15th century  

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 +[[Image:Fouquet Madonna.jpg|thumb|left|200px|''[[Virgin and Child Surrounded by Angels]]'' (detail, c. 1450) Jean Fouquet]]
 +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
 +| style="text-align: left;" |
 +"The mere mention of the names of [[A. Pinchart]], [[E. van Even]], [[W. H. J. Weale]], [[A. Wauters]], [[E. de Busscher]], and [[C. H. Ruelens]], recalls to specialists the most important contributions made to the history of [[15th century|15th century art]] in our day."--''[[Early Flemish Painters]]'' (1856) is a book by Joseph A. Crowe and Giovanni Battista Cavalcaselle
 +<hr>
 +“All [[witchcraft]] comes from [[carnal lust]], which is in [[Insatiability of women|women insatiable]].”--''[[Malleus Maleficarum]]'' (1487) by Heinrich Kramer
 +<hr>
 +"At some period towards the close of the [[15th century|fifteenth century]], a mutilated ancient statue was accidentally dug up in Rome, and it was erected on a pedestal in a place not far from the [[Ursini Palace]]. Oppofite it stood the shop of a shoemaker, named [[Pasquillo]], or [[Pasquino]], the latter being the form most commonly adopted at a later period. This Pasquillo was notorious
 +as a facetious fellow, and his shop was usually crowded by people who went there to tell tales and hear news; and, as no other name had been invented for the statue, people agreed to give it the name of the shoemaker, and they called it Pasquillo."--''[[History of Caricature and Grotesque in Literature and Art]]'' (1865) by Thomas Wright
 +|}
 +[[Image:Mantegna Andrea Dead Christ.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Lamentation over the Dead Christ (Mantegna)|Lamentation over the Dead Christ]]'' (c. [[1480]]) by [[Andrea Mantegna]]]]
 +[[Image:Satyr by Piero di Cosimo.jpg|thumb|200px|''[[Satyr mourning over a nymph]]'' (c. [[1495]]) - [[Piero di Cosimo]]]]
 +[[Image:Altar piece at Brixen.jpg|thumb|200px|See [[Michael Pacher]]]]
 +[[Image:Machecoul.jpg|thumb|200px|See [[Gilles de Rais]]]]
 +[[Image:Michael Pacher detail.jpg|thumb|right|This page '''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is part of the [[devil in popular culture]] series. Illustration: detail from [[Michael Pacher]]'s panel painting ''[[The Devil Presenting St Augustine With The Book Of Vices]]'']]
 +[[Image:Venus by Botticelli.jpg|thumb|200px|See [[Botticelli]]]]
 +[[Image:Wound Man.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Wound Man]]]]
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-As a means of recording the passage of [[time]], the '''15th century''' was that [[century]] which lasted from [[1401]] to [[1500]].+{|class="toc hlist" id="toc" summary="Contents" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; text-align:center;"
 +|colspan="3" |
 +|-
 +! style="text-align:right; width:310px;"|<< [[14th century]]
 +! style="width:125px;"|
 +! style="text-align:left; width:310px;"|[[16th century]] >>
 +|}
 +The '''15th century''' was the [[century]] which spans the [[Julian calendar|Julian]] years [[1401]] to [[1500]].
 + 
 +In '''[[History of Europe|Europe]]''', the 15th century is seen as the bridge between the [[Late Middle Ages]], the [[Early Renaissance]], and the [[Early modern period]].
