Elizabeth I (1533-1603), the last Queen of England and Ireland (1558-1603) of the Tudor dynasty established in 1485 by Henry VII, her reign later became known as the "Elizabethan Age". "The Virgin Queen", daughter of King Henry VIII and Ann Boleyn considered by Roman Catholics as illigitimate, inherited an England divided by religion but governed ably during what could otherwise have been a very turbulent period in the country's history. The English Renaissance flourished under her rule which also saw economic expansion and the growth of the wool trade. The exploits of the mariners of her reign have attained an almost legendary status.
She is certainly a great Queen and were she only a Catholic she would be our dearly beloved. Just look how well she governs! She is only a woman, only mistress of half an island, and yet she makes herself feared by Spain, by France, by the Empire, by all . . . |
- Pope Sixtus V, c.1588 |
Elizabeth was born on September 7th, 1533, at the royal Palace of Placentia in Greenwich, London, the second daughter of Henry VIII (1509-1547) and only surviving child of his second wife, Anne Boleyn.
Elizabeth was recognised as the heir to the throne at the time of her birth although, because the circumstances of her parents' marriage (chiefly the divorce of Henry VIII from the Catholic Catherine of Aragon), Elizabeth was considered by Roman Catholics to be illegitimate. Her older half-sister, Mary Tudor (b.1515, later Queen Mary I, 1553-1558), the only surviving child of the king's marriage to Catherine of Aragon was passed over and made to serve in Elizabeth's household.
Elizabeth's childhood, unlike that of her half-sister Mary's, was comparatively happy and she recieved an extremely thorough education in literature, languages and music. Her life before her accession to the throne was not without its dangers and, at the time of Wyat's rebellion, Queen Mary had her imprisoned in the Tower of London for a time.
|
The fortunes of the two-year-old princess and heir to the throne changed suddenly on the execution of her mother for treason in May 1536 and the birth of a male heir, Edward (later Edward VI), to Henry by his third wife, Lady Jane Seymour, in October 1537. Elizabeth was now placed in the same position as Mary had been at her own birth. To legitimise the new-born prince as Henry's heir, both his royal half-sisters were declared illigitimate.
All of King Henry's later wives treated Elizabeth and Mary kindly and Elizabeth was devoted to her father. Following Henry's death in 1547, he was succeeded to the throne by the young Edward VI and Elizabeth was placed in the care of her father's last wife, Catherine Parr, and her new husband, Thomas Seymour (c.1508-1549), Lord High Admiral, brother of Jane Seymour and uncle to the new king.
Seymour was attracted to the young Elizabeth who may have responded in kind. He hoped to marry her after Catherine's untimely death shortly after the birth of their child, but was executed (as was his brother Edward, the Lord Protector, later) in a series of power struggles during the minority of Edward VI.
|
Under the aegis of Catherine Parr, Roger Ascham, and their associates, the princess Elizabeth was raised as a Protestant. She also received a fine education, an exceptional eduction for a woman of the time, under the tutelage of various scholars, including Ascham, renowned as author of "The Schoolmaster". She learnt the classics, history, mathematics, poetry, and languages and could speak and/or write capably in six languages during her reign: her native English, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and Greek.
Yea, I believe, that beside her perfect readiness in Latin, Italian, French, and Spanish, she readeth here now at Windsor more Greek every day than some prebendary of this church doth read Latin in a whole week. |
- Roger Ascham, Elizabeth's tutor from 1548 to 1550 |
Elizabeth's position was secure during the lifetime of her half-brother, the king, but the young Edward VI died in 1553 of either tuberculosis or poisoning by arsenic. Following the brief and abortive attempt to place Lady Jane Grey, her staunchly Catholic half-sister Mary came to the throne as Queen Mary I. The Queen was determined to convert her half-sister to Catholicism and Elizabeth, for her part, was willing to give the outward appearance of Catholic worship although she remained Protestant at heart. Mary saw through the deception and, at the time of Wyat's rebellion, had Elizabeth briefly confined to the Tower of London.
Some believe that it is during her confinement in the Tower that Elizabeth first met the love of her life, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. It is more likely, however, that they had known each other since their childhoods.
|
Elizabeth's life was spared but her position subject to a new threat when Mary married Philip II of Spain, raising the spechtre of a Catholic heir to the throne of England to secure her forcible return of the country to the Catholic faith.
