shakespeare’s macbeth a little bit of history. the tudor-stuart family tree henry vii arthur...
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Shakespeare’s Macbeth
A little bit of history
The Tudor-Stuart Family Tree
Henry VII
Arthur marries Margaret marries Henry VIII Mary marries
Katherine of Aragon James IV of Scotland
Marries 6 wives:Katherine of Aragon
Anne BoleynJane SeymourAnne of Cleves
Katherine HowardCatherine Parr
Louis XII of France
Edward IVMary
Elizabeth I
ProducesJames V of Scotland
Mary StuartQueen of Scotland
James VI of ScotlandI of England
James I: The beginning of the Stuarts
Becomes King of England after Elizabeth I
takes throne in 1604 Was formerly James VI of Scotland
England had become a superpower under Elizabeth I, also a Protestant nation
As King, James became rich, powerful
Believed in witches, demons; wrote books on the subject; saw a connection between witchcraft and treason
King head of the church; witchcraft in violation of religious teachings, thus an act against the state
The Gunpowder Plot
The role of faith James I inherited a nation pulled apart by faith
Elizabeth’s father, Henry VIII, broke with the Catholic Church over his divorce with Katherine of Aragon, a Spanish princess
Mary (by Catherine of Aragon) succeeded her half brother, Edward IV, in 1553 deposing Lady Jane Grey, Edward’s mother and a Protestant; Mary is Catholic and persecutes Protestants for heresy and treason
Elizabeth (by Anne Boleyn) is Protestant and deposes Mary to end the bloody persecutions of Protestants; she avoided systematic persecutions of Catholics
James is also Protestant and avoided systematic persecutions of Catholics
The plan: Gunpowder Plot devised by Papists
(Catholic) to destroy Parliament, King (Protestant)
Comes after years of persecution of Catholics by Protestant rulers
Catholics see James I as a failure as he continues Protestant reforms in England
The Conspirators: Plot devised from May, 1604 through to
execution on November 5, 1605 Conspirators all Catholic looking to destroy
government they see as oppressors 10 men part of the plot, including Guy
Fawkes, a munitions expert who had learned his skills fighting with the Spanish (Catholic) against the Dutch (Protestant)
Plot Uncovered Plotters put gunpowder under the Houses of
Parliament, with the intent to blow up the building Plot uncovered by an anonymous letter; an
investigation was launched and Fawkes was discovered leaving the cellars of Parliament on the evening of November 5
Fawkes is taken to the Tower of London and interrogated under torture (the rack)
Fawkes and several other conspirators are hanged, drawn and quartered on January 31 for their acts of treason
James speech to Parliament, 1605 Extracts on the Gunpowder Plot
“… this was not a crying sin of blood ... it may well be called a roaring, nay a thundering sin of fire and brimstone, from the which God has so miraculously delivered us all ...”
“…And as the wretch himself that is in the Tower does confess, it was purposely devised by them, and concluded to be done in this House…”
"Historic Royal Speeches and Writings: James I (r.1603 - 1625)." The Official Website of the British Monarchy. The Royal Household, 2008/09. Web. 02 Sept. 2013. <http://www.royal.gov.uk/pdf/jamesi.pdf>.
James I and Macbeth Shakespeare wrote plays for Elizabeth,
then for James Players become the King’s Men as James
favors Shakespeare
Is one of Shakespeare’s most topical plays About a Scottish king dealing with treason,
reflects the issues of the times
James is a descendant of Banquo
New developments in the play Combines the stories of the murder of King
Duncan and the reign of Macbeth Macbeth was a warrior king of Scotland (1040-
1057)
Introduces the idea of the villain as the hero Beginning of the anti-hero
Strong female role in Lady Macbeth
Important questions in Macbeth
Why do people do evil, knowing it is evil? Does Macbeth do evil because he is
tempted by fate/because he is pushed/because of his personal ambition?
What is guilt? Why does Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s
success fall apart so quickly?
Side notes Out of the 270 Witch trials in Elizabethan England, 247 of those
were women, 23 were men. Those targeted were the old (set in their established ways), poor (a strain on the economy), and unprotected (women who had no man around) Women were thought to be inferior and in need of a man to provide
for them. Even Elizabeth I acknowledged this belief: “In a famous speech to troops at Tilbury [who were fighting the Spanish] she said: ‘I know I have the body of a weak, feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king - and of a King of England too.’” "BBC History - Elizabeth I." BBC News. BBC, n.d. Web. 02 Sept. 2013. <www.bbc.co.uk/history/people/elizabeth_I>
In villages, women were commonly healers (working with herbs and other natural remedies passed down to them) and were able to “predict” (getting to know everyone); this became “witchcraft” as “modern medicine” began to develop
Side notes Weird Sisters
Weyard Sisters in the first folio which is how “wyrd” sounds Wyrd – old English time period/language – means fate