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Elizabethan era

The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603). Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history. The symbol of Britannia (a female personification of Great Britain) was first used in 1572, and often thereafter, to mark the Elizabethan age as a renaissance that inspired national pride through classical ideals, international expansion, and naval triumph over Spain.

This "golden age"[1] represented the apogee of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of poetry, music and literature. The era is most famous for its theatre, as William Shakespeare and many others composed plays that broke free of England's past style of theatre. It was an age of exploration and expansion abroad, while back at home, the Protestant Reformation became more acceptable to the people, most certainly after the Spanish Armada was repelled. It was also the end of the period when England was a separate realm before its royal union with Scotland.

The Elizabethan age contrasts sharply with the previous and following reigns. It was a brief period of internal peace between the Wars of the Roses in the previous century, the English Reformation, and the religious battles between Protestants and Catholics prior to Elizabeth's reign, and then the later conflict of the English Civil War and the ongoing political battles between parliament and the monarchy that engulfed the remainder of the seventeenth century. The Protestant/Catholic divide was settled, for a time, by the Elizabethan Religious Settlement, and parliament was not yet strong enough to challenge royal absolutism.

England was also well-off compared to the other nations of Europe. The Italian Renaissance had come to an end following the end of the Italian Wars, which left the Italian Peninsula impoverished. The Kingdom of France was embroiled in the French Wars of Religion (1562–1598). They were (temporarily) settled in 1598 by a policy of tolerating Protestantism with the Edict of Nantes. In part because of this, but also because the English had been expelled from their last outposts on the continent by Spain's tercios, the centuries-long Anglo-French Wars were largely suspended for most of Elizabeth's reign.

The one great rival was Habsburg Spain, with whom England clashed both in Europe and the Americas in skirmishes that exploded into the Anglo-Spanish War of 1585–1604. An attempt by Philip II of Spain to invade England with the Spanish Armada in 1588 was famously defeated. In turn England launched an equally unsuccessful expedition to Spain with the Drake–Norris Expedition of 1589. Three further Spanish Armadas also failed in 1596, 1597 and 1602. The war ended with the Treaty of London the year following Elizabeth's death.

England during this period had a centralised, well-organised, and effective government, largely a result of the reforms of Henry VII and Henry VIII, as well as Elizabeth's harsh punishments for any dissenters. Economically, the country began to benefit greatly from the new era of trans-Atlantic trade and persistent theft of Spanish and Portuguese treasures, most notably as a result of Francis Drake's circumnavigation.

The term Elizabethan era was already well-established in English and British historical consciousness, long before the accession of Queen Elizabeth II, and generally refers solely to the time of the earlier Queen of this name.

The National Armada memorial in Plymouth using the Britannia image to celebrate the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 (William Charles May, sculptor, 1888)

Romance and reality

 
"Elizabeth ushers in Peace and Plenty." Detail from The Family of Henry VIII: An Allegory of the Tudor Succession, c. 1572, attributed to Lucas de Heere.

The Victorian era and the early 20th century idealised the Elizabethan era. The Encyclopædia Britannica maintains that "[T]he long reign of Elizabeth I, 1558–1603, was England's Golden Age... 'Merry England', in love with life, expressed itself in music and literature, in architecture and in adventurous seafaring".[2] This idealising tendency was shared by Britain and an Anglophilic America. In popular culture, the image of those adventurous Elizabethan seafarers was embodied in the films of Errol Flynn.[3]

In response and reaction to this hyperbole, modern historians and biographers have tended to take a more dispassionate view of the Tudor period.[4]

Government

 
William Cecil presiding over the Court of Wards

Elizabethan England was not particularly successful in a military sense during the period, but it avoided major defeats and built up a powerful navy. On balance, it can be said that Elizabeth provided the country with a long period of general if not total peace and generally increased prosperity due in large part to stealing from Spanish treasure ships, raiding settlements with low defenses, and selling African slaves. Having inherited a virtually bankrupt state from previous reigns, her frugal policies restored fiscal responsibility. Her fiscal restraint cleared the regime of debt by 1574, and ten years later the Crown enjoyed a surplus of £300,000.[5] Economically, Sir Thomas Gresham's founding of the Royal Exchange (1565), the first stock exchange in England and one of the earliest in Europe, proved to be a development of the first importance, for the economic development of England and soon for the world as a whole. With taxes lower than other European countries of the period, the economy expanded; though the wealth was distributed with wild unevenness, there was clearly more wealth to go around at the end of Elizabeth's reign than at the beginning.[6] This general peace and prosperity allowed the attractive developments that "Golden Age" advocates have stressed.[7]

Plots, intrigues, and conspiracies

The Elizabethan Age was also an age of plots and conspiracies, frequently political in nature, and often involving the highest levels of Elizabethan society. High officials in Madrid, Paris and Rome sought to kill Elizabeth, a Protestant, and replace her with Mary, Queen of Scots, a Catholic. That would be a prelude to the religious recovery of England for Catholicism. In 1570, the Ridolfi plot was thwarted. In 1584, the Throckmorton Plot was discovered, after Francis Throckmorton confessed his involvement in a plot to overthrow the Queen and restore the Catholic Church in England. Another major conspiracy was the Babington Plot – the event which most directly led to Mary's execution, the discovery of which involved a double agent, Gilbert Gifford, acting under the direction of Francis Walsingham, the Queen's highly effective spy master.

The Essex Rebellion of 1601 has a dramatic element, as just before the uprising, supporters of the Earl of Essex, among them Charles and Joscelyn Percy (younger brothers of the Earl of Northumberland), paid for a performance of Richard II at the Globe Theatre, apparently with the goal of stirring public ill will towards the monarchy.[8] It was reported at the trial of Essex by Chamberlain's Men actor Augustine Phillips, that the conspirators paid the company forty shillings "above the ordinary" (i. e., above their usual rate) to stage the play, which the players felt was too old and "out of use" to attract a large audience.[8]

In the Bye Plot of 1603, two Catholic priests planned to kidnap King James and hold him in the Tower of London until he agreed to be more tolerant towards Catholics. Most dramatic was the 1605 Gunpowder Plot to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. It was discovered in time with eight conspirators executed, including Guy Fawkes, who became the iconic evil traitor in English lore.[9]

Royal Navy and defeat of the Armada

 
The Spanish Armada fighting the English navy at the Battle of Gravelines in 1588

While Henry VIII had launched the Royal Navy, Edward and Mary had ignored it and it was little more than a system of coastal defense. Elizabeth made naval strength a high priority.[10] She risked war with Spain by supporting the "Sea Dogs", such as John Hawkins and Francis Drake, who preyed on the Spanish merchant ships carrying gold and silver from the New World. The Navy yards were leaders in technical innovation, and the captains devised new tactics. Parker (1996) argues that the full-rigged ship was one of the greatest technological advances of the century and permanently transformed naval warfare. In 1573 English shipwrights introduced designs, first demonstrated in the "Dreadnaught", that allowed the ships to sail faster and maneuver better and permitted heavier guns.[11] Whereas before warships had tried to grapple with each other so that soldiers could board the enemy ship, now they stood off and fired broadsides that would sink the enemy vessel. When Spain finally decided to invade and conquer England it was a fiasco. Superior English ships and seamanship foiled the invasion and led to the destruction of the Spanish Armada in 1588, marking the high point of Elizabeth's reign. Technically, the Armada failed because Spain's over-complex strategy required coordination between the invasion fleet and the Spanish army on shore. Moreover, the poor design of the Spanish cannons meant they were much slower in reloading in a close-range battle. Spain and France still had stronger fleets, but England was catching up.[12]

Parker has speculated on the dire consequences if the Spanish had landed their invasion army in 1588. He argues that the Spanish army was larger, more experienced, better-equipped, more confident, and had better financing. The English defenses, on the other hand, were thin and outdated; England had too few soldiers and they were at best only partially trained. Spain had chosen England's weakest link and probably could have captured London in a week. Parker adds that a Catholic uprising in the north and in Ireland could have brought total defeat.[13]

Colonising the New World

The discoveries of Christopher Columbus electrified all of western Europe, especially maritime powers like England. King Henry VII commissioned John Cabot to lead a voyage to find a northern route to the Spice Islands of Asia; this began the search for the North West Passage. Cabot sailed in 1497 and reached Newfoundland.[14] He led another voyage to the Americas the following year, but nothing was heard of him or his ships again.[15]

In 1562 Elizabeth sent privateers Hawkins and Drake to seize booty from Spanish and Portuguese ships off the coast of West Africa.[16] When the Anglo-Spanish Wars intensified after 1585, Elizabeth approved further raids against Spanish ports in the Americas and against shipping returning to Europe with treasure.[17] Meanwhile, the influential writers Richard Hakluyt and John Dee were beginning to press for the establishment of England's own overseas empire. Spain was well established in the Americas, while Portugal, in union with Spain from 1580, had an ambitious global empire in Africa, Asia and South America. France was exploring North America.[18] England was stimulated to create its own colonies, with an emphasis on the West Indies rather than in North America.

Martin Frobisher landed at Frobisher Bay on Baffin Island in August 1576; He returned in 1577, claiming it in Queen Elizabeth's name, and in a third voyage tried but failed to found a settlement in Frobisher Bay.[19][20]

From 1577 to 1580, Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe. Combined with his daring raids against the Spanish and his great victory over them at Cádiz in 1587, he became a famous hero[21]—his exploits are still celebrated—but England did not follow up on his claims.[22] In 1583, Humphrey Gilbert sailed to Newfoundland, taking possession of the harbour of St. John's together with all land within two hundred leagues to the north and south of it.[23]

In 1584, the queen granted Walter Raleigh a charter for the colonisation of Virginia; it was named in her honour. Raleigh and Elizabeth sought both immediate riches and a base for privateers to raid the Spanish treasure fleets. Raleigh sent others to found the Roanoke Colony; it remains a mystery why the settlers all disappeared.[24] In 1600, the queen chartered the East India Company in an attempt to break the Spanish and Portuguese monopoly of far Eastern trade.[25] It established trading posts, which in later centuries evolved into British India, on the coasts of what is now India and Bangladesh. Larger scale colonisation to North America began shortly after Elizabeth's death.[26]

Distinctions

England in this era had some positive aspects that set it apart from contemporaneous continental European societies. Torture was rare, since the English legal system reserved torture only for capital crimes like treason[27]—though forms of corporal punishment, some of them extreme, were practised. The persecution of witches began in 1563, and hundreds were executed, although there was nothing like the frenzy on the Continent.[28] Mary had tried her hand at an aggressive anti-Protestant Inquisition and was hated for it; it was not to be repeated.[29] Nevertheless, more Catholics were persecuted, exiled, and burned alive than under Queen Mary.[30][31]

Religion

 
Detail from the Copperplate map of London (1553–1559), showing St Paul's Cathedral

Elizabeth managed to moderate and quell the intense religious passions of the time. This was in significant contrast to previous and succeeding eras of marked religious violence.[32]

Elizabeth said "I have no desire to make windows into men's souls". Her desire to moderate the religious persecutions of previous Tudor reigns – the persecution of Catholics under Edward VI, and of Protestants under Mary I – appears to have had a moderating effect on English society. Elizabeth, Protestant, but undogmatic one,[33] reinstated the 1552 Book of Common Prayer with modifications which made clear that the Church of England believed in the (spiritual) Real Presence of Christ in the Holy Communion but without a definition how in favor of leaving this a mystery, and she had the Black Rubric removed from the Articles of Faith: this had allowed kneeling to receive communion without implying that by doing so it meant the real and essential presence of Christ in the bread and wine: she believed it so. She was not able to get an unmarried clergy or the Protestant Holy Communion celebrated to look like a Mass,.[34] The Apostolic Succession was maintained, the institution of the church continued without a break (with 98% of the clergy remaining at their posts) and the attempt to ban music in church was defeated. The Injunctions of 1571 forbade any doctrines that did not conform to the teaching of the Church Fathers and the Catholic Bishops. The Queen's hostility to strict Calvinistic doctrines blocked the Radicals.

