educated fifteenth century italians believed that
a. the world was going to end
b. they were living in a new era of human history
c. they had much to learn from the middle ages
d. their society was in the midst of inevitable and unstoppable decline
Answer: B



Answer :

Educated fifteenth century Italians believed that they were living in a new era of human history. Option (b) is the correct response.

Italy in the fifteenth century was distinct from the rest of Europe. It was split up into separate city-states, each with its own own system of government. The Italian Renaissance was born in Florence, a sovereign republic.

The Piedmontese monarchy fundamentally altered the established educational system in eighteenth-century Italy.

After the University of Turin's faculty and curriculum were updated, the establishment of a network of royal colleges throughout the provinces expanded state control over the middle class's education and carried out a project that, for its coherence and innovation, was used as a model throughout Europe for many years.

Through the school system, an intriguing phenomenon of alchemy inside the Ancient Régime's hierarchies of order and prestige was achieved.

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