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Classicism - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art movement and architectural style
For the branch of study in the humanities, see Classics. Not to be confused with Classism.
Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784, an icon of Neoclassicism in painting
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Classicism, in the arts, refers generally to a high regard for a classical period, classical antiquity in the Western tradition, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seek to emulate. In its purest form, classicism is an aesthetic attitude dependent on principles based in the culture, art and literature of ancient Greece and Rome, with the emphasis on form, simplicity, proportion, clarity of structure, perfection and restrained emotion, as well as explicit appeal to the intellect.[1] The art of classicism typically seeks to be formal and restrained: of the Discobolus Sir Kenneth Clark observed, "if we object to his restraint and compression we are simply objecting to the classicism of classic art. A violent emphasis or a sudden acceleration of rhythmic movement would have destroyed those qualities of balance and completeness through which it retained until the present century its position of authority in the restricted repertoire of visual images."[2] Classicism, as Clark noted, implies a canon of widely accepted ideal forms, in the Western canon that he was examining in The Nude (1956).

Classicism is a force which is often present in post-medieval European and European influenced traditions; however, some periods felt themselves more connected to the classical ideals than others, particularly the Age of Enlightenment,[3] when Neoclassicism was an important movement in the visual arts.

General term

[edit]
Fountain of the Four Rivers, Bernini, 1651.
Classicist door in Olomouc, The Czech Republic.

Classicism is a specific genre of philosophy, expressing itself in literature, architecture, art, and music, which has Ancient Greek and Roman sources and an emphasis on society. It was particularly expressed in the Neoclassicism[4] of the Age of Enlightenment.

Classicism is a recurrent tendency in the Late Antique period, and had a major revival in Carolingian and Ottonian art. There was another, more durable revival in the Italian Renaissance when the fall of Byzantium and rising trade with the Islamic cultures brought a flood of knowledge about, and from, the antiquity of Europe. Until that time, the identification with antiquity had been seen as a continuous history of Christendom from the conversion of Roman Emperor Constantine I. Renaissance classicism introduced a host of elements into European culture, including the application of mathematics and empiricism into art, humanism, literary and depictive realism, and formalism. Importantly it also introduced Polytheism, or "paganism" [non sequitur], and the juxtaposition of ancient and modern.

The classicism of the Renaissance led to, and gave way to, a different sense of what was "classical" in the 16th and 17th centuries. In this period, classicism took on more overtly structural overtones of orderliness, predictability, the use of geometry and grids, the importance of rigorous discipline and pedagogy, as well as the formation of schools of art and music. The court of Louis XIV was seen as the center of this form of classicism, with its references to the gods of Olympus as a symbolic prop for absolutism, its adherence to axiomatic and deductive reasoning, and its love of order and predictability.

This period sought the revival of classical art forms, including Greek drama and music. Opera, in its modern European form, had its roots in attempts to recreate the combination of singing and dancing with theatre thought to be the Greek norm. Examples of this appeal to classicism included Dante, Petrarch, and Shakespeare in poetry and theatre. Tudor drama, in particular, modeled itself after classical ideals and divided works into Tragedy[5] and Comedy. Studying Ancient Greek became regarded as essential for a well-rounded education in the liberal arts.

The Renaissance also explicitly returned to architectural models and techniques associated with Greek and Roman antiquity, including the golden rectangle[6] as a key proportion for buildings, the classical orders of columns, as well as a host of ornament and detail associated with Greek and Roman architecture. They also began reviving plastic arts such as bronze casting for sculpture, and used the classical naturalism as the foundation of drawing, painting and sculpture.