Almost no original theological thought came out of the English Reformation: instead the Church relied on the Catholic Consensus of the first Four Ecumenical Councils. The preservation of many Catholic doctrines and practices was the cuckoos nest that eventually resulted in the formation of the Via Media during the 17th century.[35] She spent the rest of her reign ferociously fending off radical reformers and Roman Catholics who wanted to modify the Settlement of Church affairs: The Church of England was Protestant, "with its peculiar arrested development in Protestant terms, and the ghost which it harboured of an older world of Catholic traditions and devotional practice".[36]

For a number of years refrained from persecuting Catholics because she was against Catholicism, not her Catholic subjects if they made no trouble. In 1570, Pope Pius V declared Elizabeth a heretic who was not the legitimate queen and that her subjects no longer owed her obedience. The pope sent Jesuits and seminarians to secretly evangelize and support Catholics. After several plots to overthrow her, Catholic clergy were mostly considered to be traitors, and were pursued aggressively in England. Often priests were tortured or executed after capture unless they cooperated with the English authorities. People who publicly supported Catholicism were excluded from the professions; sometimes fined or imprisoned.[31] This was justified on the grounds that Catholics were not persecuted for their religion but punished for being traitors who supported the Queen's Spanish foe; in practice, however, Catholics perceived it as religious persecution and regarded those executed as martyrs.

Science, technology, and exploration

 
Francis Bacon, pioneer of modern scientific thought

Lacking a dominant genius or a formal structure for research (the following century had both Sir Isaac Newton and the Royal Society), the Elizabethan era nonetheless saw significant scientific progress. The astronomers Thomas Digges and Thomas Harriot made important contributions; William Gilbert published his seminal study of magnetism, De Magnete, in 1600. Substantial advancements were made in the fields of cartography and surveying. The eccentric but influential John Dee also merits mention.

Much of this scientific and technological progress related to the practical skill of navigation. English achievements in exploration were noteworthy in the Elizabethan era. Sir Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe between 1577 and 1581, and Martin Frobisher explored the Arctic. The first attempt at English settlement of the eastern seaboard of North America occurred in this era—the abortive colony at Roanoke Island in 1587.

While Elizabethan England is not thought of as an age of technological innovation, some progress did occur. In 1564 Guilliam Boonen came from the Netherlands to be Queen Elizabeth's first coach-builder —thus introducing the new European invention of the spring-suspension coach to England, as a replacement for the litters and carts of an earlier transportation mode. Coaches quickly became as fashionable as sports cars in a later century; social critics, especially Puritan commentators, noted the "diverse great ladies" who rode "up and down the countryside" in their new coaches.[37]

Social history

Historians since the 1960s have explored many facets of the social history, covering every class of the population.[38]

Health

Although home to only a small part of the population the Tudor municipalities were overcrowded and unhygienic. Most towns were unpaved with poor public sanitation. There were no sewers or drains, and rubbish was simply abandoned in the street. Animals such as rats thrived in these conditions. In larger towns and cities, such as London, common diseases arising from lack of sanitation included smallpox, measles, malaria, typhus, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and chickenpox.[39]

Outbreaks of the Black Death pandemic occurred in 1498, 1535, 1543, 1563, 1589 and 1603. The reason for the speedy spread of the disease was the increase of rats infected by fleas carrying the disease.[40]

Child mortality was low in comparison with earlier and later periods, at about 150 or fewer deaths per 1000 babies.[41] By age 15 a person could expect 40–50 more years of life.[42]

Homes and dwelling

 
Parts of the Ivy House in Witchampton date from c. 1580

The great majority were tenant farmers who lived in small villages. Their homes were, as in earlier centuries, thatched huts with one or two rooms, although later on during this period, roofs were also tiled. Furniture was basic, with stools being commonplace rather than chairs.[39] The walls of Tudor houses were often made from timber and wattle and daub, or brick; stone and tiles were more common in the wealthier homes. The daub was usually then painted with limewash, making it white, and the wood was painted with black tar to prevent rotting, but not in Tudor times; the Victorians did this afterwards. The bricks were handmade and thinner than modern bricks. The wooden beams were cut by hand, which makes telling the difference between Tudor houses and Tudor-style houses easy, as the original beams are not straight. The upper floors of Tudor houses were often larger than the ground floors, which would create an overhang (or jetty). This would create more floor-surface above while also keeping maximum street width. During the Tudor period, the use of glass when building houses was first used, and became widespread. It was very expensive and difficult to make, so the panes were made small and held together with a lead lattice, in casement windows. People who could not afford glass often used polished horn, cloth or paper. Tudor chimneys were tall, thin, and often decorated with symmetrical patterns of molded or cut brick. Early Tudor houses, and the homes of poorer people, did not have chimneys. The smoke in these cases would be let out through a simple hole in the roof.

Mansions had many chimneys for the many fireplaces required to keep the vast rooms warm. These fires were also the only way of cooking food. Wealthy Tudor homes needed many rooms, where a large number of guests and servants could be accommodated, fed and entertained. Wealth was demonstrated by the extensive use of glass. Windows became the main feature of Tudor mansions, and were often a fashion statement. Mansions were often designed to a symmetrical plan; "E" and "H" shapes were popular.[43]

Cities

The population of London increased from 100,000 to 200,000 between the death of Mary Tudor in 1558 and the death of Elizabeth I in 1603. Inflation was rapid and the wealth gap was wide. Poor men, women, and children begged in the cities, as the children only earned sixpence a week. With the growth of industry, many landlords decided to use their land for manufacturing purposes, displacing the farmers who lived and worked there. Despite the struggles of the lower class, the government tended to spend money on wars and exploration voyages instead of on welfare.

Poverty

 
A woodcut of c. 1536 depicting a vagrant being punished in the streets in Tudor England

About one-third of the population lived in poverty, with the wealthy expected to give alms to assist the impotent poor.[44] Tudor law was harsh on the able-bodied poor, i.e., those unable to find work. Those who left their parishes in order to locate work were termed vagabonds and could be subjected to punishments, including whipping and putting at the stocks.[45][46]

The idea of the workhouse for the able-bodied poor was first suggested in 1576.[47]

Education

There was an unprecedented expansion of education in the Tudor period. Until then, few children went to school.[48] Those that did go were mainly the sons of wealthy or ambitious fathers who could afford to pay the attendance fee. Boys were allowed to go to school and began at the age of 4, they then moved to grammar school when they were 7 years old. Girls were either kept at home by their parents to help with housework or sent out to work to bring money in for the family. They were not sent to school. Boys were educated for work and the girls for marriage and running a household so when they married they could look after the house and children.[49] Wealthy families hired a tutor to teach the boys at home. Many Tudor towns and villages had a parish school where the local vicar taught boys to read and write. Brothers could teach their sisters these skills. At school, pupils were taught English, Latin, Greek, catechism and arithmetic. The pupils practised writing in ink by copying the alphabet and the Lord's Prayer. There were few books, so pupils read from hornbooks instead. These wooden boards had the alphabet, prayers or other writings pinned to them and were covered with a thin layer of transparent cow's horn. There were two types of school in Tudor times: petty school was where young boys were taught to read and write; grammar school was where abler boys were taught English and Latin.[50] It was usual for students to attend six days a week. The school day started at 7:00 am in winter and 6:00 am in summer and finished about 5:00 pm. Petty schools had shorter hours, mostly to allow poorer boys the opportunity to work as well. Schools were harsh and teachers were very strict, often beating pupils who misbehaved.[51]

Education would begin at home, where children were taught the basic etiquette of proper manners and respecting others.[52] It was necessary for boys to attend grammar school, but girls were rarely allowed in any place of education other than petty schools, and then only with a restricted curriculum.[52] Petty schools were for all children aged from 5 to 7 years of age. Only the most wealthy people allowed their daughters to be taught, and only at home. During this time, endowed schooling became available. This meant that even boys of very poor families were able to attend school if they were not needed to work at home, but only in a few localities were funds available to provide support as well as the necessary education scholarship.[53]

Boys from wealthy families were taught at home by a private tutor. When Henry VIII shut the monasteries he closed their schools. He refounded many former monastic schools—they are known as "King's schools" and are found all over England. During the reign of Edward VI many free grammar schools were set up to take in non-fee paying students. There were two universities in Tudor England: Oxford and Cambridge. Some boys went to university at the age of about 14.[54]

Food

Availability

England's food supply was plentiful throughout most of the reign; there were no famines. Bad harvests caused distress, but they were usually localized. The most widespread came in 1555–57 and 1596–98.[55] In the towns the price of staples was fixed by law; in hard times the size of the loaf of bread sold by the baker was smaller.[56]

Trade and industry flourished in the 16th century, making England more prosperous and improving the standard of living of the upper and middle classes. However, the lower classes did not benefit much and did not always have enough food. As the English population was fed by its own agricultural produce, a series of bad harvests in the 1590s caused widespread starvation and poverty. The success of the wool trading industry decreased attention on agriculture, resulting in further starvation of the lower classes. Cumbria, the poorest and most isolated part of England, suffered a six-year famine beginning in 1594. Diseases and natural disasters also contributed to the scarce food supply.[57]

In the 17th century, the food supply improved. England had no food crises from 1650 to 1725, a period when France was unusually vulnerable to famines. Historians point out that oat and barley prices in England did not always increase following a failure of the wheat crop, but did do so in France.[58]

England was exposed to new foods (such as the potato imported from South America), and developed new tastes during the era. The more prosperous enjoyed a wide variety of food and drink, including exotic new drinks such as tea, coffee, and chocolate. French and Italian chefs appeared in the country houses and palaces bringing new standards of food preparation and taste. For example, the English developed a taste for acidic foods—such as oranges for the upper class—and started to use vinegar heavily. The gentry paid increasing attention to their gardens, with new fruits, vegetables and herbs; pasta, pastries, and dried mustard balls first appeared on the table. The apricot was a special treat at fancy banquets. Roast beef remained a staple for those who could afford it. The rest ate a great deal of bread and fish. Every class had a taste for beer and rum.[59]

Diet

The diet in England during the Elizabethan era depended largely on social class. Bread was a staple of the Elizabethan diet, and people of different statuses ate bread of different qualities. The upper classes ate fine white bread called manchet, while the poor ate coarse bread made of barley or rye.

