上帝的选民) . This belief serves so well to help the rising bourgeoisie on its path (有助于资本主义的兴起)。
《欧洲文化入门》复习题(一)Division One:Greek Culture and Roman Culture第一部分: 古希腊和古罗马文化Greek Culture古希腊文化I.填空1.more enduring持久的and they are element and Judeo-Christia犹太教与基督教所共有的element.2.Greek culture reached a high point of development in the 53.th公元前4世纪的后期, all Greece was brought under the马其顿王国4.攻克Greece.5.Greek culture reached a high point of development in the 5th century.6.Revived in the Olympic Games have become the world’s foremost amateur sportscompetition.奥运会由7.荷马to be the author of their epics史诗.8.The Iliad结盟,同盟of the states of the southern特洛伊9.The Odyssey奥德赛奥德赛思after the Trojan 木马war to hishome, island of Ithaca.伊萨卡poets of ancient Greece, two are still admired 赞赏by readers today:品达颂歌celebrating 庆祝the victories 胜利at the athletic games,14.Aeschylus埃斯库罗斯Agamemnon阿伽门农.15.Sophocles索福克勒斯wrote such tragic plays as Oedipus the King俄狄浦斯王, Electra伊莱克特拉, and Antigone.安提戈涅16.Euripides women in such plays as Andromache安德洛玛克,Medea麦迪edy喜剧also flourished繁荣in the 5阿里斯托芬, who has left eleven plays, including Frogs, Clouds, Waspsoften called ―Father of History‖. He wrote about the wars between19.Thucydides修昔底徳and between锡拉库扎, a Greek state on the Island of Sicily西西里岛.20.was a bold thinker who had the idea that all things were numbers.21.was the founder of scientific mathematics.22.Heracleitue believed fire to the primary element of the universe, out of which everything else hadarisen出现.philosophy哲学are andwas one of the earliest philosophical哲学的materialists唯物主义者and speculated推测about the atomic原子的structure结构of matter事件.25.th26.Euclid欧几里得27.To illustrate说明told the king: ―Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world.‖给我一个支点,我可以撬动地球。
1、There are many elements constituting(组成) of European Culture.2、There are two major elements:Greco-Roman element and Judeo-Christian element.3、The richness(丰富性) of European Culture was created by Greco-Roman element and Judeo-Christian element.第一章1、The 5th century closed with civil war between Athens and Sparta.2、The economy of Athens rested on(依赖) an immense(无限的)amount of slave labour.3、Olympus mount,Revived in 1896(当代奥运会)4、Ancient Greece(古希腊)‗s epics was created by Homer.5、The events of Homer‗s epics was his own time. (False)(They are not about events of Homer‗s own time,probably in the period1200-1100 B.C.)6、The Homer‗s epics consisted of Iliad and Odyssey.7、Agamemnon,Hector,Achilles are in Iliad.8、Odysseus and Penelope are in Odyssey.9、Odyssey(对其作品产生影响)—→James Joyoe‗s Ulysses(描述一天的生活)。
In the 20th century.10、Drama in Ancient Greece was floured in the 5th century B.C.11、三大悲剧大师①Aeschylus《Prometheus Bound》—→模仿式作品Shelly《Prometheus Unbound》②Sophocles(之首)《Oedipus the King》—→ Freud‗s ―the Oedipus complex‖ (恋母情结) —→ David Herbert Lawrence‘s《Sons and lovers》(劳伦斯)447页③EuripidesA.《Trojan Women》B.He is the first writer of ―problem plays‖(社会问题剧) 在肖伯纳手中达到高潮,属于存在主义戏剧的人物C.Elizabeth Browning called him ―Euripides human‖(一个纯粹的人)D.Realism can be traced back(追溯到) to the Ancient Greece.12、The only representative of Greek comedy is Aristophanes. 18页Aristophanes writes about nature. —→浪漫主义湖畔派(The lakers)华兹华兹(新古典主义代表作家《格列夫游记》《大人国小人国》《温和的提议》用讽刺的写作手法)13、History (Historical writing)史学创作※―Father of History‖ —→ Herodotus —→ war(between Greeks an d Persians)This war is called Peleponicion wars. 伯罗奔尼撒,3只是陈述史实,并没有得出理论。
《欧洲文化入门》复习指南Division One: Greek Culture and Roman Culture(European culture is made up of many elements.Two of these elements are considered to be more enduring and they they are: the Greco-Roman element, and the Judeo-Christian element.) I. Greek Culture 。
1.The Historical Context1). In a more remote period of Greek history, probably around 1200B.C. , a war was fought between Greece(希腊)andTroy(特洛伊) 。
2). Greek culture reached a high point of development in the 5th century B.C.What marked the high point of development in Greek culture in the 5th century B.C.?1). The high point of development in Greek culture was marked by (a) the successful repulse of the Persian invasion early in the 5th century B.C., (b) the establishment of democracy and (c) the flourishing of science, philosophy, literature, art and historical writing in Athens(雅典). 。
Part IDirections: Read the following unfinished statements or questions carefully. For each unfinished statement or question, four suggested answers marked [ A ], [ B ], [ C ] and [ D] are given. Choose the one which best completes the statement or answers the question by blackening the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET.****** 1 ******1. _________ believed that the highest good in life was pleasure, freedom from pain and emotional upheaval.A. SophistsB. CynicsC. SkepticsD. Epicureans2. _________ is said to have told the king of Syracuse: "Give me a place to stand, andI will move the world."A. ArchimedesB. AristotleC. PlatoD. Euclid3. Increasingly troubled by the inroads of northem tribes such as Goths, the West Roman Empire finally collapsed in _________A. 395B. 27C. 1453D. 4764. The City of God was written by ________, the most important of all the leaders of Christian thought.A. JesusB. AugustineC. Thomas AquinasD. Martin Luther5. _________ was a painter, a sculptor, an architect, a musician, an engineer, and a scientist----- a Renaissance man in the true sense of the word.A. MichelangeloB. RaphaelC. ShakespeareD. Leonardo Da Vinci6. In _______, Cervantes satirized a very popular type of literature at the time, the romance of chivalry.A. Don QuixoteB. HamletC. LeviathanD. The Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe7. The best- known book written by Thomas More is ________ , which describes an ideal non-Christian state where everybody lives a simple life and shares the goods in common, possesses a good knowledge of Latin, fights no war and enjoys full freedom in religious belief.A. The Praise of the FollyB. As You Like ItC. Divine ComedyD. Utopia8. ________, author of Prince, is regarded as "father of political science" in the West.A. MachiavelliB. DanteC. BaconD. Locke9. In The Revolution of Heavenly Orbs,________ put forward his theory that the sun, not the earth, is the center of the universe.A. KeplerB. GalileoC. NewtonD. Copernicus10. During the _________ century, the modern scientific method began to take shape, which emphasized observation and experimentation before formulating a final explanation or generalization.A. 18thB. 15 thC. 16 thD. 17 th11. _______ said, "Knowledge is power."A.. Isaac NewtonB. Francis BaconC. John LockeD. Marx12. In Faust,_______ drew on an immense variety of cultural material----theological, mythological, philosophical, political, economic, scientific, aesthetic, musical, and literary.A. GoetheB. DefoeC. RousseauD. Byron13. Which of the following is not regarded as a romantic writer?A. WordsworthB. ShelleyC. PushkinD. Balzac14. The most frequent themes of Romanticism include all of the following except _________.A. the power of reasonB. individual freedomC. spontaneityD. love of nature15. "If winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" is the ending line of "Ode to the West Wind" by ________.A. WordsworthB. KeatsC. PushkinD. Shelley16. The composer of Swan Lake was ____, a genius in symphonic music.A. TchaikovskyB. ChopinC. BeethovenD. Mozart17. The naturalist school founded by Zola in late 19 th century intended ________.A. to attack the industrial injustice and urban evilsB. to give full play to the imagination of individualsC. to uphold the classical values such as harmony, balance, proportion and retraintD. to demonstrate the law of human conduct by a scientific study of "a slice of life"18. Which of the following novels was not written by Tolstoy?A. ResurrectionB. War and PeaceC. Crime and PunishmentD. Anna Karenina19. In his poems, Walt Whitman sang praises of all of the following value except ________.A. democracyB. the dignity of the individualC. the idyllic way of lifeD. the brotherhood of man20. Modernism was characterized by ________.A. a conscious rejection of established rules, traditions and conventionsB. the exploration of the inner life of the individual and the psychopathology of human relationsC. its intense interest in the bizarre, the mysterious, the unpredictable and the formlessD. all of the above.****** 2 ******1. Greek culture reached a high point of development in _________.A. 1,200B.C. B. 5th century B. C.C. 4th century B.C.D. 146 B. C.2. The masterpiece of engineering in Roman architecture is _________.A. the PathenonB. the ColossseumC. She-wolfD. the Ionic style of temple3. The Old Testament of the Bible is about _________.A. GodB. the doctrine of Jesus ChristC. the Laws of GodD. A and C4. Which of the following statements is true?A. Jesus was born in Galilee.B. Jesus was born in a synagogue.C. Jesus was born into a poor ca rpenter’s family.D. Jesus was born into a merchant’s family.5. Feudalism in Europe was mainly a system of _________.A. military serviceB. land holdingC. governmentD. B and C6. Which of the following statements is true about the Gothic style in architecture?A. The Gothic style flourished in the 18th century.B. The Gothic style started in France.C. Sculpture of Gothic style churches were based on the natural forces.D. Gothic style churches were solid but small.7. Renaissance means the revival of interest in _________.A. ancient Greek cultureB. ancient Roman cultureC. the BibleD. A and B8. The reasons for the decline of renaissance in Italy are _________.A. wars and class conflictsB. loss of supremacy in world trade as a result of the discovery of the new world and routes to IndiaC. the tightening of control of the Roman Catholic Church over thought, speech and publicationD. all of the above9. Which of the following died a prisoner?A. CopernicusB. NewtonC. KeplerD. Galileo10. The theory of the social contract was expounded by _________.A. Thomas HobbesB. Francis BaconC. John LockeD. A and C11. In economic thought, the enlightenment thinkers favored _________.A. government interventionB. balanced developmentC. the policy of laissezfaireD. strict regulation12. The author of "The Sorrows of Young Werther" is _________.A. GoetheB. DefoeC. SchillerD. Kant13. The Lakers refer to _________.A. Wordsworth and ColeridgeB. Byron and ShellyC. William Blake and KeatsD. None of the above14. The later Romantics in music refer to _________.A. Schuman and ChopinB. Verdi and WagnerC. Beethoven and MozartD. Haydn and Bach15. In Capital, Marx, after long and careful study, discovered that _________.A. it is men’s social being that determines their consciousnessB. activity is basicC. socialism would be realized through class struggleD. surplus value is the source of the wealth of the capitalist class16. The essence of Darwin’s theory of evolution is _________.A. immutable fixity of speciesB. natural selectionC. artificial selectionD. none of the above17. "The Cherry Orchard" was written by _________.A. DostoyevskyB. GogolC. CorkyD. Chekhov18. Which of the following was not written by Charles Dickens?A. David CopperfieldB. Hard TimesC. Vanity FairD. Oliver Twist19. The author of "Sons and Lovers" is _________.A. Henry JamesB. Virginia WoolfC. T.S. EliotD. D.H. Lawrence20. One of the chief representatives of the Theatre of the Absurd is _________.A. Kinsley AmisB. John OsborneC. Allen GinsbergD. Samuel Beckett****** 3 ******1. Socrates was _________.A. the teacher of AristotleB. the student of PlatoC. the teacher of PlatoD. the student of Aristotle2. One of the contributions the Romans made to European culture was _________.A. the Roman empireB. the slave systemC. the production of the great epic writerD. the Roman law3. The Book of Daniel describes _________.A. the struggle of the Jews against the Syrian ruleB. the prisoners in BabylonC. the story of Noah’s ArkD. the rule of King Solomon4. The Old Testament was originally written in _________.A. HebrewB. Aramaic dialectC. GreekD. Latin5. Which of the following is not included in the Code of Chivalry?A. Loyalty to his lord.B. Fighting for the church.C. Protection of the people.D. Respect for women of noble birth.6. The goal of the Crusades was_________.A. to re-control JerusalemB. to open path to ByzantineC. to regain the Holy land --- PalestineD. to open trade route to the east7. The essence of Renaissance philosophy was _________.A. the emphasis on the greatness of manB. the glorification of GodC. the emphasis on the giving up of worldly pleasureD. the importance of wealth8. Leonardo da Vinci, in his lifetime, put down his observation in notebooks running up to _________ volumes.A. 1, 000B. 5, 000C. 3, 000D. 4, 0009. "Knowledge is power" is one of the quotations from _________.A. John LockeB. Francis BaconC. Isaac NewtonD. Gotffried Wilhelm yon Leibniz10. The most important point in Descartes’ philosophy is _________.A. I think therefore I amB. I use my senses therefore I amC. I doubt therefore I amD. None of the above11. The most important forerunners of the Enlightenment were _________.A. V oltaire and RousseauB. Diderot and MontesquieuC. John Locke and Isaac NewtonD. None of the above12. Which of the following remarks was made by Rousseau?A. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.(The Declaration of Independence 美国的《独立宣言》)B. The thirst after happiness is never extinguished in the heart of man.(Rousseau卢梭)C. Love truth, but pardon error. (V oltaire伏尔泰)D. Liberty consists in the freedom to do everything which injures no one else.(Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen(1789)法国的《人权宣言》)13. Romanticism was a movement in Europe _________.A. in the late 19th century and early 20th centuryB. in the 19th centuryC. in the late 17th century and early 18th centuryD. in the late 18th century and early 19th century14. The two most important works of Victor Hugo’s are _________.A. Atala and Rene(Chateaubriand夏多布里昂)B. Ivanhoe and The Heart of Mid – lothianWalter Scott的《艾凡赫》又译《撒克逊劫后英雄传》以及《中洛辛郡的心脏》C. Notre Dame de Paris and Les MiserablesD. Eugene Onegin and Boris Godunov普希金pushkin的《叶甫盖尼·奥涅金》和《鲍里斯·戈都诺夫》15. The man who applied Darwi n’s evolution to society was_________.A. Yah FuB. Thomas HuxleyC. Alfred Russel WallaceD. Herbert Spencer16. According to Marx,the most important thing about Feuerbach was _________.A. he proclaimed materialismB. he supported HegelC. he supported the utopian socialistsD. he put forward the idea of class struggle17. "Sunflower" was the work of _________.A. van GoghB. Paul GauguinC. Claude MonetD. Gustave Courbet18. Which of the following works is not written by Thomas Hardy?A. Far from the Madding Crowd.B. The Return of the Native.C. Tess of the d'Urberyvilles.D. A Tale of Two Cities.19. William Butler Yeats was a(n) _________ poet.A. EnglishB. ScottishC. AmericanD. Irish20. "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" was an autobiographical novel by _________.A. Ezra PoundB. William FaulknerC. James JoyceD. Ernest Hemingway****** 4 ******1. Which of the following is not true about Aristotle?A. In Aristotle the great humanist and the great man of science meet.B. Aristotle founded the school of the Stoics.C. Aristotle was tutor of Alexander.D. Aristotle wrote many books on logic, politics, poetry, rhetoric and other subjects.2. Which of the following statements is true about the Roman Empire?A. The Roman Empire had never been divided.B. The Roman Empire was divided into East and West in 395 A. D.C. The Roman Empire was later called Byzantium.D. The Roman Empire was conquered by the Turks in the 15th century.3. The Bible has been regarded as __________.A. a religious bookB. literatureC. record of great mindsD. all of the above4. The Catholic Church should be characterized as__________.A. a loosely organized religious institutionB. a highly centralized European organizationC. a highly centralized and disciplined international organizationD. a highly centralized and disciplined western organization.5. The Crusades were wars between __________.A. the Arabs and the Christian PilgrimsB. the Turks and the Christians in Western EuropeC. the Christians in Western Europe and the MoslemsD. the Arabs and the Turks6. St. Thomas Aquinas defended in his works __________.A. feudal hierarchy of societyB. divine power of feudal rulersC. the Pope' s supremacy over secular rulersD. all of the above7. The motto Montaigne put down in the essays was __________.A. What do I know?B. I doubt therefore I think.C. Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world.D. Only to stand out of my light.8. Vasco da Gama was a Portuguese navigator who __________.A. discovered the Cape of Good HopeB. discovered the route to India round the Cape of Good HopeC. explored the mouth of the AmazonD. was the first to visit Cuba and Haiti9. Which of the following laws was discovered by Newton?A. Law of buoyancy.B. Law of falling bodies.C. Law of relativity.D. Law of universal gravitation.10. In Locke' s political philosophy, the chief reason for the institution of civil government was __________.A. the protection of private propertyB. the upholding of free thinkingC. the abolishment of the rule of the churchD. regulation of economy11. Which of the following is not true about the developments of the Industrial Revolution?A. The substitution of water power for human power.B. The introduction of machine.C. The beginning of the factory system.D. The growth of modem capitalism and the working class.12. "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains. "This is a remark made by __________.A. V oltaireB. RousseauC. DiderotD. Moliere13. In the works of __________, one can see the spirit of the Age of Reason.A. HandelB. HaydnC. BachD. Mozart14. The poem of Byron' s that was translated into Chinese at the turn of the 20th century is __________.A. Don JuanB. Defence of PoetryC. Ode to a NightingaleD. Isles of Greece15. Throughout his life, Beethoven struggled to pass on through his music __________.A. the spirit of the French RevolutionB. the spirit of Byronic heroesC. ideas of a moral natureD. the praise of natural beauty16. __________ is considered to be the poet of the piano.A. MozartB. ChopinC.SchubertD. Schumann17. Which of the following works was not written by Charles Dickens?A. A Tale of Two Cities.B. The Mayor of Casterbridge.C. David Copperfield.D. Pickwick Papers.18. The author of the short story The Necklace was __________.A. O' HenryB. Jack LondonC. Mark TwainD. Maupassant19. "The apparition of these faces in the crowd/Petals on a wet, black bough. "The author of these lines was __________.A. William FaulknerB. Ezra PoundC. T. S. EliotD. William Butler Yeats20. __________was regarded as the greatest Russian literary figure of the 20th century.A. SholokhovB. TolstoyC. ChekhovD. Gorky****** 5 ******I. The contribution of ancient Greeks to world civilization is _________A. Athenian democracyB. The Olympic GamesC. The epics of HomerD. All of the above2. Which of the following is true about Herodotus?A. He is called " Father of History".B. He wrote about the wars between Athens and Sparta.C. He contributed greatly to tragic art.D. He used clever parody in his writing.3. Genesis of the Old Testament tells about __________A. the fall of manB. the creation of the worldC. Noah’s ArkD. all of the above.4. The leader of the slave uprising in 73 B. C. was _________A. NeroB. MosesC. SpartacusD. Abraham5. The great contribution of St. Jerome was __________A. the building of monasteriesB. the translation of Old and New Testaments into LatinC. the setting up of the church systemD. none of the above6. The main classes under feudalism in Western Europe were __A. monks, lords and townspeopleB. clergy, knights and peasantsC. knights, peasants and townspeopleD. clergy, lords and peasants7. Which of the following is not true about Dante?A. Dante was a great Italian poet.B. Dante wrote Beowulf.C. Dante wrote his masterpiece in Italian.D. Dante was a great political thinker.8. John Wycliffe was twice condemned as a heretic because of __________A. his teaching philosophy at OxfordB. his vigorous attack on orthodox church doctrinesC. his clerical associations and activitiesD. A&C9. Scientists in the 17th century, such as Galileo and Newton, attached great importance to ________A. deductive reasoningB. classical authorityC. direct observation and experimentD. humanist learning10. The method that Francis Bacon introduced in inquiry was _________.A. practicalB. deductive reasoningC. inductionD. experiment11. The characteristic of Dutch art in the early 17th century was ________.A. that it was still mainly religious paintingsB. that it recorded the familiar scenes and everyday life of the timeC. that it was mainly portraits of noble familiesD. that the theme was mainly court life12. Who was the first one to put forward the doctrine of separation of powers?A. LockeB. HobbesC. V oltaireD. Montesquieu13. Diderot is best known as ________.A. the author of Persian Letter s(Montesquieu)B. the author of the Origin of Human Inequality(Rousseau)C. the editor of the EncyclopedieD. the author of Philosophical Thoughts(Diderot)14. The lines "And mask in every face I meet / Masks of weakness, masks of woe" are written by _______.A. William BlakeB. SchillerC. ByronD. Keats15.B. LermontovC. ChekhovD. Turgenev16. A work jointly written by Marx and Engels is ________.A. CapitalB. The Manifesto of the Communist PartyC. Thesis on FeuerbachD. Socialism: Utopian and Scientific17. Which author won the Nobel Prize in 1925?A. Thomas HardyB. George EliotC. George Bernard ShawD. Henry James18. Which novel was acclaimed as the greatest of all anti-slavery manifestoes'?.A. Leaves of GrassB. Uncle Tom's Cabi nC. The Portrait of a LadyD. Dead Souls19. _______ was the discoverer of X - rays.A. RontgenB. Madame CurieC. RutherfordD. Einstein20. The author of The Interpretation of Dreams wasA. T. S. EliotB. James JoyceC. D. H. Lawrence D. Sigmund Freud****** 6 ******1. Who were considered as people by the ancient Athens?A. Women citizensB. AdultsC. Adult male citizensD. Foreigners and children2. Which of the following is true about Dialogues?A. Dialogues was a book written by Socrates.B. Dialogues was a record of life of Plato.C. Dialogues was a record of Socrates written by Plato.D. Dialogues was a record of Socrates's sayings by his followers.3. The great deed that David performed was ____.A. he took the Hebrews back to CanaanB. he killed Goliath, the philistine giantC. he went to the top of the mountain in Sinai to receive message from (~dD. none of the above4. In the early days of Christianity, it was a religion of _____.A. the richB. the poorC. the ruling classD. all people5. Which of the following statements about knighthood is not true?A. A nobleman was born a knight.B. Knighthood had to be earned.C. One had to be trained in order to become a knight.D. After being dubbed a knight, he had to observe the Code of Chivalry.6. The Inquisition was ______A. a church court set up to try hereticsB. an organization for church investigationC. a court in many kingdomsD. the decision - making body of the church7. Art to Michelangelo was a means by which_____.A. he expressed his opposition to the despotic ruleB. he made inquiry into the realityC. he expressed his vision of manD. B and C8. Counter- Reformation means that the Roman Catholic Church _____.A. suppressed the Reformation movement by forceB. refused to accept any reformC. re-established itself as a dynamic force in European affairs by introducing reforms and improvementsD. ganged up with the Spanish monarchy to set up the Inquisition9. Kepler's contribution to astronomy isA. his discovery of the law of inertiaB. his discovery of the Ptolemaic systemC. his discovery of the three laws of planetary motionD. none of the above10. In Essay Concerning Human Understanding, John Locke stated that .__A. all our knowledge sprang from experienceB. knowledge was powerC. every man was enemy to every manD. the world was made up of simple, active substances11. The symbolic event of the French Revolution in 1789 was _____.A. the issuance of the Declaration of IndependenceB. the founding of the First RepublicC. the seizure of the BastilleD. the publication of The Spirit of the Laws12. V oltaire was noted for his_____.A. witB. satireC. passionD. A and B13. In Critique of Pure Reason, Kant argued that________.A. knowledge is the joint product of both sense and reasonB. creation is never complete; it is ever going onC. virtue can be sustained without religious beliefD. man's greatest ills are not natural but are made by man himself14. The Lyrical Ballads was written by _________.A. ShelleyB. Wordsworth and ColeridgeC. Blake and KeatsD. Byran and Shelley15. The line "Beauty is truth, truth beauty" comes from_________.A. WordsworthB. ByronC. KeatsD. Blake16. In developing Marxist philosophy, Marx and Engels accepted _______ in German classical philosophy.A. Hegel's dialecticsB. Feuerbach's metaphysicsC. Feuerbach's materialismD. A and C17. Balzac's monumental work was ________.A. Divine ComedyB. The Human ComedyC. The Brothers KaramazovD. Les Miserables18. The author of A Doll's House was ________.A. George Bernard ShawB. ChekhovC. Henric IbsenD. Leo Tolstoy19. Which of the following works was written by William Faulkner?A. The Waste LandB. DublinersC. CantosD. The Sound and the Fury20. The poem Howl was written by ________.A. Kingsley AmisB. John OsborneC. Allen GinsbergD. Ezra Pound****** Division 1 ******Division1:1-5 DCBBC 6-10 CAACC****** Division 2 ******Division2:1-5 DCABB 6-8 BCC****** Division 3 ******Division3: 1-5 ADDBB 6-8 DDCCB****** Division 4 ******Division 4:1-5 BCCDA 6-8 CBDCC****** Division 5******Division 5:1-5 CBADC 6-8 ADBCC****** Division 6******Division 6:1-5 CBADA 6-8 DCA****** Division 7******Division 7:1-5 CDDAB 6-8 CADBA****** Division 8************ Division 9******Division 9:1-5 ACBCD 6-10 CABBA****** Division 10 ******Division 10:1-6 DADBDC 7-12 CCBBDBPart IIDirections: Explain each of the following terms in English. Write your answer in the corresponding space on the ANSWER SHEET.Division One Greek Culture and Roman Culture1. Iliad(《伊利亚特》)1) It is one of the two great ancient Greek epics by Homer. 2) It deals with the alliance of the states of the southern mainland of Greece, led by Agamemnon in their war against the city of Troy probably in the period 1200-1100 B. C. 3) The heroes are Hector on the Trojan side and Achilles and Odysseus on the Greek side. 4) In the final battle, Hector was killed by Achilles and Troy was sacked and burned by the Greeks.2. Herodotus(希罗多德)1) He is one of great ancient Greek historians. 2) He is of ten called “Father of History”. 3) He wrote about the wars between Greeks and Persians. 4) His works, full of anecdotes and digressions and lively dialogue, is wonderfully readable. 5) His object in writing was “that the great and wonderful deeds done by G reeks and Persians should not lack renown.”3. Socrates1) He was the philosopher of ancient Greece in the 5th to 4th century B.C. 2) He was considered one of the three greatest names in European philosophy. 3) He hold that philosophy took the aim to reach the conclusion of oneself and virtue was knowledge. 4) His thoughts were recorded in Dialogues by Plato. 5) He devised the dialectical method.4. Dialectical method(辩证法)1) It was devised by ancient Greek philosopher Socrates. 2) It is a method of argument, by questions and answers.5. Plato1) He was the greatest philosopher of ancient Greece, pupil of Socrates. 2) His Dialogues are important not only as philosophical writing but also as imaginative literature. Of the Dialogues he wrote, 27 have survived, including: the Apology, Symposium and the Republic. 3) Plato built up a comprehensive system of philosophy.4) His philosophy is called idealism.6. Diogenes(狄奥艮尼)1)He was one of the Cynic’s leaders in ancient Greece, who decided to live like a dog. 2) The word “cynic” means “dog” in Greek. 3) He rejected all conventions, advocated self-sufficiency and extreme simplicity in life.7. Stoics(斯多咯派)1) It was one of four ancient Greek schools of philosophers in the 4th century B.C. 2) To them , the most important thing in life was “duty”. 3) It developed into the theory that one should endure hardship and misfortune with courage. 4) The chief Stoic was Zeno.8. Doric Style(陶立克柱)1) It is one of three ancient Greek architecture styles. 