Queen Mary's vision of a Catholic England was shared neither by the common majority of the Enlgish, nor the aristocracy. On the death of the childless Queen in 1558 however, Elizabeth (who had been designated explicitly as heir by the will of Henry VIII) was the natural successor and accepted as such by parliament.
Elizabeth came to the throne after Mary's death in 1558 and her half-sister's reign set the stage for an auspicious start to her own; the country was sickened by Mary's persecution of the Protestants and resentful of her marriage to the Catholic Philip of Spain. the new Queen was, in contrast, thoroughly English and prepared to come to a compromise all could accept for the sake of the State.
She was crowned Queen of England on January 15th, 1559 (a date chosen by John Dee as particularly auspicious astrologically to prevent misfortune), in Westminster Abbey. The ceremony was performed by the Bishop of Carlisle, the most senior prelate willing to recognise Elizabeth as the legitimate heir to the throne.
On her accession, she set about the task of achieving a formula which could be subscribed to by both Catholics and Protestants and the resulting Thirty-nine Articles were promulgated in 1563.
The Queen relied on the counsel of William Cecil, whom she created Lord Burghley, for most of her reign. On his death in 1598, his inept son Robert, became her leading advisor.
Sir Francis Walsingham ran a network of intelligence officers throughout Europe, an early form of "secret service". His agents kept watch on any threats to the monarch and it was they who discovered the Babington plot of 1586 which resulted in the execution of Mary Queen of Scots.
|
Elizabeth showed equal skill in her diplomatic relations with foreign powers and a great capacity for subjugating her own personal interests to the good of the State.
England became established as a sea power and, at home, economic hardship was alleviated by the famous Poor Laws which remained in force into modern times.
The Queen's signature on the death warrant of her cousin and an ever=present danger to Elizabeth's reign, Mary Queen of Scots, was only obtained with much difficulty and delay.
She is said to have been stricken with grief after the tragic death of her former favourite, Essex, and died two years later.
In his efforts to secure a male heir for the Tudor dynasty established by his father, Henry VIII (1509-1547) split with the Catholic Church to divorce Catherine of Aragon and threw England into the turbulent rising tide of European Protestantism. With his ardently Catholic daughter Mary waiting in the wings to claim the throne and reverse her father's deeds, and fearful of the loss of their own power, the rulers of England during the short reign of the young Edward VI codified the doctrinal foundations of the Anglican Church with publication of the Book of Common Prayer and sought to entrench the Protestant changes making them irreversible.
When King Edward died in July 1553 (either from either from tuberculosis or arsenic poisoning), the faction led by Northumberland attempted to secure the status quo by placing Lady Jane Grey on the throne. After only nine days, Lady Jane was imprisoned and Mary Tudor on the throne. The staunchly Catholic monarch proceeded to turn her new realm back to the old faith with a zeal which would earn her the nick-name "Bloody Queen Mary".
The new Protestant Queen returned the Church of England to its status before the reign of her Catholic half-sister and try and achieve a settlement of the religious tension which marked her forty-five-year reign.
Within two years of comming to the throne, the Queen reiterated and redefined the monarch's status as Supreme Governor of the Church of England with the Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity, building on the earlier acts of the same names. Unquestionaby Protestant herself, attempted to steer a moderate path between extremist beliefs. The persecution of Catholics and others regarded as heretics continued during her reign, particularly so in Ireland.
Pope Pius V excommunicated the Queen on February 25th, 1570 (something his predecessor had been reluctant to do). Created an outcast, similar in status to the medieval "outlaw" of the Catholic Church, it became the duty of every Catholic to bring down the reign of the errant Queen thus making it impossible for Elizabeth to continue her policy of religious toleration.
By the publication of the bull Regnans in Excelsis, dated April 27th, 1570, Elizabeth was excommunicated and her subjects released from their allegiance to the monarch.
|
The St Bartholemew's Day Massacre
The St Bartholomew's Day Massacre began during a holy pageant on the night of August 24th, 1572 when at least 10,000 French Protestants in Paris were murdered and the slaughter of Huguenots spread into the provinces. By the time the bloodbath had ended, the total number of victims is variously estimated as between twenty and a hundred or more thousands.