Diet of the lower class

The poorer among the population consumed a diet largely of bread, cheese, milk, and beer, with small portions of meat, fish and vegetables, and occasionally some fruit. Potatoes were just arriving at the end of the period, and became increasingly important. The typical poor farmer sold his best products on the market, keeping the cheap food for the family. Stale bread could be used to make bread puddings, and bread crumbs served to thicken soups, stews, and sauces.[60]

Diet of the middle class

At a somewhat higher social level families ate an enormous variety of meats, who could choose among venison, beef, mutton, veal, pork, lamb, fowl, salmon, eel, and shellfish. The holiday goose was a special treat. Rich spices were used by the wealthier people to offset the smells of old salt-preserved meat. Many rural folk and some townspeople tended a small garden which produced vegetables such as asparagus, cucumbers, spinach, lettuce, beans, cabbage, turnips, radishes, carrots, leeks, and peas, as well as medicinal and flavoring herbs. Some grew their own apricots, grapes, berries, apples, pears, plums, strawberries, currants, and cherries. Families without a garden could trade with their neighbors to obtain vegetables and fruits at low cost. Fruits and vegetables were used in desserts such as pastries, tarts, cakes, crystallized fruit, and syrup.[61][62]

Diet of the upper class

At the rich end of the scale the manor houses and palaces were awash with large, elaborately prepared meals, usually for many people and often accompanied by entertainment. The upper classes often celebrated religious festivals, weddings, alliances and the whims of the king or queen. Feasts were commonly used to commemorate the "procession" of the crowned heads of state in the summer months, when the king or queen would travel through a circuit of other nobles' lands both to avoid the plague season of London, and alleviate the royal coffers, often drained through the winter to provide for the needs of the royal family and court. This would include a few days or even a week of feasting in each noble's home, who depending on his or her production and display of fashion, generosity and entertainment, could have his way made in court and elevate his or her status for months or even years.

Among the rich private hospitality was an important item in the budget. Entertaining a royal party for a few weeks could be ruinous to a nobleman. Inns existed for travellers, but restaurants were not known.

Special courses after a feast or dinner which often involved a special room or outdoor gazebo (sometimes known as a folly) with a central table set with dainties of "medicinal" value to help with digestion. These would include wafers, comfits of sugar-spun anise or other spices, jellies and marmalades (a firmer variety than we are used to, these would be more similar to our gelatin jigglers), candied fruits, spiced nuts and other such niceties. These would be eaten while standing and drinking warm, spiced wines (known as hypocras) or other drinks known to aid in digestion. Sugar in the Middle Ages or Early Modern Period was often considered medicinal, and used heavily in such things. This was not a course of pleasure, though it could be as everything was a treat, but one of healthful eating and abetting the digestive capabilities of the body. It also, of course, allowed those standing to show off their gorgeous new clothes and the holders of the dinner and banquet to show off the wealth of their estate, what with having a special room just for banqueting.

Gender

 
The Procession Picture, c. 1600, showing Elizabeth I borne along by her courtiers

While the Tudor era presents an abundance of material on the women of the nobility—especially royal wives and queens—historians have recovered scant documentation about the average lives of women. There has, however, been extensive statistical analysis of demographic and population data which includes women, especially in their childbearing roles.[63] The role of women in society was, for the historical era, relatively unconstrained; Spanish and Italian visitors to England commented regularly, and sometimes caustically, on the freedom that women enjoyed in England, in contrast to their home cultures. England had more well-educated upper-class women than was common anywhere in Europe.[64][65]

The Queen's marital status was a major political and diplomatic topic. It also entered into the popular culture. Elizabeth's unmarried status inspired a cult of virginity. In poetry and portraiture, she was depicted as a virgin or a goddess or both, not as a normal woman.[66] Elizabeth made a virtue of her virginity: in 1559, she told the Commons, "And, in the end, this shall be for me sufficient, that a marble stone shall declare that a queen, having reigned such a time, lived and died a virgin".[67] Public tributes to the Virgin by 1578 acted as a coded assertion of opposition to the queen's marriage negotiations with the Duc d'Alençon.[68]

In contrast to her father's emphasis on masculinity and physical prowess, Elizabeth emphasized the maternalism theme, saying often that she was married to her kingdom and subjects. She explained "I keep the good will of all my husbands – my good people – for if they did not rest assured of some special love towards them, they would not readily yield me such good obedience",[69] and promised in 1563 they would never have a more natural mother than she.[70] Coch (1996) argues that her figurative motherhood played a central role in her complex self-representation, shaping and legitimating the personal rule of a divinely appointed female prince.[71]

Marriage

Over ninety percent of English women (and adults, in general) entered marriage at the end of the 1500s and beginning of the 1600s, at an average age of about 25–26 years for the bride and 27–28 years for the groom, with the most common ages being 25–26 for grooms (who would have finished their apprenticeships around this age) and 23 for brides.[72][73][74] Among the nobility and gentry, the average was around 19–21 for brides and 24–26 for grooms.[75] Many city and townswomen married for the first time in their thirties and forties[76] and it was not unusual for orphaned young women to delay marriage until the late twenties or early thirties to help support their younger siblings,[77] and roughly a quarter of all English brides were pregnant at their weddings.[78]

High culture

Theatre

 
A reconstruction of the Globe Theatre in London, originally built in 1599 and used by Shakespeare

With William Shakespeare at his peak, as well as Christopher Marlowe and many other playwrights, actors and theatres constantly busy, the high culture of the Elizabethan Renaissance was best expressed in its theatre. Historical topics were especially popular, not to mention the usual comedies and tragedies.[79]

Literature

Elizabethan literature is considered one of the "most splendid" in the history of English literature. In addition to drama and the theatre, it saw a flowering of poetry, with new forms like the sonnet, the Spenserian stanza, and dramatic blank verse, as well as prose, including historical chronicles, pamphlets, and the first English novels. Edmund Spenser, Richard Hooker, and John Lyly, as well as Marlowe and Shakespeare, are major Elizabethan writers.[80]

Music

Travelling musicians were in great demand at Court, in churches, at country houses, and at local festivals. Important composers included William Byrd (1543–1623), John Dowland (1563–1626) Thomas Campion (1567–1620), and Robert Johnson (c. 1583–c. 1634). The composers were commissioned by church and Court, and deployed two main styles, madrigal and ayre.[81] The popular culture showed a strong interest in folk songs and ballads (folk songs that tell a story). It became the fashion in the late 19th century to collect and sing the old songs.[82]

Fine arts

It has often been said that the Renaissance came late to England, in contrast to Italy and the other states of continental Europe; the fine arts in England during the Tudor and Stuart eras were dominated by foreign and imported talent—from Hans Holbein the Younger under Henry VIII to Anthony van Dyck under Charles I. Yet within this general trend, a native school of painting was developing. In Elizabeth's reign, Nicholas Hilliard, the Queen's "limner and goldsmith", is the most widely recognized figure in this native development; but George Gower has begun to attract greater notice and appreciation as knowledge of him and his art and career has improved.[83]

Popular culture

Pastimes

The Annual Summer Fair and other seasonal fairs such as May Day were often bawdy affairs.

Watching plays became very popular during the Tudor period. Most towns sponsored plays enacted in town squares followed by the actors using the courtyards of taverns or inns (referred to as inn-yards) followed by the first theatres (great open-air amphitheatres and then the introduction of indoor theatres called playhouses). This popularity was helped by the rise of great playwrights such as William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe using London theatres such as the Globe Theatre. By 1595, 15,000 people a week were watching plays in London. It was during Elizabeth's reign that the first real theatres were built in England. Before theatres were built, actors travelled from town to town and performed in the streets or outside inns.[84]

Miracle plays were local re-enactments of stories from the Bible. They derived from the old custom of mystery plays, in which stories and fables were enacted to teach lessons or educate about life in general. They influenced Shakespeare.[85]

Festivals were popular seasonal entertainments.[86]

Sports

There were many different types of Elizabethan sports and entertainment. Animal sports included bear and bull baiting, dog fighting and cock fighting.

The rich enjoyed tennis, fencing, and jousting. Hunting was strictly limited to the upper class. They favoured their packs of dogs and hounds trained to chase foxes, hares and boars. The rich also enjoyed hunting small game and birds with hawks, known as falconry.

Jousting

Jousting was an upscale, very expensive sport where warriors on horseback raced toward each other in full armor trying to use their lance to knock the other off his horse. It was a violent sport--King Henry II of France was killed in a tournament in 1559, as were many lesser men. King Henry VIII was a champion; he finally retired from the lists after a hard fall left him unconscious for hours.[87]

Other sports included archery, bowling, hammer-throwing, quarter-staff contests, troco, quoits, skittles, wrestling and mob football.

Gambling and card games

Dice was a popular activity in all social classes. Cards appeared in Spain and Italy about 1370, but they probably came from Egypt. They began to spread throughout Europe and came into England around 1460. By the time of Elizabeth's reign, gambling was a common sport. Cards were not played only by the upper class. Many of the lower classes had access to playing cards. The card suits tended to change over time. The first Italian and Spanish decks had the same suits: Swords, Batons/ Clubs, Cups, and Coins. The suits often changed from country to country. England probably followed the Latin version, initially using cards imported from Spain but later relying on more convenient supplies from France.[88] Most of the decks that have survived use the French Suit: Spades, Hearts, Clubs, and Diamonds. Yet even before Elizabeth had begun to reign, the number of cards had been standardized to 52 cards per deck. The lowest court subject in England was called the "knave". The lowest court card was therefore called the knave until later when the term "Jack" became more common. Popular card games included Maw, One and Thirty, Bone-ace. (These are all games for small group players.) Ruff and Honors was a team game.