2) It is also called the masculine style. 3) It is sturdy, powerful, severe-looking and showing a good sense of proportions and numbers. 4) The Doric style is monotonous and unadorned.9. Pax Romana(罗马和平)1) In the year 27 B.C. Octavius took supreme power as emperor with the tile of Augustus. 2) Two centuries later, the Roman empire reached its greatest extent in the North and East. 3) The emperors mainly relied on a strong army---the famous Roman Legions and an influential bureaucracy to exert their rules. 4) Thus the Roman enjoyed a long period of peace lasting 200 years. This remarkable phenomenon in the history is know as Pax Romana.10. Virgil(维吉尔)1) He was the greatest of Latin poets. 2) He wrote the great epic, the Aeneid. 3) The poem opened out to the future, for Aeneas stood at the head of a race of people who were to found the first the Roman republic and then the Roman Empire.Division Two The Bible and Christianity1. The Bible1) The Bible is a collection of religious writings comprising two parts: the Old Testament and the New Testament. 2) The former is about God and the laws of God; the latter, the doctrine of Jesus Christ.2. The Old Testament1)The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. 2) The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. 3)The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.3. The New Testament1) The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. 2) The New Testament is about the doctrine of Jesus Christ. 3)The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.4. Pentateuch(摩西五经)1) In the Old Testament, the oldest and most important are the first five books, called Pentateuch. 2) Pentateuch contains five books: Genesis (创世记), Exodus (出埃及记), Leviticus(利未记), Numbers (民数记), Deuteronomy (申命记).5. Genesis1) Genesis is the first one of the five books in Pentateuch in Old Testament. 2) It tells about a religious account of the origin of the Hebrews people, including the origin of the world and of man, the career of Issac and the life of Jacob and his son Joseph.6. Exodus1) Exodus is the second one of the five books in Pentateuch in the Old Testament.2) It tells about a religious history of the Hebrews during their flight from Egypt led by Moses. 3) During the period they began to receive God’s Law.7. Noah’s Ark(挪亚方舟)1) For many hundred years after Adam and Eve were driven out of Eden, the。
王佐良欧洲文化入门知识点总结一、欧洲地理概况1. 概述:欧洲是世界上第三大洲,北起北冰洋,南至地中海和黑海,西界大西洋,东临乌拉尔山脉、乌拉尔河和里海。
2. 各国概况:欧洲共有50个国家,主要包括英国、法国、德国、意大利、西班牙等国家。
欧洲拥有悠久的历史和丰富的文化遗产,是世界上重要的文明发源地之一。
二、欧洲历史概述1. 文艺复兴:欧洲文艺复兴是欧洲历史上一次重大的文化运动,是从14世纪中后期开始,15世纪到16世纪初达到高潮。
这一时期,由于欧洲贵族与市民阶级的崛起,人民的生活水平逐渐提高,文化艺术得到了迅速的发展,为欧洲历史上的大航海时代和工业革命奠定了基础。
2. 工业革命:工业革命是指从18世纪末到19世纪初,以英国为中心的一场以机器代替手工业为特征的社会经济变革。
工业革命的发生,标志着世界生产力的大幅提高,也为现代科学技术的快速发展和现代企业组织形式的出现奠定了基础。
三、欧洲文化的特点1. 宗教文化:欧洲是基督教文明的发源地,基督教文化在欧洲有着深远的影响,造就了许多宏伟的教堂和宗教艺术。
2. 古典文化:希腊罗马文化对欧洲文明有着深远的影响,许多欧洲国家的建筑、雕塑、绘画等艺术形式都受到了古典文化的启发。
3. 音乐文化:欧洲有着丰富多样的音乐文化,如奥地利的维也纳音乐、意大利的歌剧、西班牙的弗拉明戈等,许多世界著名的作曲家和音乐家都出自欧洲。
4. 文学文化:欧洲文学在世界文学史上占有重要地位,如莎士比亚、但丁、雨果、托尔斯泰等名家名作都是世界文学宝库中的珍品。
四、欧洲风俗文化1. 饮食文化:欧洲的饮食文化多种多样,以法国、意大利等国家的美食最为著名,例如法式大餐和意大利披萨饼等。
2. 节庆文化:欧洲各国有着丰富多彩的传统节庆,如法国的巴士底狄大游行、德国的慕尼黑啤酒节、西班牙的圣诞夜等。
3. 服饰文化:欧洲各国的服饰文化也十分丰富多彩,代表性的如英国的格子、法国的时装等。
五、欧洲国际关系1. 欧盟:欧洲联盟是由欧洲国家组成的政治经济联盟,旨在促进成员国之间的经济合作与发展,维护和平与安全。
Introduction1、There are many elements constituting European Culture.2、There are two major elements: Greco-Roman element and Judeo-Christian element.The richness of European Culture was created by Greco-Roman element and Judeo-Christian element.Division One:Greek Culture and Roman Culture1、The 5th century closed with civil war between Athens Sparta.2、The economy of Athens rested on an immense amount of slave labour.3、Ancient Greece’s epics was created by Homer.4、The Home r’s epics consisted of Iliad and Odyssey.5、Drama in Ancient Greece was floured in the 5th century B.C.6、Three masters in tragedy三大悲剧大师①AeschylusPrometheus Bound —→Shelly Prometheus Unbound②SophoclesOedipus the King —→ Freud’s “the Oedipus complex” (恋母情结)—→ David Herbert Lawrence’s Sons and lovers③EuripidesA.Trojan WomenB.He is the first writer of “problem plays”(社会问题剧)C.Realism can be traced back to the Ancient Greece,to be specific, Euripides.7、The only representative of Greek comedy is Aristophanes.Aristophanes writes about nature.8、History (Historical writing)“Father of History” —→ Herodotus —→ war (between Greeks and Persians)“t he greatest historian that ever lived.” —→ Thucydides —→ war (between Sparta and Athens) 9、①Euclid’s Elements解析几何It was in use in English schools until the early years of the 20th century.②ArchimedesHis work laid basis for not only geometry几何学,but also arithmetic算术, mechanics机械, and hydrostatics.流体静力学“Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world”.(Archimedes)10、The melting between Roman Culture and Greek Culture. (罗马征服希腊的标志)From 146 B.C., Latin was the language of the western half of the Roman Empire, and Greek that of the eastern half.Both Latin and Greek belong to Indo-European language.11、The dividing range in the Roman history refers to 27 B.C.12、The year 27 B.C. Divided the Roman history into two periods: republic and empire.13、The idea of Republic can be traced back to Plato’s republic.14、In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was guaranteedby the Roman legions(罗马军团)15、In the Roman history, there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was known asPax Romana.(神圣罗马帝国)16、In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was guaranteedby the Roman legions, it was known as Pax Romana17、The Roman Law protected the rights of plebeians (平民).18、The important contribution made by the Romans to the European culture was the Roman Law.19、After 395,the empire was divided into East (the Byzantine Empire) and West.20、Cicero西赛罗his legal and political speeches are models of Latin diction拉丁语用词described as Ciceronian.西赛罗式的an enormous influence on the development of European prose.21、Virgil: Aeneid 阿尼德22、The pantheon was built in 27 B.C.The world’s first vast interior space.世界上第一所最大的室内场所23、The representation form of Greek Democracy is citizen-assembly.古希腊民主的表现形式24、The embodiment of Greek democracy is citizen-assembly. 古希腊民主的具体形式25. Many of Plato’s ideas were later absorbed into Christian thought.How did the Ancient Greek philosophy develop?(1)、Three founders1、Pythagoras①All things were numbers.②Scientific mathematics.③Theory of proportion.比例的理论2、Heracleitue①Fire is the primary elements of the universe.火是万物之源②The theory of the mingling of opposites produced harmony.矛盾的对立统一3、Democritus①the atomic theory.第一个原子理论开拓者②materialism.唯物主义(2)、Three thinkers1、Socrates①He hadn’t works. We can know him from Plato’s dialogues.②The dialectical method was established by Socrates.2、Plato①The Academy is the first school in the world, it was established by Plato.②He has four works. Dialogues, Apology, Symposium and Republic.3、Aristotle①The Lyceum is the second school in the world, it was established by Aristotle.②Aristotle is a humanist.(2)、Five contending schools1、The Sophists诡辩派①Under the leadership of Protagoras.②The representative of work is On the God.诸神论③His doctrine is “man is the measure of all things”.2、The Cynics犬儒派①Under the leadership of Diogenes.②The word “cynic” means “dog” in English.③He proclaimed his brotherhood. And he had no patience with the rich and powerful.3、The Sceptics置疑学派①Under the leadership of Pyrrhon.②His thought is not all knowledge was attainable, and doubting the truth of what others accepted as true.4、The Epicureans享乐派①Under the leadership of Epicurus.②Pleasure to be the highest good in life but not sensual enjoyment.Pleasure could be attained by the practice of virtue.Epicurus was a materialist. He believed that the world consisted of atoms.5、The Stoics斯多哥派①Under the leadership of Zeno.②His thought is duty is the most important thing in life.One should endure hardship and misfortune with courage.He developed into Stoics’ duty.He was also a materialist.What’s the difference between Plato and Aristotle in terms of their philosophical ideas(system)?1、For one thing, Aristotle emphasized direct observation of nature and insisted that theory should follow fact. This is different from Plato’s reliance on subjective thinking.2、For another, he thought that “form” and matter together made up concrete individual realities. Here, too, he differed from Plato who held that ideas had a higher reality than the physical world3、Aristotle thought happiness was men’s aim in life,but not happiness in the vulgar sense, but something that could only be achieved by leading a life of reason, goodness and contemplation.What is the great significance of Greek Culture on the later-on cultural development?There has been an enduring excitement about classical Greek culture in Europe and elsewhere. Rediscovery of Greek culture played a vital part in the Renaissance in Italy and other European countries.1、Spirit of innovation创新精神The Greek people invented mathematics and science and philosophy; They first wrote history as opposed to mere annals; They speculated freely about the nature of the world and the ends of life, without being bound in the fetters of any inherited orthodoxy.2、Supreme Achievement至高无上的成就The Greeks achieved supreme achievements in nearly all fields of human endeavour: Philosophy, science, epic poetry, comedy, historical writing, architecture, etc.3、Lasting effect持续的影响①Countless writers have quoted, borrowed from and otherwise used Homer’s epics, the tragedies of Aeschylus and Sophocles and Euripides, Aristophanes’s comedies, Plato’s Dialogues,ect. ②In the early part of the 19th century, in England alone, three young Romantic poets expressed their admiration of Greek culture in works which have themselves become classics经典之作: Byron’s Isles of Greece, Shelley’s Hellas and Prometheus Unbound and Keats’s Ode on a Grecian Urn. ③In the 20th century, there are Homeric parallels in the Irishman James Joyce’s modernist masterpiece Ulysses.Division Two:The Bible and Christianity1、Christianity is by far the most influential in the West.2、Judeo-Christian tradition constitutes one of the two major components of European culture: Judaism and Christianity.3、The Jewish tradition, which gave birth to Christianity. (犹太教是基督教的前身)Both originated in Palestine, which was known as Canaan.4、The ancestors of the Jews — the Hebrews.5、The Hebrews history was recorded in the Old Testament of the Bible.6、The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament.7、The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God.8、The New Testament is about the doctrine of Jesus Christ.9、The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.10、The Old Testament consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books, called Pentateuch.摩西五经11、The Fall of Man was recorded in Genesis, Pentateuch, the Old Testament, The Bible.12、Noah’s Ark was recorded in Genesis, Pentateuch, the Old Testament, The Bible.13、The content of historical Books: 1200B.C. 586 B.C.Dealing with history of the Hebrew people from their entry into Palestine around 1200 B.C., till the fall of Palestine into hands of Assyrians and Chaldeans in 586 B.C.14、The History Books① The development of system of landed nobles.② The development of monarchy. 君主专制③ Establishment of the two Kingdoms. 两大王国的初步形成④ The settlement in the highlands⑤ Age of great prosperity under Saul, David and Solomon.15、Towards the end of the fourth century four accounts were accepted as part of the New Testament, which tells the beginning of Christianity.16、The Birth of Jesus was recorded in Matthew (马修福音书)17、The first English version of whole Bible was translated from the Latin Vulgate in 1382 and was copied out by hand by the early group of reformers led by John Wycliff.What difference between Christianity and the other religions?Christianity based itself on two forceful beliefs which separate it from all other religions.1、One is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and that God sent him to earth to live as humans live, suffer as humans suffer, and die to redeem mankind.2、The other is that God gave his only begotten son, so that whosoever believes in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. (加尔文主义也有这样的观点)What is the great significance of the translations of the bible?1、It is generally accepted that the English Bible and Shakespeare are two great reservoirs of Modern English.2、Miltion’s Paradise Lost , Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, Byron’s Cain, up to the contemporary Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and Steinbeck’s East of Eden.Division Three:The Middle Ages1、the Middle agesIn European history, the thousand-year period following the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century is called the Middle Ages.The middle ages is so called because it was the transitional period(过渡时期) between ancient times and modern times. To be specific, from the 5th century to 15th century.2、In 476 A.D. a Germanic (日耳曼) general killed the last Roman emperor and took control of the government. 西罗马476灭,东罗马1653年灭3、Feudalism in Europe was mainly a system of land holding (土地所有) — a system of holding land in exchange for military service (军事力量). The word “feudalism” was derived from the Latin “feudum”,a grant of land.4、5、The Catholic Church made Latin the official language and helped to preserve and pass on the heritage (传统) of the Roman Empire.6、The word “catholic” meant “universal”.(广泛的,无处不在的)7、St. Jerome, who translated into Latin both Old and New Testament from the Hebrew and Greek originals. Vulgate (拉丁语圣经)8、Augustine —→ “Confession” and “The City of God”9、The most important of all courses was Jerusalem. (耶路撒冷)10、Crusades went on about 200 years. There were altogether eight chief Crusades.11、The crusades ended up with the victory of Moslems.