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The English Renaissance

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Title: The English Renaissance


1
The English Renaissance
  • 1485-1625

2
The Coming of the Renaissance
  • The Renaissance was a flowering of literary,
    artistic and intellectual development that began
    in Italy in the fourteenth century.
  • It was inspired by the arts and scholarship of
    ancient Greece and Rome, which were rediscovered
    during the Crusades

3
Key Characteristics of the Renaissance
  • Religious devotion of the Middle Ages gave way to
    interest in the human beings place on this earth
  • Universities introduced a new curriculum, the
    humanities, including history, geography, poetry,
    and languages
  • Invention of printing made books more available
  • More writers began using the vernacular

4
Figures of the Renaissance
  • Mostly Italians
  • Dante, author of The Divine Comedy
  • Petrarch, wrote lyric poetry in the form of
    sonnets
  • Leonardo Da Vinci, a painter, sculptor,
    architect, and scientist
  • Da Vinci typifies a Renaissance mana person of
    broad education and interests whose curiosity
    knew no bounds.

5
The Age of Exploration
  • Renaissance thirst for knowledge lead to a great
    burst of exploration.
  • Crusades opened routes to Asia soon monopolized
    by Italian merchants.
  • Explorers from other nations searched for all-sea
    routes aided by compass and advances in
    astronomy.
  • Culminated in Columbuss discovery of the New
    World in 1492--colonization

6
England in the Age of Exploration
  • 1497Italian-born John Cabot reached Newfoundland
    (an island off the coast of Canada) and perhaps
    the mainland
  • Cabot laid the basis for future English claims in
    North America.

7
The Protestant Reformation Questioning the
Catholic Church
  • A growing sense of nationalism led many to
    question the authority of the church.
  • Complaints
  • the sale of indulgences
  • payment to the church (like taxes)
  • church leaders favored Mediterranean powers over
    northerly countries
  • the educated questioned the Church teachings and
    hierarchy

8
Erasmus
  • Dutch thinker whose edition of the New Testament
    raised questions about standard interpretations
    of the Bible.
  • Focused attention on issues of morality and
    religion
  • Morality and religion became the central concerns
    of the English Renaissance

9
Martin Luther
  • Erasmus paved the way for the split in the Roman
    Catholic Church in 1517.
  • German monk Martin Luther nailed a list of
    dissenting beliefs (ninety-five theses) to the
    door of a German church.
  • The intent was to reform the Catholic Church, but
    actually divided the church and introducing
    Protestantism.

10
Results of the Protestant Reformation
  • Swept through Europe
  • Frequent wars between rulers with different
    beliefs
  • Persecution of Catholics and Protestants
  • Division of ProtestantsLutherans and Calvinists
    (Puritans and Presbyterian sects)

11
Tudor England
  • Tudor dynasty ruled from 1485-1603.
  • Time of stability and economic expansion
  • London a metropolis of 180,000 people
  • Many saw the changes as a threat to the old
    familiar ways
  • Feared new outbreaks of civil strife (War of the
    Roses)

12
Henry VII
  • First Tudor monarch
  • Inherited an England depleted by civil war
  • Before his death in 1509, he rebuilt the treasury
    and established law and order.
  • Henry VII restored the prestige of the monarchy
    and set the stage for his successors.

13
Signature of Henry VII
14
Henry VII Gallery
15
Henry VIII
  • Catholic (even wrote a book against Luther)
  • Relationship with the Pope did not last
  • Marriage to Catherine of Aragon produced no male
    heir
  • Henry tried to obtain an annulment to marry Anne
    Boleyn
  • The Pope refused, but Henry married anyway

16
Henry VIII Gallery
17
Henrys Break with the Church
  • Henrys defiance led to an open break with the
    Roman Catholic Church.
  • The Act of Supremacy (1534) gave Henry full
    control of the Church in England and severed all
    ties with Rome.
  • Henry became the head of the Anglican Church (the
    new Church of England).
  • He seized Church property and dissolved the
    monasteries.

18
The Aftermath
  • Henry used ruthless measures to suppress
    opposition.
  • He even had his former friend and advisor, Thomas
    More, executed, because More refused to renounce
    his faith.
  • Henry married six times.
  • His first two marriages (Catherine and Anne)
    produced two daughters, Mary and Elizabeth.
  • His third wife, Jane Seymour, bore him a son,
    Edward, who was still a frail child when Henry
    died in 1547.

19
The Six Wives of Henry VIII
20
Edward VI
  • Became King at 9 died a 15 (1553)
  • Parliamentary acts during his reign changed
    Englands religious practices and sent England on
    its way to becoming a Protestant nation.
  • English replaced Latin in church.
  • The Anglican prayer book, Book of Common Prayer,
    became required in public worship.

21
Edward VI gallery
22
Bloody Mary
  • Mary I, Edwards half sister a Catholic
  • Mary restored Catholic practices and papal
    authority to the Church of England.
  • Mary married her Spanish cousin, Phillip II,
    making England a part of the powerful Spanish
    state. (During this period of nationalism, many
    found her acts unpatriotic)
  • Mary also persecuted Protestants she ordered the
    execution of some 200 Protestants during her
    reign, strengthening anti-Catholic sentiment in
    England

23
Signature of Mary I
24
Mary I Gallery
25
Elizabeth I
  • After Marys five year reign, her half-sister,
    Elizabeth came to the throne.
  • Elizabeth was the last of the Tudors, dying
    unmarried and childless.
  • Elizabeth received a Renaissance education,
    became a patron of the arts, and Elizabethan came
    to describe the English Renaissance at its height.