Festivals, holidays and celebrations

 
A wedding feast, c. 1569

During the Elizabethan era, people looked forward to holidays because opportunities for leisure were limited, with time away from hard work being restricted to periods after church on Sundays. For the most part, leisure and festivities took place on a public church holy day. Every month had its own holiday, some of which are listed below:

  • The first Monday after Twelfth Night of January (any time between 7 January and 14 January) was Plough Monday. It celebrated returning to work after the Christmas celebrations and the New Year.
  • 2 February: Candlemas. Although often still very cold, Candlemas was celebrated as the first day of spring. All Christmas decorations were burned on this day, in candlelight and torchlight processions.
  • 14 February: Valentine's Day.
  • Between 3 March and 9 March: Shrove Tuesday (known as Mardi Gras or Carnival on the Continent). On this day, apprentices were allowed to run amok in the city in mobs, wreaking havoc, because it supposedly cleansed the city of vices before Lent.
    The day after Shrove Tuesday was Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent when all were to abstain from eating and drinking certain things.
    24 March: Lady Day or the feast of the Annunciation, the first of the Quarter Days on which rents and salaries were due and payable. It was a legal New Year when courts of law convened after a winter break, and it marked the supposed moment when the Angel Gabriel came to announce to the Virgin Mary that she would bear a child.
  • 1 May: May Day, celebrated as the first day of summer. This was one of the few Celtic festivals with no connection to Christianity and patterned on Beltane. It featured crowning a May Queen, a Green Man and dancing around a maypole.
  • 21 June: Midsummer (Christianized as the feast of John the Baptist) and another Quarter Day.
  • 1 August: Lammastide, or Lammas Day. Traditionally, the first day of August, in which it was customary to bring a loaf of bread to the church.
  • 29 September: Michaelmas. Another Quarter Day. Michaelmas celebrated the beginning of autumn, and Michael the Archangel.
  • 25 October: St. Crispin's Day. Bonfires, revels, and an elected 'King Crispin' were all featured in this celebration. Dramatized by Shakespeare in Henry V.
    28 October: The Lord Mayor's Show, which still takes place today in London.
    31 October: All Hallows Eve or Halloween. The beginning celebration of the days of the dead.
  • 1 November: All Hallows or All Saints' Day, followed by All Souls' Day.
  • 17 November: Accession Day or Queen's Day, the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth's accession to the throne, celebrated with lavish court festivities featuring jousting during her lifetime and as a national holiday for dozens of years after her death.[89]
  • 24 December: The Twelve Days of Christmas started at sundown and lasted until Epiphany on 6 January. Christmas was the last of the Quarter Days for the year.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Arnold, Janet: Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd (W S Maney and Son Ltd, Leeds, 1988) ISBN 0-901286-20-6
  • Ashelford, Jane. The Visual History of Costume: The Sixteenth Century. 1983 edition (ISBN 0-89676-076-6)
  • Bergeron, David, English Civic Pageantry, 1558–1642 (2003)
  • Black, J. B. The Reign of Elizabeth: 1558–1603 (2nd ed. 1958) survey by leading scholar
  • Braddick, Michael J. The nerves of state: taxation and the financing of the English state, 1558–1714 (Manchester University Press, 1996).
  • Digby, George Wingfield. Elizabethan Embroidery. New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1964.
  • Elton, G.R. Modern Historians on British History 1485–1945: A Critical Bibliography 1945–1969 (1969), annotated guide to history books on every major topic, plus book reviews and major scholarly articles; pp 26–50, 163–97. online
  • Fritze, Ronald H., ed. Historical Dictionary of Tudor England, 1485–1603 (Greenwood, 1991) 595pp.
  • Goodman, Ruth (2014). How to Be a Victorian: A Dawn-to-Dusk Guide to Victorian Life. Liveright. ISBN 978-0871404855.
  • Hartley, Dorothy, and Elliot Margaret M. Life and Work of the People of England. A pictorial record from contemporary sources. The Sixteenth Century. (1926).
  • Hutton, Ronald:The Rise and Fall of Merry England: The Ritual Year, 1400–1700, 2001. ISBN 0-19-285447-X
  • Mennell, Stephen. All manners of food: eating and taste in England and France from the Middle Ages to the present (University of Illinois Press, 1996).
  • Morrill, John, ed. The Oxford illustrated history of Tudor & Stuart Britain (1996) online; survey essays by leading scholars; heavily illustrated
  • Pound, John F. Poverty and vagrancy in Tudor England (Routledge, 2014).
  • Shakespeare's England. An Account of the Life and Manners of his Age (2 vol. 1916); essays by experts on social history and customs vol 1 online
  • Singman, Jeffrey L. Daily Life in Elizabethan England (1995)
  • Strong, Roy: The Cult of Elizabeth (The Harvill Press, 1999). ISBN 0-7126-6493-9
  • Wagner, John A. Historical Dictionary of the Elizabethan World: Britain, Ireland, Europe, and America (1999)
  • Wilson, Jean. Entertainments for Elizabeth I (Studies in Elizabethan and Renaissance Culture) (2007)
  • World History Encyclopedia – Food & Drink in the Elizabethan Era
  • Wright Louis B. Middle-Class Culture in Elizabethan England (1935)
  • Wrightson, Keith. English Society 1580–1680 (Routledge, 2013).
  • Yates, Frances A. The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979.
  • Yates, Frances A. Theatre of the World. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1969.

