HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEW RENAISSANCE PEDAGOGY

Abstract

Prior to the age of exploration, exploding into life after Columbus’s westward journey across the Atlantic in 1492, a different exploration of an unknown world occurred after the fall of Constantinople in 1453. For well over a millennium, the Byzantine empire was the eastern stronghold of Christendom, paralleling the Roman church in the west. The Ottomans with superior military technology breached the walls of the famous imperial capital, simultaneously ending the Medieval assumption that Christendom was unassailable. Byzantine scholars seeking to protect the vast stores of manuscripts housed in Constantinople emigrated to Northern Italy, bringing with them Greek texts long forgotten in the west. These texts fueled an already burgeoning intellectual environment in such cities as Venice, Florence and Milan.

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Bozorova Muslim Kadirovna. (2024). HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEW RENAISSANCE PEDAGOGY. European International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Management Studies, 4(11), 112–116. Retrieved from https://inlibrary.uz/index.php/eijmrms/article/view/57646
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Abstract

Prior to the age of exploration, exploding into life after Columbus’s westward journey across the Atlantic in 1492, a different exploration of an unknown world occurred after the fall of Constantinople in 1453. For well over a millennium, the Byzantine empire was the eastern stronghold of Christendom, paralleling the Roman church in the west. The Ottomans with superior military technology breached the walls of the famous imperial capital, simultaneously ending the Medieval assumption that Christendom was unassailable. Byzantine scholars seeking to protect the vast stores of manuscripts housed in Constantinople emigrated to Northern Italy, bringing with them Greek texts long forgotten in the west. These texts fueled an already burgeoning intellectual environment in such cities as Venice, Florence and Milan.


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EUROPEAN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH
AND MANAGEMENT STUDIES

ISSN: 2750-8587

VOLUME04 ISSUE11

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HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEW RENAISSANCE

PEDAGOGY

Bozorova Muslim Kadirovna

Associate Professor of Termez State University, Uzbekistan

AB O U T ART I CL E

Key words:

Socio-cultural value, means, complex

and multifaceted, property, basis, medical

assistance.

Received:

19.11.2024

Accepted

: 24.11.2024

Published

: 29.11.2024

Abstract:

Prior to the age of exploration,

exploding into life after Columbus’s westward

journey across the Atlantic in 1492, a different

exploration of an unknown world occurred after

the fall of Constantinople in 1453. For well over a
millennium, the Byzantine empire was the eastern

stronghold of Christendom, paralleling the Roman

church in the west. The Ottomans with superior

military technology breached the walls of the
famous imperial capital, simultaneously ending

the Medieval assumption that Christendom was

unassailable. Byzantine scholars seeking to

protect the vast stores of manuscripts housed in
Constantinople emigrated to Northern Italy,

bringing with them Greek texts long forgotten in

the west. These texts fueled an already

burgeoning intellectual environment in such cities

as Venice, Florence and Milan.

INTRODUCTION

A new form of humanism was gaining traction in the north of Italy, reacting to the calamities of the late

Middle Ages. The black plague decimated perhaps a third of Europe’s population, exacerbated by

poverty and famine. The fracturing of Roman Catholic hegemony through internal warfare, such as the

war of the Roses in England or the hundred years war between England and France, brought an end to

an economically, politically and religiously unified Europe. Yet a number of institutions carried over

from the heights of the Middle Ages into the Renaissance, chief among them the universities. Italian

universities such as Bologna, Padua, Rome and Turin shared a history with the universities of Oxford,

Cambridge and Paris. The scholasticism that flourished in the medieval universities instigated a tireless

VOLUME04 ISSUE11

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55640/eijmrms-04-11-17

Pages: 112-116


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search for classic texts, as scholars sought to reconcile theology and philosophy through dialectical

reasoning. Humanism, the study of classical antiquity, offered a new vision by looking to the past. The
texts brought to Northern Italy after the fall of Constantinople added fuel, in the form of Greek classical

texts, to the fire of the emerging humanism. Works by Aristotle and Plato, long forgotten in the west,

arrived in Venice and Florence in the hands of Byzantine scholars. Soon a concerted effort to translate

Greek texts into Latin became a project of primary importance. The old universities were a happy home

in which the Renaissance humanists could partake in this new project.

