Characteristics, Art, and Figures in Each Historical Age:
1. Ages in Human History
2. Specific Characteristics of Each of the Four Historical Ages
3. Notable Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, and Music in Each of the Four Ages
4. Major Works of Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, and Music in Each Age
5. Literature: Universal, Spanish, Catalan, and Balearic Islands Literature in Each of the Four Historical Ages
6 Prominent authors (literature) from around the world, Spain, Catalonia, and the Balearic Islands in each age
7 Prominent figures in each of the four historical ages:
1 Ages in the history of humanity:
Ancient History (3500 BC – 476 AD):
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492):
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789)
Contemporary Age (1789 – present)
2 Specific characteristics of each of the 4 historical ages:
Ancient History (3500 BC – 476 AD):
Birth of the first civilizations; invention of writing; development of cities, trade, and states; great cultures such as Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, and Rome.
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492):
Feudalism; strong influence of religion; Castles and knights; expansion of Islam; birth of universities; growth of cities; crises such as the Black Death.
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789):
Geographical discoveries; European expansion; cultural and scientific renaissance; printing press; absolute monarchies; beginning of modern science; colonization of other continents.
Contemporary Age (1789 – present):
Liberal revolutions; industrialization; development of democracy; great scientific and technological advances; labor movements; world wars; globalization; digital revolution.
3 Notable painting, sculpture, architecture, and music in each of the 4 ages
Ancient Age (3500 BC – 476 AD):
Painting: Egyptian paintings and Roman mosaics
Sculpture: Idealized Greek sculptures and Roman portraits
Architecture: Pyramids, Greek temples, and Roman amphitheaters
Music: Religious and popular music; Use of the lyre, the aulos, and other instruments.
Middle Age (476 – 1453 or 1492):
Painting: Romanesque and Gothic painting, primarily religious.
Sculpture: Sculpture integrated into churches and cathedrals.
Architecture: Monasteries, castles, and Gothic cathedrals.
Music: Gregorian chant and early forms of polyphony.
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789):
Painting: Renaissance, Mannerism, and Baroque; great masters such as Leonardo da Vinci and Diego Velázquez.
Sculpture: Revival of classical models; works by Michelangelo.
Architecture: Renaissance palaces and Baroque buildings.
Painting: Birth of opera; Baroque music with composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach.
Contemporary Age (1789 – present):
Painting: Impressionism, Cubism, Surrealism, Abstraction, and contemporary art.
Sculpture: Diversity of materials and styles.
Architecture: New materials (steel, concrete, glass); skyscrapers and modern architecture.
Music: Romanticism, jazz, rock, pop, electronic music, and a wide variety of genres.
4 Major Works of Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, and Music from Each Age:
Ancient History (3500 BC – 476 AD):
Painting: Egyptian tomb paintings.
Sculpture: Discobolus. Myron of Eleutherae.
Architecture: Great Pyramid of Giza. Khufu (Cheops).
Music: Ancient Greek melodies preserved only in fragments.
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492):
Painting: Romanesque frescoes in Pyrenean churches.
Sculpture: Gothic cathedral portals.
Architecture: Notre-Dame Cathedral.
Music: Gregorian chant. Gregory of Tours.
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789):
Painting: Mona Lisa. Leonardo da Vinci.
Sculpture: David. Michelangelo.
Architecture: Palace of Versailles. Louis Le Vau, with contributions from Jules Hardouin-Mansart
Music: Messiah. George Frideric Handel
Contemporary Era (1789 – present):
Painting: Guernica. Pablo Picasso
Sculpture: The Thinker. Auguste Rodin
Architecture: Empire State Building or Sagrada Familia. Antoni Gaudí
Music: from Ludwig van Beethoven to the major popular music movements of the 20th and 21st centuries.
5. World, Spanish, Catalan, and Balearic Islands Literature in each of the four historical periods
Ancient Era (3500 BC – 476 AD):
World: Iliad and Odyssey
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492):
World: The Divine Comedy
Spanish: Cantar de Mio Cid
Catalan: Tirant Lo Blanc. Joanot Martorell.
Balearic Islands: Ramon Llull
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789):
Universal: Hamlet
Spanish: Don Quixote
Catalan: Francisco Vicent Garcia
Balearic Islands: Juniper Serra
Contemporary Age (1789 – present):
Universal: One Hundred Years of Solitude
Spanish: Federico García Lorca
Catalan: Mercè Rodoreda
Balearic Islands: Llorenç Villalonga and Blai Bonet
6 Prominent Authors (Literature) from Universal, Spanish, Catalan, and Balearic Islands in Each Age:
Ancient History (3500 BC – 476 AD):
Universal
Homer
Virgil
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492):
Universal
Dante Alighieri
Spanish
Anonymous author of the Poem of the Cid
Catalan
Joanot Martorell
Ausiàs March
Balearic Islands
Ramon Llull, the most important figure in all of medieval Catalan literature.
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789):
Universal
William Shakespeare
Spanish
Miguel de Cervantes
Lope de Vega
Catalan
Francesc Vincent Garcia
Balearic Islands
Junipero Serra
Juan Ramis y Ramis (straddling Modern and Contemporary)
Contemporary Age (1789 – present):
Universal
Lev Tolstoy
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Spanish
Federico García Lorca
Miguel de Unamuno
Catalan
Jacint Verdaguer
Mercè Rodoreda
Balearic Islands
Miquel Costa i Llobera
Joan Alcover
Llorenc Villalonga
Blai Bonet
7 Prominent Figures from Each of the Four Ages of History:
Ancient History (3500 BC – 476 AD)
Hammurabi — author of one of the first written codes of law.
Alexander the Great — created a vast empire stretching from Greece to India.
Julius Caesar — a key figure in the transformation of Rome.
Cleopatra VII — the powerful ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt.
Augustus — founder of the Roman Empire.
Middle Ages (476 – 1453 or 1492)
Charlemagne — spearheaded the unification of much of Western Europe.
El Cid — hero of the Reconquista.
Thomas Aquinas — one of the most influential figures in medieval thought.
Joan of Arc — a key figure in the final phase of the Hundred Years' War.
Averrois — a great transmitter of classical knowledge in Europe.
Modern Age (1453 or 1492 – 1789)
Christopher Columbus — paved the way for European exploration of the Americas.
Leonardo da Vinci — symbol of the Renaissance.
Martin Luther — initiator of the Protestant Reformation.
Galileo Galilei — pioneer of modern science.
Louis XIV — paradigm of absolute monarchy.
Contemporary Age (1789 – present)
Napoleon Bonaparte — transformed Europe after the French Revolution.
Karl Marx — influential thinker of socialism.
Mahatma Gandhi — advocate of nonviolent resistance.
Albert Einstein — one of the most important scientific figures in history.
Nelson Mandela — symbol of the struggle against apartheid.
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