 +Many technological, social and cultural developments of the 15th century can in retrospect be seen as heralding the "[[European miracle]]" of the following centuries. In religious history, the Roman [[Papacy]] was split in two parts in Europe for decades (the so-called [[Western Schism]]), until the [[Council of Constance]]. The division of the Catholic Church and the unrest associated with the [[Hussite]] movement would become factors in the rise of the [[Protestant Reformation]] in the following century.
 + 
 +[[Constantinople]], in what is today [[Turkey]], then the capital of the Christian [[Byzantine Empire]], [[Fall of Constantinople|falls]] to the emerging Muslim [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Turks]], marking the end of the tremendously influential Byzantine Empire and, for some historians, the end of the Middle Ages. The event forced Western Europeans to find a new trade route, adding further momentum to what was the beginning of the [[Age of Discovery]], which would lead to the global mapping of the world. Explorations by the [[History of Portugal (1415–1578)|Portuguese]] and [[Crown of Castile|Spanish]] led to European sightings of the [[Americas]] (the [[New World]]) and the sea passage along [[Cape of Good Hope]] to India, in the last decade of the century. These expeditions ushered in the era of the Portuguese and Spanish colonial empires.
 + 
 +The fall of Constantinople led to the migration of [[Greek scholars in the Renaissance|Greek scholars]] and texts to Italy, while [[Johannes Gutenberg]]'s invention of the mechanical [[movable type]] began the [[Printing Press]]. These two events played key roles in the development of the [[Renaissance]].
 + 
 +The Spanish [[Reconquista]] leads to the final fall of the [[Emirate of Granada]] by the end of the century, ending over seven centuries of Muslim rule and returning Spain back to Christian rulers.
 + 
 +The [[Hundred Years' War]] end with a decisive [[Kingdom of France|French]] victory over the [[Kingdom of England|English]] in the [[Battle of Castillon]]. Financial troubles in England following the conflict results in the [[Wars of the Roses]], a series of dynastic wars for the throne of England. The conflicts end with the defeat of [[Richard III]] by [[Henry VII of England|Henry VII]] at the [[Battle of Bosworth Field]], establishing the [[House of Tudor|Tudor dynasty]] in the later part of the century.
 + 
 +In '''[[History of Asia|Asia]]''', under the rule of the [[Yongle Emperor]], who built the [[Forbidden City]] and commanded [[Zheng He]] to [[Treasure voyages|explore the world overseas]], the [[Ming Dynasty]]'s territory reached its pinnacle.
 +[[Tamerlane]] established a major empire in the Middle East and Central Asia, in order to revive the [[Mongol Empire]].
 + 
 +In '''[[History of Africa|Africa]]''', the [[Muslim conquest of the Sudan|spread of Islam]] leads to the destruction of the Christian kingdoms of [[Nubia]], by the end of the century leaving only [[Alodia]] (which was to collapse in 1504). The formerly vast [[Mali Empire]] teeters on the brink of collapse, under pressure from the rising [[Songhai Empire]].
 + 
 +In the '''[[Pre-Columbian era|Americas]]''', both the [[Inca Empire]] and the [[Aztec Empire]] reach the peak of their influence.
 + 
 +== Trends==
 +*[[Quattrocento]]
 +*[[Gothic art]]
 +*End of the [[Middle Ages]]
 +*[[Gilles de Rais]]
 +*rediscovery of [[Nero]]'s [[Golden house]]
 +*[[early Renaissance]]
 +*[[Fashion in 15th century Europe]]
 +* [[Renaissance]] affects [[philosophy]], [[History of Science and Technology|science]] and [[art]].
 +* [[Age of Discovery]] begins.