The Age of Enlightenment identified itself with a vision of antiquity which, while continuous with the classicism of the previous century, was shaken by the physics of Sir Isaac Newton, the improvements in machinery and measurement, and a sense of liberation which they saw as being present in the Greek civilization, particularly in its struggles against the Persian Empire. The ornate, organic, and complexly integrated forms of the baroque were to give way to a series of movements that regarded themselves expressly as "classical" or "neo-classical", or would rapidly be labelled as such. For example, the painting of Jacques-Louis David was seen as an attempt to return to formal balance, clarity, manliness, and vigor in art.[7]

The 19th century saw the classical age as being the precursor of academicism, including such movements as uniformitarianism in the sciences, and the creation of rigorous categories in artistic fields. Various movements of the Romantic period saw themselves as classical revolts against a prevailing trend of emotionalism and irregularity, for example the Pre-Raphaelites.[8] By this point, classicism was old enough that previous classical movements received revivals; for example, the Renaissance was seen as a means to combine the organic medieval with the orderly classical. The 19th century continued or extended many classical programs in the sciences, most notably the Newtonian program to account for the movement of energy between bodies by means of exchange of mechanical and thermal energy.

The 20th century saw a number of changes in the arts and sciences. Classicism was used both by those who rejected, or saw as temporary, transfigurations in the political, scientific, and social world and by those who embraced the changes as a means to overthrow the perceived weight of the 19th century. Thus, both pre-20th century disciplines were labelled "classical" and modern movements in art which saw themselves as aligned with light, space, sparseness of texture, and formal coherence.

In the present day philosophy classicism is used as a term particularly in relation to Apollonian over Dionysian impulses in society and art; that is a preference for rationality, or at least rationally guided catharsis, over emotionalism.

In the theatre

[edit]
Molière in classical dress, by Nicolas Mignard, 1658.

Classicism in the theatre was developed by 17th century French playwrights from what they judged to be the rules of Greek classical theatre, including the "Classical unities" of time, place and action, found in the Poetics of Aristotle.

  • Unity of time referred to the need for the entire action of the play to take place in a fictional 24-hour period
  • Unity of place meant that the action should unfold in a single location
  • Unity of action meant that the play should be constructed around a single 'plot-line', such as a tragic love affair or a conflict between honour and duty.

Examples of classicist playwrights are Pierre Corneille, Jean Racine and Molière. In the period of Romanticism, Shakespeare, who conformed to none of the classical rules, became the focus of French argument over them, in which the Romantics eventually triumphed; Victor Hugo was among the first French playwrights to break these conventions.[9]

The influence of these French rules on playwrights in other nations is debatable. In the English theatre, Restoration playwrights such as William Wycherley and William Congreve would have been familiar with them. William Shakespeare and his contemporaries did not follow this Classicist philosophy, in particular since they were not French and also because they wrote several decades prior to their establishment. Those of Shakespeare's plays that seem to display the unities, such as The Tempest,[10] probably indicate a familiarity with actual models from classical antiquity.

Most famous 18th-century Italian playwright and libretist Carlo Goldoni created a hybrid style of playwriting (combining the model of Molière with the strengths of Commedia dell'arte and his own wit and sincerity).

In literature

[edit]

The literary classicism drew inspiration from the qualities of proportion of the major works of ancient Greek and Latin literature.[11][12]

The 17th–18th centuries significant Classical writers (principally, playwrights and poets) include Pierre Corneille, Jean Racine, John Dryden, William Wycherley, William Congreve, Jonathan Swift, Joseph Addison, Alexander Pope, Voltaire, Carlo Goldoni, and Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock.

In architecture

[edit]
Main articles: Classical architecture and Outline of classical architecture
Villa Rotonda, Palladio, 1591

Classicism in architecture developed during the Italian Renaissance, notably in the writings and designs of Leon Battista Alberti and the work of Filippo Brunelleschi.[13] It places emphasis on symmetry, proportion, geometry and the regularity of parts as they are demonstrated in the architecture of Classical antiquity and, in particular, the architecture of Ancient Rome, of which many examples remained.

Orderly arrangements of columns, pilasters and lintels, as well as the use of semicircular arches, hemispherical domes, niches and aedicules replaced the more complex proportional systems and irregular profiles of medieval buildings. This style quickly spread to other Italian cities and then to France, Germany, England, Russia and elsewhere.

