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Notes on the History of Elizabethan England and Shakespeare Himself. King Henry VIII (Ruled England 1509-1547) Known for breaking with Church + Many Wives (6). Catherine of Aragon 1509-1532. Anne Boleyn 1532-May 19, 1536. Catharine Parr July 1543-1547. King Henry and His Wives.
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Noteson theHistory of Elizabethan EnglandandShakespeare Himself
King Henry VIII(Ruled England 1509-1547) Known for breaking with Church + Many Wives (6)
Catherine of Aragon 1509-1532 Anne Boleyn 1532-May 19, 1536 Catharine Parr July 1543-1547 King Henry and His Wives Catherine Howard July 28, 1540-1542 Jane Seymour May 29, 1536-1537 Anne Cleves Jan. 6, 1540-July 12, 1540
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
Anne Boleyn(1532-May 19, 1536) • Gives birth to daughter, Elizabeth, 1533 • Henry accuses her of unfaithfulness • Beheaded May 19, 1536
Jane Seymour(May 29, 1536-1537) • Gives birth to son, Edward, 1537 • Dies from complications in childbirth
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
Catherine Howard(July 28, 1540-1542) • Anne Boleyn’s 2nd cousin • Anne of Cleves’ maid in waiting • She has affairs • Beheaded 1542
Catharine Parr(1543-1547) • Henry’s last wife • Acts as Henry’s nurse when he becomes sick
England After Henry • When Henry dies, Edward comes to the throne (he was 9!) •Edward dies when he’s 16, and “Bloody Mary” takes the throne
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” • Followed by King James (1603-1625)
Life in Elizabethan England • Public Life • Gossip: Those who are “in the know” are popular. • 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
Life in Elizabethan England Family Life • Children and parents = very formal • Never disobey • Children raised by nurses • Women had no legal rights • All their money and possessions went to the husband • Literacy Rate was Low • (W-10% M-30%) • Single wealthy women were fought over • 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 • LOVE • Romantic Love was ALWAYS discouraged -- a good match was more important • HONOR = very important! Defend family
Heart of England = LONDON • Tower Of London • Fort for protecting the city from invasions • Royal Palace • Prison
Horrible! Streets were filthy No sewers or drains Gutters were in the middle of the street 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 led to slums, filth 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 Time to travel to “New World” = 1-2 months London: Sanitation
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
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
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
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
England-A Spiritually Divided Country • When Henry starts his own church, that splits the country into Catholic and Protestant • Shakespeare’s family has Catholic roots, but he supports the Queen
Shakespeare: Early Life Vital Stats: • Born April 23, 1564 • Dies April 23, 1616 • Early Life: Stratford on Avon, England • Marries Anne Hathaway (said she saved his life) • They have three kids: • Susanna, Hamnet and Judith • He moves to London in 1590s
Stratford On Avon: Shakespeare’s Hometown Shakespeare’s Grammar School
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
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 • Performed lewd plays to religious ones. How Shakespeare Changed Theatre