(穆斯林)By 1291 the Moslems (穆斯林) had taken over the last Christian stronghold. They won the crusades and ruled all the territory in Palestine that the Crusaders had fought to control.12、Carolingian RenaissanceCarolingian Renaissance is derived from Charlemagne’s name in Latin, Carolus. The most interesting facet (一面) of this rather minor renaissance is the spectacle (有见解) of Frankish or Germanic state reaching out to assimilate (吸收) the riches of the Roman Classical and the Christianized Hebraic culture.13、National Epics(民族史诗运动)The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly used form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages—that is, the languages of various national states (民族国家) that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics.14、Chaucer (乔叟) 的诗歌特点:① power of observation (观察)② piercing irony (敏锐的讽刺) ③ sense of humour ④ warm humanity (温暖的人性)15、Gothic① The Gothic style started in France and quickly spread through all parts of Western Europe.② It lasted from the mid-12th to the end of 15th century and, in some areas, into the 16th. More churches were built in this manner than in any other style in history.③ The Gothic was an outgrowth (丰富与发展) of the Romanesque.(罗马式)16、The Canterbury Tales:① The Canterbury Tales was written by Chaucer.② Chaucer introduced French and Italy writing the English native alliterative verse.③ Both Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales are the best representative of the middle English.17 In the middle ages, what cultures began to merge?Classical, Hebrew and Gothic heritages merged (文化融合). It paved the way for the development of what is the present-day European culture.Why is the middle ages is called Age of Faith (信仰的年代)?1、During the Medieval times there was no central government to keep the order. The only organization that seemed to unite Europe was the Christian church.2、The Christian church continued to gain widespread power and influence.3、In the Late middle ages, almost everyone in western Europe was a Christian and a member of the Christian Church. Christianity took the lead in politics, law, art, and learning for hundreds of years.4、It shaped people’s lives. That is why the middle ages is also called the “Age of Faith”.How did Feudalism develop in Europe in middle ages?1、feudalism in Europe was mainly a system of land holding — a system of holding land in exchange for military service. The word “feudalism” was derived from the Latin “feudum”, a grant of land.2、In order to seek the protection of large land-owners, the people of small farms or land gave their farms and land to large land-owners, but they still had freedom, they were called freemen.3、While the people from towns and cities did not possess farms or land. They had nothing but their freedom to be given to large land-owners, and then they lost their freedom for protection. They were called serfs.4、In Feudalism, the ruler of the government redivided the large lands into small pieces to be given to chancellors or soldiers as a reward for their service. The subdivisions were called fiefs. The owners of the fiefs was call vassals.5、There came a form of local and decentralized (分散) government.6、As a knight, he were pledged to protect the weak, to fight for the church, to be loyal to his lord and to respect women of noble birth. These rules were known as code of chivalry, from which the western idea of good manners developed.What positive influence does the Crusades exert on the European Culture?(What is the great significance of the Crusades?)1、The crusades brought the East into closer contact with the West. And they greatly influenced the history of Europe. (拉近了东西方的交流)2、During the wars while many of the feudal lords went to fight in Palestine, kings at home found opportunities to strengthen themselves. Thus among other things, Crusades helped to break down feudalism, which, in turn led to the rise of the monarchies. (取而代之的是君主专制)3、Besides, through their contact with the more cultured Byzantines and Moslems, the western Europeans changed many of their old ideas. Their desire for wealth or power began to overshadow their religious ideals.4、The Crusades also resulted in renewing people’s interest in learning and invention. By the 13th century, universities had spread all over Europe. Such knowledge as Arabic numerals (阿拉伯数字), algebra (代数), and Arab medicine (医学) were introduced to the West.5、As trade increased, village and towns began to grow into cities. And the rise of towns and trade inwestern Europe paved the way of the growth of strong national governments.How did literature develop in the middle ages?1、The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly used form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages—that is, the languages of various national states (民族国家) that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics. Both Beowulf and song of Roland were the representative works of the National Epics.2、Dante Alighieri and The Divine Comedy: (但丁与神曲)① His masterpiece, The Divine Comedy, is one of the landmarks of world literature.② The poem expresses humanistic ideas which foreshadowed (预示) the spirit of Renaissance.③ Dante wrote his masterpiece in Italian rather than in Latin. (只用意大利语创作)3、Geoffery Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales: (乔叟与坎特布雷集)① The Canterbury Tales were his most popular work.②Most of the tales are written in verse (诗) which reflects(反映) Chaucer’s innovation (改革) by introducing into the native alliterative verse (压头韵) the French and Italian styles.③ Chaucer is thus to be , regarded as the first short story teller and the first modern poet in English literature.短篇写作第一人④ Chaucer and the Canterbury Tales were representative of the Middle ages.Division Four:Renaissance and Reformation1、RenaissanceGenerally speaking, Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th century. The wo rd “Renaissance” means revival, specifically in this period of history, revival of interest in ancient Greek and Roman culture. Renaissance, in essence, was a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of conservatism (保守主义思想) in feudalist Europe and introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie (资产阶级), to lift the restrictions (禁忌) in all areas placed by the Roman church authorities.Renaissance started in Florence and Venice with the flowering of paintings, sculpture and architecture.2、In Renaissance literature of Italy, Petrarch (彼得拉克) was the representative poet.3、Intellectuals became closely tied up with the rising bourgeoisie. (人文主义兴起的重要原因Humanistic ideas to develop)4、At the heart of the Renaissance philosophy was the assertion of the greatness of man.(以人为本—人文主义的核心)5、Last Supper adapted from the New Testament of the Bible.6、Michelangelo —— David —— Sistine Chapel (from the First book of the Bible, the Genesis ) —— Dying Slave (垂死的奴隶) —— Moses (摩西)7、Raphael was best known for his Madonna. (圣母玛利亚)He painted his Madonnas in different postures against different backgrounds.8、One of the famous paintings besides the Madonnas is School of Athens (雅典学派). Plato and Aristotle engaged in argument.9、Titian —— The Venus of Urbino (维纳斯)10、John Wyclif —— translation of the Bible into English for the first time.11、Martin Luther —— translation of the whole Bible with the vernacular language.12、The reformation get its victory first in England.13、ReformationThe Reformation was a 16th century religious movement as well as a socio-political (社会政治) movement. It began as Martin Luther posted on the door of the castle church at the University of Wittenberg his 95 thesis. This movement which swept over the whole of Europe was aimed at opposing the absolute authority of the Roman Catholic Church and replacing it with the absolute authority of the Bible. The reformists engaged themselves in translating the Bible into their mother tongues.宗教改革的实质是:反对罗马天主教,直接形式是用母语翻译圣经14、CalvinismCalvinism was established by Calvin in the period of Renaissance. Presbyterian government (长老会). Only those specially elected by God can be saved (上帝的选民) . This belief serves so well to help the rising bourgeoisie on its path (有助于资本主义的兴起)。
欧洲文化入门复习资料精选第二章1、Christianity is by far the most influential in the West. 在西方最具影响力的宗教2、Judeo-Christian tradition constitutes one of the two major components of European culture: Judaism and Christianity.3、The Jewish tradition, which gave birth to Christianity. (犹太教是基督教的前身) Both originated in Palestine, which was known as Canaan.4、The ancestors of the Jews — the Hebrews. 犹太人的祖先是希伯来人5、They called “Hebrews”,which means “wanderers”。
商旅6、About 1300 B.C., the Hebrews came to settle (定居) in Palestine.7、The Hebrews history was recorded in the Old Testament of the Bible.8、The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament.9、The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. 上帝与上帝的教义10、The New Testament is about the doctrine (教义) of Jesus Christ11、The New Testament is, in essence (实质上), the four accounts (四福音书), written by the four disciples.弟子12、The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.13、Bible is representative of Christianity and 新旧约14、The Old Testament名词解释The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.15、The New Testament名词解释The Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. The New Testament is about the doctrine (教义) of Jesus Christ. The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God and Man.16、The Old Testament consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books, called Pentateuch.摩西五经17、Pentateuch名词解释The Old Testament consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books, called Pentateuch. Pentateuch contains five books:Genesis (创世记), Exodus (出埃及记), Leviticus(教义记), Numbers (逃亡记), Deuteronomy (摩西遗言记)。
一.细节知识点(一)Greek &Roman1.drama●Aeschylus埃斯基洛斯:Prometheus Bound被束缚的普罗米修斯,Persians波斯人,Agamennon●Sophcles索发克里斯:(tragic art)Oedipus the king, Electra,Antigone●Euripides欧里庇得斯:“problem plays”,Andromache,Medea,Trojan Women●Aristophanes阿里斯多芬尼斯:Frogs,Clouds,Wasps,Birds2.Historian●Herodotus:*“father of history”* from Greek to Persians*full of anecdotes and dialogues ,interesting●Thucydides: *younger than Herodotus *Athens to Sparta andAthens to Syracuse希拉库萨 *style is imagination and power*the greatest historian that ever lived3.philosophy and science●Pythagoras毕达哥拉斯: *bold thinker *believe everything isnumbers* scientific mathematics----point,line ,magnitude震级,surface,body,first proportion●Heracleitus赫拉克里克:*fire is the primary element ofuniverse*sayings: all is flux,nothing stationary/you cannot steptwice into the same river/fresh waters are ever flowing inupon you/ the sun is new every day.*believe mingling of opposites ,opposites produce harmony(二) Bibletranslation●Latin version:383-405AD by St .Jerome●English version:1382 John Wycliff(三)Middle ages/ Medieval1. AD 476 Roman power was gone2. after 1054 Church was divided into Roman Catholic and EasternOrthodox Church3.The Crusades: 1096-1291 last for about 200 years4.learning:● Charlemagne查理曼大帝:*western and central Europe*father of Europe .Emperor of Romans in 800*Carolingian Renaissance加洛林*encourage Christian religion and ancient learning by settingmonastery schools● Alfred the Great阿尔弗雷德大帝:*ruler of Anglo Saxon of Wessex*Encourage teacher and scholars , Wessex center of learning*Anglo Saxon chronicles英国编年史● St .Thomas Aquinas*Italian philosopher ,scholasticism经院哲学*Summa Contra Centiles , Summa Theologiae 《神学大全》*building a society of “God’s rule””God’s will”,Pope is“Christ’s plenipotentiary基督的全权代表” above secular rulers● Roger Bacon罗杰培根*a British monk ,one of the earliest advocates of experimentalscientific research and observation*works :Opus maius ,encyclopedia of the sciences of his time5.Literature●Beowulf :an Anglo Saxon epic● Song of Roland ,La Chanson de Gestes: French● Dante:the divine of comedy神曲 greatest poet of Italy●Geoffrey Chaucer 乔叟:English poet :canterbury tales坎特伯雷故事集,(first short story teller, first modern poet in Englishliterature )(四)Renaissance1.started in Florence and Venice, Italy2.heart of Renaissance philosophy is greatness of man ,humanism3.masterpieces :● Giovanni Boccaccio薄伽丘:Decameron十日谈(the greatestachievement of prose fiction 散文小说in the middle ages)● Francesco Petrarch彼德拉克:*discover Cicero’s Oration Oro Arochia,a Roman defense of poetry*Works: Canzoniers(lyrical), Africa,Metrical Epistles,OnContempt for the Worldly Life,On Solitude,Ecologues, The Letters●Giotto乔托:*forerunner of Renaissance,led the way to humanism,realistic depiction of space*works: Flight into Egypt ,Betrayal of Juda s●Giorgione乔尔乔捏:Tempesta , Sleeping Venus(use of colour schemes to unify picture and most revolutionary result in this sphere)●Leonardo da Vinci:*painter, sculptor, architect, musician, mathematician, engineer,inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist, and writer.*12 paintings 5000 books ,Renaissance man in the true sense of word.*Last Supper(most famous religious pictures), Mona Lisa(most portrait)●Michelangelo Buonarroti:* an Italian sculptor, painter, architect, poet, and engineer* David ,Sistine Chapel ,Dying Slave ,Moses●Raphael:Madonna(Virgin Mary)各种圣母画,school of Athens● Rabelais拉伯雷: French ,Gargantua and Pantagruel《巨人传》● Pleiade 七星诗社:French ,leader is Pirre de Ronsard(Sonnet PourHelene) ,发扬保卫法兰西语言●Cervantes塞万提斯:Spanish,Don Quixote 1062● Erasmus:Dutch, Renaissance humanist, Catholic priest, teacher,and theologian,Greek edition of New Testament ,Praise ofFolly《愚人颂》●Durer : German ,follower of Martin Lutherthe four horsemen of apocalypse 天启四骑士knight ,death and the devil●Thomas more:英国人,Utopia乌托邦,conclusion●Shakespeare:英国人Twelfth night ,As you like it ,Hamlet,Othello,King Lear ,Macbeth,Antony andCleopatra,Sonnets, King Henry 5,6二 .