In the 16th century, Sebastiano Serlio helped codify the classical orders and Andrea Palladio's legacy evolved into the long tradition of Palladian architecture. Building off of these influences, the 17th-century architects Inigo Jones[14] and Christopher Wren firmly established classicism in England.

For the development of classicism from the mid-18th-century onwards, see Neoclassical architecture.

In the fine arts

[edit]
  • For Greek art of the 5th century B.C.E., see Classical art in ancient Greece and the Severe style

Italian Renaissance painting[15] and sculpture are marked by their renewal of classical forms, motifs and subjects. In the 15th century Leon Battista Alberti was important in theorizing many of the ideas for painting that came to a fully realized product with Raphael's School of Athens during the High Renaissance. The themes continued largely unbroken into the 17th century, when artists such as Nicolas Poussin and Charles Le Brun represented of the more rigid classicism. Like Italian classicizing ideas in the 15th and 16th centuries, it spread through Europe in the mid to late 17th century.

Later classicism in painting and sculpture from the mid-18th and 19th centuries is generally referred to as Neoclassicism.

Political philosophy

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See also: Classical republicanism

Classicism in political philosophy dates back to the ancient Greeks. Western political philosophy is often attributed to the great Greek philosopher Plato. Although political theory of this time starts with Plato, it quickly becomes complex when Plato's pupil, Aristotle, formulates his own ideas.[16] "The political theories of both philosophers are closely tied to their ethical theories, and their interest is in questions concerning constitutions or forms of government."[16]

However, Plato and Aristotle are not the seedbed but simply the seeds that grew from a seedbed of political predecessors who had debated this topic for centuries before their time. For example, Herodotus sketched out a debate between Theseus, a king of the time, and Creon's messenger. The debate simply shows proponents of democracy, monarchy, and oligarchy and how they all feel about these forms of government. Herodotus' sketch is just one of the beginning seedbeds for which Plato and Aristotle grew their own political theories.[16]

Another Greek philosopher who was pivotal in the development of Classical political philosophy was Socrates. Although he was not a theory-builder, he often stimulated fellow citizens with paradoxes that challenged them to reflect on their own beliefs.[16] Socrates thought "the values that ought to determine how individuals live their lives should also shape the political life of the community."[16] he believed the people of Athens involved wealth and money too much into the politics of their city. He judged the citizens for the way they amassed wealth and power over simple things like projects for their community.[16]

Just like Plato and Aristotle, Socrates did not come up with these ideas alone. Socrates ideals stem back from Protagoras and other 'sophists'. These 'teachers of political arts' were the first to think and act as Socrates did. Where the two diverge is in the way they practiced their ideals. Protagoras' ideals were loved by Athens. Whereas Socrates challenged and pushed the citizens and he was not as loved.[16]

In the end, ancient Greece is to be credited with the foundation of Classical political philosophy.

See also

[edit]
  • iconArt portal
  • Classical tradition
  • Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns
  • Weimar Classicism

