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The English Renaissance 14851660

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Title: The English Renaissance 14851660


1
The English Renaissance 1485-1660
  • Queen Elizabeth I 15581603
  • Queen Elizabeth I lead England as a woman, in
    what was very much a man's World, and she did
    this with courage, intelligence and loyalty to
    her friends

2
Think about
  • The Renaissance era in Europe and in England was
    marked by a change in the way people thought
    about themselves and the world.
  • No longer content with the fixed religious
    beliefs of the Middle Ages, people became more
    interested in expanding their knowledge of
    history, art, science, and especially the classic
    texts of ancient Greece and Rome.
  • The Roman Catholic Church was challenged on a
    number of fronts.
  • By the end of the sixteenth century, the Church
    had lost its position as the supreme moral and
    political power in Europe.

3
Rediscovering Ancient Greece and Rome
  • Renaissance is a French word meaning rebirth
    and it refers to the renewed interest in
    classical learning (writers of ancient Greece and
    Rome).
  • Few ordinary people could read.
  • Those who could read were encouraged to study
    texts explaining Church doctrine.

4
Spirit of Rebirth
  • Some people became more curious about themselves
    and their world than people had been in the
    Middle ages, so that gradually there was a
    renewal of the human spirit, curiosity and
    creativity.
  • We use the term Renaissance person for an
    energetic and productive human being who is
    interested in science, literature, history, art,
    and other subjects.
  • EX/ Thomas Jefferson.

5
Flourish of Genius
  • Galileo- telescope
  • Leonardo daVinci
  • Michelangelo- Sistine Chapel
  • Christopher Columbus
  • Almost everyone in Europe was were Roman Catholic
    so the church was very rich and powerful, even in
    political affairs

6
Livin the Good life
  • Refreshed by the classics, the new writers and
    artists were part of an intellectual movement
    known as humanism.
  • Humanists asked What is a human being? What is a
    good life? How do I lead a good life?
  • Christianity provided complete answers to these
    questions
  • The aim of life is to attain virtue, not success
    of money or fame, because virtue is the best
    possible human possession and the only source of
    true happiness.

7
New Technology
  • The printing Press transformed the way
    information was exchanged during the Renaissance.
  • Prior to the printing press, the books were
    written out by hand.
  • Began a movement for Standardized English

8
The Reformation Breaking with the Church
  • Reformers rejected the authority of the pope and
    the Italian churchmen. In
  • England, conflicts with the papacy had occurred
    off and on over century but could not longer
    remain civil and a break with the Roman Catholic
    church could no longer be avoided.
  • Caused by strong feelings of patriotism,
    national identity caused resentment against the
    Vatican for imposing financial burdens on them.
  • New Religious ideas (Christianity based on the
    Bible- not what the pope says)
  • THE CHURCH NEEDED A REFORM

9
King vs. Pope
  • The generations-old conflict between the pope and
    the king of England came to climax when Henry
    VIII wanted to get rid of his wife of twenty-four
    years.
  • Divorce wasnt allowed and so Henry needed a
    loophole
  • He asked the Pope to declare that he and his wife
    (Catherine of Aragon) were not properly married..
    The pope refused and so Henry named a new
    archbishop of Canterbury who WOULD declare their
    marriage invalid.
  • Then, Henry broke from the church and named
    himself head of the Church

10
  • Arthur Prince of Wales King Henry VIII

11
Baby Mama Drama
  • Why did Henry want a divorce so badly that he
    broke with the church?
  • Catherine was unable to have a son although she
    did produce a girl (Mary).
  • He lusted after a maid in waiting. And then fell
    in love with her sister, Ann Boleyn who refused
    to sleep with him unless they were married.
  • He divorced Catherine and had a baby girl with
    Ann (Elizabeth).
  • Catherine was put under house arrest because she
    refused to accept the annulment.

12
  • King Henry the Eighth, to six wives he was
    wedded One died, one survived, two divorced, two
    beheaded."

13
Queen Mary Ann
Boleyn-aka Mom Jane Seymour of
Aragon (divorced) (Beheaded)
bore Edward I

(Died)
Ann of Cleves Catherine Howard
Catherine ParrAka The Flanders
Mare Adulterer (Beheaded) Married Thomas
Seymour (Divorced)

(Survived!)
14
  • Henry Catherine of Aragon
  • Mary
  • Henry Anne Boleyn
  • Elizabeth
  • Henry Jane Seymour
  • Edward

15
After King Henrys Death
  • Jane Grey("The Nine Days' Queen")10 July19
    July 1553 (Excecuted)
  • Edward VI28 January15471553
  • Protestant
  • Elizabeth I("The Virgin Queen")17
    November15581603
  • Protestant
  • Henry VIII21 April15091547
  • Catholic-Protestant
  • Mary I("Bloody Mary")19 July15531558
  • Catholic