The religious warfare in France between Catholics and Protestants was unlike any European conflict since the age of the crusades. This was relentless slaughter, carried out by desperate men and women driven by inner conviction to annihilate, root and branch, all those who opposed them in matters of religious conscience. And nothing short of mass butchery would please the vengeful God who commanded the killing. |
- Carolly Erickson, The First Elizabeth, 1983 |
News of the French massacre of Protestants reached Queen Elizabeth and the royal court, causing shock, disbelief and trepidation, after they had returned to London early in September, at the end of the royal progress that summer.
|
|
| | | Links to Other Pages on This Site
|
| |
| | |
In 1559, the year of her coronation, Queen Elizabeth was one of the parties to the Peace of Cateau Cambr�sis that ended the Italian Wars for control of the States of Italy (1494-1559).
The first Turnpike Act was passed by parliament allowing the private maintenance of
roads in return for the revenue which could be obtained by the Trustees from users of the roads.
In 1691, the requirement that each able-bodied householder should provide four days' labour annually towards the
repair of the roads within the parish (established by
an Act of parliament in 1555) was increased to six days.
The Spanish Armada of 1588
My loving people, we have been persuaded by some, that are careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit ourselves to armed multitudes, for fear of treachery; but I assure you, I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let tyrants fear; I have always so behaved myself that, under God, I have placed my chiefest strength and safeguard in the loyal hearts and good will of my subjects. And therefore I am come amongst you at this time, not as for my recreation or sport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat of the battle, to live or die amongst you all; to lay down, for my God, and for my kingdom, and for my people, my honor and my blood, even the dust. I know I have but the body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart of a king, and of a king of England, too; and think foul scorn that Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade the borders of my realms: to which, rather than any dishonor should grow by me, I myself will take up arms; I myself will be your general, judge, and rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field. I know already, by your forwardness, that you have deserved rewards and crowns; and we do assure you, on the word of a prince, they shall be duly paid you. In the mean my lieutenant general shall be in my stead, than whom never prince commanded a more noble and worthy subject; not doubting by your obedience to my general, by your concord in the camp, and by your valor in the field, we shall shortly have a famous victory over the enemies of my God, of my kingdom, and of my people.
| - Queen Elizabeth I visiting her troops in the field at Tilbury, 1588 |
[ I ]
THE
ENGLISH MERCURIE.
Published by AUTHORITIE.
For the Prevention of false Reportes.
Whitehall, July 23d, 1588
EARLIE this Morninge arrived a Messenger at Sir Francis Walsingham's Office, with Letters of the 22d from the Lorde High Admirall on board the Ark-Royal, containing the followinge materiall Advices.
On the 20th of this Instant Capt. Fleming, who had beene ordered to cruize in the Chops of the Channell, for Discoverie, brought Advice into Plymouth, that he had descried the Spanish Armado neare the Lizard, making for the Entrance of the Channell with a favourable Gale. Though this Intelligence was not recieved till near foure in the Afternoone, and the Winde at that time blew hard into the Sound, yet by the indefatigable Care and Diligence of the Lorde High Admiral, the Ark-Royal, with five of the largest Frigates, anchored out of the Harboar that very Eveninge. The next Morninge, the greatest Part of her Majestie's Fleet gott out to them. They made in all about eighty Sail, divided into four Squadrons, commanded by his Lordship in Person, Sir Francis Drake Vice-Admiral, and the Rear-Admirals Hawkins and Forbisher. But about one in the Afternoone, they came in Sighte of the Spanish Armado two Leagues to the Westward of the Eddistone, sailing in the Form of a half-Moon, the Points whereof were seven Leagues asunder.
B
|
[ 2 ]
asunder. By the best Computation, that could be made on the sudden (which the Prisoners have since confirmed), they cannot be fewer than one hundred and fifty Ships of all Sorts; and severall of them called Galleons and galleasses, are of a Size never seene before in our Seas, and appeare on the Surface of the Water like floatinge Castles.
But the Sailors were soe far from being daunted by the Number and Strengthe of the Enemie, that as soon as they were discerned from the top-mast-Head, acclamations of Joy resounded through the whole Fleete.
The Lord High Admirall observing his generall Alacritie, after a Council of War had beene held, directed the Signall of Battle to be hung out.
We attacked the Enemy's Reare with the Advantage of the Winde: The Earl of Cumberland in the Defiance gave the first Fire: My Lord Howard himselfe was next engaged about three Hours with Don Alphonso de Leyva in the St. Jaques, which would certaynly have struck, if she had not beene seasonably rescued by Ango de Moncada.