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 112.
  2. ^ Clark, The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form 1956:242
  3. ^ Walters, Kerry (September 2011). "JOURNAL ARTICLE Review". Church History. 80 (3): 691–693. doi:10.1017/S0009640711000990. JSTOR 41240671. S2CID 163191669.
  4. ^ Johnson, James William (1969). "What Was Neo-Classicism?". Journal of British Studies. 9 (1): 49–70. doi:10.1086/385580. JSTOR 175167. S2CID 144293227.
  5. ^ Bakogianni, Anastasia (2012). "Theatre of the Condemned. Classical Tragedy on Greek Prison Islands by G. VAN STEEN". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 132: 294–296. doi:10.1017/S0075426912001140. JSTOR 41722362.
  6. ^ Palmer, Lauren (2015-10-02). "History of the Golden Ratio in Art". artnet News. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  7. ^ Galitz, Kathryn (October 2004). "The Legacy of Jacques Louis David (1748–1825)". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  8. ^ "JOURNAL ARTICLE The Pre-Raphaelites". Bulletin of the Fogg Art Museum. 10 (2): 62–63. November 1943. JSTOR 4301128.
  9. ^ NASH, SUZANNE (2006). "Casting Hugo into History". Nineteenth-Century French Studies. 35 (1): 189–205. ISSN 0146-7891. JSTOR 23538386.
  10. ^ Pierce, Robert B. (Spring 1999). "Understanding "The Tempest"". New Literary History. 30 (2): 373–388. doi:10.1353/nlh.1999.0028. JSTOR 20057542. S2CID 144654529.
  11. ^ Baldick, Chris (2015). "Classicism". The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms (Online Version) (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191783234.
  12. ^ Greene, Roland; et al., eds. (2012). "Neoclassical poetics". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics (4th rev. ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15491-6.
  13. ^ Department of European Paintings (October 2002). "Architecture in Renaissance Italy". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  14. ^ Anderson, Christy (1997). "Masculine and Unaffected: Inigo Jones and the Classical Ideal". Art Journal. 56 (2): 48–54. doi:10.2307/777678. ISSN 0004-3249. JSTOR 777678.
  15. ^ Larsen, Michael (March 1978). "Italian Renaissance Painting by John Hale". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. 126 (5260): 243–244. JSTOR 41372753.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Devereux, Daniel (2011-09-02). Klosko, George (ed.). "Classical Political Philosophy: Plato and Aristotle". Oxford Handbooks Online. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199238804.003.0007.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Kallendorf, Craig (2007). A Companion to the Classical Tradition. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405122948. Retrieved 2012-05-06. Essays by various authors on topics related to historical periods, places, and themes. Limited preview online.

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  • Cretan school
  • Turquerie
  • Fontainebleau school
  • Art of the late 16th century in Milan
17th century
  • Baroque
    • Baroque in Milan
    • Flemish Baroque
    • Caravaggisti
      • in Utrecht
      • Tenebrism
    • Louis XIII style
    • Lutheran Baroque
  • Stroganov school
  • Animal painting
  • Guild of Romanists
  • Dutch Golden Age
    • Delft school
  • Capriccio
  • Heptanese school
  • Classicism
    • Louis XIV style
    • Poussinists and Rubenists
18th century
  • Rococo
    • Rocaille
    • Louis XV style
    • Frederician
    • Chinoiserie
    • Fête galante
  • Neoclassicism
    • Goût grec
    • Louis XVI style
    • Adam style
    • Directoire style
    • Neoclassical architecture in Milan
  • Picturesque
Colonial art
  • Art of the African diaspora
    • African-American
    • Caribbean
      • Haitian
  • Colonial Asian art
    • Arts in the Philippines
      • Letras y figuras
      • Tipos del País
    • Colonial Asian Baroque
    • Company style
  • Latin American art
    • Casta painting
    • Indochristian art
      • Chilote school
      • Cuzco school
      • Quito school
    • Latin American Baroque
Art borrowing
Western elements
  • Islamic
    • Moorish
  • Manichaean
  • Mughal
  • Qajar
  • Qing handicrafts
  • Western influence in Japan
    • Akita ranga
    • Uki-e
Transition
to modern

