| Term | Definition |
|
humanities |
subject taught in ancient greek and roman schools, including grammer and rhetoric,poetry and history |
|
Jesuits |
spread the cathoclic faith to new areas (north/south america)black robes |
|
Ignatius loyola |
the man who established the jesuits |
|
indulgences |
pieces of paper sold by church that annulled you from your sins |
|
Predestination |
the idea that god has chosen who will be saved |
|
inquisition |
church court based in italy |
|
simony |
in the middle ages the selling and buying of church offices |
|
vernacular |
everyday language of the people |
|
Renaissance |
i time of when erupean scholars learned about ancient greece and rome |
|
Nuclear family |
family made of parents and children and sometimes grandparents |
|
Extended family |
a large family constisting of parents there sons and their wives and their children, and unmarried daughters |
|
johannes gutenburg |
created the printing press |
|
Excommunication |
when you were excluded from the sacrements of the church |
|
Justification by faith |
was a catholic doctrine discoverd by luther |
|
protestant reformation |
a religious movement of the 16th century that began as an attempt to reform the Roman Catholic Church and resulted in the creation of Protestant churches |
|
seminary |
a special school providing education in theology, religious history, primarily to prepare students for the priesthood |