The Renaissance was an ancient Renaissance that began in Italy in the mid-14th century and had a tremendous influence on the development of the future Western society. It will no longer focus on the church and its instructions, they will still work. It will no longer allow the government to sit in Rome, and even if the church still has government involvement, church creeps will dominate the land. It will no longer circumvent the vast amount of knowledge that was created in the past, but the opponent still exists, but ignore it for 1000 years.
The Italian war continued to be activated under Francis I (1494 - 1547, Rule 1515 - 47), which was known as the prince of the Renaissance during his long reign. (In the Renaissance, the term "prince" refers to military and political rulers, including the king.) Francis grew up at the court of King Louis XIII and was called dolphin. In 1514 he married Louise's daughter, Claude France. When France and Spain fought in 1512, the king gave the army to Francis of 18 years old. Ferdinand II of Spain's King Aragon conquered the small kingdom of Navar between France and Spain in Biscay Bay (see the "Spanish" section later in this chapter). The French are now trying to regain Navarre. Francis could be a military advisor, but he could not win. Then in 1513, the Swiss army insulted the French army in Novara State in northwestern Italy.
King Francis became the prince of the Renaissance during his long reign. His childhood was extraordinary for his wise humanistic education. His mother, Louise of Savoy (1476 - 1531), supervised his growing experience and established a strong bond between them. The boy learned Spanish and Italian, and spent time reading myths, history, literature, and thanks to art. Francisco also accepted adequate and noble education in the art of war. Surrounded by young playmates, he studied the strategy and method of the Renaissance war and showed extraordinary talent for this technique. At the age of 13, Francis left the mother's house and lived in the French court. King Louis XIII was awarded the Duke of Francis Valor made from the great property of the Orleans family.
From a very young age, Bertie stubbornly refused to follow the plan for the education of his father's noble children. There is no prince of the Renaissance here. Filled with facts and theory, he can not find and concentrate on learning difficulties. Negative pressure to a small prince behind made a negative reaction. His mentor, Frédéric Gibbs, remembered that in mathematics classes in Prince of Wales, he lost feelings in frequent classrooms. Apply yourself "