Title: The Renaissance
1The Renaissance
The Early Modern Period
2Learning Objectives
- To observe the transformative qualities a monarch
can have on the arts and culture of a time
period. - To understand the basic principles and
influential factors behind Elizabethan
literature. - To study the major themes and motifs of this era.
3The Renaissance
- Means rebirth
- In science, for example, Copernicus (1473-1543)
attempted to prove that the sun rather than the
earth was at the center of the planetary system,
thus radically altering the cosmic world view
that had dominated antiquity and the Middle Ages.
- In religion, Martin Luther (1483-1546) challenged
and ultimately caused the division of one of the
major institutions that had united Europe
throughout the Middle Ages--the Church. - Renaissance thinkers often thought of themselves
as ushering in the modern age, as distinct from
the ancient and medieval eras. - Hence the often used title as the Early Modern
period.
4The Renaissanceof Poetry
- A reintroduction and revival of texts and
languages from the classical period. - Romantic Dialogue clever/witty/entendre
Rhetorically savvy/beautiful language POETRY! - Sonnets fit this perfectly and they are all the
rage in the 1580s. This is the time the
literature of the period really takes off why? - English poets generally imitate sonnets of
Petrarch until Shakespeare makes fun of them all
later on.
5The Renaissance of Theater
- During the reign of Henry VIII, Commedia dell
arte (traveling troops of actors with a
repertoire) is popular in Italy he wants that
for England. - Earls begin supporting groups of actors
- 20 men
- Traveling troop
- Linked to a great house
- Wears the Earls colors
- Geared towards lower classes
- 1576 James Burbage opens The Theatre now not
restricted by church or Earls tastes
6The Renaissance of Theater
- The theatre determined the type of play
literary, trashy, or plays by certain
playwrights. - Actors learned only their own lines
- Performed on a thrust stage no proscenium arch.
- Plays only performed twice, one week to remember
lines and rehearse. - Playhouses outside the city wallsnot a
respectable establishment - Many playwrights are Cambridge or Oxford
graduates who didnt want to take religious
orders over-educated unemployed bitter
7The Tudors
Henry VII
Elizabeth York
Jane Seymour
Anne Boleyn
Anne of Cleves
Kathryn Howard
Katherine Parr
Arthur Mary Margaret
Henry VIII
Catherine of Aragon
Henry VII (1485-1509) Henry VIII
(1509-1547) Edward VI (1547-1553) Lady Jane Grey
(9 days) Mary I (1553-1558) Elizabeth I
(1558-1609)
Mary I
Elizabeth I
Edward VI
Philip II of Spain
Mary Stewart, Queen of Scots Tried to claim
throne through Her mother, Margaret. Her
son James takes over after Elizabeth.
Jane Grey Tried to claim throne through Her
grandmother, Mary.
8Henrys Wives
- Henry married his late brothers (Arthur) wife,
Catherine, when he ascended to the throne. - When Catherine produced no male heirs, Henry
began looking elsewhere mainly at her
ladies-in-waiting. - Henry wanted Anne Boleyn, but needed to divorce
Catherine, first. - When Rome refused to grant him an annulment, he
declared himself head of Englands church and
granted himself the annulment instead. - Henry remained mostly Catholic in his beliefs and
practices, despite the change in church. - However, he took out his frustration with the
Catholic church by destroying many of Englands
cathedrals and monasteries.
9Sir Thomas More (1478-1553)
- Counselor and Lord Chancellor to Henry VIII
- Opponent of Protestant Reformation
- Humanist creating an educated public,
emancipating the individual, intellectual
freedom. - Most famous for his fictional satire Utopia
(1516) . - Perfect world where there is no private
property, no pre-marital sex, and courtship
takes place in the nude! - Ironic that the non-Christian commonwealth had
attained a greater degree of peace and order
than his own England had . - Executed by Henry VIII for treason he refused to
proclaim Henry as head of Englands church.
Beatified in the 1800s.
10Sir Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
- The Baconian or Scientific method
- A set of procedures for examining the natural
world. - The father of empiricism.
- One of the dimly possible Shakespeare writers.
11Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542)
- Lyric poet who introduced the sonnet form to
England by translating some of Petrarchs sonnets
into English. - Unlike Petrarch, who idealizes love as
transforming, Wyatt stresses the anguish and
disillusionment of love. - The speaker in some of the poems is bitter,
cynical, angry, longing and pained. - Briefly enamored of Anne Boleyn, but Henry VIII
distanced Wyatt from her by sending him to Italy.
12Mary I (Bloody Mary)
- Snatched the crown from Lady Jane Grey and had
both her and her husband executed, despite the
fact that Edward VI had named Grey as his heir. - A strict Catholic, she marries King Philip II of
Spain. A very unpopular choice. - Mary was notoriously intolerant of Protestants
and had over 300 them burned at the stake for
heresy. - Died at age 42 possibly of a tumor which may
have produced signs of pregnancy.
13Princess Elizabeth
- Elizabeth was classically trained and highly
educated along with her brother, Edward - six languages, grammar, theology, history,
rhetoric, logic, philosophy, arithmetic, logic,
literature, geometry, religious studies, and
music. - She also learned the skills of a noble lady of
her rank - sewing, embroidery, dancing, music, archery,
riding and hunting - Mary locked her in the Tower during her reign
because she feared Elizabeth might rise against
her.
14Queen Elizabeth I
- Ascended to the throne in 1558 after the death
of her sister, Mary. She ruled until her death in
1603. - A moderate ruler (more so than her father or
sister had been). Video et taceo I see, and
say nothing. - Protestant, but she was famous for her tolerance
of Catholicism (as long as people werent too
blatant about it and attended Anglican church on
Sundays). - Rome hated her anyway and excommunicated her and
any who followed her rule.