elizabethan, confused, with, elizabethan, russia, russian, period, during, reign, elizabeth, russia, epoch, tudor, period, history, england, during, reign, queen, elizabeth, 1558, 1603, historians, often, depict, golden, english, history, symbol, britannia, fe. Not to be confused with Elizabethan Russia the Russian period during the reign of Elizabeth of Russia The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I 1558 1603 Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history The symbol of Britannia a female personification of Great Britain was first used in 1572 and often thereafter to mark the Elizabethan age as a renaissance that inspired national pride through classical ideals international expansion and naval triumph over Spain Elizabethan era1558 1603Monarch s Elizabeth ILeader s Elizabeth I William Cecil 1st Baron Burghley Thomas Radclyffe 3rd Earl of Sussex Francis Walsingham Robert Dudley 1st Earl of Leicester Francis Knollys the ElderSee others at List of ministers to Queen Elizabeth I Preceded byTudor period Followed by Jacobean eraThis golden age 1 represented the apogee of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of poetry music and literature The era is most famous for its theatre as William Shakespeare and many others composed plays that broke free of England s past style of theatre It was an age of exploration and expansion abroad while back at home the Protestant Reformation became more acceptable to the people most certainly after the Spanish Armada was repelled It was also the end of the period when England was a separate realm before its royal union with Scotland The Elizabethan age contrasts sharply with the previous and following reigns It was a brief period of internal peace between the Wars of the Roses in the previous century the English Reformation and the religious battles between Protestants and Catholics prior to Elizabeth s reign and then the later conflict of the English Civil War and the ongoing political battles between parliament and the monarchy that engulfed the remainder of the seventeenth century The Protestant Catholic divide was settled for a time by the Elizabethan Religious Settlement and parliament was not yet strong enough to challenge royal absolutism England was also well off compared to the other nations of Europe The Italian Renaissance had come to an end following the end of the Italian Wars which left the Italian Peninsula impoverished The Kingdom of France was embroiled in the French Wars of Religion 1562 1598 They were temporarily settled in 1598 by a policy of tolerating Protestantism with the Edict of Nantes In part because of this but also because the English had been expelled from their last outposts on the continent by Spain s tercios the centuries long Anglo French Wars were largely suspended for most of Elizabeth s reign The one great rival was Habsburg Spain with whom England clashed both in Europe and the Americas in skirmishes that exploded into the Anglo Spanish War of 1585 1604 An attempt by Philip II of Spain to invade England with the Spanish Armada in 1588 was famously defeated In turn England launched an equally unsuccessful expedition to Spain with the Drake Norris Expedition of 1589 Three further Spanish Armadas also failed in 1596 1597 and 1602 The war ended with the Treaty of London the year following Elizabeth s death England during this period had a centralised well organised and effective government largely a result of the reforms of Henry VII and Henry VIII as well as Elizabeth s harsh punishments for any dissenters Economically the country began to benefit greatly from the new era of trans Atlantic trade and persistent theft of Spanish and Portuguese treasures most notably as a result of Francis Drake s circumnavigation The term Elizabethan era was already well established in English and British historical consciousness long before the accession of Queen Elizabeth II and generally refers solely to the time of the earlier Queen of this name The National Armada memorial in Plymouth using the Britannia image to celebrate the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 William Charles May sculptor 1888 Contents 1 Romance and reality 2 Government 2 1 Plots intrigues and conspiracies 2 2 Royal Navy and defeat of the Armada 2 3 Colonising the New World 3 Distinctions 4 Religion 5 Science technology and exploration 6 Social history 6 1 Health 6 2 Homes and dwelling 6 3 Cities 6 4 Poverty 6 5 Education 6 6 Food 6 6 1 Availability 6 6 2 Diet 6 7 Gender 6 8 Marriage 7 High culture 7 1 Theatre 7 2 Literature 7 3 Music 7 4 Fine arts 8 Popular culture 8 1 Pastimes 8 2 Sports 8 2 1 Jousting 8 2 2 Gambling and card games 8 3 Festivals holidays and celebrations 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingRomance and reality Elizabeth ushers in Peace and Plenty Detail from The Family of Henry VIII An Allegory of the Tudor Succession c 1572 attributed to Lucas de Heere The Victorian era and the early 20th century idealised the Elizabethan era The Encyclopaedia Britannica maintains that T he long reign of Elizabeth I 1558 1603 was England s Golden Age Merry England in love with life expressed itself in music and literature in architecture and in adventurous seafaring 2 This idealising tendency was shared by Britain and an Anglophilic America In popular culture the image of those adventurous Elizabethan seafarers was embodied in the films of Errol Flynn 3 In response and reaction to this hyperbole modern historians and biographers have tended to take a more dispassionate view of the Tudor period 4 Government William Cecil presiding over the Court of Wards Elizabethan England was not particularly successful in a military sense during the period but it avoided major defeats and built up a powerful navy On balance it can be said that Elizabeth provided the country with a long period of general if not total peace and generally increased prosperity due in large part to stealing from Spanish treasure ships raiding settlements with low defenses and selling African slaves Having inherited a virtually bankrupt state from previous reigns her frugal policies restored fiscal responsibility Her fiscal restraint cleared the regime of debt by 1574 and ten years later the Crown enjoyed a surplus of 300 000 5 Economically Sir Thomas Gresham s founding of the Royal Exchange 1565 the first stock exchange in England and one of the earliest in Europe proved to be a development of the first importance for the economic development of England and soon for the world as a whole With taxes lower than other European countries of the period the economy expanded though the wealth was distributed with wild unevenness there was clearly more wealth to go around at the end of Elizabeth s reign than at the beginning 6 This general peace and prosperity allowed the attractive developments that Golden Age advocates have stressed 7 Plots intrigues and conspiracies The Elizabethan Age was also an age of plots and conspiracies frequently political in nature and often involving the highest levels of Elizabethan society High officials in Madrid Paris and Rome sought to kill Elizabeth a Protestant and replace her with Mary Queen of Scots a Catholic That would be a prelude to the religious recovery of England for Catholicism In 1570 the Ridolfi plot was thwarted In 1584 the Throckmorton Plot was discovered after Francis Throckmorton confessed his involvement in a plot to overthrow the Queen and restore the Catholic Church in England Another major conspiracy was the Babington Plot the event which most directly led to Mary s execution the discovery of which involved a double agent Gilbert Gifford acting under the direction of Francis Walsingham the Queen s highly effective spy master The Essex Rebellion of 1601 has a dramatic element as just before the uprising supporters of the Earl of Essex among them Charles and Joscelyn Percy younger brothers of the Earl of Northumberland paid for a performance of Richard II at the Globe Theatre apparently with the goal of stirring public ill will towards the monarchy 8 It was reported at the trial of Essex by Chamberlain s Men actor Augustine Phillips that the conspirators paid the company forty shillings above the ordinary i e above their usual rate to stage the play which the players felt was too old and out of use to attract a large audience 8 In the Bye Plot of 1603 two Catholic priests planned to kidnap King James and hold him in the Tower of London until he agreed to be more tolerant towards Catholics Most dramatic was the 1605 Gunpowder Plot to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament It was discovered in time with eight conspirators executed including Guy Fawkes who became the iconic evil traitor in English lore 9 Royal Navy and defeat of the Armada The Spanish Armada fighting the English navy at the Battle of Gravelines in 1588 While Henry VIII had launched the Royal Navy Edward and Mary had ignored it and it was little more than a system of coastal defense Elizabeth made naval strength a high priority 10 She risked war with Spain by supporting the Sea Dogs such as John Hawkins and Francis Drake who preyed on the Spanish merchant ships carrying gold and silver from the New World The Navy yards were leaders in technical innovation and the captains devised new tactics Parker 1996 argues that the full rigged ship was one of the greatest technological advances of the century and permanently transformed naval warfare In 1573 English shipwrights introduced designs first demonstrated in the Dreadnaught that allowed the ships to sail faster and maneuver better and permitted heavier guns 11 Whereas before warships had tried to grapple with each other so that soldiers could board the enemy ship now they stood off and fired broadsides that would sink the enemy vessel When Spain finally decided to invade and conquer England it was a fiasco Superior English ships and seamanship foiled the invasion and led to the destruction of the Spanish Armada in 1588 marking the high point of Elizabeth s reign Technically the Armada failed because Spain s over complex strategy required coordination between the invasion fleet and the Spanish army on shore Moreover the poor design of the Spanish cannons meant they were much slower in reloading in a close range battle Spain and France still had stronger fleets but England was catching up 12 Parker has speculated on the dire consequences if the Spanish had landed their invasion army in 1588 He argues that the Spanish army was larger more experienced better equipped more confident and had better financing The English defenses on the other hand were thin and outdated England had too few soldiers and they were at best only partially trained Spain had chosen England s weakest link and probably could have captured London in a week Parker adds that a Catholic uprising in the north and in Ireland could have brought total defeat 13 Colonising the New World Main article English colonial empire The discoveries of Christopher Columbus electrified all of western Europe especially maritime powers like England King Henry VII commissioned John Cabot to lead a voyage to find a northern route to the Spice Islands of Asia this began the search for the North West Passage Cabot sailed in 1497 and reached Newfoundland 14 He led another voyage to the Americas the following year but nothing was heard of him or his ships again 15 In 1562 Elizabeth sent privateers Hawkins and Drake to seize booty from Spanish and Portuguese ships off the coast of West Africa 16 When the Anglo Spanish Wars intensified after 1585 Elizabeth approved further raids against Spanish ports in the Americas and against shipping returning to Europe with treasure 17 Meanwhile the influential writers Richard Hakluyt and John Dee were beginning to press for the establishment of England s own overseas empire Spain was well established in the Americas while Portugal in union with Spain from 1580 had an ambitious global empire in Africa Asia and South America France was exploring North America 18 England was stimulated to create its own colonies with an emphasis on the West Indies rather than in North America Martin Frobisher landed at Frobisher Bay on Baffin Island in August 1576 He returned in 1577 claiming it in Queen Elizabeth s name and in a third voyage tried but failed to found a settlement in Frobisher Bay 19 20 Francis Drake From 1577 to 1580 Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe Combined with his daring raids against the Spanish and his great victory over them at Cadiz in 1587 he became a famous hero 21 his exploits are still celebrated but England did not follow up on his claims 22 In 1583 Humphrey Gilbert sailed to Newfoundland taking possession of the harbour of St John s together with all land within two hundred leagues to the north and south of it 23 In 1584 the queen granted Walter Raleigh a charter for the colonisation of Virginia it was named in her honour Raleigh and Elizabeth sought both immediate riches and a base for privateers to raid the Spanish treasure fleets Raleigh sent others to found the Roanoke Colony it remains a mystery why the settlers all disappeared 24 In 1600 the queen chartered the East India Company in an attempt to break the Spanish and Portuguese monopoly of far Eastern trade 25 It established trading posts which in later centuries evolved into British India on the coasts of what is now India and Bangladesh Larger scale colonisation to North America began shortly after Elizabeth s death 26 DistinctionsEngland in this era had some positive aspects that set it apart from contemporaneous continental European societies Torture was rare since the English legal system reserved torture only for capital crimes like treason 27 though forms of corporal punishment some of them extreme were practised The persecution of witches began in 1563 and hundreds were executed although there was nothing like the frenzy on the Continent 28 Mary had tried her hand at an aggressive anti Protestant Inquisition and was hated for it it was not to be repeated 29 Nevertheless more Catholics were persecuted exiled and burned alive than under Queen Mary 30 31 ReligionMain article Tudor period English Reformation Detail from the Copperplate map of