名词解释1.RenaissanceRenaissance is a period of western civilization between 14-17thcentury. The word Renaissance means revival .it also means therevival of interest in ancient Greek and Roman culture,whichstarted in Florence and Venice ,Italy . the heart of~is humanism.2 . Reformation~ was a 16th century religious movement as well as a socio-political movement ,which began with Martin Luther’s 95 theses in1517. The Reformation began as an attempt to reform the RomanCatholic Church.3.Middle ages :~is also called Medieval ,”the year of faith”* or the thousand-year period following the fall of the western roman empire in the 5thcentury .it came between ancient times and modern times .During thisperiod Germanic kingdom grew into nations such asEngland ,French ,Spain, Italy, Germany.4 . Feudalism~is a system of holding land in exchange for military service .the word~was derived from the Latin “feudum” , a grant of land.5 Catholic~Means” universal”. ~church was a highly centralized and disciplinedinternational religious organization .in the middle ages ,almostevery Europeans belonged to it.6. old testament~is one of the two parts of the Bible ,which is about the God and the laws of God. Testament means agreement—the agreement between Godand man.7. Pentateuch 摩西五书The oldest first five parts of the Bible includingGenesis ,Exodus,Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy8. doric :one of Greek architecture styles,~is also called masculine style .it’s sturdy坚定的,powerful,severelooking ,showing sense ofproportions and numbers.Ionic:feminine style graceful and elegant,showing wealth of ornament装饰三.问答1. What happened in Western Europe after the decline of the Roman Empire?After the Roman Empire lost its predominance优势, a great many Germanic Kingdoms began to grow into the nations know as England, France, Italy, and Germany in its place. These nations of Western Europe were in the scene of frequent wars and invasions. The political unity had given way to widespread destruction and confusion. Hunger and disease killed many lives and village fell into ruin and great areas of land lay waste. There was no central government to keep the order. The only organization that seemed to unite Europe was the Christian church. Christianity was almost the all and the one of Medieval lives in western Europe and took lead in politics, law, art, and learning for hundreds years.2. What were the cultural characteristics of the period from 500 to 1000?Above all, the cultural characters of this period were the heritage and achievement of Roman culture and the emergence of Hebrew and Gothic culture.3.What made Italy the birthplace of the Renaissance?Because of its geographical position, foreign trade developed early in Italy. This brought Italy into contact with other cultures and gave rise to urban economy and helped Italy accumulate wealth which was an essential factor for the flowering of art and literature.For two centuries beginning from the late 15th century, Florence was the golden city which gave birth to a whole generation of poets, scholars, artists and sculptors. There was in Florence a revival of interest in classical learning and rising of humanist ideas.And to spread the new ideas, libraries and academies were founded.In the 15th century printing was invented and helped to spread humanist ideas.4.How did Italian Renaissance art and architecture break away from medieval tr aditions?The Italian Renaissance art and architecture radically broke away from the medi eval methods of representing the visible pared with the latter,the fo rmer has the following distinct features:⑴Art broke away from the domination of church and artist who used to be craftsmen commissioned by the church became a separate strata doing noble and crea tive work⑵Themes of painting and architecture changed from purely celestial realm focusing on the stories of the Bible,of God and Mary to an appreciation of all a spects of nature and man;⑶The artists studied the ruins of Roman and Greek temples and put many of theprinciples of ancient civilization into their works;⑷Artists introduced in their works scientific theories of anatomy and perspective.欢迎您的下载,资料仅供参考!致力为企业和个人提供合同协议,策划案计划书,学习资料等等打造全网一站式需求⑸。
论述题1、人文主义人文主义一词也可译作“人道主义”,但在西方思想史上,人文主义特指人道主义的最初历史形态,是文艺复兴时期人文学者的世界观。
人文主义是文艺复兴运动的旗帜,是文艺复兴时期新兴资产阶级在反封建反教会斗争中形成的思想体系。
它主张一切以人为本,反对神的权威,把人从中世纪的神学枷锁下解放出来,对“人”的肯定成了人文主义思想的核心。
其主要内容表现在:1、用人权反对神权;2、用个性解放反对禁欲主义;3、用理性反对蒙昧主义;4、用户中央集权,反对封建割据。
2、古希腊罗马文化繁荣的条件古典时代希腊文化出现空前繁荣并非偶然,而是希腊奴隶制城邦充分发展的必然结果。
首先,希腊各城邦奴隶制经济的发展是雅典古典文化繁荣的物质基础,早在古风时代,随着城邦的形成和海外殖民,希腊对外经济交流不断增强,城邦的工商业有了长足的发展,并造就了一个崇尚民主与自由的新工商业奴隶主阶层。
他们领导了城邦的民主政治建设,大力发展工商业经济,为文化发展创造了条件。
公元前5世纪上半叶希波战争的胜利,进一步有力推动了雅典等城邦的工商业发展,使希腊奴隶制经济达到了空前的繁荣,这就为文化的繁荣奠定了物质基础。
其次,希腊城邦制度及其民主政治与公共生活,激发了城邦公民的文化创造力,同时又为文化发展提供了宽松的政治环境。
古代希腊在城邦制度下,各城邦总的来说都是共和政体,但民主的程度却很不一样,从而使各城邦的民主制度呈现出多样化。
这种政治多元性为城邦之间互相比较、互相影响、互相学习和竞争提供了条件,开阔了各城邦政治家、思想家和普通公民的政治视野,产生了各种政治学说。
城邦的公共生活培养了公民的公共意识,使他们能更好的为城邦服务。
再次,古希腊的文化成就,为古典时代文化的繁荣铺垫了浓厚的文化背景。
《荷马史诗》是希腊文学的渊源,古典时代的文学作品无一不受到它的影响。
《神谱》是希腊自然哲学的思想渊源,其中包含的理性思维,促成了哲学思维的诞生。
抒情时代的诗歌是希腊戏剧产生的基础。
欧洲文化入门复习题答案一、填空题1. 欧洲文化通常指的是欧洲大陆上各国的文化遗产和艺术成就,其中包括文学、艺术、音乐、哲学等多个领域。
2. 欧洲文艺复兴起源于14世纪的意大利,是欧洲历史上的一个重要时期,标志着从中世纪向现代过渡。
3. 法国大革命是18世纪末至19世纪初的一场政治、社会和文化变革,对欧洲乃至世界历史产生了深远的影响。
4. 欧洲的宗教改革运动主要发生在16世纪,它导致了基督教的分裂,形成了天主教和新教两大教派。
5. 欧洲启蒙运动是18世纪的一场思想解放运动,强调理性、科学和批判精神,对现代民主政治和文化有着重要影响。
二、选择题1. 欧洲文艺复兴的中心是(C)A. 法国巴黎B. 德国柏林C. 意大利佛罗伦萨D. 英国伦敦2. 欧洲宗教改革的领导者之一是(B)A. 马丁·路德B. 约翰·加尔文C. 托马斯·阿奎那D. 但丁3. 欧洲启蒙运动的代表人物包括(D)A. 但丁B. 达芬奇C. 米开朗基罗D. 伏尔泰4. 法国大革命的标志性事件是(A)A. 巴士底狱的攻占B. 拿破仑的加冕C. 法国的君主立宪制D. 法国的共和制确立三、简答题1. 简述欧洲文艺复兴的特点。
答:欧洲文艺复兴的特点包括对古典文化的复兴,对人文主义的强调,艺术和科学领域的创新,以及对个人主义的推崇。
这一时期的艺术家和学者开始重视人的价值和能力,探索自然和人类社会的真实面貌。
2. 欧洲宗教改革对欧洲社会产生了哪些影响?答:欧洲宗教改革对欧洲社会产生了深远的影响,包括促进了宗教多元化,引发了一系列的宗教战争,推动了民族国家的形成,以及促进了教育和文化的普及。
四、论述题1. 论述欧洲启蒙运动对现代民主政治和文化的影响。
答:欧洲启蒙运动对现代民主政治和文化产生了深远的影响。
它提倡理性思考和科学方法,反对迷信和盲从,为现代民主政治的建立提供了思想基础。
同时,启蒙运动还强调个人自由和权利,推动了法律和制度的改革,促进了社会的进步和文明的发展。
欧洲文化入门第一章特洛伊战争:特洛伊战争是以争夺世上海伦(Helen)为起因,以阿伽门农(Agamemnon)及阿喀琉斯(Achilles)为首的希腊军进攻以帕里斯及赫克托尔为首的的十年攻城战。
然而根据《世界通史》的论述,特洛伊地处交通要道,商业发达,经济繁荣,人民生活富裕。
亚细亚各君主结成联军,推举阿伽门农为统帅。
他们对地中海沿岸最富有的地区早就垂涎三尺,一心想占为己有,于是以海伦为借口发动战争,这才是特洛伊战争的真正目的。
民主制城邦:指全民行使权利的城邦,但全民仅指成年男性公民,而且公民权也是从父辈那里世袭而来。
荷马:古希腊盲诗人。
相传记述了公元前12~前11世纪特洛伊战争,以及关于海上冒险故事的古希腊长篇叙事代表作——史诗《伊利亚特》和《奥德赛》,即是他根据民间流传的短歌综合编写而成。
他生活的年代,当在公元前10~9、8世纪之间。
他的杰作《荷马史诗》,在很长时间里影响了西方的宗教、文化和伦理观。
伊利亚特:相传是由盲诗人荷马所作。
是重要的古希腊文学作品,也是整个西方的经典之一。
《伊利亚特》全诗共15,693行,分为24卷,主要内容是讲述了在阿伽门农的率领下,古希腊南部各城邦联合征战特洛伊的故事。
它通过对特洛伊战争的描写,歌颂英勇善战、维护集体利益、为集体建立功勋的英雄。
奥德赛:又译《奥德修纪》,是古希腊最重要的两部史诗之一《奥德赛》延续了《伊利亚特》的故事情节,相传为盲诗人荷马所作。
这部史诗是西方文学的奠基之作,是除《吉尔伽美什史诗》和《伊利亚特》外现存最古老的西方文学作品。
讲述了奥德修斯在特洛伊战争结束后返回家乡绮色佳岛的故事,书中讲述了奥德修斯在漫长的海上航行中的种种冒险经历,以及最终如何与忠实的妻子泊涅罗泊重新团聚的故事。
荷马史诗:《荷马史诗》相传是由古希腊盲诗人荷马创作的两部长篇史诗——《伊利亚特》和《奥德赛》的统称,是他根据民间流传的短歌综合编写而成。
《荷马史诗》以扬抑格六音部写成,集古希腊口述文学之大成,是古希腊最伟大的作品,也是西方文学中最伟大的作品。
一Summary of Greek culture and Roman culture and LiteraturePart one GreekLiteratureHomer was considered to be Author of epics,and his two epics are Iliad and Odyssey.Sappho and Pindar were Lyric poetsThree Tragedy WritersAeschylus:Prometheusbound,Persians,Agamemnon, Tragic dramatistSophocles:Oedipus the King,Electra,Antigone,Tragic dramatistEuripides:Medea,Trojan Women, Andromache, Tragic dramatistComedy writers:Aristophanes :Frogs ,Clouds,Wasps,Birds Comedy writerHistory:Herodotus wrote about wars between Greeks and Persians Father of historyThucydides wrote about wars between Athens and Sparta and Athens and Syracuse. the greatest historian that has ever lived. Philosophy and science:The greatest names in European rhi;osophy are Socrates plato and ArisotleContending schools of thoughtThe cynics;diogenesThe septics: pyrrhonThe epicureans: epicurusThe stoics: zeroScience:Euclid:Elements , a textbook of geometryArchimedes: did important work not only in geometry, but also in arithemetic mechanics and hydrostaticsArchitecturea. ArtGreek art is a visual proof of Greek civilization.b. ArchitectureGreek architecture can be grouped into 3 styles (1). the Doric Style ( masculine style ) ---- is sturdy (strong and firm), powerful, severe looking, showing a good sense of proportions and numbers. (2). the Ionic Style ( feminine style ) ---- is graceful and elegant (slightly ornamental style ) ( While the Doric Style is monotonous and unadorned, the Ionic style often shows a wealth of ornament) (3). Corinthian Style ---- is known for its ornamental luxuryPart Two RomanLatin Literature a. Prose Two men active on the political scene wrote memorable prose . Marcus Tullius Cicero (106.43B.C.) He played an important role in the Roman senate Noted for his oratory and fine writing style His legal and political speeches ar e models of Latin diction. Ciceronian.eloquent, oratorical manner of writing . Julius caesar (102/100?.44B.C.)a general, dictator, assassinated. He recorded what he did and saw in the various military campaigns These writings, collected in his Commentaries, are models of succinct Latin. He use language with economy and ferocity I came, I saw, I conquered..b. Poetry. Lucretius (93.50 B.C.) He wrote the philosophical poem On the Nature of Things. Virgil (70.19 B.C.) The greatest of Latin poets, wrote the great epic, the Aenied Architecture, Painting and Sculpturei. ArchitectureThe Romans were great engineers. They covered their world from one end to the other with roads, bridges, aqueducts, theatres and arenas . The Pantheon The greatest and the best preserved Roman temple, which was built in 27 B.C. and reconstructed in the 2nd century A.D . Pont du GardIt is an exceptionally well-preserved aqueduct that spans a wide valley in south France. thecolosseum It is an enormous amphitheatre built in the centre of Rome in imperial times. A masterpiece of engineering, it held more than 5000 spectators. Its interior is two-third of a mile round. The colosseum was used for games, contests and shows.ii. PaintingRoman painting was strongly influenced by the art of Greece. Unfortunately much of the painting no longer exists. There are, however, some wall-paintings from Pompeii and other towns near Naples. These wall-paintings include still lifes, landscape paintings and figure paintings.iii. Sculptureshe wolfA statue which illustrates the legend of the creation of RomeToday at the site of the city憇founding, there stands a statue of the she-wolf二Summary of Rise of chrisitianityTwo beliefs which separate Christianity from all other religious: ---Jesus Christ is the son of God, and God sent him to earth to live as humans live, suffer as humans suffer, and die to redeem mankind. --- God gave his only begotten son, so that whosoever believes in himshould not perish, but have ever lasting life. At the heart of Christianity is the life of Jesus: How he lived and died to redeem the whole human race.1) The life of JesusNazareth /Augustus/Jew/local synagogue/30/ baptism/John Baptist /Galilee/ throughout Palestine/preach/3 years/to Jerusalem for the Passover/betrayed by Juda/crucified as a revolutionary preacher and dangerous reformer.2) The Spread of Christianity Constantine issued the Edict of Milan in 313. It granted religious freedom to all, and made Christianity legal. In 392 A.D., Emperor Theodosius made Christianity the official religion of the empire and outlawed all ot her religious. Christianity changed from an object of oppression to a weapon in the hands of the ruling class. After the fifth century Nestorianism reached China.三Summery of Important Figures in arts in Renaissance periodGiotto “Flight into Egypt”“Betrayal of Judas” forerunner of renaissan ceBrunelleschi showed a systematic use of perspectiveDonatello “David” one of the first artists engaged in anatomyGiorgione “Sleeping Venus” made happy use of colour schemes to unify his picturesDa Vinci “Last Supper” “Mona Lisa”Michelangelo “David”“SistineChapel”“DyingSlave”“Moses”Raphael Known for his “Madonna(Virgin Mary)”Titian Oil color the most prolific of the great Venetian painters of Western WorldRenaissance in spainEl Greco (1541---1614) a Spanish painter Major Work: The Burial of Count OrgazRenaissance in Germany Albrecht Durer (1471---1528) He was the leader of the Renaissance in Germany. He was a master of woodcut. His engravings are unsurpassed and his Water colours of animals and plants are exceedingly sensitive. Major Works: The Four Horsemen of Apocalpse Knight, Death and Devil,1513 Hans Holbein (the younger) (1497--- 1543) He was the last great German master of the 16th century. His best known works are his portraits. Major Works: Erasmus of Rottendam Portrait of Henry VIIIRenaissance in the Netherlands Erasmus (about 1466?---1536) a great Dutch scholar and humanist. P-160 Work: The Praise of Folly Renaissance in Flanders Pieter Bruegel (the Elder) (about 1525---1569) a Flemish painter of landscape and scenes of rurallife. He was called peasant Bruegel Major Works: The Land of Cockayne (1567) The Return of the Hunters (1565)四Summery of Important Facts of The Seventeenth Century I,IINicolaus Copernicus was Forerunner of modern science. His chief work The Revolution of the Heavenly Orbs was published in 1543. In this mathematical description of the heavens, Copernicus put forward his heliocentric theory that the sun, not the earth, is the center of the universe. It laid the foundation for many future scientific discoveries.Kepler (1571---1630) Kepler‘s Laws (three laws of planetary motion): 1). Each planet moves in an ellipse, not a perfect circle, with the sun at one focus; 2). Each planet moves more rapidly when near the sun than farther from it; 3). The distance of each planet from the sun bears a definite relation to the time period the planet took to complete a revolution around the sun. This law was reduced to a mathematical formula: the square of the period of revolution of a planet about the sun is proportional to the cube of the mean distance of the planet from the sun. These three laws formed the basis of all modern planetary astronomy and led to Newton‘s discovery of the laws of gravitation2) Galileo Galilei (1564--- 1642)He was the first to apply the telescope to the study of the skies.What he saw in the sky with the help of the telescope proved that Ptolemy‘s geocentric systemsimply would not work and that Copernicus‘s powerful hypothesis had been right. Galileo discovered the importance of acceleration in dynamics. Galileo was also the first to establish the law of falling bodies.3) Sir Isaac Newton (1642---1727)Achievements: As a scientist, Newton displayed his talents in many fields. As a mathematician, he invented calculus. In optics, he discovered that white light is composed of all the colours of the spectrum. Yet it was in the field of physics that Newton established his name. Of all his achievements in physics, his discovery of the law of the universal gravitation is the most important.4) Gottfried Wilhelm von LeibnizLeibniz was a German philosopher, scientist, mathematician, historian and diplomat. He distinguishes three levels of understanding: the self-conscious, the conscious and unconscious or subconscious. Many of his theories have given rise to important developments of modern science, ranging from Freudian psychology to Einsteinian physics.5) Invention of New InstrumentsThe miscroscope was invented in 1590. The telescope was invented in 1608 by a Dutchman. Galileo invented the thermometer and one of his pupils made the barometer. The pendulum clock appeared in 1656.