 +*[[Johannes Gutenberg]] invents the [[printing press]] in Europe (c. 1455).
 +* [[Linear perspective]] drawing perfected by [[Filippo Brunelleschi]] 1410-1415
 +* Europe Claims [[Americas|America]] [[October 12]] [[1492]], Christopher Columbus's expedition makes landfall in the Caribbean. The Italian explorer believes he has reached East Asia.
 + 
 +== Culture ==
 +*''[[Facetiae]]'' (1470) by Poggio
 +*[[The Birth of Venus (Botticelli)]], c. 1485
 +*''[[Satyr mourning over a nymph]]'' (c. 1495) by Piero di Cosimo
 +*The [[Bonfire of the Vanities]]
 +*The use of [[tobacco]] is introduced into Europe by Columbus and his crew returning from America.
 +*1431 - First German peasant revolt at [[Worms, Germany]]
 +*[[Vlad the Impaler]]
 +*Vlad III Dracula (also known as Vlad Tepes in Romanian or Vlad the Impaler)
 +*1485 The first edition ''[[Danse Macabre]]'' is published in Paris by [[Guyot Marchant]]
 +*[[1487]] - ''[[The Malleus Maleficarum]]'' by Kramer
 +*[[Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry]], first version finished in 1416
 +*Curiosities included ''[[Hermaphroditus (Beccadelli) |Hermaphroditus]]''
 + 
 +== Births ==
 +*[[François Villon]]
 +*[[Hans Holbein]]
 +*[[Hieronymus Bosch]]
 +*[[Quentin Matsys]]
 +*[[Albrecht Dürer]]
 +*[[Matthias Grünewald]]
 +*[[Lucas Cranach]]
 +*[[Hans Baldung Grien]]
 +*[[Pietro Aretino]]
 +*[[François Rabelais]]
 +*[[Jean Fouquet]], French painter.
 +*[[Gilles de Rais]]
 +*[[Michael Pacher]]
 +* [[Joan of Arc]], national [[hero|heroine]] of [[France]] ([[1412]] - [[1431]]).
 +* [[François Villon]], French poet (c. [[1431]] - [[1474]]).
 +* [[Leonardo da Vinci]], inventor and painter ([[1452]] - [[1519]]).
 + 
 +==Deaths==
 +* [[Jan Hus]], Bohemian religious thinker and reformer (c. [[1369]] - [[1415]]).
 +* [[Johannes Gutenberg]], European inventor of printing with movable type (c.[[1398]] - [[1468]])
 +* [[Joan of Arc]], national [[hero|heroine]] of [[France]] ([[1412]] - [[1431]]).
 +* [[François Villon]], French poet (c. [[1431]] - [[1474]]).
==Events== ==Events==
-* [[1401]]: [[Timur]] sacks [[Baghdad]]. 
-* [[1402]]: The [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] and [[Timurid Empire]]s fight at the [[Battle of Ankara]] resulting in Timur's capture of [[Bayezid I]]. The Ottoman Empire descends into [[Ottoman Intteregium|civil war]] until [[1413]]. 
-* [[1402]]: The conquest of the [[Canary Islands]] signals the beginning of the [[Spanish Empire]]. 
-* [[1402]]: [[Sultanate of Malacca]] founded by [[Parameswara (sultan)|Parameshwara]]. 
-* [[1403]]: The [[Yongle Emperor]] moves the capital of China from [[Nanjing]] to [[Beijing]]. 
-* [[1405]]-[[1433|33]]: [[Zheng He]] of China sails through the [[Indian Ocean]] to India, Arabia, and East Africa. 
-* [[1410]]: The [[Battle of Grunwald]] was the decisive battle of the [[Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War (1409-1411)|Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War]] leading to the downfall of the [[Teutonic Knights]]. 
-* [[1415]]: [[Henry the Navigator]] leads the [[Battle of Ceuta|conquest of Ceuta]] from the [[Moors]] marking the beginning of the [[Portuguese Empire]]. 
-*[[1415]]: [[Battle of Agincourt]] fought between the [[Kingdom of England]] and [[France]] 
-* [[1420]]: Construction of the Chinese [[Forbidden City]] is completed in Beijing. 
-* [[1420]]-[[1434|34]]: [[Hussite Wars]] in [[Bohemia]] 