(c. 1770 – 1862)
  • Romanticism
    • Fairy painting
    • Danish Golden Age
    • Troubadour style
    • Nazarene movement
    • Purismo
    • Shoreham Ancients
    • Düsseldorf school
    • Pre-Raphaelites
    • Hudson River School
      • American luminism
  • Orientalism
  • Norwich school
  • Empire style
  • Historicism
    • Revivalism
  • Biedermeier
  • Realism
    • Barbizon school
    • Costumbrismo
    • Verismo
      • Macchiaioli
  • Academic art
    • Munich school
      • in Greece
    • Neo-Grec
  • Etching revival
Modern
(1863–1944)
1863–1899
  • Neo-romanticism
    • National romanticism
  • Yōga
  • Nihonga
  • Japonisme
    • Anglo-Japanese style
  • Beuron school
  • Hague school
  • Peredvizhniki
  • Impressionism
    • American
      • Hoosier Group
      • Boston school
    • Amsterdam
    • Canadian
    • Heidelberg school
  • Aestheticism
  • Arts and Crafts
    • Art pottery
  • Tonalism
  • Decadent movement
  • Symbolism
    • Romanian
    • Russian
  • Volcano school
  • Incoherents
  • Post-Impressionism
    • Neo-Impressionism
      • Luminism
    • Divisionism
    • Pointillism
    • Pont-Aven School
    • Cloisonnism
    • Synthetism
    • Les Nabis
  • American Barbizon school
    • California tonalism
  • Wilhelminism
  • Costumbrismo
1900–1914
  • Art Nouveau
    • Art Nouveau in Milan
  • Primitivism
  • California Impressionism
  • Secessionism
  • School of Paris
    • Munich Secession
    • Vienna Secession
    • Berlin Secession
    • Sonderbund
  • Pennsylvania Impressionism
  • Mir iskusstva
  • Ten American Painters
  • Fauvism
  • Expressionism
    • Die Brücke
    • Der Blaue Reiter
  • Noucentisme
  • Deutscher Werkbund
  • American Realism
    • Ashcan school
  • Cubism
    • Proto-Cubism
    • Orphism
  • A Nyolcak
  • Neue Künstlervereinigung München
  • Futurism
    • Cubo-Futurism
  • Art Deco
  • Metaphysical
  • Rayonism
  • Productivism
  • Synchromism
  • Vorticism
1915–1944
  • Sosaku-hanga
  • Suprematism
  • School of Paris
  • Crystal Cubism
  • Constructivism
    • Latin American
      • Universal Constructivism
  • Dada
  • Shin-hanga
  • Neoplasticism
    • De Stijl
  • Purism
  • Return to order
    • Novecento Italiano
  • Figurative Constructivism
    • Stupid
    • Cologne Progressives
  • Arbeitsrat für Kunst
    • November Group
  • Australian tonalism
  • Dresden Secession
  • Social realism
  • Functionalism
    • Bauhaus
  • Kinetic art
  • Anthropophagy
  • Mingei
  • Group of Seven
  • New Objectivity
  • Grosvenor school
  • Neues Sehen
  • Surrealism
    • Iranian
    • Latin American
  • Mexican muralism
  • Neo-Fauvism
  • Precisionism
  • Aeropittura
  • Asso
  • Scuola Romana
  • Cercle et Carré
  • The Group
  • Harlem Renaissance
  • Kapists
  • Regionalism
    • California Scene Painting
  • Heroic realism
    • Socialist realism
    • Nazi art
  • Streamline Moderne
  • Concrete art
    • Abstraction-Création
  • Tiki
  • The Ten
  • Dimensionism
  • Boston Expressionism
  • Leningrad school
Contemporary
and Postmodern
(1945–present)
1945–1959
  • International Typographic Style
  • Abstract expressionism
    • Washington Color School
  • Visionary art
    • Vienna School of Fantastic Realism
  • Spatialism
  • Color field
  • Lyrical abstraction
    • Tachisme
    • Arte Informale
    • COBRA
    • Nuagisme
  • Generación de la Ruptura
  • Jikken Kōbō
  • Metcalf Chateau
  • Mono-ha
  • Nanyang Style
  • Action painting
  • American Figurative Expressionism
    • in New York
  • New media art
  • New York school
  • Hard-edge painting
  • Bay Area Figurative Movement
  • Les Plasticiens
  • Gutai Art Association
  • Gendai Bijutsu Kondankai
  • Pop art
  • Situationist International
  • Soviet Nonconformist
    • Ukrainian underground