In the meane tyme, Sir Francis Drake and the two Rear-Admirals Hawkins and Frobisher, vigorously braodsided the Enemies sternmost Ships commanded by Vice-Admiral Recalde, which were forced to retreat much shattered to the maine Body of their Fleete, where the Duke de Medina himself commanded.
About Sun set we had the Pleasure of seeing this invincible Armado fill all their Sails to get away from us.
The Lord Admirall slackened his, in order to expect the Arrivall of twenty fresh Frigates, with which he intends to pursue the Enemie, whom we hope by the Grace of God to prevent from landing one Man on English grounde.
In the Night the St. Francis Galleon, of which Don Pedro de valdez was Captaine, fell in with Vice-Admirall Drake, who tooke her after a stout Resistance.
She was disabled from keepinge up with the rest of the Fleete, by an Accident, which happened to her, of springing her Fore-maste.
She carryes fifty Guns and five hundred Men, both Souldiers and Mariners.
The Captours found on board five thousand Golde Ducats, which they shared amongst them after bringing her into Plymouth.
Such Preparations have beene long made, by her Majestie's Wisdom and Foresighte for Defence of the Kingdome, that (setting aside the common Accidents of War), no greate Danger is to be apprehended, though the Spaniards should lande in any Parte of it; since besides the two Campes at Tilbury and Blackheath, large Bodyes of Militia are disposed along
|
[ 3 ]
along the Coaste under experienced Commandours, with proper Ynstructions howe to behave, in case a Descent cannot be prevented till a greater Force may be drawne together, and severall of the principall of her Majesties Council and the Nobility have raised Troopes of Horse at their owne Charge, well trained and officered, which are readye to take the Fielde at an Houre's Warning.
The Queene was pleased to review them last Weeke in the Parke at Nonsuch, and expressed the highest Satisfaction at their gallant Appearance : In soe much, that by God's Blessinge there is no doubte but this unjust and dareing Enterprise of the Kinge of Spayne will turne out to his everlasting Shame and Dishonour, as all Rankes of People, without Respect of Religion, seeme resolute to defend the sacred Persone of their Sovereigne and the Lawes and Liberties of this Country, against all foreigne Invaders.
Ostend, July 27th N.S. Nothinge is now talked of in these Partes, but the intended Invasion of England.
His Highnesse the Prince of Parma has compleated his Preparationes, of which the following Accounte may be depended upon as exacte and authentique.
The Armie designed for the Expedition is selected out of all the Spanish Troopes in the Netherlands, and consistes of thirty thousand Foote, and eighteen hundred Horse.
At Nieuport are quartered thirty Companies of Italians, ten of Walloons, and eight of Burgundians, commanded by Camp-Master Generall Camillo de Monte.
At Dixmuyde lie readye eighty Companies of Flemings, sixty of Spaniards, sixty of Germans, and above seven hundred fugitive English, and headed by the two Irish Arch-Traitours, the Earles of Westmorland, and Sir William Stanley.
Besides these, four thousand Men out of the old Spanish Brigades are lodged in the Suburbes of Corrick, and nine hundred Reisters at Watene, together with the Marquisse de Guast General of Cavalrie.
Volunteers of the first Qualitie are arrived from different Countries, to share in the Honoure of this Enterprize, as the Duke de Pastrana, the Marquisse of Brisgaw, (Son to the Arch-Duke Ferdinand), Don Juan de Medicis, Don Amadeus Bastarde of Savoye, besides many others of less note, whome we have not roome to enumerate.
For the Transportation of these Forces, Vessels of all Sortes are prepared at Dunkirk, Antwerp, and Nieuport, fitted up with all manner of Conveniences; the flat bottomed Boates for the Cavalrie have Bridges fixed to them, for the more easie Shipping or Disembarkation of Horse.
The Transportes for the Foote containe each two Ovens, to
|
to bake Bread, in case they should be kepte longer at Sea then they hope to bee.
Twenty thousand Caskes are provided at Graveling, with Mailes and Cordage, which can soone be throwne into the Forme of a Bridge: And a greate Pile of Fascines is erected near Nieuport, designed for the fillinge up of Ditches, covering Workemen at a Siege, and other Artes of that Nature.
The little Hoyes, and Barges loaded with Arms, Powder and Provisions, are to bee conveyed through Canals cut from Bruges and Ghent, to Antwerp, Sluys, and Nieuport, and soe into the British Channell, The Scheme is sayed to be thus settled, that as soone as their great Armado arrives in Sighte of the Flemish Portes, the Prince of Parma is to get out with his Transportes and joyne them.
