1 / 9

The English Renaissance

The English Renaissance. Italian Renaissance ( mid 15th to mid 16th century ): political instability , explosion of individual expression .

kaida
Download Presentation

The English Renaissance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The English Renaissance Italian Renaissance (mid 15th tomid 16th century): politicalinstability, explosionofindividualexpression. Renaissance in NorthernEurope(16th century): influencedby the Reformation, more integratedinto the cultural life of society, politicalstability. English Renaissance: encouragedby Queen Elisabeth Ist, characterisedbyan open, questioningmentality, by a greatexpansionofknowledge, and the studyofclassicalcultures. The Renaissance endedwith the deathof Elisabeth.

  2. Mainfeaturesof the Renaissance • Intellectualcuriosity • Rediscoveryof the Greek and Roman cultures (suppressedby the Catholic Church in the Middle Ages) • Spread oflearning (expansionof Oxford and Cambridge universities, the printing press, Erasmus) • Centralityof man: new interest in the humanthought and action (humanism).

  3. Contradictionsof the Renaissance • Ageofconfusion: cohexistenceofoldmedievalideaswithnewdiscoveriesof science and philosophy(Copernicus). • Itwas the beginningof progress forEuropeannations, butthis progress wasbased on the conquest and exploitationofcountries in Africa, Asia and the Americas.

  4. The Tudors Henry VII (1485-1509) (Financial and politicalstability, expansionoftrade, “frugal” king) Henry VIII (1509-47) (hewas a poet, musician, sportsman; helikedluxury and magnificence, hestarted a newgoldenage, hehadsixwives) Catherine ofAragon † Jane Seymour Catherine Howard † AnnBoleyn† Anne ofCleves Catherine Parr Mary I Elisabeth I Edward VI

  5. Henry VIII (1509 – 47) • First a defenderofCatholicismagainst Martin Luther, • He wanted todivorcehis first wife (whodidn’t givehim male heir) in ordertomarryAnnBoleyn • The pope Clement VII didn’t granthim a divorce • With the ActofSupremacy(1534) hedeclaredhimself the head of the new Church of England (confiscationoflandsfrom the monasteries, beheadingof Thomas More)

  6. Edward VI(1547 – 53): radicalprotestantism, persecutionofCatholics, introductionof the Book of Common Prayer (serviceswerenow in English). Mary I (1553 – 58): daughterof Catherine ofAragon, Catholic. “Bloody Mary” becauseofherpersecutionofProtestants. Elisabeth I (1558- 1603): protestant, butshewasabletogive England unity and stability, tofind a balancebetweenCatholicism and Puritanism, flourishingof English Renaissance. Elisabeth received a goodclassicaleducation, shewassurroundedbyintelligentcouncillors. Shewasexcommunicatedby the Pope differentplotsagainsther (alsobyhercousin Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland, finallybeheaded in 1587). Duringherreign England becameoneof the mostpowerfulnations in Europe: beginningof the British Empire. Defeatof the “SpanishArmada” in 1588; expansionof the navy and ofcommerce (battlefornavalsupremacy, pirateraidsagainstSpanishships); explorationofnewlands (Drake).

  7. The mythof Elisabeth • The Virgin Queen: shenevermarried. • Hericonographic and poeticrepresentationstillcorrespondsto the idealised woman ofmedievalcourtly love. • Regardedas the centreof the universe(reflecting the conceptof the universe at the time, stillPtolemaic).

  8. The yearsafter Elisabeth • James I (1603 – 1625), Anglican, Mary Stuart’s son. 1605: Gunpowder Plot; clashwithParliament (divine right of the king) • Charles I (1625 – 49) dissolvedParliament and reignedasanabsolutemonarchfrom 1929 to 1640. Great social changes: the new middle classes (landedgentry, professional people) hadacquired more wealth and supportedParliament. 1642: civil war: Cavaliers (Royalists) and Roundheads (Parliamentarists), led by Oliver Cromwell(a puritan, heimposed the closingoftheatres) 1647 -1658: Cromwellestablished the “Commonwealth”. Hetookcontrolof London, arrestedover 100 membersofParliament, arrested and executed the king in 1949.

  9. The Restoration AfterCromwell’s deathCharles II (1660-1685) wascalled back fromhisexile in France. 2disasters: the plague(1665) and the greatfireof London(1666). • James II (1685-88): wanted to impose the catholicreligion,wasabsolutist and put Catholics in positionsofpower gloriousrevolution(non-violent): William of Orange (husbandof James’s protestantdaughter, Mary) becameking William III (1689-1702). With the Bill ofRights(1689), heestablishedthat the kingcould no longerrule the country (raisetaxes or formanarmy) withoutParliament. HealsogavefreedomofreligionbutestablishedthatonlyProtestantscouldbeheirsto the throne.

More Related