Title: Elizabethan Beliefs
1Elizabethan Beliefs
- The Great Chain of Being
- Divine Right of Kings
- Primogeniture
- Ghosts
- Machiavelli
Elizabeth I
1558 - 1603
2The Great Chain Concept
God
- One chain without branches links the universe
- A chain link determines your distance from God
- English society is based on the idea that
everyone and everything has a place - If you leave your place, you disrupt the chain
(rebellion and discord happen) - If passion controls your reason or if you take
anothers spot, you get knocked down the chain - Nature will reflect any disorders in the chain
3The Elizabethan View
- There were three levels of attachment within
the great chain - Macrocosm
- Mesocosm
- Microcosm
4The Great Chain of Being
Macrocosm
- God
- Angels
- People
- Animals
- Lion
- Dog
- Plants
- Inanimate
- Gold
- Dirt
Mesocosm (Earthly) (3 groups in red)
Microcosm
the
Individual
- Church Pope
Archbishops
Bishops
Priests - Laity or those not of the clergy
Family
Husband
Wife
Son
Servants
The State
King
Dukes
Earls, etc.
Knights Middle
Class
5The English Class System
The Nobility The King Dukes
Marquises Earls
Viscounts Barons
The Gentry Baronets
Knights Esquires
Gentlemen
Commonalty (1) Middle People
Citizens Burgesses Yeomen
Professionals Merchants
Lawyers Administrators
Clergy
Commonalty (2) Small merchants or retailers
Day-laborers, husbandmen, artisans
The poor, infirm, and unemployed
Everyone has a place and harmony is everyone in
his place Nature will reflect any disharmony in
this chain
6King James
- Shakespeare was a great entertainer who knew
his audience, and the primary audience member for
Macbeth was King James I. This young and
energetic King of Scotland took the English
throne in 1603, and Shakespeares company was
renamed the Kings Men that year in honor of
James (Caraway, Amanda. Whats A Thane to Do?
The Story of A Thane to Placate a King.).
7- Macbeth is set in Scotland during the reigns of
Duncan and Macbeth, who were kings of Scotland
between 1037 and 57 C.E. Shakespeare alters the
historical accounts in order to write a story
that will flatter King James. The Chronicles of
Holinshed, Shakespeares primary source for
Macbeth, links Banquo to the Stuart line of
Kings, from which James I is descended (Evans, G.
Blakemore, The Riverside Shakespeare, 2nd edition
Boston, New York Houghton Mifflin Company,
1997, 1356).
8King James
- James thought of himself as a fighter of evil
and a true man of God with the Divine Right to
Rule. He is remembered for ordering a new
translation of the Bible, known as the King James
Version of the Bible. He considered himself to be
a scholar of witches and witchcraft (Garber,
Marjorie B, Shakespeare After All, 1st ed. New
York Pantheon Books, 2004, 697).
9Divine Right of Kings
"the figure of God's majesty, His captain,
steward, deputy-elect, Anointed, crowned,"
(Richard II, 4.1) The theory of the Divine
Right of Kings aimed at instilling obedience by
explaining why all social ranks were religiously
and morally obliged to obey their
government. Monarchs ruled because they were
chosen by God to do so and these kings were
accountable to no person except God. They were
considered to be divinely chosen.
10Primogeniture
- Families transferred their right to rule by this
practice of inheritance - The eldest son of the ruling family inherits all
power, titles and lands of the family
11Ghosts!
- Elizabethans, like people today, had mixed
beliefs in their existence. - However, everyone then knew that a murdered
persons ghost would have no rest until the
murderer was brought to justice! - This idea resulted from the chain of being in
that nature reflected the disorder created by
murder. Hamlet and Julius Caesar play upon this
belief.
Hamlet seeing his murdered fathers ghost
12Machiavelli (1469 1527)
- He writes The Prince in 1513
- He concludes that some virtues will lead to a
princes destruction whereas some vices will
allow him to survive. - His ultimate conclusion for keeping power is that
the end justifies the means.
13Shakespeares Plays Question Machiavelli
- His histories and tragedies ask who is the
rightful ruler and why - Does the end truly justify the means?