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Queen Elizabeth I
(1533-1603)
I Introduction
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Elizabeth I, queen of England and Ireland (1558-1603),
daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn. Elizabeth was
the longest-reigning English monarch in nearly two centuries and the
first woman to successfully occupy the English throne. Called Glorianna
and Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth enjoyed enormous popularity during her
life and became an even greater legend after her death.
Elizabeth’s reign was marked by her effective use of
Parliament and the Privy Council, a small advisory body of the important
state officials, and by the development of legal institutions in the
English counties. Elizabeth firmly established Protestantism in England,
encouraged English enterprise and commerce, and defended the nation
against the powerful Spanish naval force known as the Spanish Armada.
Her reign was noted for the English Renaissance, an outpouring of poetry
and drama led by William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, and Christopher
Marlowe that remains unsurpassed in English literary history (see
English Literature). She was the last of the Tudor monarchs, never
marrying or producing an heir, and was succeeded by her cousin, James VI
of Scotland.
II Background And Early Life ÂÂ
Elizabeth was born at Greenwich Palace in London on
September 7, 1533. Her parents, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, wanted a son
as heir and were not pleased with the birth of a daughter. When she was
two her mother was beheaded for adultery, and Elizabeth was exiled from
court. She was later placed under the protection of Catherine Parr,
Henry’s sixth wife, and educated in the same household as her
half-brother, Edward. Both were raised Protestant. The noted scholar
Roger Ascham later served as her tutor, and he educated her as a
potential heir to the throne rather than as an insignificant daughter of
the monarch. Elizabeth underwent rigorous training in Greek, Latin,
rhetoric, and philosophy and was an intellectually gifted pupil.
Edward VI succeeded his father in 1547 at the age of nine. Because of
her position as a member of the royal family, Elizabeth became a pawn in
the intrigues of the nobles who governed in the boy’s name.
One of them twice proposed marriage to her. When her Roman Catholic
half-sister, Mary I, inherited the crown in 1553, Elizabeth faced
different dangers. She was now sought out to lead Protestant
conspiracies, despite the fact that she had supported Mary’s accession
and attended Catholic services. In 1554 Mary had Elizabeth imprisoned in
the Tower of London, briefly threatened her with execution, and then
placed her under house arrest. Elizabeth lived quietly at
her family’s country retreat north of London until she became queen
upon her sister’s death in 1558. Elizabeth’s experiences as a child
and young adult helped her develop keen political
instincts that allowed her to skillfully balance aristocratic factions
and court favorites during her long reign.
III Elizabethan Economy ÂÂ
The nation that Elizabeth inherited was experiencing a steady increase
in population. During the 16th century the population of England and
Wales would roughly double, and by Elizabeth’s death in 1603 would
reach 5 million. The continued population growth placed strains on the
economy, which was made worse by serious harvest failures in every
decade of Elizabeth’s reign. Prices for food and clothing skyrocketed
in what became known as the Great Inflation. The 1590s were the worst
years of the century, marked by starvation, epidemic disease, and roving
bands of vagrants looking for work.
Elizabeth’s government enacted legislation known as the Poor Laws,
which made every local parish responsible for its own poor, created
workhouses, and severely punished homeless beggars. Parliament also
passed bills to ensure fair prices in times of shortage and to regulate
wages in times of unemployment. One of the queen’s most important
economic decisions was to issue a new currency that contained a standard
amount of precious metal. This raised confidence in the currency and
also allowed businesses to enter into long-term financial contracts.
During Elizabeth’s reign, England expanded trade overseas and the
merchant community grew. Private shipbuilding boomed and navigational
advances made long sea voyages safer. England’s chief commodity was
woolen cloth, traded mostly at the Dutch port of Antwerp for finished
goods and such luxuries as French wines. Cloth exports grew over the
course of the reign, but suffered from competition from finer Spanish
products and from Antwerp’s decline after its harbor silted up and
became impassable by the mid-1560s. In the 1560s financier Sir Thomas
Gresham founded the Royal Exchange to help merchants find secure markets
for their goods.
At the same time, new enterprises like the Muscovy Company were
chartered to find outlets for English products. In 1600 the government
granted the English East India Company a monopoly to trade in Asia,
Africa, and America. The desire to expand overseas trade was also a
motive in the ventures of English explorers such as Sir Francis Drake,
Sir Humphrey Gilbert, and Sir Walter Raleigh. Such adventurers
established the first English outposts in North America.
IV Elizabethan Religion ÂÂ
Elizabeth’s accession marked the final change in the nation’s
official religion. Her father and half-brother established Protestantism
in England, but her half-sister, Mary, attempted forcibly to restore
Catholicism. As Henry VIII’s reign had terrorized Catholics, so
Mary’s persecuted Protestants. Under Mary, prominent Protestant
clergymen were either executed or they fled abroad. The power of the
pope was reestablished in England, though even Mary could do nothing to
restore the church lands sold off during Henry’s reign.