26
Elizabeth and the Church
  • Ended religious turmoil
  • Reestablished the monarchs supremacy in the
    Church of England
  • Restored the Book of Common Prayer
  • Instituted a policy of religious moderation

27
Foreign Affairs
  • France and Spain, Englands two greatest rivals,
    often worked with Catholic factions in England.
  • Both nations fought to dominate England.
  • Elizabeth and her counselors played one side
    against the other, using offers of marriage as
    bait.
  • This cleverness allowed England a period of peace
    and allowed commercial and maritime interests to
    prosper.

28
Mary, Queen of Scots
  • Elizabeths Catholic cousin, Mary Stuart queen
    of Scotland by birth and next in line to the
    British throne (granddaughter of Henry VII)
  • Catholics did not recognize Henry VIIIs marriage
    to Anne Boleyn, Elizabeths mother, and
    considered Mary Stuart the queen.
  • Mary was a prisoner of England for 19 years and
    the center of numerous plots on Elizabeths life.
  • Eventually Mary was convicted of plotting to
    murder Elizabeth and went to the block in 1587, a
    Catholic martyr.
  • In my end is my beginningMarys death led
    Catholic Spain to declare war on England.

29
Elizabeths Signature
30
Elizabeth I Gallery
31
England vs. Spain
  • Spain rejected English claims in America and
    resented the fact that English privateers had
    been attacking and plundering Spanish ships.
  • Privateers like John Hawkins and Francis Drake
    operated on their own, but were really under
    the authority of Queen Elizabeth.

32
The Spanish Armada
  • After Marys execution, King Phillip II prepared
    a Spanish armada of 130 warships to attack
    England.
  • In 1588, English sailors defeated the Armada in
    the English Channel.
  • This event marked the decline of Spain and the
    rise of England as a great sea power

33
From Tudors to Stuarts
  • Elizabeths death marked the end of the Tudor
    dynasty.
  • To avoid civil strife, Elizabeth named King James
    VI of Scotland her successor (son of Mary
    Stuart).
  • James was a Protestant.
  • The reign of James I (1603-1625) is now known as
    the Jacobean Era

34
King James I
  • Strong supporter of the arts
  • Furthered Englands position as a world power
  • Sponsored the establishment of the first English
    colony in AmericaJamestown
  • Believed in divine right monarchy and had
    contempt for Parliament (power struggle)
  • Persecuted Puritans (House of Commons)Jamess
    persecution prompted a group of Puritans to
    establish Plymouth colony in 1621

35
The English Renaissance
  • Architects designed beautiful mansions
  • Composers wrote new hymns for Anglican service
    and popularized the English madrigal
  • Renaissance painters and sculptors moved to
    England (Hans Holbein the Younger was court
    painter to Henry VIII)
  • Opened public schools (like private secondary
    schools today)
  • Improvements at Oxford and Cambridge

36
Elizabethan Poetry
  • Perfected the sonnet and experimented with other
    poetic forms
  • Philip Sidney wrote the first Elizabethan sonnet
    cycle (a series of sonnets that fit together as a
    story)Astrophel and Stella
  • Edmund Spenser wrote a long epic, The Faerie
    Queen, in complex nine-line units now called
    Spenserian stanzas
  • Christopher Marlowe popularized pastoral verse
    (idealizes the rural life)

37
The Poetry of William Shakespeare
  • Shakespeare changed the pattern and rhyme scheme
    of the Petrarchan sonnet, creating the English,
    or Shakespearean, sonnet

38
Elizabethan Drama
  • Reintroduced tragediesplays in which disaster
    befalls a hero or heroine
  • Reintroduced comediesplays in which a humorous
    situation leads to a happy resolution.
  • Began using blank verse
  • Christopher Marlowe was the first major
    Elizabethan dramatist.
  • Marlowe may have rivaled Shakespeare as Englands
    greatest playwright had he lived past thirty.

39
Christopher Marlowe
40
Sir Walter Raleigh (ca. 1552-1618) The Nymph's
Reply
41
He was not of an age but for all time.
  • Shakespeare began his involvement with the
    theater as an actor.
  • By 1592, he was a popular playwright whose works
    had been performed at Elizabeths court.
  • After the Globe Theater was built in 1599, many
    of his plays were performed there.
  • Shakespeare wrote thirty-seven plays nine
    tragedies, several comedies, ten histories, and a
    number of play classified as tragic comedies.

42
Shakespeare Festival - Clemson University
43
Elizabethan and Jacobean Prose
  • Philip Sidneys Defense of Poesie is one of the
    earliest works of English literary criticism.
  • Thomas Nashes Unfortunate Traveler, a fictional
    adventure, was a forerunner of the novel.
  • Walter Raleigh wrote his History of the World
    during his confinement in the Tower of London
    (was beheaded for allegedly plotting against
    James I)
  • The leading prose writer of the time was Francis
    Bacon.

44
The King James Bible
  • The most monumental prose achievement of the
    English Renaissance
  • Commissioned by King James on the advice of
    Protestant clergymen
  • Took fifty-four scholars three years to complete
  • Is now among the most widely quoted an
    influential works in the English language
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