* [[1429]]: [[Joan of Arc]] ends the [[Siege of Orléans]] and turns the tide of the [[Hundred Years' War]]. * [[1429]]: [[Joan of Arc]] ends the [[Siege of Orléans]] and turns the tide of the [[Hundred Years' War]].
-* [[1438]]: [[Pachacuti]] founds the [[Inca Empire]]. 
-* [[1440s]]: The [[Golden Horde]] breaks up into the [[Siberia Khanate]], the [[Khanate of Kazan]], the [[Astrakhan Khanate]], the [[Crimean Khanate]], and the [[Great Horde]]. 
-* [[1440]]-[[1469|69]]: Under [[Moctezuma I]], the [[Aztec]]s become the dominant power in [[Mesoamerica]]. 
-* [[1444]]: The [[Albania|Albanian league]] is established in Lezha, [[Skanderbeg]] is elected leader 
-* [[1453]]: The [[Fall of Constantinople]] marks the end of the [[Byzantine Empire]]. 
-[[Image:Chas_vii.jpg|thumb|right|170px|[[Charles VII of France]], final victor of the Hundred Years' War]] 
-* [[1453]]: The [[Battle of Castillon]] is the last engagement of the [[Hundred Years' War]]. 
-* [[1454]]-[[1466|66]]: After defeating the Teutonic Knights in the [[Thirteen Years' War]], Poland annexes [[Royal Prussia]]. 
-* [[1455]]-[[1485|85]]: [[Wars of the Roses]] - English civil war between the House of York and the House of Lancaster. 
-* [[1456]]: The [[Siege of Belgrade]] halts the Ottoman's advance into Europe. 
-* [[1467]]-[[1615]]: The [[Sengoku period]] is one of civil war in Japan. 
-* [[1469]]: The marriage of [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] and [[Isabella of Castile]] leads to the unification of [[Spain]]. 
-* [[1474]]-[[1477|77]]: [[Burgundy Wars]] of [[France]],[[Switzerland]],[[Lorraine]] and [[Sigismund II of Habsburg]] against de [[Burgundy|duke of Burgundy]], [[Charles the bold]]. 
-* [[1478]]: [[Muscovy]] conquers [[Novgorod]]. 
-* [[1480]]: After the [[Great standing on the Ugra river]], Muscovy gained independence from the Great Horde. 
* [[1481]]: [[Spanish Inquisition]] begins. * [[1481]]: [[Spanish Inquisition]] begins.
-* [[1485]]: [[Henry VII]] defeats [[Richard III]] at the [[Battle of Bosworth]] and becomes King of England 
-* [[1492]]: [[Boabdil]]'s surrender of [[Granada]] marks the end of the [[Reconquista]] and [[Al-Andalus]]. 
* [[1492]]: [[Jews]] expelled from [[Spain]]. * [[1492]]: [[Jews]] expelled from [[Spain]].
* [[1492]]: [[Christopher Columbus]] founds Spain's first [[New World]] colony on [[Hispaniola]]. * [[1492]]: [[Christopher Columbus]] founds Spain's first [[New World]] colony on [[Hispaniola]].
Line 38: Line 104:
* [[1494]]-[[1559]]: The [[Italian Wars]] lead to the downfall of the [[Italian city-states]]. * [[1494]]-[[1559]]: The [[Italian Wars]] lead to the downfall of the [[Italian city-states]].
* [[1497]]-[[1499]]: [[Vasco da Gama]]'s first voyage from [[Europe]] to [[India]] and back. * [[1497]]-[[1499]]: [[Vasco da Gama]]'s first voyage from [[Europe]] to [[India]] and back.
 +==See also==
 +:''[[Thematic development of Italian Renaissance painting]], [[Italian Renaissance painting]], [[15th century]]''
-==Significant people== 
-* [[Jan Hus]], Bohemian religious thinker and reformer (c. [[1369]] - [[1415]]). 
-* [[Filippo Brunelleschi]] invents one-point perspective, leads innovation in Italian architecture ([[1377]] - [[1446]]).  
-* [[Henry V of England]], the English King who won the famous [[Battle of Agincourt]] in [[1415]] ([[1387]] - [[1422]]). 
-* [[Johannes Gutenberg]], European inventor of printing with movable type (c.[[1398]] - [[1468]]) 
-* [[Stephen III of Moldavia]], also known as Stephen the Great, ruler of Moldavia, national hero of [[Romanians]] for long resistance to the Ottomans ([[1437]] - [[1504]]) 