五Summery of Important figures and Facts of The Seventeenth Century V1) Baroque arta) Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini (1598---1680)Italian sculptor and architect, the prominent figure of Italian Baroque. Major works: David 1623 The Ecstasy of St.Theresa 1645-1652b) Michelangelo Caravaggio (1573--- 1610)Italian painter of the baroque whose influential works, such as Deposition of Christ (1604), are marked by intense realism and revolutionary use of light. Major works: The calling of St. Matthew The Cardsharpsc) Francesco Borromini (1599---1667)Italian architect and sculptor of the baroque. He revolutionized architecture with his treatment of space, light, and geometr ic shapes.d) Peter Paul Rubens (1577--- 1640)The greatest of painters of Flemish school. Major works: Marie de Medici, Queen of France, Landing in MarseilliesThe Raising of the Crosse) Diego Velazquez (1599---Major work: The Maids of Honor2) Dutch Protestant ArtVan Rijn Rembrandt (1606---1669) The principal Dutch Baroque painter and etcher. Major works: Blinding of Samson ThePolishRider3) Art and Architecture in Francemid 17th century, France the richest and the most powerful country in Europe. Louis XIV the greatest patron. Palace of Versailles Garden Front (1669 ---1685) East Front of the Louvre (1667 --- 1685) St. Paul‘s Catherdral by the English scientist and architect Christopher Wren.4) MusicA distinction is usually common between early baroque music ( prior to1650, Monteverdi, Frescobaldi, Carissimi, etc.) and late baroque music ( Scarlatti, Vivaldi, Bach, Handel, etc.), the development of the latter leading to the Musical Enlightenment.六Summery of Important facts of The Enlightenment1) French Philosophy and LiteratureMontesquieu “Persian Letters” “the Spirit of the laws”Separation of powersVoltaire “Candide” most famous of his novels “LettrePhilosophiques”Rousseau “the Social contract” “the Confessions” “The Origin of Human Inequality” one of the greatest figures of French enlightenmentDiderot “Encyclopedie” “Elements of Physiology”“Philosophical Thoughts”2)English LiteraturePope spokesman in verse of the Age of Reason, translation of Homer, good at heroic couplet “Essay on Criticism”Defoe one of the greatest fiction writer of the 18th century England “Robinson Crusoe”Swift the foremost satirist in the English language and one of the satiric masters of all time “A modest Proposal” “Gulliver’s travels”Henry Fielding Father of the English novel“The history of Tom Jones”“a foundling”Samuel Richardson The founder of English domestic novel “Pamela”Samuel Johnson editor of “A Dictionary of the English Language”3) German Literature and Philosophy Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729 --- 1781) a. Minna Von Barnhelm (1767) b. Nathan the Wise (1779)c. Laocoon (1766)d. HamburgischeDramaturgie Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 ---1832)a) The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774)b) Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (1795---1796)c) Wilhelm Meister’s Travels (1821---1829)d) Fauste) Poetry and TruthJohann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (1759 --- 1805) Immanuel Kant (1724 --- 1804)4)Rococo Arta) Salon de la Princesse, Hotel de Soubiseb) Rococo PaintersAntoine Watteau (1684 --- 1721) Francois Boucher (1703 --- 1770)5)The Musical EnlightenmentJ.S.Bach Christianity Major musicians of the musical EnlightenmentHandel ”Messiah” being his crowning masterpieceBach and Handel showed the world Baroque musical architecture at its imposing best.The Baroque period was followed by the Classical Period, roughly between 1750 and 1820.Haydn “String Quartets”“Symphonies” Classical period Viennese schoolMozart “Choral Music”“Concertos”“Operas”“Symphonies”Beethoven occupy a Pivotal position, leaning in much of his work towards the Romantic Movement in Music。
欧洲文化入门复习资料第一章填空题:1. The richness of European Culture was created by ________element and _________element. Greco-Roman Judeo-Christian2. The Homer’s epics consisted of_________. Iliad and Odyssey3. ________ is the first writer of “problem plays”. Euripides4. __________ is called “Father of History”. Herodotus5. ________The greatest historian that ever lived. ThucydidesThe dividing range in the Roman history refers to ________. 27 B.C.“I came, I saw, I conquered.” By _______. Julius CaesarThe representation form of Greek Democracy is __________. citizen-assembly.判断题1. Euclid says “Give me a place to stand, and I will move the world”. (×) Archimedes2. Herodotus’s historical writing is on the war between Anthens and Sparta. (×) Greeks and Persians名词解释:1. Pax Romana答:In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time,which was guaranteed by the Roman legions, it was known as Pax Romana2. “Democracy” in ancient Greece答: 1)Democracy means “exercise of power by the wholepeople”, but in Greece by “the whole people” the Greeks meant only the adult male citizens.2)Women, children, foreigners and slaves were excluded from Democracy.论述题:1. How did the Greek Culture originate and develop?答:1) Probably around 1200 B.C., a war was fought between Greece and troy. This is the war that Homer refers to in his epics.2) Greek culture reached a high point of development in the 5th century B.C.A. The successful repulse of the Persian invasion early in the 5th century.B. The establishment of democracy.C. The flourishing of science, philosophy, literature, art and historical writing in Athens.3)The 5th century closed with civil war between Athens and Sparta.4) In the second half of the 4th century B.C., Greece was conquered by Alexander, king of Macedon. Whenever he went and conquered,whenever Greek culture was found.5) Melting between Greek culture and Roman culture in 146B.C., the Romans conquered Greece.2. What is the great significance of Greek Culture on the later-on cultural development?答: There has been an enduring excitement about classical Greek culture in Europe and elsewhere Rediscovery of Greek culture played a vital part in the Renaissance in Italy and other European countries.1) Spirit of innovationThe Greek people invented mathematics and science and philosophy; They first wrote history as opposed to mere annals; They speculated freely about the nature of the world and the ends of life, without being bound in the fetters of any inherited orthodoxy.2) Supreme AchievementThe Greeks achieved supreme achievements in nearly all fields of human endeavour努力: Philosophy, science, epic poetry, comedy, historical writing, architecture, etc.3) Lasting effectA. Countless writers have quoted, borrowed from and otherwise used Homer’s epics, the tragedies of Aesc hylus and Sophocles and Euripides, Aristophanes’s comedies, Plato’s Dialogues,ect.B. In the early part of the 19th century, in England alone, three young Romantic poets expressed their admiration of Greek culture in works which have themselves become clas sics: Byron’s Isles of Greece, Shelley’s Hellas and Prometheus Unbound and Keats’s Ode on a Grecian Urn.C. In the 20th century, there are Homeric parallels in the Irishman James Joyce’s modernist masterpiece Ulysses.3. What is the similarity and difference between Greek culture and Roman culture?答:1) similarities:A. Both peoples had traditions rooted in the idea of the citizen-assembly.B. Their religions were alike enough for most of their deities to be readily identified, and their myths to be fused.C. Their languages worked in similar ways, both being members of the Indo-European language family.2) differences:A. The Romans built up a vast empire; the Greeks didn’t, except for the brief moment of Alexander’s conquests, which soon disintegra ted.B. The Romans were confident in their own organizational power, their military and administrative capabilities.4. What is the Rome historical background?答:1) The history of Rome divided into two periods: Before the year 27 B.C., Rome had been a republic; from the year 27 B.C., Octavius took supreme power as emperor with the title of Augustus and Roman Empire began.2) Two centuries later, the Roman Empire reached its climax, marked by land area’s extension: Encircling the Mediterranean.3) Strong military power: the famous Roman legions.4) In the Roman history ,there came two hundred years of peaceful time, which was guaranteed by the Roman legions, it was known as Pax Romana.5) Another important contribution made by the Romans to European culture was Roman Law.6) The empire began to decline in the 3rd century.A. In the 4th century the emperor Constantine moved the capital from Rome to Byzantium. Renamed it Constantinople (modern Istanbul).B. After 395, the empire was divided into East (The Byzantine Empire) and WestC. In 476 the last emperor of the West was deposed by Goths and this marked the end of the West Roman Empire.D. The East Roman Empire collapsed when Constantinople fell to the Turks in 1453.第二章填空题:1. ___________is by far the most influential in the West. Christianity2. The Hebrews history was recorded in _________of the Bible. the Old Testament3. The New Testament is about _________. the doctrine of Jesus Christ4. The story about God’s flooding to the human being and only good-virtue being saved was recorded in Genesis, Pentateuch, the Old Testament, the Bible, which was known as _________. Noah’s Ark.5. The Birth of Jesus was recorded in ________. Matthew6. The story about Jesus being pinned in the cross to death was known as _________. The Last Supper.7. The first English version of whole Bible was translated from the Latin Vulgate in 1382 and was copied out by hand by the early group of reformers led by _________. John Wycliff.名词解释:1. The Old TestamentThe Bible was divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. The word “Testament” means “agreement”, the agreement between God andMan.2. PentateuchThe Old Testament consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books, called Pentateuch. Pentateuch contains five books: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy.3. GenesisGenesis is one of the five books in Pentateuch, it tells about a religious account of the origin of the Hebrews people, including the origin of the world and of man, the career of Issac and the life of Jacob and his son Joseph.4. ExodusExodus is one of the five books in Pentateuch, it tells about a religious history of the Hebrews during their flight from Egypt, the period when they began to receive God’s Law. Joshua brought the people safely back toCanaan.5. The Book of DanielThe Book of Daniel belongs to The Old Testament of the Bible. It tells about the Hebrews being carried away into Babylon.论述简答题:1. What are the beliefs of Christianity?答:Christianity based itself on two forceful beliefs which separate itfrom all other religions.1)One is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and that God sent him to earth to live as humans live, suffer as humans suffer, and die to redeem mankind.2)The other is that God gave his only begotten son , so that whosoever believes in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.2. What are the different translation editions of the Bible?答:1)The oldest extant Greek translation of the Old Testament is known as the Septuagint. And it is still in use in the Greek Church today. But it only translated the Old Testament.2) The most ancient extant Latin version of the whole Bible is the Vulgate edition, which was done in 385-405 A.D. By St. Jerome in common people’s language. It became the officialBible of the Roman Catholic Church throughout the world.3) The first English version of whole Bible was translated from the Latin Vulgate in 1382 and was copied out by hand by the early group of reformers led by John Wycliff.4) After John Wycliff’s version, appeared William Tyndale’s version. It was based on the original Hebrew and Greek sources.5) The Great Bible ordered by Henry Ⅷin 1539 to be placed in all theE nglish churches was in part founded on Tyndale’s work.6) The most important and influential of English Bible is the “Authorized” or “King James” version, first published in 1611. It was produced by 54 biblical scholars at the command of King James. With its simple, majestic Anglo-Saxon tongue, it is known as the greatest book in the English languages.7) The Revised Version appeared in 1885, and the standard American edition of the Revised Version in 1901.8) The Good News Bible and the New English Bible.3. What is the great significance of the translations of the bible?答:1) It is generally accepted that the English Bible and Shakespeare are two great reservoirs of Modern English.2) Miltion’s Paradise Lost, Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, Byron’s Cain, u p to the contemporary Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and Steinbeck’s East of Eden. They are not influenced without the effect of the Bible.第三章填空题:1. In _______ a Germanic (日耳曼) general killed the last Roman emperor and took control of the government. 4762. After 1054, the church was divided into _________ and_______. theRoman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church.3. _______ is the one who translated into Latin both Old and New Testament from the Hebrew and Greek originals. St. Jerome4. ______introduced French and Italy writing the English native alliterative verse.5. Both ___________are the best representative of the middle English. Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales6. _________ paved the way for the development of what is the present-day European culture. the Middel Ages名词解释1. the Middle agesIn European history, the thousand-year period following the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century is called the Middle Ages. The middle ages is so called because it came between ancient times and modern times. To be specific, from the 5th century to 15th century.2. FeudalismFeudalism in Europe was mainly a system of land holding—a system of holding land in exchange for military service. The word “feudalism” was derived from t he Latin “feudum”, a grant of land.3. The ManorThe centre of medieval life under feudalism was the manor. Manors were founded on the fiefs of the lords. By the twelfth century manor houses were made of stone and designed as fortresses. They came to be called castles.4. Carolingian RenaissanceCarolingian Renaissance is derived from Charlemagne’s name in Latin, Carolus. The most interesting facet of this ratherminor renaissance is the spectacle of Frankish or Germanic state reaching out to assimilate the riches of the Roman Classical and the Christianized Hebraic culture.5. Gothic1) The Gothic style started in France and quickly spread through all parts of Western Europe.2) It lasted from the mid-12th to the end of 15th century and, in some areas, into the 16th. More churches were built in this manner than in any other style in history.3) The Gothic was an outgrowth of the Romanesque.论述简答题:1. Why is the middle ages is called Age of Faith?答:1) During the Medieval times there was no central government to keep the order. The only organization that seemed to unite Europe wasthe Christian church.2) The Christian church continued to gain widespread power and influence.3) In the Late middle ages, almost everyone in western Europe was a Christian and a member of the Christian Church. Christianity took the lead in politics, law, art, and learningfor hundreds of years.4) It shaped people’s lives. That is why the middle ages is also called the “Age of Faith”.2. What is the great significance of the Crusades?答:1) The crusades brought the East into closer contact with the West. And they greatly influenced the history of Europe.2) During the wars while many of the feudal lords went to fight in Palestine, kings at home found opportunities to strengthen themselves. Thus among other things, Crusadeshelped to break down feudalism, which, in turn led to the rise of the monarchies.3) Besides, through their contact with the more cultured Byzantines and Moslems, the western Europeans changed many of their old ideas. Their desire for wealth or power began to overshadow their religious ideals. 4) The Crusades also resulted in renewing people’s interest in learnin g and invention. By the 13th century, universities had spread all over Europe. Such knowledge as Arabic numerals, algebra , and Arabmedicine were introduced to the West.5) As trade increased, village and towns began to grow into cities. And the rise of towns and trade in western Europe paved the way of the growth of strong national governments.3. How did learning and science develop in the Middle Ages?答:1) Charlemagne and Carolingian Renaissance:A. He was crowned “Emperor of the Romans” by the pope in 800.B. Carolingian Renaissance is derived from Charlemagne’s name in Latin, Carolus. The most interesting facet of this rather minor renaissance is the spectacle of Frankish or Germanic state reaching out to assimilate the riches of the Roman Classical and the Christianized Hebraic culture.2) Alfred the Great and Wessex Centre of Learning:A. He promoted translations into the vernacular from Latin works.B. He also inspired the compilation of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles.3) St. Thomas Aquinas and Scholasticism:4) Roger Bacon and Experimental Science:A. Roger Bacon, a monk, was one of the earliest advocates ofscientific research.B. He called for careful observation and experimentation. His main work was the Opus maius.4. How did literature develop in the middle ages?答:1) The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly used form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages—that is, the languages of various national states that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics. Both Beowulf and song of Roland were the representative works of the National Epics.2) Dante Alighieri and The Divine Comedy:A. His masterpiece, The Divine Comedy, is one of the landmarks of world literature.B. The poem expresses humanistic ideas which foreshadowed the spirit of Renaissance.C. Dante wrote his masterpiece in Italian rather than in Latin.3) Geoffery Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales:A. The Canterbury Tales were his most popular work.B. Most of the tales are written in verse which reflects Chaucer’s innovation by introducing into the native alliterative verse the French and Italian styles.C. Chaucer is thus to be , regarded as the first short story teller and the first modern poet in English literature.D. Chaucer and the Canterbury Tales were representative of the Middleages.5. What is the difference between the vernacular languageused in the National epics and the vernacular language used by Mark twain?答:1) The epic was the product of the Heroic Age. It was an important and mostly use d form in ancient literature. “National epic” refers to the epic written in vernacular languages—that is, the languages of various national states that came into being in the Middle Ages. Literary works were no longer all written in Latin. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics. Both Beowulf and song of Roland were the representative works of the National Epics.2) The vernacular language used by Mark twain refers to both local and colloq language used in the Mississippi area, with a strong characteristic of that region. Mark twain used vernacular language not only in dialogue, but also in narration.3) His representative works Life on the Mississippi.6. What were the power and influence of the Roman Catholic church in the Medieval times?1) With a highly centralized and disciplined international organization from priests to Pope, the Roman Catholic Church seemed to be the only unity across the western Europe of the Medieval times. It developed acivilization based on Christianity and helped to preserve and pass on the heritage of the classical cultures by the official language of Latin.2) with the Pope as the supreme head of all the Christian Churches of the western Europe, the Catholic (meaning universal) church received heavy taxes from lay people and various supports from nobles and kings. Church could remove any opponents political rights or even emperors, with the powerfulsymbol of the Inquisition, the Church court to punish heresy.3) The Medieval Church was the center of the Europeans’ daily life and almost everyone became a member of the Church. People turned to the Church for comfort and spiritual guidance; the Church also was the center of holy communion, recreation, trade and communal activity.4) Clergy then was the only literate class, so kings and nobles used them to implement important secular governmental duties.5) The Church took the lead in politics, law, art, and learning throughout the “Age of Faith”. For example, Romanesque and Gothic arts were predominantly religious; in learning, it influenced greatly the western thinking with the monk s’ work on copying and translating ancient books, the Church Fathers’phi losophy, Monasticism, Scholasticism and Experimental science.6) originally for regaining the holy city of Jerusalem, the Church launched 200-year Crusades, which helped to bread down feudalism andenhanced the cultural contact between the West and the East.第四章填空题:1. Renaissance started in ________ and ________ with the flowering of paintings, sculpture and architecture. Florence and Venice2. In Renaissance literature of Italy, _______ was the representative poet. Petrarch3. At the heart of the Renaissance philosophy was the assertion of _________. the greatness of man.4. The idea of the greatness of man is reflected in __________ literature. Shakespeare’s5. The national religion established after reformation in England was called _______. The church of England or The Anglican Church.6. It was under the reign of _______ that reformation was successful in England. Henry Ⅷ7. Montaigne was a French humanist known for his _______. “Essais”(Essays).8. The representative novelist of Renaissance in Spain was __________ with his famous work_______, which marked European culture entry intoa new stage. Cervantes Don Quixote9. The Venus of Urbino is ___________ works. Titian10. _______ translated the whole Bible with the vernacular language. Martin Luther名词解释:1. RenaissanceGenerally speaking, Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th century. The word “Renaissance” means revival, specifically in this period of history, revival of interest in ancient Greek and Roman culture. Renaissance, in essence, was a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of conservatism in feudalist Europe and introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, to lift the restrictions in all areas placed by the Roman church authorities.2. ReformationThe Reformation was a 16th century religious movement as well as a socio-political movement. It began as Martin Luther posted on the door of the castle church at the University of Wittenberg his 95 thesis. This movement which swept over thewhole of Europe was aimed at opposing the absolute authority of the Roman Catholic Church and replacing it with the absolute authority of the Bible. The reformists engaged themselves in translating the Bible into their mother tongues.3. Counter-ReformationBy late 1520 the Roman Catholic Church had lost its control over the church in Germany. The Roman Catholic Church did not stay idle. They mustered their forces, the dedicated Catholic groups, to examine the Church institutions and introduce reforms and improvements, to bring back its vitality. This recovery of power is often called by historians the Counter-Reformation.论述简答题:1. What are the Geographical Discoveries in the Renaissance?答:The Renaissance was the golden age of geographical discoveries: by the year of 1600 the surface of the known earth was doubled.1)Columbus: Columbus discovered the land of America. On his fourth voyage he explored the coast of Central America.2)Dias: Dias was a Portuguese navigator who discovered the Cape of Good Hope in 1487.3)Da Gama: Gama was a Portuguese navigator, who discovered the route to India round the Cape of Good Hope between the years of 1497 and 1498.4)Amerig:Amerigo was the Italian navigator on whose honour America was named. His discovered and explored the mouth of the Amazon and accepted South America as a new continent.。
1、Two major elements in European culture:the Greco-Roman element and the Judeo-Christian element.2、The Homer epics consists of the Iliad and theOdyssey.The Iliad deals with the alliance of the states of the southern mainland of Greece,led by Agamemnon in their war against the city of Troy. The heroes are Hector on the Trojan side and Achilles and Odysseus on the Greek. In the final battle,Hector was killed by Achilles and Troy was sacked and burned by the Greeks.The Odyssey deals with the return of Odysseus after the Trojan war to his home island of Ithaca. It describes many adventures he ran into on his long sea voyage and how finally he was reunited with his faithful wife Penelope.3、古希腊三大悲剧家:Aeschylus, Sophocles,EuripidesWorks of Aeschylus:Prometheus Bound,Persians,and Agamemnon .There are only two actors and one chorus in these plays. Aeschylus is noted for his vivid character portrayal and majestic poetry.Works of Sophocles:Oedipus the King,Electra,and Antigone (theme:the difficult choice between public duty and private feeling). He has had a great impact on European culture. The Oedipus complex(恋母情结)、Electra(恋父情结)were derived from his plays Work of Euripides:Andromache,Medea,and Trojan Women. He was more of a realist than other two. His characters are less heroic,more like ordinary people. He may be called the first writer of “problem plays”4.Herodotus is often called “Father of History”,wrote about the wars between Greeks and Persians . His history is full of anecdotes and digressions and lively dialogue.5.Thucydides is more accurate as an historian. He told about the war between Athens and Syracuse ,a Greek state on the island of Sicily. He traced events to their causes and brought out their effects. Macaulay called Thucydides “the greatest historian that ever lived”6.Pythagoras was a bold thinker who had the idea that all things were numbers. He was t he founder of scientific mathematics.7.Heracleitus believed fire to be the primary element of the universe,out of which everything else had arisen. To him,“all is flux,nothing is stationary”. He alsosaid,“you cannot step twice into the same river;for fresh waters are ever flowing in upon you. The sun is new everyday”he held the theory of the mingling of opposites and believed that it was the strife between the opposites that produced harmony. 