Elizabeth inherited a highly charged religious situation, which she
handled with great skill. Although there was never any doubt she would
return England to Protestantism, Elizabeth had to contend with
opposition from both Catholics and radical Protestants. Catholic bishops
and
peers controlled the House of Lords and fought Elizabeth’s first
attempts to bring back Protestantism. Protestants exiled under the reign
of Mary I returned to England, and many
brought with them new and radical Protestant ideas, especially those of
John Calvin, a French religious reformer. Calvin stressed the importance
of predestination, the belief that salvation was predetermined for some
people and not for others. Calvin also wanted the clergy to play a less
important role in the state church and to concern themselves with
preaching the gospel rather than in becoming bishops.
Under Elizabeth, England again broke with the pope, Catholic services
were forbidden, priests were allowed to marry, and relics and
decorations were removed from the churches. In attempting to diffuse the
religious situation, Elizabeth tried to accommodate Catholic
sensibilities in matters she judged less essential. She used Parliament
to establish the official doctrine of the new church, which ensured that
the voice of Catholic peers would be heard. Under the Act of Supremacy,
she assumed the title of Supreme Governor of the Church, rather than the
title of Supreme Head, a move to placate critics because Supreme
Governor sounded less powerful. She would not allow retaliation against
those who had assisted Mary, and she treated with some leniency those
who refused to swear an oath to her supremacy.
The English form of Protestantism was defined in part by two measures
enacted during Elizabeth’s reignâ€â€the Act of Uniformity of 1559 and
the Thirty-nine Articles of 1563. The Act of Uniformity established a
common prayer book and set the basic ceremonies of the church. The
Thirty-nine Articles established religious doctrine that governed the
church until the English Revolution in the 1640s. Both acts were
compromises that favored the views of more conservative or moderate
Protestant groups.
Elizabeth viewed the church as an inseparable part of her monarchy and
would not tolerate challenges to it. Such challenges came from both
Catholics, who clung to the old faith and plotted to remove the queen,
and from Puritans, radical Protestants who wanted to abolish all traces
of Catholicism (see Puritanism).
Catholic challenges and plots persisted through much of Elizabeth’s
reign, and Elizabeth reacted to them strongly. In 1569 a group of
powerful Catholic nobles in northern England rose in rebellion but were
savagely repressed. The northern earls were executed, their property and
those of their followers was confiscated, and their heirs were deprived
of their inheritance. In 1570 the pope excommunicated Elizabeth,
sanctioning Catholic efforts to dethrone her. In 1571 an international
conspiracy was uncovered to assassinate her in favor of her cousin,
Mary, Queen of Scots. Although Mary was beheaded in 1587 after years of
being at the center of Catholic plots against Elizabeth, such plots did
not end until England defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588.
Elizabeth’s battles against the Puritans were less conclusive. She
suspended Archbishop of Canterbury Edmund Grindal when he would not
punish Puritans who refused to kneel or make the sign of the cross. She
also imprisoned a member of Parliament in 1576 for introducing a bill to
change the prayer book, and she refused to aiccept the Lambethi Articles
of 1595, which contained a Calvinist, and more radical, interpretation
of the doctrine of predestination. But Elizabeth’s efforts did not
stop the Puritans from criticizing the established church, attacking
bishops, and converting others to their views. The significance of the
Elizabethan religious settlement is that it was able to hold the vast
majority of the people together, despite being a compromise few would
have chosen.
V Elizabethan Government ÂÂ
The difficulties Elizabeth experienced governing the English state were
enhanced by prejudices against women rulers. Though she presented
herself in the traditional images of the
monarchy, such as carrying the sword of state, commissioning a portrait
showing her bestriding the counties of England, and even appearing in
armor, Elizabeth realized the importance of
securing the cooperation of powerful men in order to rule effectively.
She made extensive use of the Privy Council and summoned ten parliaments
during her reign. She used Parliament to raise taxes and to endorse her
policies, but also allowed its members to suggest laws regarding local
issues, something rarely permitted by prior monarchs. The House of Lords
and the House of Commons both grew in size during her reign, but they
remained councils of the queen rather than parts of an independent
legislature. When she did not like the advice Parliament offered, she
ended its sessions.
Elizabeth effectively expanded royal government by increasing the role
of sheriffs in the counties and by relying upon justices of the peace to
perform the basic administrative work of local government. Thousands of
gentlemen served in this capacity, each an official, if unpaid, member
of the regime. Meeting in quarter sessions (that is, in sessions held
four times a year), justices enforced everything from the Poor Laws to
statutes against theft.
At the center of her government, Elizabeth was fortunate in having a
succession of capable ministers, including Sir Nicholas Bacon, Sir
Francis Walsingham, and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, who was her
personal favorite. She favored Leicester so extensively their
relationship became the subject of rumors. But the ablest of all
Elizabethan ministers was William Cecil, Lord Burghley, who held the
offices of secretary and treasurer. Burghley served the queen loyally
for 40 years and more than anyone else guided Elizabeth’s policies.