-* [[Constantine XI]], Last [[Byzantine Emperor]] ([[1404]] - [[1453]]). 
-* [[Johannes Ockeghem]], Flemish composer (ca. [[1410]]-[[1497]]). 
-* [[Joan of Arc]], national [[hero|heroine]] of [[France]] ([[1412]] - [[1431]]). 
-* [[Kazimierz IV Jagiellon]] King of [[Poland]] and Grand Duke of [[Lithuania]] ([[1427]] - [[1492]]).  
-* [[François Villon]], French poet (c. [[1431]] - [[1474]]).  
-*[[Vlad III Dracula]] , [[List of rulers of Wallachia|Prince of Wallachia]] who led the defense of his territory against the expanding [[Ottoman Empire]] ([[1431]] - [[1476]]). 
-* [[Mehmed II]], Sultan of the [[Ottoman Empire]] and Conqueror of [[Constantinople]] ([[1432]] - [[1481]]). 
-* [[Mir Chakar Khan Rind]] ([[1468]])-([[1565]])  
-* [[Marsilio Ficino]], Significant translator of [[Plato]]'s works ([[1433]] - [[1481]]). 
-* Gjergj Kastrioti, [[Skenderbeg]] - Albanian Prince who resisted the Ottomans for almost 30 years in the name of the Albanian people and Catholic faith ([[1443]] - [[1468]]). 
-* [[Matthias Corvinus of Hungary]], Renaissance ruler ([[1443]] - [[1490]]).  
-* [[Isabella of Castile]], co-ruler of Ferdinand II of Aragon and responsible with him for the unification of Spain ([[1451]] - [[1504]]).  
-* [[Christopher Columbus]] sails to the [[Americas]] for [[Spain]] (c. [[1451]] - [[1506]]). 
-* [[Richard III of England]], last English King of the [[House of York]], last of the Plantagenet Dynasty ([[1452]] - [[1485]]).  
-* [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] , co-ruler of Isabella of Castile and responsible with her for the unification of Spain ([[1452]] - [[1516]]). 
-* [[Leonardo da Vinci]], inventor and painter ([[1452]] - [[1519]]). 
-* [[Henry VII of England]], English King and founder the [[Tudor dynasty]] ([[1457]] - [[1509]]).  
-* [[Vasco da Gama]] reaches India for [[Portugal]], creating the first maritime alternative for the [[Silk Road]] (c. [[1469]] - [[1524]] 
- 
-==Inventions, discoveries, introductions== 
-[[Timeline of invention#15th century|List of 15th century inventions]] 
-* [[Renaissance]] affects [[philosophy]], [[History of Science and Technology|science]] and [[art]]. 
-* [[Age of Discovery]] begins. 
-* Rise of [[Modern English]] language from [[Middle English]]. 
-* Introduction of the [[noon bell]] in the [[Catholic]] world. 
-* Public [[History of banking|banks]] 
-* [[Yongle Encyclopedia]] - over 22,000 volumes 
-* [[Hangul]] alphabet in [[Korea]] 
-* [[Scotch whisky]] 
-* [[Psychiatric hospital]]s 
-* Development of the [[woodcut]] for printing between 1400-1450 
-* [[Movable type]] first used by King [[Taejong of Joseon]] - 1403 (Movable type, which allowed individual characters to be arranged to form words, was invented in China by [[Bi Sheng]] between 1041 to 1048.) 
-* Although pioneered earlier in Korea and by the Chinese official [[Wang Zhen (official)|Wang Zhen]] (with [[tin]]), [[bronze]] metal [[movable type]] [[printing]] is created in China by [[Hua Sui]] in 1490.  
-*[[Johannes Gutenberg]] invents the [[printing press]] in Europe (c. 1455).  
-* [[Linear perspective]] drawing perfected by [[Filippo Brunelleschi]] 1410-1415 
-* Invention of the [[harpsichord]] c. 1450 
-* Discovery of [[Americas|America]] by [[Christopher Columbus]] 1492 
-* First [[canal lock]] reportedly built in Vreeswijk, Netherlands in 1481 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

