print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/topic/humanism
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

The emphasis on virtuous action as the goal of learning was a founding principle of humanism and (though sometimes sharply challenged) continued to exert a strong influence throughout the course of the movement. Salutati, the learned chancellor of Florence whose words could batter cities, represented in word and deed the humanistic ideal of an armed wisdom, that combination of philosophical understanding and powerful rhetoric that alone could effect virtuous policy and reconcile the rival claims of action and contemplation. In De ingenuis moribus et liberalibus studiis (1402–03; “On the Manners of a Gentleman and Liberal Studies”), a treatise that influenced Guarino Veronese (Guarino da Verona) and Vittorino da Feltre, Pietro Paolo Vergerio maintained that just and beneficent action was the purpose of humanistic education. His words were echoed by Alberti in Della famiglia (1435–44; “On the Family”):

As I have said, happiness cannot be gained without good works and just and righteous deeds.…The best works are those that benefit many people. Those are most virtuous, perhaps, that cannot be pursued without strength and nobility. We must give ourselves to manly effort, then, and follow the noblest pursuits.

Matteo Palmieri wrote that

the true merit of virtue lies in effective action, and effective action is impossible without the faculties that are necessary for it. He who has nothing to give cannot be generous. And he who loves solitude can be neither just, nor strong, nor experienced in those things that are of importance in government and in the affairs of the majority.

Palmieri’s philosophical poem, La città di vita (c. 1464; “The City of Life”), developed the idea that the world was divinely ordained to test human virtue in action. Later humanism would broaden and diversify the theme of active virtue. Machiavelli saw action not only as the goal of virtue but also (via historical understanding of great deeds of the past) as the basis for wisdom. Castiglione, in his highly influential Il libro del cortegiano (1528; The Book of the Courtier), developed in his ideal courtier a psychological model for active virtue, stressing moral awareness as a key element in just action. Rabelais used the idea of active virtue as the basis for anticlerical satire. In his profusely humanistic Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–64), he has the active hero Friar John save a monastery from enemy attack while the monks sit uselessly in the church choir, chanting meaningless Latin syllables. John later asserts that, had he been present, he would have used his manly strength to save Jesus from crucifixion, and he castigates the Apostles for betraying Christ “after a good meal.” Endorsements of active virtue, as will be shown, would also characterize the work of English humanists from Sir Thomas Elyot to John Milton. They typify the sense of social responsibility—the instinctive association of learning with politics and morality—that stood at the heart of the movement. As Salutati put it, “One must stand in the line of battle, engage in close combat, struggle for justice, for truth, for honour.”

Early history

The rise of humanism can be located in mid-13th-century Florence and attributed to the influence of one man. During the latter half of the century, Florentine Chancellor Brunetto Latini sparked a revolution in civic discourse that would lead to the major achievements of Italian humanism in centuries to come. As a statesman and diplomat, he was a driving force in establishing and preserving civil liberties. As a writer and teacher, he led his fellow citizens from the confines of feudal and ecclesiastical authority into a community founded on shared awareness and individual initiative. His achievement was chronicled by his near contemporary Giovanni Villani:

He commented on the Rhetoric of Tully, and made the good and useful book called the Tesoro, and the Tesoretto, and the Keys of the Tesoro, and many other books of philosophy, and of vices and of virtues, and he was Secretary of our Commune. He was a worldly man, but we have made mention of him because he was the first master in refining the Florentines, and in teaching them how to speak correctly, and how to guide and govern our Republic on political principles.

In Brunetto one finds, for the first time, the medley of attitudes and strategies that gave humanism its character: Ciceronian discourse in the service of civic liberty, personal activism and leadership, social realism in the spirit of Cicero, the endorsement of individual genius, and the strong emphasis on political education. Brunetto also established the philological dynamics that gave humanism its cultural power: the combination of Classical learning with apt expression in the vernacular. Brunetto was a major influence on the Italian poet Dante, who revered him as a teacher, and on Florentine leadership from Salutati to Machiavelli. Other now-familiar aspects of humanism, including Petrarch’s individualism and Boccaccio’s realism, grew in the soil that Brunetto had tilled. Brunetto’s groundbreaking endorsement of Aristotle and Cicero as real-world political champions would animate humanistic discourse down to the time of Thomas Jefferson, who listed these two thinkers as sources of the Declaration of Independence. For these reasons Brunetto may be regarded as the founder of the humanistic revolution that gave rise successively to the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and the modern democratic state.

During the 1290s the young Dante seemed on his way to succeeding Brunetto as the cultural leader of Florence. Precociously learned, he focused his talents on the defense of civic liberty and speedily achieved the civic rank of prior. But in 1301 civil war forced him into an exile that would last the rest of his life. Although his literary output in exile showed signs of his personal alienation, it advanced the cause of humanism in important ways. His De monarchia (c. 1313; On Monarchy), one of the most important tracts of medieval political philosophy, was the first major step in what would ultimately become the doctrine of the separation of church and state. His De vulgari eloquentia (c. 1304–07; On Vernacular Eloquence) was a landmark in the development of modern languages. His Commedia—later known as La divina commedia (c. 1308–21; The Divine Comedy)—established the vernacular as a medium for major art. Although not immediately influential, the poem eventually became the artistic fountainhead of an emerging national culture.