Burghley’s lifelong concern was for the queen to provide an heir for
succession. Having refused suitors pressed upon her when a princess, as
a queen, Elizabeth was never able to make a decision to marry and she
had no desire to share power with a husband. She rejected her sister
Mary’s husband, Philip II, king of Spain, who wished to remain allied
with English naval power, as well as nearly every eligible European
royal bachelor, including a future king of France. At first Burghley
feared Elizabeth would marry his rival, the Earl of Leicester, whose
wife had died under mysterious circumstances. Then he feared Elizabeth
might suddenly die, throwing the kingdom into chaos, a fear magnified by
her bout with smallpox in 1562.
The failure to settle the succession encouraged aristocratic factions to
grow around the queen. Until her execution, Mary, Queen of Scots, was a
focus of intrigue. In her prime, Elizabeth was adept at balancing
competing claimants for her favor, keeping them loyal and dependent. But
toward the end of her reign, the contest between Burghley and Robert
Devereux, Earl of Essex, led to an open rebellion against her. Essex’s
attempt to overthrow Elizabeth in 1601 was successfully put down, but it
demonstrated that the queen’s power had weakened.
VI Foreign Policy ÂÂ
The failure to secure her succession was also a factor in the
international struggles for power in which England engaged. Because she
would not marry a Catholic prince, she was drawn into the conflicts of
European Protestants. Elizabeth came to the throne in 1558 at the end of
a disastrous war that her sister Mary fought against France. One of
Elizabeth’s first acts was to conclude a treaty that gave up English
control over the French port of Calais, a blow to England’s prestige.
Despite this truce, trouble with France continued over developments in
Scotland. Mary, Queen of Scots, a Catholic, was married briefly to the
king of France, and after his death in 1560 returned to rule Scotland.
But Scotland was undergoing its own Protestant Reformation that was
supported by Elizabeth and, with France’s assistance, opposed by Mary.
In 1568 Mary lost her Scottish crown and was exiled to England, where
she continued to conspire against Elizabeth.
A similar struggle took place on French soil in 1562 and 1563, as French
Protestants, supported by Elizabeth, fought for religious freedom from
their Catholic monarch. English military expeditions to Scotland and
France proved expensive and ineffective. Troops were badly trained,
poorly equipped, and none too eager for battle. Most importantly,
Elizabeth never gave her wholehearted support to the French Protestants,
whom she regarded as rebels against their monarch.
The most significant English international expeditions were in support
of the Dutch Protestants. In 1581 the Dutch, then part of the Spanish
Empire, proclaimed their independence, which was contested by Philip II
of Spain, a Catholic. Spain was the most powerful nation in Europe, and
the Dutch could not hope to survive as an independent nation without
outside help. The Earl of Leicester persuaded a reluctant Elizabeth to
support the Dutch Protestants, and in 1585 he was given command of an
army that fought with the Dutch. The campaign was a disasterâ€â€not only
did it fail to prevent the loss of the crucial port of Antwerp, but it
also roused the anger of Philip II against England.
Philip feared that English assistance would hinder his efforts to
reconquer the Dutch, especially since English ships could easily send
vital supplies. In 1587 Philip began organizing an immense naval fleet,
the Spanish Armada, for a direct attack upon England. His objectives
were to destroy the English navy, force Elizabeth out of the war in the
Netherlands, and gain concessions for English Catholics. The Spanish
Armada, one of the most powerful fighting forces ever known, was no
match for the “Protestant wind†that blew many of the Spanish ships
off course in August 1588, or for the smaller, swifter English vessels
that were able to fire cannonballs more quickly than the Spanish
galleons. The defeat of the Spanish Armada was the high point of the
queen’s reign and united the nation. But it did not end the war with
Spain, which continued for the remaining 15 years of Elizabeth’s life.
She died on March 23, 1603, and was succeeded by her cousin James VI of
Scotland, who became James I of England.
VII Assessment ÂÂ
When Elizabeth died, one of the great epochs of English history ended.
Her 45-year rule decisively shaped the future of England as a stable
monarchy governed through the cooperation of crown and local elites. The
roles played by Parliament and the justices of the peace, two of the
most characteristic of all English institutions, solidified during her
reign and were indispensable thereafter. The Protestant religion was
firmly established as England’s faith, and though religious conflict
was to be a serious problem for another century, it was within the
context of the Elizabethan church settlement that the battles were
fought. The defeat of the Spanish Armada was a cause for national
celebration, and “Glorious ’88†was spoken of generations later
when Elizabeth’s birthday was still celebrated as a national holiday.
The defeat of Spain established the glory of the English navy and
inspired merchants and explorers toward colonization of a wider world.
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