Virgin and Child Surrounded by Angels (detail, c. 1450) Jean Fouquet
Enlarge
Virgin and Child Surrounded by Angels (detail, c. 1450) Jean Fouquet

"The mere mention of the names of A. Pinchart, E. van Even, W. H. J. Weale, A. Wauters, E. de Busscher, and C. H. Ruelens, recalls to specialists the most important contributions made to the history of 15th century art in our day."--Early Flemish Painters (1856) is a book by Joseph A. Crowe and Giovanni Battista Cavalcaselle


“All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which is in women insatiable.”--Malleus Maleficarum (1487) by Heinrich Kramer


"At some period towards the close of the fifteenth century, a mutilated ancient statue was accidentally dug up in Rome, and it was erected on a pedestal in a place not far from the Ursini Palace. Oppofite it stood the shop of a shoemaker, named Pasquillo, or Pasquino, the latter being the form most commonly adopted at a later period. This Pasquillo was notorious as a facetious fellow, and his shop was usually crowded by people who went there to tell tales and hear news; and, as no other name had been invented for the statue, people agreed to give it the name of the shoemaker, and they called it Pasquillo."--History of Caricature and Grotesque in Literature and Art (1865) by Thomas Wright

Image:Michael Pacher detail.jpg
This page 15th century is part of the devil in popular culture series. Illustration: detail from Michael Pacher's panel painting The Devil Presenting St Augustine With The Book Of Vices

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<< 14th century 16th century >>

The 15th century was the century which spans the Julian years 1401 to 1500.

In Europe, the 15th century is seen as the bridge between the Late Middle Ages, the Early Renaissance, and the Early modern period. Many technological, social and cultural developments of the 15th century can in retrospect be seen as heralding the "European miracle" of the following centuries. In religious history, the Roman Papacy was split in two parts in Europe for decades (the so-called Western Schism), until the Council of Constance. The division of the Catholic Church and the unrest associated with the Hussite movement would become factors in the rise of the Protestant Reformation in the following century.

Constantinople, in what is today Turkey, then the capital of the Christian Byzantine Empire, falls to the emerging Muslim Ottoman Turks, marking the end of the tremendously influential Byzantine Empire and, for some historians, the end of the Middle Ages. The event forced Western Europeans to find a new trade route, adding further momentum to what was the beginning of the Age of Discovery, which would lead to the global mapping of the world. Explorations by the Portuguese and Spanish led to European sightings of the Americas (the New World) and the sea passage along Cape of Good Hope to India, in the last decade of the century. These expeditions ushered in the era of the Portuguese and Spanish colonial empires.

The fall of Constantinople led to the migration of Greek scholars and texts to Italy, while Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the mechanical movable type began the Printing Press. These two events played key roles in the development of the Renaissance.

The Spanish Reconquista leads to the final fall of the Emirate of Granada by the end of the century, ending over seven centuries of Muslim rule and returning Spain back to Christian rulers.

The Hundred Years' War end with a decisive French victory over the English in the Battle of Castillon. Financial troubles in England following the conflict results in the Wars of the Roses, a series of dynastic wars for the throne of England. The conflicts end with the defeat of Richard III by Henry VII at the Battle of Bosworth Field, establishing the Tudor dynasty in the later part of the century.

In Asia, under the rule of the Yongle Emperor, who built the Forbidden City and commanded Zheng He to explore the world overseas, the Ming Dynasty's territory reached its pinnacle. Tamerlane established a major empire in the Middle East and Central Asia, in order to revive the Mongol Empire.

In Africa, the spread of Islam leads to the destruction of the Christian kingdoms of Nubia, by the end of the century leaving only Alodia (which was to collapse in 1504). The formerly vast Mali Empire teeters on the brink of collapse, under pressure from the rising Songhai Empire.

In the Americas, both the Inca Empire and the Aztec Empire reach the peak of their influence.

Contents

Trends

Culture

Births

Deaths

Events

See also

Thematic development of Italian Renaissance painting, Italian Renaissance painting, 15th century




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "15th century" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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