London 1553 1559 showing St Paul s Cathedral Elizabeth managed to moderate and quell the intense religious passions of the time This was in significant contrast to previous and succeeding eras of marked religious violence 32 Elizabeth said I have no desire to make windows into men s souls Her desire to moderate the religious persecutions of previous Tudor reigns the persecution of Catholics under Edward VI and of Protestants under Mary I appears to have had a moderating effect on English society Elizabeth Protestant but undogmatic one 33 reinstated the 1552 Book of Common Prayer with modifications which made clear that the Church of England believed in the spiritual Real Presence of Christ in the Holy Communion but without a definition how in favor of leaving this a mystery and she had the Black Rubric removed from the Articles of Faith this had allowed kneeling to receive communion without implying that by doing so it meant the real and essential presence of Christ in the bread and wine she believed it so She was not able to get an unmarried clergy or the Protestant Holy Communion celebrated to look like a Mass 34 The Apostolic Succession was maintained the institution of the church continued without a break with 98 of the clergy remaining at their posts and the attempt to ban music in church was defeated The Injunctions of 1571 forbade any doctrines that did not conform to the teaching of the Church Fathers and the Catholic Bishops The Queen s hostility to strict Calvinistic doctrines blocked the Radicals Almost no original theological thought came out of the English Reformation instead the Church relied on the Catholic Consensus of the first Four Ecumenical Councils The preservation of many Catholic doctrines and practices was the cuckoos nest that eventually resulted in the formation of the Via Media during the 17th century 35 She spent the rest of her reign ferociously fending off radical reformers and Roman Catholics who wanted to modify the Settlement of Church affairs The Church of England was Protestant with its peculiar arrested development in Protestant terms and the ghost which it harboured of an older world of Catholic traditions and devotional practice 36 For a number of years refrained from persecuting Catholics because she was against Catholicism not her Catholic subjects if they made no trouble In 1570 Pope Pius V declared Elizabeth a heretic who was not the legitimate queen and that her subjects no longer owed her obedience The pope sent Jesuits and seminarians to secretly evangelize and support Catholics After several plots to overthrow her Catholic clergy were mostly considered to be traitors and were pursued aggressively in England Often priests were tortured or executed after capture unless they cooperated with the English authorities People who publicly supported Catholicism were excluded from the professions sometimes fined or imprisoned 31 This was justified on the grounds that Catholics were not persecuted for their religion but punished for being traitors who supported the Queen s Spanish foe in practice however Catholics perceived it as religious persecution and regarded those executed as martyrs Science technology and exploration Francis Bacon pioneer of modern scientific thought Lacking a dominant genius or a formal structure for research the following century had both Sir Isaac Newton and the Royal Society the Elizabethan era nonetheless saw significant scientific progress The astronomers Thomas Digges and Thomas Harriot made important contributions William Gilbert published his seminal study of magnetism De Magnete in 1600 Substantial advancements were made in the fields of cartography and surveying The eccentric but influential John Dee also merits mention Much of this scientific and technological progress related to the practical skill of navigation English achievements in exploration were noteworthy in the Elizabethan era Sir Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe between 1577 and 1581 and Martin Frobisher explored the Arctic The first attempt at English settlement of the eastern seaboard of North America occurred in this era the abortive colony at Roanoke Island in 1587 While Elizabethan England is not thought of as an age of technological innovation some progress did occur In 1564 Guilliam Boonen came from the Netherlands to be Queen Elizabeth s first coach builder thus introducing the new European invention of the spring suspension coach to England as a replacement for the litters and carts of an earlier transportation mode Coaches quickly became as fashionable as sports cars in a later century social critics especially Puritan commentators noted the diverse great ladies who rode up and down the countryside in their new coaches 37 Social historyHistorians since the 1960s have explored many facets of the social history covering every class of the population 38 Health Although home to only a small part of the population the Tudor municipalities were overcrowded and unhygienic Most towns were unpaved with poor public sanitation There were no sewers or drains and rubbish was simply abandoned in the street Animals such as rats thrived in these conditions In larger towns and cities such as London common diseases arising from lack of sanitation included smallpox measles malaria typhus diphtheria scarlet fever and chickenpox 39 Outbreaks of the Black Death pandemic occurred in 1498 1535 1543 1563 1589 and 1603 The reason for the speedy spread of the disease was the increase of rats infected by fleas carrying the disease 40 Child mortality was low in comparison with earlier and later periods at about 150 or fewer deaths per 1000 babies 41 By age 15 a person could expect 40 50 more years of life 42 Homes and dwelling Parts of the Ivy House in Witchampton date from c 1580 The great majority were tenant farmers who lived in small villages Their homes were as in earlier centuries thatched huts with one or two rooms although later on during this period roofs were also tiled Furniture was basic with stools being commonplace rather than chairs 39 The walls of Tudor houses were often made from timber and wattle and daub or brick stone and tiles were more common in the wealthier homes The daub was usually then painted with limewash making it white and the wood was painted with black tar to prevent rotting but not in Tudor times the Victorians did this afterwards The bricks were handmade and thinner than modern bricks The wooden beams were cut by hand which makes telling the difference between Tudor houses and Tudor style houses easy as the original beams are not straight The upper floors of Tudor houses were often larger than the ground floors which would create an overhang or jetty This would create more floor surface above while also keeping maximum street width During the Tudor period the use of glass when building houses was first used and became widespread It was very expensive and difficult to make so the panes were made small and held together with a lead lattice in casement windows People who could not afford glass often used polished horn cloth or paper Tudor chimneys were tall thin and often decorated with symmetrical patterns of molded or cut brick Early Tudor houses and the homes of poorer people did not have chimneys The smoke in these cases would be let out through a simple hole in the roof Mansions had many chimneys for the many fireplaces required to keep the vast rooms warm These fires were also the only way of cooking food Wealthy Tudor homes needed many rooms where a large number of guests and servants could be accommodated fed and entertained Wealth was demonstrated by the extensive use of glass Windows became the main feature of Tudor mansions and were often a fashion statement Mansions were often designed to a symmetrical plan E and H shapes were popular 43 Cities The population of London increased from 100 000 to 200 000 between the death of Mary Tudor in 1558 and the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 Inflation was rapid and the wealth gap was wide Poor men women and children begged in the cities as the children only earned sixpence a week With the growth of industry many landlords decided to use their land for manufacturing purposes displacing the farmers who lived and worked there Despite the struggles of the lower class the government tended to spend money on wars and exploration voyages instead of on welfare Poverty Main article Poor Law A woodcut of c 1536 depicting a vagrant being punished in the streets in Tudor England About one third of the population lived in poverty with the wealthy expected to give alms to assist the impotent poor 44 Tudor law was harsh on the able bodied poor i e those unable to find work Those who left their parishes in order to locate work were termed vagabonds and could be subjected to punishments including whipping and putting at the stocks 45 46 The idea of the workhouse for the able bodied poor was first suggested in 1576 47 Education There was an unprecedented expansion of education in the Tudor period Until then few children went to school 48 Those that did go were mainly the sons of wealthy or ambitious fathers who could afford to pay the attendance fee Boys were allowed to go to school and began at the age of 4 they then moved to grammar school when they were 7 years old Girls were either kept at home by their parents to help with housework or sent out to work to bring money in for the family They were not sent to school Boys were educated for work and the girls for marriage and running a household so when they married they could look after the house and children 49 Wealthy families hired a tutor to teach the boys at home Many Tudor towns and villages had a parish school where the local vicar taught boys to read and write Brothers could teach their sisters these skills At school pupils were taught English Latin Greek catechism and arithmetic The pupils practised writing in ink by copying the alphabet and the Lord s Prayer There were few books so pupils read from hornbooks instead These wooden boards had the alphabet prayers or other writings pinned to them and were covered with a thin layer of transparent cow s horn There were two types of school in Tudor times petty school was where young boys were taught to read and write grammar school was where abler boys were taught English and Latin 50 It was usual for students to attend six days a week The school day started at 7 00 am in winter and 6 00 am in summer and finished about 5 00 pm Petty schools had shorter hours mostly to allow poorer boys the opportunity to work as well Schools were harsh and teachers were very strict often beating pupils who misbehaved 51 Education would begin at home where children were taught the basic etiquette of proper manners and respecting others 52 It was necessary for boys to attend grammar school but girls were rarely allowed in any place of education other than petty schools and then only with a restricted curriculum 52 Petty schools were for all children aged from 5 to 7 years of age Only the most wealthy people allowed their daughters to be taught and only at home During this time endowed schooling became available This meant that even boys of very poor families were able to attend school if they were not needed to work at home but only in a few localities were funds available to provide support as well as the necessary education scholarship 53 Boys from wealthy families were taught at home by a private tutor When Henry VIII shut the monasteries he closed their schools He refounded many former monastic schools they are known as King s schools and are found all over England During the reign of Edward VI many free grammar schools were set up to take in non fee paying students There were two universities in Tudor England Oxford and Cambridge Some boys went to university at the age of about 14 54 Food Availability England s food supply was plentiful throughout most of the reign there were no famines Bad harvests caused distress but they were usually localized The most widespread came in 1555 57 and 1596 98 55 In the towns the price of staples was fixed by law in hard times the size of the loaf of bread sold by the baker was smaller 56 Trade and industry flourished in the 16th century making England more prosperous and improving the standard of living of the upper and middle classes However the lower classes did not benefit much and did not always have enough food As the English population was fed by its own agricultural produce a series of bad harvests in the 1590s caused widespread starvation and poverty The success of the wool trading industry decreased attention on agriculture resulting in further starvation of the lower classes Cumbria the poorest and most isolated part of England suffered a six year famine beginning in 1594 Diseases and natural disasters also contributed to the scarce food supply 57 In the 17th century the food supply improved England had no food crises from 1650 to 1725 a period when France was unusually vulnerable to famines Historians point out that oat and barley prices in England did not always increase following a failure of the wheat crop but did do so in France 58 England was exposed to new foods such as the potato imported from South America and developed new tastes during the era The more prosperous enjoyed a wide variety of food and drink including exotic new drinks such as tea coffee and chocolate French and Italian chefs appeared in the country houses and palaces bringing new standards of food preparation and taste For example the English developed a taste for acidic foods such as oranges for the upper class and started to use vinegar heavily The gentry paid increasing attention to their gardens with new fruits vegetables and herbs pasta pastries and dried mustard balls first appeared on the table The apricot was a special treat at fancy banquets Roast beef remained a staple for those who could afford it The rest ate a great deal of bread and fish Every class had a taste for beer and rum 59 Diet The diet in England during the Elizabethan era depended largely on social class Bread was a staple of the Elizabethan diet and people of different statuses ate bread of different qualities The upper classes ate fine white bread