After which, they are in a Bodie to force their Waye up the River of Thames, against all Impediments, and lande as near London as they can.
But whilst these Harbours are so closely watched by the united Squadrone of her Majestie and the States, commanded by the Lord Henry Seymour, it is the general Opinion, that his Highnesse will finde it impossible to put to Sea, and we hope the Lorde Admial Howard will prevent the Spanish Navie from being in a Condition to raise the Blockade.
London, July 23rd. The Lord Mayoer, Aldermen, Common-Council and Lieutenancie of this greate City wayted upon her Majestie at Westminster this afternoone, with Assurances of their hearty and unanimous Resolution, to stande by and support her Majestie at this criticall Juncture, with their Lives and Fortunes, when her invaluable Life, the true Protestant Religion, and all the Priviledges of free-borne Englishmen are threatened by an open Attack from our bigotted and blood-thirsty Adversaries the Spaniards.
The Queene recieved them very graciously, and ashured them she did not doubte their sealous Endeavours to serve theyr Country on the present very important Occasion; that for her Part she relyed on God's Providence and the goodnesse of her Cause, and was resolvde to run all Risques with her faithfull Subjectes.
Imprinted at London by Christ, Barker, her Highnesse's Printer, 1588.
|
|
Unlike her father, Henry VIII who was
made the wealthiest king in Christendom by the dissolution of the monasteries, Queen Elizabeth
was comparatively poor.
On her death in 1603, Elizabeth I left the monarchy in debt to the sum of some £400,000 - a debt which would plague the Stuart monarchs who succeeded her.
The Queen's funeral procession started on April 28th and was composed of more than a thousand mourners.
She was interred in Westminster Abbey alongside her half-sister Queen Mary (1553-1558).
Elizabeth's tomb in Westminster Abbey was paid for by the new king, James I. Costing much less, it was not as impressive as the tomb provided for his disgraced mother, Mary Queen of Scots.
|
Following the Queen's death, the country was thrown into uncertainty. While
James I was welcomed peacefully and happily but all did not
go well. Soon Robert Cecil (who became the most powerful statesman of
James's reign), was writing to Sir John Harington;-
You know all my former steps: good knight, rest content, and give heed to one that hath sorrowed in the bright lustre of a court, and gone heavily even on the best-seeming fair ground. Tis a great task to prove one's honesty, and yet not spoil one's fortune. You have tasted a little hereof in our blessed Queen's time, who was more than a man and, in troth, sometimes less than a woman. I wish I waited now in her Presence Chamber, with ease at my foot, and rest in my bed. I am pushed from the shore of comfort, and know not where the winds and waves of a court may bear me.
|
Harington, himself lamented the passing of the monarch (Nugae Antiquae) . . .
My good mistress is gone, I shall not hastily put forth for a new master.
|
. . . while, with some hindsight, Godfrey Goodman, bishop of Gloucester;
After a few years, when we had experience of a Scottish government, the Queen did seem to revive; then was her memory much magnified: such ringing of bells, such public joy and sermons in commemoration of her, the picture of her tomb painted in many churches, and in effect more solemnity and joy in memory of her coronation than was for the coming-in of King James.