8.Democtitus speculated about the atomic structure of matter. Indeed,he was one of the earliest exponents of the atomic theory. He was one of the earliest philosophical materialists and Marx`s first published work was a study of Democritus.9Socrates taught Plato,who taught Aristotle. They were active in Athens in the 5th and the 4th century B.C.Socrates was known through Dialogues by Plato. Socrates liked to talk with people in the marketplace and in the streets ,asking and answering questions. He was ready to discuss anything in heaven and earth,specializing in exposing fallacies. When words like justice ,religiousness,virtue,wisdom,ect. Were used by others,he would ask the speaker to explain them and then dissect the answers to show how they were wrong and or illogical. This method of argument,byquestioning and answering,has come to be known as the dialectical method.Plato showed himself a brilliant stylist,writing with wit and grace. His Dialogues are important not only as philosophical writing but also as imaginative literature. His other works: Apology(Socrates` defense of himself at the trial),Symposium (about beauty and love),and the Republic(about the ideal state ruled by a philosopher but barring poets)Plato built up a comprehensive system of philosophy. It dealt with the problems of how,in the complex,ever —changing the world,men were to attain knowledge. The reply he gave was:men have knowledge because of the existence of certain general“ideas”,like beauty,truth,goodness. Only these ideas are completely real,while the physical world is only relatively real. For this reason,Plato`s philosophy is called Idealism. Many of his ideas were absorbed into Christian thoughtAristotle studied in Plato`s Academy for years. Later he became the tutor of Alexander the Macedonian King. In him the great humanist and the great man of science meet. On logic, moral philosophy,politics,metaphysics(形而上学),psychology,physics,zoology,poetry,rhetoric,he wrote epoch-making works,which dominated Europe thought for more than a thousand years. He did much to form,through his various and diverse interpreters,the philosophical,scientific and cosmological outlook of an entire world. Dante called him “the master of those who know”His works:Ethics(an introduction to moral philosophy),Politics,Poetics(a treatise on literary theory),and Rhetoric (dealing with the art of persuading an audience)Aristotle differed from his teacher in following ways:for one thing,Aristotle emphasized direct observation of nature and insisted that theory should follow fact. This is different from Plato`s reliance on subjective thinking;also,he thought that “form”(idea)and matter together made up concrete individual realities. Here ,he differed from Plato who held that ideas had a higher reality than the physical worldAristotle thought happiness that could only be achieved by leading a life of reason,goodness and contemplation should be a man`s aim in life.10.contending schools of thought:百家争鸣The Cynics:got their name because Diogenes,one of their leaders,decided to live like a dog and the word “cynic”means“dog”in Greek. He rejected all conventions—whether of religion,of manner,dress,housing,food,or of decency. In fact,he lived by begging. He proclaimed his brotherhood,not only with the whole human race,but also with animals. On the other hand,he had no patience with the rich and the powerfulThe Sceptics (诡辩学家)followed Pyrrhon,who heldthat not all knowledge was attainable. Hence he and his followers doubted t the truth of what others accepted as true.The Epicureans were disciples of Epicurus,whobelieved pleasure to be the highest good in life,butby pleasure he meant,not sensual enjoyment,butfreedom from pain and emotional upheaval. Thishe thought could be attained by the practice of virtue.His teaching wa s misunderstood by later peopleand the word“Epicurean”has come to meanindulgence in luxurious living. Epicuruswas a materialist.Opposed to the Epicureans were the Stoics. To them,the most important thing in life was not pleasure,but duty. This developed into the theory that one should endure hardship and misfortune with courage. The chief Stoic was Zeno. He was also a materialist,asserting the existence of the real world. He believed that there is no such thing as chance,and that the course of nature is rigidly determined by natural laws. In the life of an individual man,virtue is the solo good;such things as health,happiness,possessions,are of no account. Since virtue resides in the will,everything good or bad in a man`s life depends only upon himself. If he has to die, he should die nobly,like Socrates.Greek architecture three styles:a.the Doric style (masculine style. powerful, sturdy, showing a good sense of propotion), the Ionic style(feminine style), the Corinthian style(oranmental luxury)There famous temples: the Acropplis at Athens, the Parthenon.The impact of Greek culture: a,The Greek culture played a vital part in the Renaissance in Italy and other Eruropean countries.b. The Greeks invented mathematics and science and phylosophy. Their spirt of innovation had immence influence in later generations c. The Greek is the birthland of the democracy. d.They set a great example of thinking rationally and logically. e. In literature, they have exerted an influence which can be still felt today. Epic poetry, tragedy, comedy, lyric poetry, historical writing f.architecture, sculpture.Romans and Greeks异同:Common:a. Both peoples had traditions rooted in the idea of cittizen-assembly, hostile to monarchy and to servility. b. Their religions were alike enough for most of their deities to be readily identified-Greek Zeus with Roman Jupiter, Greek Aphrodite with Roman Venus, and so on-and their myth to be fused. c.Their languages worked in similar ways, and were ultimately related, both being members of the Indo-European language family which stretches from Banglandesh to Iceland. Difference: a.The Romans built up a vast empire: The Greeks didn’t. b.The Romans were confident in their military and administrative capabilities. c.The Greeks enjoyed an artistic and intellectural inheritance much richer than the Romans.Roman peace: The emperors relied on a strong army-the famous Roman regions-and an efficient bureaucracy to exert their rule, which was facilitated by a well-developed system of roads. Thus the Romans enjoyed a long period of oece lasting 200 years, a remarkable phenomenon in history known as the Pax Romana.Virgil:The greatest of Latin poet, wrote the greatest epic, the Aeneid.Tragic hero: Aeneas was a truely tragic hero because to fufil his hitoric mission he had to betray the great passion of his life. While he gained an empire, his love for Dido, qyeen of Carhage. While he gained an empire, he lost something no empire could compensate, happiness in life.The Colosseum:斗兽场It is an enormous amphitheatre built in the centre of Rome in imperial times. It held more than 5000 spectatots.The relationship between Judaism and Christianity: They are closely related. the Jewish tradition gave birth to Christianity. Both originated in Palestine-thehub of migration and trade toutes, which led to exchange of ideas over wide areas.The bible is a collection of religious writings comprising two parts: the Old Testament and the New Testament.The Old Testament is about God and the Laws of God. Consists of 39 books, the oldest and most important of which are the first five books called Pentateuch.The Pentateuch.(摩西五经):Genesis: a religious account of the origin of the Hebrew people, including the origin of the world and of man, the career of Isosa and the life of Jacob and his son Joseph. (The fall of man, Noah’s ark)Exodus: a riligious history of the Hebrews during their flight from Egypt, the period when they began to receive God’s Law. Leviticus: a collection of primitive laws. Numbers: a continuation of the account of the flight from Egypt with two censuses about the Exodus. Deuteronomy: the final words of Moses to his people, restating his orders and fifty years’ experiences as a leader.The spread of Christianity:it spread steadily over the Mediterranean region, instead of being poor people’s religion in the earlier days, it began to draw men and women from all classes. The Romans grew tired of war and feared the collapse of the empire. A war was won by Constantine, he believed that God had helped him in winning the battle, issued the Edict of Milan in 313. it granted religious freedom to all and made Christianity legal. later seeing it the hope of moral solidarity, Constantine renounced pretensions to divinity. In 392AD, Emperor Theodosius made Christianity the official religion of the empire and outlawed all other religions.The New Testament is about the doctrine (教义) of Jesus Christ. His disciples in the first century wrote down in Greek about his life and teaching.Four accounts were accepted as part of the New Testament, which tells the beginning of the Christianity. The four accounts were believed to have been written by Matthew, Mark, Luck,and John, four of Jesus’s early fellows. They tell of the birth, teaching, death, and Resurrection of Jesus. The Acts of the Apostles, a history of the early Christian movement; the Epistles, or the letters to the church groups around Mediterranean; the book of Revelation,启示录:a visionary account of the final triumph of God’s purpose.The Old Testament was written in Hebrew, and the New Testament was written in Greek.The most ancient Latin version of the whole Bible is the Vulgate edition by St. Jerome.But the most important and influential of the English Bible is the “Authorized” or the King James version. The New Testament is,in essence (实质上),the four accounts (四福音书),written by the four disciples.弟子The word “Testament”means “agreement”,the agreement between God and Man.The New Testament: T he Bible was divided into two sections:the Old Testament and the New Testament. The New Testament is about the doctrine (教义) of Jesus Christ.⑴. The Middle Ages: a period in which classical, Hebrew and Gothic heritages merged. The fusion and blending of different ideas and practices paved the way for the development of what is the present- day European culture.(名词解释)In European history,the thousand-year period following the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century is called the Middle Ages.⑵. Feudalism: it in Europe was mainly a systemof land holding---a system of land holding in exchangefor military service. “Feudalism”was derived fromthe Latin “feudum”, a grant of land. It is also a systemof government ---a form of local and decentralizedgovernment.Feudalism was also a system of government---a formof local and decentralized government. This is a periodin which classical,Hebrew and Gothic heritagesmerged.And it is this fusion and blending of different ideas andpractices that paved the way for the development ofwhat is the present-day European culture.⑶. The church:after 1054, the church wasdivided into the Roman Catholic Church and theEastern Orthodox Church. The Catholic Church madeLatin the official language In the medieval “age offaith”, almost all Europeans belonged to the Christian(Catholic) Church. Religion was of great importance invirtually every phrase of daily life. The word“catholic”, meant “universal”. The Catholic Churchwas a highly centralized and disciplined internationalorganization.政教合一⑷. Lay members of Catholic Church: pope教皇--- supreme head; college of cardinals---elected pope,served as advisors, next in power to pope; archbishops大主教---province, bishops主教---diocese区, priests牧师---parish教区; religious orders---militarymonastic, lived in monasteries (abbeys) governed byabbots.⑸.Early Monasticism(早期修道院制):Between300 and 500 A.D.,many men withdrew from worldlycontacts to deserts and lonely places. This movementdeveloped into the establishment of monasteries andconvents for monks and nuns. Some of the hermits (隐士)were great scholars known as “Father of theChurch”,whose work is generally consideredorthodox.(东正教)A noble champion of early monasticism was St.Jerome, who translated into Latin both Old andNew Testaments from the Hebrew and Greeksoriginals.His translation work, the Vulgate, becamethe official Latin Bible used by the Roman CatholicChurch of this day.⑹. Augustine of Hippo: The Confession, The Cityof God. (the Roman’s fall was a punishment forhaving become rich and corrupt and for havingpersecuted Christians.⑺.the crusades十字军东征(went on about 200years) :The Objectives of the crusades was at first torelease the Holy Land, in particular Jerusalem, fromthe Saracens, but in time was extended to seizingSpain from the Moors, the Slavs and Pagans fromeastern Europe, and the islands of the Mediterranean.原因:in 1071 Palestine fell to the armies of theTurkish Moslems who attacked the Christian pilgrimsto Jerusalem, killing many of them and sold manyothers as slaves. News of this kind roused greatindignation among Christians in Western Europe. Theresult was a series of holy was called crusades thatwent on about 200 years.后果:by 1291 the Moslems had taken over the lastChristian strongland. They won the crusades and ruledall the territory in Palestine that the crusades hadfought to control.影响:①although the crusades have not achievetheir goal to regain the holy land, they had animportant effect on the future of both the east and thewest. They brought the east into closer contact with thewest. And they greatly influenced the history ofEurope.②during the wars while many of the feudallords went to fight in Palestine, kings at home foundopportunities to strengthen themselves, thus amongother things, crusades helped to break down feudalism,which in turn led to the rise of the monarchies.③through their contact with the more culturedByzantines and Moslems, the western Europeanschanged many of their old ideas. Their desire forwealth or power began to overshadow their religiousideals. ④the crusades also resulted in renewingpeople’s interest in learning and invention. By the13th century, universities, which grew from cathedralschools, had spread all over Europe.⑻Charlemagne, among many other things he did,encouraged learning by setting up monastery schools,giving support to scholars and setting scribes to workcopying various ancient books.The result of Charlemagne’s efforts is called theCarolingian Renaissance. The most interesting facetof this rather minor Renaissance is the spectacle ofFrankish or Germanic state reaching out to assimilatethe riches of the Roman Classical and theChristianized Hebraic culture.⑼christianism基督教: Catholicism天主教,Orthodox Church东正教; Protestantism基督新教⑽Beowulf is an Anglo-Saxon epic, originating fromthe collective efforts oral literature.⑾Dante Alighieri and the divine comedy: one of thelandmarks of world literature. 实质The greatestChristian poem with a profound vision of the medievalChristian world, expresses humanistic ideas whichforeshadowed the spirit of Renaissance; 影响wrotehis masterpiece in Italian rather in latin, influenceddecisively the evolution of European literature awayfrom its origins in latin culture to a new variedexpression.The fall of the Western Roman Empire: in the latterpart of the 4th century, the Huns swept into Europe ,robbing and killing as they came along,, manycivilized Germanic tribes fled their homelands in northEurope and were rushed into the Roman Empire.In476 A.D. a Germanic (日耳曼) general killed the lastRoman emperor and took control of the government.。