Renewing Educational Goals

Renaissance education inherited a ready-made structure developed in the middle ages. The humanist
ideal of rebirthing civilization by drawing upon classical antiquity was happily situated within this

educational structure. Today, the classical Christian school movement has likewise drawn upon the very

same structure. The liberal arts were comprised of th

e trivium and quadrivium. Let’s see how the

trivium met the goals of Renaissance educational goals.

Grammar was the initial art of the trivium. Not only were the parts of speech learned, but students

would also theorize about the nature of language and how thoughts were shaped through the use of

words. The study of Latin and Greek were essential to the Renaissance enterprise, especially since both
ancient languages were not spoken in the West. Young scholars would learn these languages in order

to interact directly with the rediscovered manuscripts from the East, written predominantly in Greek.

Or students would acquire Latin, the language of scholarly pursuit, so that they could read the newly

available translations of Aristotle and Plato.

Students learned how to reason carefully by acquiring skills in logic. The dialectical method drew

opposing viewpoints together in order to establish the truth of statements. Aristotle reigned supreme,
his theory of syllogism providing powerful tools to thinkers of all eras by carefully defining premises

and conclusions by way of deduction. Several of Aristotle’s works were already known during the

Middle Ages, but texts from Constantinople were quickly translated into Latin and formed the new logic

(logica nova). Professors quickly added numerous commentaries on these Aristotelian texts, which

often extended the dialectical method into the realms of philosophy, theology and ethics.

The most revolutionary of the arts in the Renaissance was rhetoric. The scholastic theology of the

Middle Ages was mired in dialectic thought that was beholden to rigid dogmas. Even more important

than the new logic were the rhetorical texts discovered in the early renaissance: Aristotle’s Rhetoric,

Quintilian’s Institutio, Cicero’s De Oratore, and Brutus’s Orator. The study of rhetoric not only entailed


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acquiring skill in expression, but also the study of examples of rhetorical skill, what we might call

profane literature. Quintilian in particular focused attention on the rhetorical ideal of the good man
speaking well. Notions of the good man coincided with the emerging humanism of the time. In the face

of the fall of society, rhetoric provided a set of concepts to call individuals to noble civic duty.

If western society was going to survive the fall of the Christendom of the middle ages, a renewal of

educational goals was necessary. This renewal set in motion a reconsideration of human beings as self-

directed individuals capable of setting the course of society through their own moral agency. In some

ways this was a challenge to the church and to God, yet in other ways it refined conceptions of church,

God and theology. Martin Luther, for instance, concluded that Aristotle was the foundation upon which
the authoritarian doctrine of the Roman church was based. Only through removing Aristotelian

concepts of the soul and ethics does one properly encounter the soul and ethics of scripture. However,

in challenging these conceptions, Luther challenged the authority of the church, leading to a break with

the Roman church and a broader reformation of Christianity throughout Europe. Francis Bacon would

likewise challenge Aristotelian notions of deductive reasoning based on syllogisms, formulating a new

scientific method around induction. Beginning with facts observed through sense perception, the

scientist derives general truths through the observation of nature. Revolutions in society impacted not
only theology and science, but economics, politics among other areas of knowledge. A renewal of

education breathed new life into a stultified western society.

An Educational Renaissance Today

Society is due for a rebirth today, and perhaps is observing the sparks of one in an educational

renaissance that parallels that of Italy and broader Europe in the 15th century.

In her essay “The Lost

Tools of Learning,” Dorothy Sayers proposes a return to an old form of education as a mean of

accomplishing renewal today. She writes:

“If we are to produce a society of educated people, fitted to preserve their intellectual freedom

amid the

complex pressures of our modern society, we must turn back the wheel of progress some four or five

hundred years, to the point at which education began to lose sight of its true object, towards the end of

the Middle Ages.”

