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The English Renaissance

The English Renaissance. LICEO “T. TARAMELLI” PAVIA 10th JUNE, 2011 Elisa Bernazzani, Camilla Gammeri, Martina Cassinera. HISTORICAL CONTEXT. THE ELIZABETHAN PERIOD. THE QUEEN ELIZABETH I. Henry VII Tudor, the clever sovereign.

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The English Renaissance

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  1. The English Renaissance LICEO “T. TARAMELLI” PAVIA 10th JUNE, 2011 Elisa Bernazzani, CamillaGammeri, Martina Cassinera
  2. HISTORICAL CONTEXT THE ELIZABETHAN PERIOD THE QUEEN ELIZABETH I
  3. Henry VII Tudor, the clever sovereign Enforced LAW and ORDER Encouraged COMMERCE Pursued PEACE with neighbouring countries Started the ROYAL NAVY to protect the shores of England Supported the MERCHANT CLASSES and thegentry Taxed nobles and limiting their power Avoided the risk of further civil wars Consolidated the power of the king 1485-1603
  4. Henry VIII he is mainly remembered for the break with Rome
  5. The reasons for the break Religious reasons: England became a protestant country, while in Rome there was the Catholic Church. Economic reasons: The king needed money for his court, monasteries contained treasures, people had to pay taxes to the Church. Political reasons: The power of the Church wasn’t subject to the autority of the king. Personal reasons: The Pope denied the request of the King to annul his marriage with Catherine of Aragon.
  6. The Act of Supremacy In 1534 with the Act of Supremacy the king Herny VIII proclaimed himself the Head of the Church of England
  7. The Treasons Act With the Treasons Act those who denied the king’s supremacy had been charged with high treason. They were killed and the King annexed their estates and sold their lands to the nobles. Many fine buildings were demolished, libraries were sacked. An example was Thomas More, the king’s chacellor, who was killed in 1535. Shrines wich attracted pilgrims, like that of Thomas Becket in Canterbury, were suppressed.
  8. Family and Succession HENRY VIII One of the other wives CATHERINE OF ARAGON ANNE BOLEYN MARY ELIZABETH EDWARD The king married six times and had only three children. The first wife was Catherine of Aragon who gave him a daughter, Mary. Anne Boleyn gave birth to Elizabeth. An other wife gave him also a male, Edward
  9. Mary Stuart She was the Roman Catholic queen of Scotland, she married with the heir to the French throne. The queen Elizabeth never married so she remained the closest heir, because her mother was the elder sister of Henry VIII. She aspired to the English throne, particularly after the birth of her son, as a legitimate successor to Elizabeth, but because of a series of intrigues that led to a war was forced to flee to England where the execution took place in 1587.
  10. New Discoveries and Development The discovery of America in 1492 New interest to the west  benefits for the geografical position Challenged the naval supremacy of Spain. Exploration to find gold and voyages of discovery Colonization and commercial expansion  consolidation of the maritime power of England
  11. Chartered Companies Mechants founded trading companies which recived the royal charter. They have exclusive right to trade in a particular geographycal area or in a specific commodity, and part of their profits went to the Crown. Estland Company  Baltic Africa Company  Morocco and African Coast Levant Company  Mediterranean East India Company  India, Japan and Persia
  12. England and Spain Relationship between England and Spain was becoming tense. British ships attacked and plundered the Spanish. Philip II invaded Spain with the “Invincible Armada”. A naval battle broke out and the heavy Spanish galleons couldn’t withstand the fast English ships, so they were defeated
  13. Religious problems When Protestans,escaped abroad during Mary’s reign,returned to England they pretended to purify Anglicanism. They were supported by the Parliament but the Queen refused to modify the Anglican Church. For the queen, religious doctrine was a “matter of state”
  14. Other problems The army was badly organised The cost of the war with Spain gave a blow to the finances There was widespread corruption in bureaucracy James I Elizabeth left her crown to James I, Mary Stuart’s son, in 1603
  15. ELIZABETHAN BEAUTY STANDARDS THE CHAIN OF BEING Myth AND MAGIC ELIZABETH THE FOUR HUMORS
  16. Elizabethan Beauty Standards The most desirable woman at court, even in old age! What was desirable at the time? Face painted in white with Ceruse, a mixture between lead, ground marble, figs and vinegar Enhanced the blue of their veins, Wear a mask to go out in the sun. Other face pigments for cheeks and lips (from minerals or insects such as ladybirds) Clothes The queen owned over three thousand dresses, full of gold and jewels. Her ladies were to look less attractive to her, so they could wear only black and white placing in extreme evidence the queen. Personal Hygiene The hygiene of the body was in contrast to the sumptuous look that they wanted to have, in fact they bathed only three times a year. Elizabeth was slightly cleaner than other and she carried a portable bath during her travels. The teeth were brushed with pumice stone powder and thisresulted in a rapid decay and erosion. Strong-scented Perfumes wer used to mask breath and body odours.
  17. Queen Elizabeth’s Personality Elizabeth was known as Good Queen Bess, the Virgin Queen and “Gloriana”, epithets wich reflected her popularity with her subjects and her refusal to marry. With the speech that the Queen gave at Tilbury in 1558, before the fight with Spain, we can see the Queen through her own eyes. She said she knew that she had the body of a feeble woman but she had also the heart and the stomach of a king, a king of England too; so she herself would take up arms and would be her troop’s general and judge. The poet Grace Nichols wrote a poem when she looked a picture of Elizabeth I This poem presents two contrasting aspects of the Queen’s personality: her vanity and her courage and stamina. We can know some of her qualities like pride, dynamism and assertiveness.
  18. The chain of Being God created everything in a strict hierarchy, like a chain, that went from God himself down to the lowest living thing. Some humans were higher in the chain than others: the monarch was the highest, followed by nobles and churchmen. All women where considered inferior than men, with the exceptionof Elizabeth I, because she was a monarch. If someone didn’t accept his place in the chain there would have been chaos Each category had his head
  19. MYTH and MAGIC Elizabethans belived in: faires, magic, witches, spells and prophecies. Supertitions and folklore were on the same level of religion. People belived that spirits came out at night and played tricks on people. Witches, associated to disease and disaster, according to popular belief, were women who didn’t partecipate in society were accused for working for the evil and sentenced to death. People belived in astrology more than today; John Dee was the personal astrologer .
  20. WITCHES People blamed unexplainable events on witches. Those were accused of witchcraft. They were generally old, poor and unprotected single women. Popular beliefs considered witches able to fly and their and their home was believed to be in a wood with animals like cats, frogs, pigs, ravens, goats, crows, bats, belived to be used to perform evil deeds and cast malevolet spells. Some Superstition: The evil could enter your bod when you opened your mouth to sneeze. The blessing kept away the evil. An eclips was seen as an omen of evil. It was unlucky for a black cat to cross your path. It was unlucky to keep the feather of a peacock. Touch wood to guard against bad luck; tree posseded magipal powers Not to walk under ladders, associated to executions. Shoes on a table inviting an imminent death. Spilling salt or peppers
  21. The four Humours The Elizabethans believed that the human body was a miniature representation of the universe: various part of the body were linked to the planets and the sign of zodiac. For example, Gemini the shoulders, Leo the back and the hearth, Cancer the chest, stomach and lungs. What happened in the universe, called Macrocosm, happened on a smaller scale in the human body, called Microcosm. The Greek physician Galen believed that the human body contained FOUR HUMOURS or FLUID wich were responsible for a person’s temperament
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