called manchet while the poor ate coarse bread made of barley or rye Diet of the lower classThe poorer among the population consumed a diet largely of bread cheese milk and beer with small portions of meat fish and vegetables and occasionally some fruit Potatoes were just arriving at the end of the period and became increasingly important The typical poor farmer sold his best products on the market keeping the cheap food for the family Stale bread could be used to make bread puddings and bread crumbs served to thicken soups stews and sauces 60 Diet of the middle classAt a somewhat higher social level families ate an enormous variety of meats who could choose among venison beef mutton veal pork lamb fowl salmon eel and shellfish The holiday goose was a special treat Rich spices were used by the wealthier people to offset the smells of old salt preserved meat Many rural folk and some townspeople tended a small garden which produced vegetables such as asparagus cucumbers spinach lettuce beans cabbage turnips radishes carrots leeks and peas as well as medicinal and flavoring herbs Some grew their own apricots grapes berries apples pears plums strawberries currants and cherries Families without a garden could trade with their neighbors to obtain vegetables and fruits at low cost Fruits and vegetables were used in desserts such as pastries tarts cakes crystallized fruit and syrup 61 62 Diet of the upper classAt the rich end of the scale the manor houses and palaces were awash with large elaborately prepared meals usually for many people and often accompanied by entertainment The upper classes often celebrated religious festivals weddings alliances and the whims of the king or queen Feasts were commonly used to commemorate the procession of the crowned heads of state in the summer months when the king or queen would travel through a circuit of other nobles lands both to avoid the plague season of London and alleviate the royal coffers often drained through the winter to provide for the needs of the royal family and court This would include a few days or even a week of feasting in each noble s home who depending on his or her production and display of fashion generosity and entertainment could have his way made in court and elevate his or her status for months or even years Among the rich private hospitality was an important item in the budget Entertaining a royal party for a few weeks could be ruinous to a nobleman Inns existed for travellers but restaurants were not known Special courses after a feast or dinner which often involved a special room or outdoor gazebo sometimes known as a folly with a central table set with dainties of medicinal value to help with digestion These would include wafers comfits of sugar spun anise or other spices jellies and marmalades a firmer variety than we are used to these would be more similar to our gelatin jigglers candied fruits spiced nuts and other such niceties These would be eaten while standing and drinking warm spiced wines known as hypocras or other drinks known to aid in digestion Sugar in the Middle Ages or Early Modern Period was often considered medicinal and used heavily in such things This was not a course of pleasure though it could be as everything was a treat but one of healthful eating and abetting the digestive capabilities of the body It also of course allowed those standing to show off their gorgeous new clothes and the holders of the dinner and banquet to show off the wealth of their estate what with having a special room just for banqueting Gender The Procession Picture c 1600 showing Elizabeth I borne along by her courtiers While the Tudor era presents an abundance of material on the women of the nobility especially royal wives and queens historians have recovered scant documentation about the average lives of women There has however been extensive statistical analysis of demographic and population data which includes women especially in their childbearing roles 63 The role of women in society was for the historical era relatively unconstrained Spanish and Italian visitors to England commented regularly and sometimes caustically on the freedom that women enjoyed in England in contrast to their home cultures England had more well educated upper class women than was common anywhere in Europe 64 65 The Queen s marital status was a major political and diplomatic topic It also entered into the popular culture Elizabeth s unmarried status inspired a cult of virginity In poetry and portraiture she was depicted as a virgin or a goddess or both not as a normal woman 66 Elizabeth made a virtue of her virginity in 1559 she told the Commons And in the end this shall be for me sufficient that a marble stone shall declare that a queen having reigned such a time lived and died a virgin 67 Public tributes to the Virgin by 1578 acted as a coded assertion of opposition to the queen s marriage negotiations with the Duc d Alencon 68 In contrast to her father s emphasis on masculinity and physical prowess Elizabeth emphasized the maternalism theme saying often that she was married to her kingdom and subjects She explained I keep the good will of all my husbands my good people for if they did not rest assured of some special love towards them they would not readily yield me such good obedience 69 and promised in 1563 they would never have a more natural mother than she 70 Coch 1996 argues that her figurative motherhood played a central role in her complex self representation shaping and legitimating the personal rule of a divinely appointed female prince 71 Marriage Over ninety percent of English women and adults in general entered marriage at the end of the 1500s and beginning of the 1600s at an average age of about 25 26 years for the bride and 27 28 years for the groom with the most common ages being 25 26 for grooms who would have finished their apprenticeships around this age and 23 for brides 72 73 74 Among the nobility and gentry the average was around 19 21 for brides and 24 26 for grooms 75 Many city and townswomen married for the first time in their thirties and forties 76 and it was not unusual for orphaned young women to delay marriage until the late twenties or early thirties to help support their younger siblings 77 and roughly a quarter of all English brides were pregnant at their weddings 78 High cultureTheatre A reconstruction of the Globe Theatre in London originally built in 1599 and used by Shakespeare Main article English Renaissance theatre With William Shakespeare at his peak as well as Christopher Marlowe and many other playwrights actors and theatres constantly busy the high culture of the Elizabethan Renaissance was best expressed in its theatre Historical topics were especially popular not to mention the usual comedies and tragedies 79 Literature Main article Elizabethan literature Elizabethan literature is considered one of the most splendid in the history of English literature In addition to drama and the theatre it saw a flowering of poetry with new forms like the sonnet the Spenserian stanza and dramatic blank verse as well as prose including historical chronicles pamphlets and the first English novels Edmund Spenser Richard Hooker and John Lyly as well as Marlowe and Shakespeare are major Elizabethan writers 80 Music Main article Music in the Elizabethan era Travelling musicians were in great demand at Court in churches at country houses and at local festivals Important composers included William Byrd 1543 1623 John Dowland 1563 1626 Thomas Campion 1567 1620 and Robert Johnson c 1583 c 1634 The composers were commissioned by church and Court and deployed two main styles madrigal and ayre 81 The popular culture showed a strong interest in folk songs and ballads folk songs that tell a story It became the fashion in the late 19th century to collect and sing the old songs 82 Fine arts Main articles Portraiture of Elizabeth I and Artists of the Tudor court It has often been said that the Renaissance came late to England in contrast to Italy and the other states of continental Europe the fine arts in England during the Tudor and Stuart eras were dominated by foreign and imported talent from Hans Holbein the Younger under Henry VIII to Anthony van Dyck under Charles I Yet within this general trend a native school of painting was developing In Elizabeth s reign Nicholas Hilliard the Queen s limner and goldsmith is the most widely recognized figure in this native development but George Gower has begun to attract greater notice and appreciation as knowledge of him and his art and career has improved 83 Popular culturePastimes Main article Elizabethan leisure The Annual Summer Fair and other seasonal fairs such as May Day were often bawdy affairs Watching plays became very popular during the Tudor period Most towns sponsored plays enacted in town squares followed by the actors using the courtyards of taverns or inns referred to as inn yards followed by the first theatres great open air amphitheatres and then the introduction of indoor theatres called playhouses This popularity was helped by the rise of great playwrights such as William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe using London theatres such as the Globe Theatre By 1595 15 000 people a week were watching plays in London It was during Elizabeth s reign that the first real theatres were built in England Before theatres were built actors travelled from town to town and performed in the streets or outside inns 84 Miracle plays were local re enactments of stories from the Bible They derived from the old custom of mystery plays in which stories and fables were enacted to teach lessons or educate about life in general They influenced Shakespeare 85 Festivals were popular seasonal entertainments 86 Sports There were many different types of Elizabethan sports and entertainment Animal sports included bear and bull baiting dog fighting and cock fighting The rich enjoyed tennis fencing and jousting Hunting was strictly limited to the upper class They favoured their packs of dogs and hounds trained to chase foxes hares and boars The rich also enjoyed hunting small game and birds with hawks known as falconry Jousting Jousting was an upscale very expensive sport where warriors on horseback raced toward each other in full armor trying to use their lance to knock the other off his horse It was a violent sport King Henry II of France was killed in a tournament in 1559 as were many lesser men King Henry VIII was a champion he finally retired from the lists after a hard fall left him unconscious for hours 87 Other sports included archery bowling hammer throwing quarter staff contests troco quoits skittles wrestling and mob football Gambling and card games Dice was a popular activity in all social classes Cards appeared in Spain and Italy about 1370 but they probably came from Egypt They began to spread throughout Europe and came into England around 1460 By the time of Elizabeth s reign gambling was a common sport Cards were not played only by the upper class Many of the lower classes had access to playing cards The card suits tended to change over time The first Italian and Spanish decks had the same suits Swords Batons Clubs Cups and Coins The suits often changed from country to country England probably followed the Latin version initially using cards imported from Spain but later relying on more convenient supplies from France 88 Most of the decks that have survived use the French Suit Spades Hearts Clubs and Diamonds Yet even before Elizabeth had begun to reign the number of cards had been standardized to 52 cards per deck The lowest court subject in England was called the knave The lowest court card was therefore called the knave until later when the term Jack became more common Popular card games included Maw One and Thirty Bone ace These are all games for small group players Ruff and Honors was a team game Festivals holidays and celebrations A wedding feast c 1569 During the Elizabethan era people looked forward to holidays because opportunities for leisure were limited with time away from hard work being restricted to periods after church on Sundays For the most part leisure and festivities took place on a public church holy day Every month had its own holiday some of which are listed below The first Monday after Twelfth Night of January any time between 7 January and 14 January was Plough Monday It celebrated returning to work after the Christmas celebrations and the New Year 2 February Candlemas Although often still very cold Candlemas was celebrated as the first day of spring All Christmas decorations were burned on this day in candlelight and torchlight processions 14 February Valentine s Day Between 3 March and 9 March Shrove Tuesday known as Mardi Gras or Carnival on the Continent On this day apprentices were allowed to run amok in the city in mobs wreaking havoc because it supposedly cleansed the city of vices before Lent The day after Shrove Tuesday was Ash Wednesday the first day of Lent when all were to abstain from eating and drinking certain things 24 March Lady Day or the feast of the Annunciation the first of the Quarter Days on which rents and salaries were due and payable It was a legal New Year when courts of law convened after a winter break and it marked the supposed moment when the Angel Gabriel came to announce to the Virgin Mary that she would bear a child 1 May May Day celebrated as the first day of summer This was one of the few Celtic festivals with no connection to Christianity and patterned on Beltane It featured crowning a May Queen a Green Man and dancing around a maypole 21 June Midsummer Christianized as the feast of John the Baptist and another Quarter Day 1 August Lammastide or Lammas Day Traditionally the first day of August in which it was customary to bring a loaf of bread to the church 29 September Michaelmas Another Quarter Day Michaelmas celebrated the beginning of autumn and Michael the Archangel 25 October St Crispin s Day Bonfires revels and an elected King Crispin were all featured in this celebration Dramatized by Shakespeare in Henry V 28 October The Lord Mayor s Show which still takes place today in London 31 October All Hallows Eve or Halloween The beginning celebration of the days of the