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Notes on the History of Elizabethan England and Shakespeare Himself.

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Presentation on theme: "Notes on the History of Elizabethan England and Shakespeare Himself."— Presentation transcript:

1 Notes on the History of Elizabethan England and Shakespeare Himself

2 King Henry VIII (Ruled England 1509-1547) Known for breaking with Church + Many Wives (6)

3 King Henry and His Wives Catherine of Aragon 1509-1532 Anne Boleyn 1532-May 19, 1536 Jane Seymour May 29, 1536-1537 Anne Cleves Jan. 6, 1540-July 12, 1540 Catherine Howard July 28, 1540-1542 Catharine Parr July 1543-1547

4 Catherine of Aragon (1509-1532) Marries Henry to keep alliance with Spain Bears 7 children; only Mary lives through infancy Henry starts new church, annuls marriage, banishes Catherine

5 The Wives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon Anne Boleyn Divorced Child = Elizabeth

6 Anne Boleyn (1532-May 19, 1536) Gives birth to daughter, Elizabeth, 1533 Henry accuses her of unfaithfulness Beheaded May 19, 1536

7 The Wives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon Anne Boleyn DivorcedBeheaded Jane Seymour Child = Edward VI

8 Jane Seymour (May 29, 1536-1537) Gives birth to son, Edward, 1537 Dies from complications in childbirth

9 The Wives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon Anne Boleyn DivorcedBeheaded Jane Seymour Dies Anne of Cleves

10 Anne of Cleves (Jan. 6, 1540-July 12, 1540) Henry marries her for political reasons -- alliance with Cleves (part of modern Germany) Officially divorces her July 12, 1540

11 The Wives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon Anne Boleyn DivorcedBeheaded Jane Seymour Dies Anne of Cleves Divorced Kathryn Howard

12 Catherine Howard (July 28, 1540-1542) Anne Boleyn’s 2nd cousin Anne of Cleves’ maid in waiting She has affairs Beheaded 1542

13 The Wives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon Anne Boleyn DivorcedBeheaded Jane Seymour Dies Anne of Cleves Divorced Kathryn Howard Beheaded Katherine Parr

14 Catharine Parr (1543-1547) Henry’s last wife Acts as Henry’s nurse when he becomes sick

15 Dies - 1547

16 England After Henry When Henry dies, Edward comes to the throne (he was 9!) Edward dies when he’s 15, and “Bloody Mary” takes the throne

17 Mary Tudor (1553-1558)  Uber-Catholic  Ordered the Burning of Cranmer and almost 300 other Protestants.  Earned her name “Bloody Mary”

18

19 Queen Elizabeth I (Ruled England 1558-1603) Mary (a Catholic) dies and Elizabeth (a Protestant) comes to the throne in 1558 Under Elizabeth, the arts flourished and educational institutions were established. England also became a military force -Defeat of the Spanish Armada 1588 Never married, so known as the “Virgin Queen”

20 King James Became King when Elizabeth died In 1603 Protestant Shakespeare worried (his mentor died)

21 Worried --What does Shakespeare do? Writes Macbeth in 1607 A Scottish play in honor of King James Banquo first in Stewart line James believed in witchcraft

22 Life in Elizabethan England Public Life Crowds and public squares were volatile --> anything could set them off! No free discussion of rulers = High treason! Spies everywhere Punishments: Upper class = beheading Lower class = drawing and quartering

23 Life in Elizabethan England Family Life Children and parents = very formal –Never disobey –Children raised by nurses Women had no legal rights –Married at the age of 11 or 12 –Father had the right to choose husbands for daughters -- negotiated for power Marriage = crucial to a woman –No legal rights without it

24 Elizabethan Love LOVE Romantic Love was ALWAYS discouraged -- a good match was more important HONOR = very important! Defend family

25 London: Sanitation Horrible! Streets were filthy –No sewers or drains –Garbage & chamber pots emptied in the streets --piled up until a rain Men walked in the middle of street to protect the ladies The Plague = incurable Overcrowding Plague carried by fleas on rats -- not known then Thought to be God’s wrath on wicked people Two outbreaks killed 1/4 of the population in Shakespeare’s time Life expectancy = 48 years

26 Theater’s Place in the World: One Side The Court Elizabeth and James totally supported theater Shakespeare’s company, “The King’s Men,” were named for King James

27 Theater’s Place in the World: The Other Side City Officials Time of Puritanism = Very conservative Thought theater was evil, satanic, and destroyed public morals

28 Theater’s Place in the World Therefore: Theater was not allowed in London proper, within the official city limits Instead, all theaters were in Southwark, just across the Thames, and outside city lines

29 Shakespeare’s Theater: The Globe Variety of tickets, from the pit (groundlings) to the gallery Loud, obnoxious, intelligent crowds Performances lasted “at least two hours,” and started around 2 PM (the middle of the working day) Trumpet blew to signal the start Public - open to all, though could not be advertised Showed type of play by color of the flag White = Comedy Red = History Black = Tragedy

30 William Shakespeare: The Bard Himself

31 Shakespeare: Early Life Vital Stats: Born April 23, 1564 Dies April 23, 1616 Early Life: Stratford on Avon, England Marries Anne Hathaway They have three kids: –Susanna, Hamnet and Judith He moves to London in 1590s

32 Stratford On Avon: Shakespeare’s Hometown Shakespeare’s Grammar SchoolTrinity Church

33 Shakespeare in London Became a leading actor and playwright by 1592 In 1594, Romeo and Juliet was first performed -- all male actors! By 1595, he’s the hottest playwright in London Writes 37 plays (2 per year) Performed plays in theaters, palaces, inns, and homes of nobility 1610 -- returned to Stratford

34 How Shakespeare Changed Theatre After -- Professional Adds sets, lighting, multiple stages, and the box office. Theater is new, akin to the start of TV Before -- Performed by roaming troupes for a meal or bed. Actors considered vagrants

35 William Shakespeare, according to many scholars, has made the greatest contribution to the English language of any writer, ever.

36 Sources: www.bantams.demon.co.uk/ henry%20-%20holbein.jpg www.marileecody.com/ seymour-min.jpg laracorsets.com/ period_gowns.htm www.guggenheim.org/.../ sugimoto_bottom_index.html www.pijlsnel95.nl/images/ anne%20boleyn.jpg www.costumes.org/.../boehn/ janeseymour.jpg www.englishhistory.net/tudor/ monarchs/howard.html www.britannia.com/ bios/cparr.html ntap.k12.ca.us/whs/projects/ history/elizabeth.htm www.tudorhistory.org/ cleves/clevesnew.jpg www.englishhistory.net/tudor/ monarchs/eliz1.html www.barking-dagenham.gov.uk/.../ eh-qe1-art.jpg www.calrevels.org/graphics/ ermine.jpg www.bju.edu/.../dramatour/ images/shakespeare.jpg www.macalester.edu/~sisk/ mind/shakespeare.jpg www.stratford-upon-avon.org/ images/Arial%20vi... www.nmm.ac.uk/uploads/jpg/BHC0261.jpg Photos and postcards acquired by Ms. Larsen in London, 2002


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