the tudors (1485 1603)

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The Tudors (1485-1603)

•The century of Tudor rule (1485-1603) is

often thought of as a most glorious period

in English history.

• Henry Vll built the foundations of a wealthy

nation state and a powerful monarchy.

• His son, Henry VIII kept a magnificent court, and

made the Church in England truly English by

breaking away from the Roman Catholic Church.

• his daughter Elizabeth brought glory to the new

state by defeating the powerful navy of Spain,

the greatest European power of the time. •  

1. The Built of a Nationa. Henry VII and the New Monarch (1485-1509)

•Henry VII is less well known than either

Henry VIII or Elizabeth I. But he was far

more important in establishing the new

monarchy than either of them.

• During the Wars of the Roses, England's

trading position had been badly damaged.

• In 1485, Henry VIII made an important

trade agreement with the Netherlands

which allowed English trade to grow again.

• Henry used the "Court of Star Chamber",

traditionally the king's council chamber, to

deal with lawless nobles.

• Local justice that had broken down during

the wars slowly began to operate again.

• Henry also raised taxes for wars which he then did

not fight. He never spent money unless he had to.

• He was careful to keep the friendship of the

merchant and lesser gentry classes.

• He built ships for a merchant fleet that enforced the

international trade.

•When Henry died in 1509 he left behind

the huge total of £2 million, about fifteen

years' worth of income.

b. Henry VIII and the Reformation

•Henry VIII was quite unlike his father.

•He was cruel, wasteful with money, and interested in pleasing himself.

•Henry disliked the power of the Church in England because, since it was an international organisation, he could not completely control it.

• In 1510 Henry had married Catherine of Aragon, the widow of his elder brother Arthur.

• But by 1526 she had still not had a son who survived infancy

• Henry asked for the divorce.

• But the pope was controlled by Charles V, who was Holy Roman Emperor and king of Spain, and also Catherine's nephew.

•The pope refused the divorce, this led Henry to break with the catholic church building a new church “Protestantism’

•Protestantism was introduced by martin Luther in Germany and john Calvin in Geneva.

•Through several Acts of Parliament

between 1532 and 1536, England became

politically a Protestant country, even

though the popular religion was still

Catholic

• Henry died in 1547, leaving behind his sixth wife,

Catherine Parr, and his three children.

• Mary, the eldest, was the daughter of Catherine of

Aragon.

• Elizabeth was the daughter of his second wife, Anne

Boleyn, whom he had executed because she was

unfaithful.

• Nine-year-old Edward was the son of Jane Seymour

3. The Protestants-Catholic Struggle

• Under Edward VI, the young son of Henry

VIII, England became more protestant,

• A lot of nobles profited from the church

lands and property after the break with the

Roman Catholic Church.

• Mary , the Catholic daughter of Catherine of Aragon, became queen when her brother Edward, aged sixteen, died in 1553.

• She was supported by the ordinary people, who were angered by the greed of the Protestant nobles.

•Mary decided to marry the King Philip of

Spain that made him king of England for

Mary's lifetime.

• A rebellion in Kent actually reached

London

•‘Bloody Mary’ then began burning

Protestants. 300 people died in this way

during her five-year reign

•Elizabeth I, Mary's half sister, was lucky

to become queen when Mary died in

1558.

• Her period of sovereignty was kind of

prosperous.

•In some ways the kind of Protestantism

finally agreed in 1559 remained closer to

the Catholic religion than to other

Protestant groups

•She made the Church part of the state machine.

3) Family Life, Language and Culturea. Domestic Life

•In the 16th Century, the population

increased.

•The unused land was cleared for sheep,

and large areas of forest were cut down to

provide wood for the growing

shipbuilding industry.

•The price of food and other goods rose

steeply during the sixteenth and early

seventeenth centuries.

•England was beginning to experience

greater social and economic problems

than ever before.

•The rise of unemployment and robbery. As

one foreign visitor reported, “There are

incredible numbers of robbers here, they

go about in bands of twenty…”

•Women in England had greater freedom

than anywhere else in Europe.

• There was a dark side to married life.

• Most women bore between eight and fifteen

children, and many women died in childbirth.

• Marriage was often an economic arrangement, deep

emotional ties often seem to have been absent.

• Between 1530 and 1600 almost everyone

doubled their living space.

• After 1570 the wealthy yeoman's family had

eight or more rooms and workers' families

had three rooms instead of one, and more

furniture was used than ever before.

b. Language and Culture

• London English, itself a mixture of south midland

and southeastern English, had become accepted

as Standard English.

• For the first time, people started to think of

London pronunciation as "correct" pronunciation.

•The Renaissance influenced Britain with

some works like Thomas More, wrote a

study of the ideal nation, called Utopia,

which became extremely popular

throughout Europe.

• In music, painting and art, England

enjoyed its most fruitful period ever and

saw its heydays.

•At the period of Elizabeth’s reign,

literature was England's greatest art form.

•Playwrights like Christopher Marlowe,

Ben Jonson, and William Shakespeare

filled the theatres with their exciting new

plays.

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