This statement lays out three important ideas. First, the success of a free, democratic society depends

upon the quality of education its people receive. Publishing her article in 1947, Sayers would have been
all too aware of the dangers of the far-right authoritarianism of Nazi Germany as well as the emerging

threat of authoritarian communism in the Soviet Union at the outset of the Cold War. However, the most


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significant threat to democracy was not fascism or Marxism in foreign lands, but the loss of the liberal

arts tradition w

ithin our own lands. This leads to Sayers’ second point, that the “wheel of progress” had

made certain unfulfilled promises. Progressivist educational theory almost completely took over

schools in earnest during the late 1800s, although Sayers is correct that progressive educational

thought had been around since Locke and Rousseau. The cultural and moral relativism of the

progressive program eroded a sense of truth residing outside the individual. Instead, the internal

motivations of the child took on central importance, guided by insights in the fields of psychology and

sociology. Education took on more utilitarian aims, forsaking the long-held notion that education

imparts the norms and ideals of society. Finally, Sayers’ points to the educational model of

the Middle

Ages, the liberal arts tradition that was part and parcel of Western civilization, which we have seen was

foundational to the educational goals of the Renaissance, during which a renewal of society took place.

The claim has been made that Western civilization has fallen. Rod Dreher for instance traces a centuries-

long decline of Western society through key revolutions. In his book The Benedict Option, he considers

how we are seeing a cultural decline today that parallels the decline of Roman culture in the 6th century.

Dreher looks to the past in how Benedict formed intentional communities to preserve the heart of

Christian culture and to weather the fall of Western society. Similarly, we can look to the past to identify
educational theories, methods and practices that will enable us to rebuild and renew Western

civilization. Yet for several decades now there has been a growing sense that educational reform is

needed and in some sectors already occurring. Add this to the growing literature on neuroscience and

educational psychology. We find ourselves at the very same intersection Renaissance intellectuals

found themselves: the recovery of that which was long-forgotten in a context of burgeoning intellectual

pursuit. We are ready for an educational renaissance.

REFERENCES

1.

Toshqulova, Lobar, and Muslima Bozorova. "PIRLS ASSESSMENT SYSTEM CRITERIA."

Академические исследования в современной науке 1.18 (2022): 25

-27.

2.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "THE ROLE OF THE ORAL CREATIVE RESOURCES OF THE PEOPLE

IN THE NATIONAL EDUCATION SYSTEM AND ITS PEDAGOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE." Science and

innovation 2.B4 (2023): 510-514.

3.

Kodirovna, Bozorova Muslima. "Ethnic Values-Revival of Attributes of Nomad Life in Education of
Descendants." International Journal on Integrated Education 5.6 (2022): 373-376.

4.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "The Role of Ethnopedagogy in the Process of Improving the

National Education System." Academicia Globe 2.10 (2021): 18-21.


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5.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "Life Features of Uzbek Folk Pedagogy." International Journal on

Integrated Education 4.10 (2021): 29-30.

References

Toshqulova, Lobar, and Muslima Bozorova. "PIRLS ASSESSMENT SYSTEM CRITERIA." Академические исследования в современной науке 1.18 (2022): 25-27.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "THE ROLE OF THE ORAL CREATIVE RESOURCES OF THE PEOPLE IN THE NATIONAL EDUCATION SYSTEM AND ITS PEDAGOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE." Science and innovation 2.B4 (2023): 510-514.

Kodirovna, Bozorova Muslima. "Ethnic Values-Revival of Attributes of Nomad Life in Education of Descendants." International Journal on Integrated Education 5.6 (2022): 373-376.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "The Role of Ethnopedagogy in the Process of Improving the National Education System." Academicia Globe 2.10 (2021): 18-21.

Kadyrovna, Bozorova Muslima. "Life Features of Uzbek Folk Pedagogy." International Journal on Integrated Education 4.10 (2021): 29-30.