15Elizabeth the Lover
- After Marys court of fear, Elizabeth implements
a court of love. Courtly love politicians must
court her, not petition her. Poetry, music,
chivalry, etc. - She put herself into the role of the unattainable
lover - Her poetry is a weapon, deliberately leaked in
order to make her appear human and emotional
after unpopular political decisions. - Elizabeth entertains several heads of state with
the possibility of marriage the closest she gets
is the Duke of Anjou of France in 1581. On
Monsieurs Departure
16Elizabeth , Virgin Queen
- After a shaky recovery from small pox in 1562,
the Queens former beauty is ruined. Parliament
and her privy counsel begin to make their
strongest arguments for her to marry and produce
and heir. - It is at this point that Elizabeth begins to wear
the heavy white makeup, elaborate wigs, and
highly stylized costumes shes known for in most
of her portraits. - Artists and playwrights begin to follow along
with her fashioning of herself as a virgin
goddess.
17Mary Queen of Scots
- In 1571 the Ridolfi Plot is uncovered.
- Mary Queen of Scots has been trying to take
Elizabeths throne on the grounds that she is
Henry VIIIs niece (and a Catholic). - Elizabeth delays taking action, though Mary has
been proven guilty. Advisors urge action. - Highly controversial since Mary is a queen in her
own right (Scotland and France).
18Elizabeth the Warrior Goddess
- Spanish Armada 1588 Philip II of Spain amassed
151 ships to sail against England and depose
Elizabeth, whom he felt was ruling illegitimately
(and who was helping the Protestant Dutch revolt
against their Catholic Spanish enemies) - Elizabeth addresses the troops amassed at Tilbury
who are to meet the fleet when it hit shore
they had little chance of success. - Luckily a storm knocks out most of the fleet and
England is saved! - England becomes a world power, becomes fascinated
with itself many history plays are written to
glorify its past.
Her victory dress
19Sir Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)
- As an aspiring poet, Spenser penned The Faerie
Queene in honor of Queen Elizabeth, but he fell
out of favor with her when he severely criticized
one of her trusted advisors. - Wrote Amoretti (1595) for his future wife,
Elizabeth Boyle. It is a sonnet sequence of 89
sonnets that tell the story of a love
relationship in which the couple move toward
marriage. - Wrote Epithalamion for his wife after their
marriage. 365 line poem, one line for each day of
the year.
20The Faerie Queene (1596)
- A LONG narrative poem/allegorical epic in six
books. (one of the longest in English) - Spenser planned to write 24 books, one for each
of the "twelve private moral virtues and 12
public virtues which King Arthur represents. - In each book, a different hero represents one of
these moral virtues. Book 1 is Redcrosse Knight
Holiness. - Gloriana Queen Elizabeth. Arthur is always
searching for her what better consort for Queen
Elizabeth but King Arthur?
21The Faerie Queene (1596)
- Spenser deliberately uses archaic language as he
attempts to create a mythology surrounding Queen
Elizabeth and the ideals of her court. - Each book contains Lines 1-8 in each stanza are
iambic pentameter, and 9 is iambic hexameter
(alexandrine) ababbcbcc. - This form is called a Spenserian stanza.
22Book One Characters
- Redcross Holiness a knight trying to do the
right thing. Is actually the character of St.
George, patron saint of England. - Una the True Church (Protestantism).
Accompanies Redcrosse on his quest to save her
kingdom from a dragon. - Errour a book vomiting monster/snake woman
- Duessa/Fidessa the False Church (Catholicism)
Tries to seduce and destroy Redcrosse. - Gloriana the Faerie Queene really a
representation of Queen Elizabeth - Arthur of Arthurian legend. Has fallen in love
with the Faerie Queene and seeks her out. - Sansfoy, Sansjoy, Sansloy three evil knights
(faithless, Joyless, Lawless)
23Sir Philip Sydney 1554-1586
- Poet, courtier, soldier, Protestant
- Works to know his Astrophil and Stella sonnets
written to Penelope Devereux - Defense of Prosey
24Defense of Prosey
- "The lawyer saith what men have determined the
historian what men have done. The grammarian
speaketh only of the rules of speech and the
rhetorician and logician, considering what in
nature will soonest persuade, thereon give
artificial rules. . . Only the poet, disdaining
to be tied to any such subjection, lifted up with
the vigor of his own invention, doth grow in
effect another nature, in making things either
better than nature bringeth forth, or, quite
anew, forms such as never were in nature, as the
Heroes, Demigods, Cyclops, Chimeras, Furies, and
such like so as he goeth hand in hand with
nature, not enclosed within the narrow warrant of
her gifts, but freely ranging only within the
zodiac of his own wit. Nature never set forth
the earth in so rich tapestry as divers poets
have done. . . Her world is brazen, the poets
only deliver a golden" (956-7). - "The poet he nothing affirms, and therefore never
lieth. For, as I take it, to lie is to affirm
that to be true which is false. So as the other
artists, and especially the historian, affirming
many things, can, in the cloudy knowledge of
mankind, hardly escape from many lies. But the
poet (as I said before) never affirmeth. . . .
so wise readers of poetry will never give the
lie to things not affirmatively but allegorically
and figuratively written" (968).
25William Shakespeare
Youve got this already, right? But maybe you
should read his longer poems, like The Rape of
Lucrece or a history play, like Richard II.
26Vocabulary to Know
- Difference between the Italian (Petrarchan),
English (Spensarian), and Shakespearean sonnet
types. - Octave, sestet, turn (volta), problem, solution
- Blazon
- Allegory
- Pastoral
- Body Politic vs. natural body