  • Lettrism
    • Letterist International
    • Ultra-Lettrist
  • Florida Highwaymen
  • Cybernetic art
  • Antipodeans
1960–1969
  • Otra Figuración
  • Afrofuturism
  • Nueva Presencia
  • ZERO
  • Happening
  • Neo-Dada
    • Neo-Dada Organizers
  • Op art
  • Nouveau réalisme
  • Nouvelle tendance
  • Capitalist realism
  • Art & Language
  • Arte Povera
  • Black Arts Movement
  • The Caribbean Artists Movement
  • Chicano art movement
  • Conceptual art
  • Land art
  • Systems art
  • Video art
  • Minimalism
  • Fluxus
  • Generative art
  • Post-painterly abstraction
  • Intermedia
  • Psychedelic art
  • Nut Art
  • Photorealism
  • Environmental art
  • Performance art
  • Process art
  • Institutional critique
  • Light and Space
  • Street art
  • Feminist art movement
    • in the US
  • Saqqakhaneh movement
  • The Stars Art Group
  • Tropicália
  • Yoru no Kai
  • Artificial intelligence visual art
1970–1999
  • Post-conceptual art
  • Installation art
  • Artscene
  • Postminimalism
  • Endurance art
  • Sots Art
    • Moscow Conceptualists
  • Pattern and Decoration
  • Pliontanism
  • Punk art
  • Neo-expressionism
    • Transavantgarde
  • Saint Soleil school
  • Guerrilla art
  • Lowbrow art
  • Telematic art
  • Appropriation art
  • Neo-conceptual art
  • New European Painting
  • Tunisian collaborative painting
  • Memphis Group
  • Cyberdelic
  • Neue Slowenische Kunst
  • Scratch video
  • Transgressive
  • Retrofuturism
  • Young British Artists
  • Superfiction
  • Taring Padi
  • Superflat
  • New Leipzig school
  • Artist-run initiative
  • Artivism
  • The Designers Republic
  • Grunge design
  • Verdadism
  • Chinese Apartment Art
2000–
present
  • Amazonian pop art
  • Altermodern
  • Art for art
  • Art game
  • Art intervention
  • Brandalism
  • Classical Realism
  • Contemporary African art
    • Africanfuturism
  • Contemporary Indigenous Australian art
  • Crypto art
  • Cyborg art
  • Excessivism
  • Fictive art
  • Flat design
    • Corporate Memphis
  • Hypermodernism
  • Hyperrealism
  • Idea art
  • Internet art
    • Post-Internet
  • iPhone art
  • Kitsch movement
  • Lightpainting
  • Massurrealism
  • Modern European ink painting
  • Neo-futurism
  • Neomodern
  • Neosymbolism
  • Passionism
  • Post-YBAs
  • Relational art
  • Skeuomorphism
  • Software art
  • Sound art
  • Stuckism
  • Superflat
    • SoFlo Superflat
    • Superstroke
  • Toyism
  • Vaporwave
  • Walking Artists Network
Related topics
  • History of art
  • Abstract art
    • Asemic writing
  • Anti-art
  • Avant-garde
  • Ballets Russes
  • Christian art
    • Art in the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation
    • Catholic art
    • Icon
    • Lutheran art
  • Digital art
  • Fantastic art
  • Folk art
  • Hierarchy of genres
    • Genre painting
    • History painting
  • Illuminated manuscript
  • Illustration
  • Interactive art
  • Jewish art
  • Kitsch
  • Landscape painting
  • Modernism
    • Modern sculpture
    • Late modernism
  • Naïve art
  • Outsider art
  • Portrait
  • Prehistoric European art
  • Queer art
  • Realism
  • Shock art
  • Trompe-l'œil
  • Western painting
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Western world and culture
Foundations
  • Cradle of civilization
  • Old World
  • Greco-Roman world
    • Greece
    • Hellenistic Kingdoms
    • Rome
    • Roman Empire
      • Western
      • Eastern
  • Roman legacy
  • Romanization
  • Romano-Germanic culture
    • Gallo-Roman
  • Anglo-American world
  • Eurosphere
  • Christendom
History
  • European Bronze Age
  • Classical antiquity
    • Late antiquity
  • Middle Ages
    • early
    • high
    • late
  • Renaissance
  • Modern period
    • Early modern period
    • Age of Discovery