dead 1 November All Hallows or All Saints Day followed by All Souls Day 17 November Accession Day or Queen s Day the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth s accession to the throne celebrated with lavish court festivities featuring jousting during her lifetime and as a national holiday for dozens of years after her death 89 24 December The Twelve Days of Christmas started at sundown and lasted until Epiphany on 6 January Christmas was the last of the Quarter Days for the year See also1550 1600 in fashion Artists of the Tudor court Elizabethan architecture Elizabethan government Health and diet in Elizabethan England Jacobethan Revival architecture Music in Elizabethan Era Nine Years War Ireland Tudor architecture Tudor period Tudor money box Tudor Revival architecture Tudorbethan References From the 1944 Clark lectures by C S Lewis Lewis English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Oxford 1954 p 1 OCLC 256072 Elizabeth I and England s Golden Age Britannica Student Encyclopedia See The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 1939 and The Sea Hawk 1940 Patrick Collinson 2003 Elizabeth I and the verdicts of history Historical Research 76 194 469 91 doi 10 1111 1468 2281 00186 Aaron Melissa D 2005 Global Economics p 25 In the later decades of the reign the costs of warfare defeating the English Armada of 1589 and funding the campaigns in the Netherlands obliterated the surplus England had a debt of 350 000 at Elizabeth s death in 1603 Cook Ann Jennalie 1981 The Privileged Playgoers of Shakespeare s London 1576 1642 Princeton University Press pp 49 96 ISBN 0691064547 Hibbert Christopher 1991 The Virgin Queen Elizabeth I Genius of the Golden Age Da Capo Press ISBN 0201608170 a b Jonathan Bate 2008 Soul of the Age London Penguin pp 256 286 ISBN 978 0 670 91482 1 J A Sharpe 2005 Remember Remember A Cultural History of Guy Fawkes Day Harvard University Press ISBN 0674019350 Corbett Julian S 1898 Drake and the Tudor Navy With a History of the Rise of England as a Maritime Power New York B Franklin Parker Geoffrey 1996 The Dreadnought Revolution of Tudor England Mariner s Mirror 82 3 269 300 doi 10 1080 00253359 1996 10656603 Parker Geoffrey 1888 Why the Armada Failed History Today 38 5 26 33 Parker Geoffrey 1976 If the Armada Had Landed History 61 203 358 368 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1976 tb01347 x Andrews Kenneth 1984 Trade Plunder and Settlement Maritime Enterprise and the Genesis of the British Empire 1480 1630 Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 0 521 27698 5 Ferguson Niall 2004 Colossus The Price of America s Empire Penguin Books p 4 ISBN 0143034790 Thomas Hugh 1997 The Slave Trade the History of the Atlantic Slave Trade Simon amp Schuster pp 155 158 ISBN 0684810638 Ferguson 2004 p 7 Lloyd Trevor Owen 1994 The British Empire 1558 1995 Oxford University Press pp 4 8 ISBN 0 19 873134 5 Cooke Alan 1979 1966 Frobisher Sir Martin In Brown George Williams ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol I 1000 1700 online ed University of Toronto Press McDermott James 2001 Martin Frobisher Elizabethan privateer Yale University Press p 190 ISBN 0 300 08380 7 Cummins John 1996 That golden knight Drake and his reputation History Today 46 1 14 21 Wathen Bruce 2009 Sir Francis Drake The Construction of a Hero D S Brewer ISBN 978 1843841869 Sugden John 1990 Sir Francis Drake Random House p 118 ISBN 1448129508 Quinn David B 1979 1966 Gilbert Sir Humphrey In Brown George Williams ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol I 1000 1700 online ed University of Toronto Press Quinn David B 1985 Set fair for Roanoke voyages and colonies 1584 1606 University of North Carolina Press Books ISBN 0807841234 OL 2840495M Wernham R B 1994 The Return of the Armadas The Last Years of the Elizabethan Wars Against Spain 1595 1603 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 333 334 ISBN 978 0 19 820443 5 Andrews Kenneth R 1985 Trade Plunder and Settlement Maritime Enterprise and the Genesis of the British Empire 1480 1630 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521276985 George Macaulay Trevelyan 1949 England Under the Stuarts p 25 With over 5 of Europe s population in 1600 England executed only 1 of the 40 000 witches killed in the period 1400 1800 William Monter 2004 Re contextualizing British Witchcraft Journal of Interdisciplinary History 35 1 105 111 106 doi 10 1162 002219504323091252 S2CID 143951415 John Edwards 2000 A Spanish Inquisition The Repression of Protestantism under Mary Tudor Reformation and Renaissance Review 4 62 Rafael E Tarrago 2004 Bloody Bess The Persecution of Catholics in Elizabethan England Logos A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 7 117 133 doi 10 1353 log 2004 0010 S2CID 170503389 a b J B Black The Reign of Elizabeth 1558 1603 2nd ed 1959 pp 166 88 Patrick Collinson 2003 The Monarchical Republic of Queen Elizabeth I Elizabethans London Hambledon p 43 ISBN 978 1 85285 400 3 Christopher Haigh English Reformations Religion Politics and Society under the Tudors 1993 p 237 ISBN 978 0 19 822162 3 Haigh op cit p 241 Diarmaid MacCullough The Later Reformation in England 1547 1603 2001 pp 24 29 ISBN 0 333 69331 0 The cuckoo in the nest p 64 78 86 English Reformations Religion Politics and Society under the Tudors 1993 pp 240 242 29 295 MacCullough p 85 Ann Jennalie Cook 1981 The Privileged Playgoers of Shakespeare s London 1576 1642 Princeton University Press pp 81 82 ISBN 0691064547 On the social and demographic history see D M Palliser 1992 The Age of Elizabeth England Under the Later Tudors 1547 1603 2nd ed pp 35 110 a b Life in Tudor Times Localhistories org Retrieved 10 August 2010 Spread of the Plague BBC 29 August 2002 Retrieved 10 August 2010 Bruce M S Campbell 1992 Before the Black Death Studies in the Crisis of the Early Fourteenth Century Manchester U P p 51 ISBN 9780719039270 Richard Grassby 2002 The Business Community of Seventeenth Century England Cambridge U P p 94 ISBN 9780521890861 Tudor Houses Woodlands junior kent sch uk Archived from the original on 10 May 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2010 John F Pound Poverty and vagrancy in Tudor England Routledge 2014 Poverty in Tudor Times Spartacus Educational com Archived from the original on 22 November 2008 Retrieved 27 February 2019 Paul Slack Poverty and policy in Tudor and Stuart England 1988 Martin Pugh 1999 Britain since 1789 A Concise History La Nuova Italia Scientifica Roma Joan Simon 1970 Education and Society in Tudor England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521296793 Alison Sim 2001 The Tudor Housewife McGill Queen s Press pp 29 43 ISBN 9780773522336 Nelson William 1952 The Teaching of English in Tudor Grammar Schools Studies in Philology 49 2 119 143 JSTOR 4173010 Cressy David 1976 Educational Opportunity in Tudor and Stuart England History of Education Quarterly 16 3 301 320 doi 10 2307 368112 JSTOR 368112 S2CID 144782147 a b Lee E Pearson 1957 Education of children Elizabethans at home Stanford University Press pp 140 41 ISBN 978 0 8047 0494 6 Joan Simon 1966 Education and Society in Tudor England London Cambridge University Press p 373 ISBN 978 0 521 22854 1 Tudor Schools Woodlands junior kent sch uk 1 January 2004 Archived from the original on 18 June 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2010 John Guy 1988 Tudor England Oxford University Press pp 30 31 ISBN 0192852132 R H Britnell 1996 Price setting in English borough markets 1349 1500 Canadian Journal of History 31 1 1 15 doi 10 3138 cjh 31 1 1 ISSN 0008 4107 Archived from the original on 12 January 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Andrew B Appleby 1978 Famine in Tudor and Stuart England Stanford University Press Andrew B Appleby 1979 Grain Prices and Subsistence Crises in England and France 1590 1740 The Journal of Economic History 39 4 865 887 doi 10 1017 S002205070009865X JSTOR 2120334 S2CID 154494239 Joan Thirsk 2006 Food in Early Modern England Phases Fads Fashions 1500 1760 Continuum ISBN 0826442331 Emmison F G 1976 Elizabethan Life Home Work and Land Essex Record Office v 3 pp 29 31 ISBN 090036047X Jeffrey L Singman 1995 Daily Life in Elizabethan England Greenwood Publishing Group pp 133 36 ISBN 031329335X Stephen Mennell 1996 All manners of food eating and taste in England and France from the Middle Ages to the present University of Illinois Press Minna F Weinstein 1978 Reconstructing Our Past Reflections on Tudor Women International Journal of Women s Studies 1 2 133 158 Susan C Shapiro 1977 Feminists in Elizabethan England History Today 27 11 703 711 Joyce A Youings 1984 Sixteenth century England Penguin Books ISBN 0140222316 John N King 1990 Queen Elizabeth I Representations of the Virgin Queen Renaissance Quarterly 43 1 30 74 doi 10 2307 2861792 JSTOR 2861792 S2CID 164188105 Christopher Haigh 2000 Elizabeth I 2nd ed Longman p 23 ISBN 0582472784 Susan Doran 1995 Juno Versus Diana The Treatment of Elizabeth I s Marriage in Plays and Entertainments 1561 1581 Historical Journal 38 2 257 274 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00019427 JSTOR 2639984 S2CID 55555610 Agnes Strickland The life of Queen Elizabeth 1910 p 424 Carole Levin and Patricia Ann Sullivan 1995 Political rhetoric power and Renaissance women State Univ of New York p 90 ISBN 0791425452 Christine Coch 1996 Mother of my Contreye Elizabeth I and Tudor construction of Motherhood English Literary Renaissance 26 3 423 60 doi 10 1111 j 1475 6757 1996 tb01506 x S2CID 144685288 David Cressy Birth Marriage and Death Ritual Religion and the Life Cycle in Tudor and Stuart England Oxford University Press 29 May 1997 Pg 285 De Moor Tine Van Zanden JAN Luiten 2010 Girl power The European marriage pattern and labour markets in the North Sea region in the late medieval and early modern period1 The Economic History Review 63 1 33 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0289 2009 00483 x Life in Elizabethan England Weddings and Betrothals Young Bruce W 2008 Family Life in the Age of Shakespeare Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 41 Coontz Stephanie 2005 Marriage a History From Obedience to Intimacy or How Love Conquered Marriage New York New York Viking Press Penguin Group Inc Greer Germaine Shakespeare s Wife Bloomsbury 2007 Cressy 1997 Pg 74 M C Bradbrook 1979 The Living Monument Shakespeare and the Theatre of his Time Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521295300 Elizabethan Literature Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 31 March 2021 Comegys Boyd 1973 Elizabethan music and musical criticism Greenwood Press ISBN 0837168058 Helen Child Sargent and George Lyman Kittredge eds 1904 English and Scottish popular ballads edited from the collection of Francis James Child Ellis Waterhouse 1978 Painting in Britain 1530 1790 4th ed New York Viking Penguin pp 34 39 ISBN 0300058322 Tudor Entertainment Woodlands junior kent sch uk 1 January 2004 Archived from the original on 18 June 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2010 Theresa Coletti 2007 The Chester Cycle in Sixteenth Century Religious Culture Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 37 3 531 547 doi 10 1215 10829636 2007 012 Francois Laroque 1993 Shakespeare s festive world Elizabethan seasonal entertainment and the professional stage Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521457866 Richard Barber and Juliet Barker Tournaments Jousts Chivalry and Pageants in the Middle Ages Boydell Press 1998 ISBN 0851157815 Daines Barrington 1787 Archaeologia or Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity Vol 8 London Society of Antiquaries of London p 141 Hutton 1994 p 146 151Further readingArnold Janet Queen Elizabeth s Wardrobe Unlock d W S Maney and Son Ltd Leeds 1988 ISBN 0 901286 20 6 Ashelford Jane The Visual History of Costume The Sixteenth Century 1983 edition ISBN 0 89676 076 6 Bergeron David English Civic Pageantry 1558 1642 2003 Black J B The Reign of Elizabeth 1558 1603 2nd ed 1958 survey by leading scholar Braddick Michael J The nerves of state taxation and the financing of the English state 1558 1714 Manchester University Press 1996 Digby George Wingfield Elizabethan Embroidery New York Thomas Yoseloff 1964 Elton G R Modern Historians on British History 1485 1945 A Critical Bibliography 1945 1969 1969 annotated guide to history books on every major topic plus book reviews and major scholarly articles pp 26 50 163 97 online Fritze Ronald H ed Historical Dictionary of Tudor England 1485 1603 Greenwood 1991 595pp Goodman Ruth 2014 How to Be a Victorian A Dawn to Dusk Guide to Victorian Life Liveright ISBN 978 0871404855 Hartley Dorothy and Elliot Margaret M Life and Work of the People of England A pictorial record from contemporary sources The Sixteenth Century 1926 Hutton Ronald The Rise and Fall of Merry England The Ritual Year 1400 1700 2001 ISBN 0 19 285447 X Mennell Stephen All manners of food eating and taste in England and France from the Middle Ages to the present University of Illinois Press 1996 Morrill John ed The Oxford illustrated history of Tudor amp Stuart Britain 1996 online survey essays by leading scholars heavily illustrated Pound John F Poverty and vagrancy in Tudor England Routledge 2014 Shakespeare s England An Account of the Life and Manners of his Age 2 vol 1916 essays by experts on social history and customs vol 1 online Singman Jeffrey L Daily Life in Elizabethan England 1995 Strong Roy The Cult of Elizabeth The Harvill Press 1999 ISBN 0 7126 6493 9 Wagner John A Historical Dictionary of the Elizabethan World Britain Ireland Europe and America 1999 Wilson Jean Entertainments for Elizabeth I Studies in Elizabethan and Renaissance Culture 2007 World History Encyclopedia Food amp Drink in the Elizabethan Era Wright Louis B Middle Class Culture in Elizabethan England 1935 Wrightson Keith English Society 1580 1680 Routledge 2013 Yates Frances A The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 Yates Frances A Theatre of the World Chicago University of Chicago Press 1969 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabethan era amp oldid 1122339669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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