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Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603)
The second daughter of Henry VIII , Elizabeth I proved to be
one of England ’s most popular and successful monarchs. Her reign saw
England expand its influence in Europe and the Americas, while the
Elizabethan era brought about a renaissance in English culture.
Born
on 7th September, 1533, Elizabeth was the daughter of Anne Boleyn,
Henry VIII’s second wife. But at the age of two Elizabeth’s father, the
King had her mother executed for treason and Elizabeth was deemed
illegitimate. Along with her elder sister Mary , from Henry’s first
marriage, Elizabeth’s was estranged from her father. When Henry VIII’s
only son and heir to the throne Edward IV died at the age of fifteen,
Mary became Queen, following a coupe against the ill fated Lady Jane
Grey. When Mary rode triumphantly into London , Elizabeth rode at her
side. But the relationship between the two half sisters was soon to
turn sour.
Mary was a Catholic and Elizabeth was a
Protestant. To marry Elizabeth’s mother Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII,
divorced Mary’s mother, Catherine of Aragon and in doing so split from
Rome and established the Protestant Church of England. This deeply
divided England, leading to decades of religious persecution on both
sides.
With Mary as Queen, the Catholics were in
power, but after a revolt by Protestant nobles opposed to Mary’s
marriage to the Catholic King of Spain, Phillip, Mary feared an attempt
to put Elizabeth on the throne. Elizabeth was imprisoned in the Tower
of London and there
were even calls for her execution.
But
when Mary died, Elizabeth was installed on the throne and the balance
of power swung back to the Protestants. The Act of Supremacy and the
Act of Uniformity again established the Church of England and separated
England from Rome and it was the Catholics who were now persecuted
under Elizabeth’s rule. There were many plots during this time, and
Elizabeth’s chief rival was her Catholic cousin Mary Queen of Scots ,
until Elizabeth had her executed.
Further intrigues
in the court of Elizabeth I centred on whom the Queen should marry.
Various suitors were proposed, from the French, Spanish and English
nobility, but Elizabeth refused to marry and for this reason is known
as the Virgin Queen. Many theories have been put forward as to why
Elizabeth refused to marry, perhaps it was her traumatic childhood
watching her father with his many wives and mistresses, her desire not
to acquiesce any of her power or that of England to another country, or
that the one man she would have married, her one true love Robert
Dudley with whom she reputedly had an affair, was unacceptable and she
refused to marry another.
Elizabeth proved to be an
astute and able Queen and her reign eventually brought about some much
needed stability in England. This Elizabethan era witnessed a cultural
renaissance in England. During this time playwright William Shakespeare
came to prominence, while overseas English expansionism was brought
about through great seafarers such as Francis Drake, John Hawkins and
Walter Raleigh, and the establishment of the English colony of Virginia
in North America.
But English expansionism was to
deepen the conflict between England and the dominant world power at the
time, Spain. In 1588, Spain launched the Spanish Armada, with a grand
fleet of 130 ships carrying 30,000 men intent on invading England. All
across the south coast of England, beacons were lit as the Armada was
sighted sailing up the English Channel. Before her troops at Tilbury,
Elizabeth delivered her celebrated speech, stating, “I know I have the
body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a
King, and of a King of England too!’
Drake and
Hawkins continually harried the fleet along the Channel, before they
launched an attack with fire ships off the coast of France, in the
Battle of Gravelines. As the Spanish fleet tried to flee they were
further attacked by English ships who forced the remainder into the
North Sea and around the treacherous coasts of Scotland and western
Ireland, where bad weather sank what the Drake’s ships missed. The
defeat of the Spanish Armada became one of the most famous episodes in
English history and cemented the popularity of Elizabeth I.
Elizabeth
I died in 1603 at the age of 69 and was succeeded by James VI of
Scotland, son of Mary Queen of Scots. Thus ending the tumultuous Tudor
dynasty and ushering in the equally illustrious Stewart dynasty and
combining for the first time the thrones of England and Scotland.
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