    • Reformation
    • Age of Enlightenment
    • Scientific Revolution
    • Age of Revolution
    • Romanticism
    • Abolitionism
    • Emancipation
    • Capitalism
    • Industrial Revolution
    • Great Divergence
    • Modernism
    • World War I
    • Interwar period
    • Universal suffrage
    • World War II
    • Cold War
  • Post–Cold War era
    • War on Terror
    • Information age
    • War on drugs
    • Post-9/11
Culture
  • Alphabet
    • Greek
    • Latin
    • Cyrillic
    • Runes
  • Architecture
  • Art
    • Periods
  • Calendar
  • Cuisine
    • Diet
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  • Esotericism
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  • Immigration
  • Law
  • Languages
    • Eurolinguistics
    • Standard Average European
  • Literature
    • Canon
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    • Chant
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    • Instruments
  • Mythology
  • Painting
    • contemporary
  • Philosophy
    • Science
    • Values
  • Physical culture
    • Sport
  • Religion
    • East–West Schism
    • Western Christianity
    • Decline
    • Secularism
Philosophy
  • Ancient Greek philosophy
  • Hellenistic philosophy
  • Ancient Roman philosophy
  • Christian ethics
  • Judeo-Christian ethics
  • Christian philosophy
  • Scholasticism
  • Rationalism
  • Empiricism
  • Existentialism
    • Christian existentialism
  • Humanism
    • Christian humanism
    • Secular humanism
  • Liberalism
  • Conservatism
  • Capitalism
  • Progressivism
  • Continental philosophy
  • Analytic philosophy
  • Post-structuralism
  • Tolerance
    • Paradox
  • Relativism
    • Peritrope
  • Atlanticism
  • Sovereigntism
  • Individualism
  • Values
    • European
Religion
  • Abrahamic
    • Christianity
      • Culture
        • Western/Eastern
      • Catholicism
        • Latin Church
      • Eastern Orthodoxy
        • Greek Orthodox Church
      • Protestantism
  • Paganism
    • Baltic
    • Celtic
    • Finnish
    • Germanic
      • Anglo-Saxon
      • Frankish
      • Gothic
      • Old Norse
    • Hellenistic
    • Roman
    • Slavic
    • Neo
  • Agnosticism
  • Atheism
Law
  • Natural law
  • Rule of law
    • Equality before the law
  • Constitutionalism
  • Human rights
    • Life
    • Thought
    • Speech
    • Press
    • Religion
    • Property
  • Democracy
  • Liberal international order
Contemporary
integration
  • ABCANZ Armies
  • AER
  • Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
  • ANZUK
  • ANZUS
  • Arctic Council
  • AUKUS
  • AUSCANNZUKUS
  • Baltic Assembly
  • Benelux
  • British–Irish Council
  • BSEC
  • Bucharest Nine
  • CANZUK
  • CBSS
  • Celtic League
  • CEFTA
  • Council of Europe
  • Craiova Group
  • Eastern European Group
  • Eastern Partnership
  • EEA
  • EFTA
  • EPC
  • ESA
  • EU
  • EU Customs Union
  • Eurozone
  • EU–UK TCA
  • Five Eyes
  • G7
  • Lancaster House Treaties
  • Latin American and Caribbean Group
  • Latin Union
  • Lublin Triangle
  • NAFTA
  • NATO
  • NORAD
  • Nordic Council
  • OAS
  • OECD
  • Open Balkan
  • OSCE
  • Pacific Islands Forum
  • PROSUR/PROSUL
  • Rio Treaty
  • Schengen
  • Special Relationship
  • Three Seas Initiative
  • UKUSA Agreement
  • USMCA
  • Visegrád Group
  • West Nordic Council
  • Western Bloc
  • Western European and Others Group
  • Westernization
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • GND
National
  • Czech Republic
  • Israel
Other
  • Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  • Yale LUX
Retrieved from "https://teknopedia.ac.id/w/index.php?title=Classicism&oldid=1333957363"
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Sunting pranala
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