16
Accomplishments
  • It was a major accomplishment that she ever
    survived to become Queen of England! Her mother
    was executed on the charge of Treason, adultery
    and incest. She was branded a bastard by her
    father, King Henry VIII. She lost her title of
    Princess Elizabeth and had to be referred to as
    Lady Elizabeth!
  • It was a major accomplishment to survive the
    questioning she endured at the Tower of London
    when she was imprisoned there by her half-sister
    Mary Tudor ( aka Mary I Bloody Mary). She was
    accused of being involved with the Protestant
    rebellion, led by Sir Thomas Wyatt the Younger
  • Her reign witnessed widespread increase in
    literacy and great achievements in the arts  -
    great poets and playrights emerged during her era
    such as William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser,
    Christopher Marlowe and Sir Walter Raleigh)

17
Accomplishments cont
  • The reign of Queen Elizabeth I also saw
    significant expansion overseas. Great explorers
    were encouraged such as Sir Francis Drake, Sir
    Walter Raleigh, Sir John Hawkins, Sir Humphrey
    Gilbert and Sir Richard Greenville
  • The new scientific thinking of the renaissance
    was encouraged and important men such as Sir
    Francis Bacon and Dr. John Dee emerged during the
    Elizabethan era
  • She achieved an excellent reputation as a good
    and wise ruler, who was truly loved by her people
    - she was highly accomplished in the art of
    rhetoric and Public Relations

18
  • Robert Dudley

19
Accomplishments
  • A major accomplishment was the defeat of the
    Spanish Armada of 132 by the English fleet of  34
    ships and 163 armed merchant vessels under Lord
    Howard of Effingham, Sir Francis Drake, and Sir
    John Hawkins
  • Her reign saw several rebellions - from the
    Irish, The Rising of the North and the Essex
    rebellion - all of which she defeated
  • She survived various Catholic plots and
    conspiracies such as the Babbington plot
    involving Mary Queen of Scots

20
Death Threats
  • Mary of ScotlandElizabeth survived many pots
    against her life.
  • Several were from her cousin Mary Stuart, Queen
    of Scots (Catholic).
  • Because Elizabeth had not children, Mary was heir
    to Englands throne because she too was descended
    of Henry VII.
  • Mary was under house arrest but continued to plot
    against Elizabeth. Eventually, Elizabeth sent her
    cousin to the chopping block.

21
The Spanish Armada Sinks
  • A major accomplishment was the defeat of the
    Spanish Armada of 132 by the English fleet of  34
    ships and 163 armed merchant vessels under Lord
    Howard of Effingham, Sir Francis Drake, and Sir
    John Hawkins
  • King Philip of Spain (Catholic) used Marys
    execution as an excuse to invade England (to save
    England from Hell). He assembled a fleet of
    warships for that purpose the famous Spanish
    Armada.
  • England's Royal Navy destroyed the Armada which
    assured Englands independence from the powerful
    Catholic countries of the Mediterranean.

22
Flood of Literature
  • What is the connection between these political
    events and English literature?
  • After the defeat of the Armada, Elizabeth became
    a beloved symbol of peace, security and
    prosperity to her subjects and sh eprovided
    isnpiration to scores of English authors.
  • Others were dedicated to her because she was a
    known connoisseur of literature.

23
William Shakespeare
24
Accomplishments
  • Queen Elizabeth adopted a moderate religious
    policy. The Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity
    (1559), the introduction of the Prayer Book of
    1559, and the Thirty-Nine Articles (1563) were
    all Protestant in doctrine, but preserved many
    traditionally Catholic ceremonies. Although a
    Protestant she did not persecute Catholics with
    conviction - she adopted a moderate approach
  • She established Protestantism as the country's
    religion

25
Pope Sixtus V said
  • "She is only a woman, only mistress of half an
    island, and yet she makes herself feared by
    Spain, by France, by the Empire, by all".
  • Under Elizabeth, the nation gained a new
    self-confidence and sense of sovereignty, as
    Christendom fragmented.

26
  • Following the death of Elizabeth I in 1603
    without issue, the Scottish king, James VI,
    succeeded to the English throne as James I in
    what became known as the Union of the Crowns. In
    1604 he adopted the title King of Great Britain,
    although the two kingdoms remained separate.

27
Decline of the Renaissance
  • The difficulties of Jamess reign became the
    impossibilities of his sons. Charles I turned
    out to be self-destructive.
  • Some of his subjects had him beheaded in 1649.
  • For the next 11 years, England was ruled by
    Parliament and the Puritan dictator Oliver
    Cromwell, not by a king.

28
  • When Charless self-indulgent son, Charles II
    returned from Exile and came to power eleven
    years later, England had changed in many
    important ways.
  • Renaissance religious morality had eroded
  • Renaissance energies gradually gave out
  • Educated people began to become more worldly in
    their outlook.
  • Scientific truths were soon to challenge
    long-accepted religious beliefs.

29
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