|
ADVISORS |
| William Cecil (1520-1598), 1st Baron Burghley |
| | Appointed secretary of state at her accesssion, the able Cecil remained the Queen's chief advisor until his death in 1598 when he was succeeded by his son, Robert. |
| John Dee (1527-1608) |
| | Noted English scientist with an interest in the occult, scientific consultant to Queen Elizabeth. It was dee who first coined the phrase "British Empire". Awarded a pension by his patron, the Queen, he travelled widely abroad and possibly acting as a spy, but his influence died with his patron in 1603 and he he died in poverty. |
| Sir Francis Walsingham (c.1530-1590) |
| | As a diplomat, Walsingham established a network of spies throughout Europe and became famous as Elizabeth's "spymaster". |
| (-) |
| | |
1509.Apr.22 | | Death of Henry
VII, his son succeeds to the Crown as Henry VIII, aged 17 | | BAAAGBXA BAAAGBRG BAAAGCDB BAAAGEFL BAAAGBRH BAAAGEKW | 1533.Sep.07 | | Birth of Princess Elizabeth (I) (-1603) to Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn at the palace of Placentia in Greenwich | | BAAAGBXA BAAAGEKX | 1533.Sep.10 | | Christening of the future Elizabeth I. Henry VIII so dissapointed she was not a son that he does not attend | | BAAAGBXA | 1536.Jul.01 | | Mary and Elizabeth declared illegitimate by Parliament | | BAAAGBXA BAAAGCAB BAAAGBXJ | 1543.Jul | | Treaties of Greenwich: 6-month-old Mary, Queen of Scots, promised in marriage to Prince Edward, the son of Henry VIII in
1552
and for their heirs to inherit the kingdoms of Scotland and England | | BAAAGEKT BAAAGDGR BAAAGBXA BAAAGCLJ | 1547.Jan.28 | | Death of King Henry
VIII, aged 55; Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset becomes
Lord Protector in the name of the 9-year-old King Edward VI | | BAAAGBXA BAAAGCEE BAAAGBHZ BAAAGCBT BAAAGCAB BAAAGDGQ BAAAGDGI | 1548 | | Roger Ascham becomes tutor to the future Elizabeth I | | BAAAGEKM | 1550.Jun.04 | | Marriage of Robert Dudley to Amy Robsart Princess Elizabeth is among the guests
| | | 1553.Jul.06 | | Death of King Edward VI, aged only 15; Northumberland proclaims Lady Jane Grey as queen | | BAAAGCAB BAAAGDGR BAAAGDGQ BAAAGCBT BAAAGEKN | 1553.Jul.19 | | Mary I, the ardent Catholic daughter of Henry VIII by Katherine of Aragon proclaimed Queen of England in London, she undisputedly succeeds to the throne of England - Lady Jane Grey is deposed and imprisoned The proclamation made at Cheapside Cross and other accustomed places | | BAAAGEFL BAAAGCBT BAAAGEKN BAAAGCAB BAAAGDKN BAAAGDGQ BAAAGDGR | 1553.Aug.03 | | Queen Mary I enters London triumphantly accompanied by Elizabeth | | BAAAGCAB BAAAGDKN BAAAGDGQ | 1554.Feb.12 | | Execution of Lady Jane Grey, who had been proclaimed Queen of England by Northumberland on the death of Edward VI, and her husband Guildford Dudley at the Tower of London | | BAAAGEKN BAAAGCAB BAAAGCGR BAAAGDGQ BAAAGDGR | 1554.Mar.18 | | Elizabeth sent to the Tower for supposed complicity with Wyatt and his rebels | | | 1554.Apr.11 | | Wyatt executed for treason | | BAAAGCAB BAAAGEKK | 1554.May.19 | | Elizabeth removed from the Tower to close confinement at Woodstock Manor, Oxfordshire | | | 1555.Oct.16 | | Elizabeth released from Woodstock to return to her childhood home of Hatfield | | BAAAGCAB | 1558 | | Act of Supremacy (Elizabeth I) | | BAAAGCBT | 1558 | | Act of Conformity (Elizabeth I) | | BAAAGCBT | 1558.Apr.24 | | Marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots, to Francis, heir to the French throne (Francis II) | | BAAAGCAB BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1558.Nov.17 | | Death of Queen Mary I, her half-sister succeeded to the crown as Queen Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII by Anne Boleyn Her reign is marked by the rise of England as a sea-power and a flourishing of the arts, particularly literature and drama | | BAAAGBXA 00000000 BAAAGCBT BAAAGCAB BAAAGEKU BAAAGEKX | 1558.Nov.17+ | | William Cecil appointed secretary of state by Elizabeth I | | BAAAGEKU | 1558.Dec.14 | | Burial of Queen Mary I in Westminster Abbey | | BAAAGCAB | 1559 | | Death of former Holy Roman Emperor Charles V | | | 1559.Jan.15 | | Coronation of Elizabeth I by the Bishop of Carlisle in Westminster Abbey | | BAAAGEFJ | 1559.Apr.03 | | Peace of Cateau-Cambr�sis; end of the Hapsburg-Valios Italian Wars for control of the States of Italy (1494-). brings peace with France Sicily and Milan granted to Spain. Queen Elizabeth was one of the parties | | BAAAGBKY | 1559.May.02 | | John Knox returns to Scotland | | BAAAGEKC | 1559.May.08 | | Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity passed implementing the Elizabethan religious settlement | | BAAAGCBT | 1559.May.10 | | John Knox incites the Scottish Lords of the Congregation to rise against the regency of Marie of Guise, the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots Edinburgh seized, religious houses destroyed. Elizabeth I subsequently approached for aid in their cause | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1559.Jul.10 | | Death of Henry II of France; his son, Francis becomes King; Mary Queen of Scots declares herself Queen of England | | BAAAGBKY BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1559.Aug.18 | | Death of Pope Paul IV, aged 83 | | | 1559.Oct.21 | | Scottish Lords depose Mary of Guise for not preventing the French fortification of Leith | | BAAAGBKY BAAAGEKC | 1559.Dec.18 | | Elizabeth I sends aid to the Scottish Lords by land and sea | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGBFI | 1560 | | Scotland is declared a Protestant nation | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1560.Jul.06 | | Treaty of Edinburgh secures peace with Scotland, French undertaking to withdraw troops from Scotland and recognise Elizabeth\\\'s right to rule England; Mary, Queen of Scots claims to the English annulled - but 18-year-old Mary (still in France) refuses to ratify the treaty | | BAAAGEKB BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT BAAAGBKY | 1560.Sep.08 | | Death of Amy Dudley (also known as Robsart), wife of Robert Dudley, in mysterious circumstances | | | 1560.Dec.05 | | Death of Francis, King of France and husband of Mary, Queen of Scots; succeeded by his brother Charles IX with Catherine de Medici (mother-in-law of Mary) as Regent | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1561 | | O\'Neill\'s rebellion in Ireland | | BAAAGBKD | 1561 | | St Pauls Cathedral in London is badly damaged by fire | | | 1561 | | Mary, Queen of Scots, invites Elizabeth I to Scotland to attempt to heal their breach but Elizabeth I refuses | | BAAAGEKT | 1561 | | Mary, Queen of Scots,
sent Maitland of Lethington as ambassador to put the case for Mary as a potential heir to the English throne | | BAAAGEKT | 1561.Aug.19 | | Mary, Queen of Scots, returns to Leith, Scotland Having lived in France since 1548. Mary is denied passage through England | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1561.Dec | | Arrangements made for Mary, Queen of Scots and Elizabeth I to meet in England (at York or another town) in September | | BAAAGEKT | 1562 | | Drake and Hawkins make the first English slave-trading voyage to the New World | | BAAAGCLO | 1562 | | Treaty of Richmond; Elizabeth I makes it secretly with French Huguenots | | BAAAGBKY | 1562.Mar.01 | | Massacre of Huguenots at Vassay, ordered by Duc de Guise, starts the First War of Religion in France The wars were to continue, intermittently, until 1598 | | BAAAGBKY | 1562.May.26 | | Second rebellion of Shane O\\\' Neill in Ireland | | BAAAGBKD | 1562.Jul | | Elizabeth I sends Sir Henry Sidney to Mary, Queen of Scots, to cancel their meeting arranged for September the previous December because of the civil war in France | | BAAAGEKT | 1562.Sep.22 | | Elizabeth I signs the Treaty of Hampton Court giving assistance to the French Huguenots | | BAAAGBKY | 1562.Oct | | Near death of Queen Elizabeth I from smallpox | | | 1563 | | The Thirty-Nine Articles were promulgated defining the Elizabethan Church settlement and the Anglican faith | | BAAAGCBT | 1563 | | Outbreak of the plague at Dorchester | | BAAAGBYS BAAAGBUC BAAAGBKS BAAAGDFZ | 1563 | | Publication of Acts and Monuments (better known as the Book of Martyrs) by John Foxe | | BAAAGCBT | 1563 | | Outbreak of the plague in London | | BAAAGDFZ BAAAGDKN | 1563 | | Elizabeth I attempts to neutralise Mary, Queen of Scots, by suggesting she marry someone suitable so she could proceed to the inquisition of her right and title to be our next cousin and heir - Mary refused She secretly envisaged Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, whom she trusted and believed she could control | | BAAAGEKT | 1563 | | An Act against conjurations, enchantments, and witchcrafts (-1604) | | BAAAGCQN | 1563.Dec.04 | | The Council of Trent hold its last session (after 18 years) | | | 1564 | | Huguenots massacred in America | | | 1564 | | Work starts on the Exter Ship Canal - the first canal in England with locks | | BAAAGBAV BAAAGCXC BAAAGEIZ | 1564.Feb.06 | | Birth of Christopher Marlowe | | | 1564.Feb.15 | | Death of astronomer Galileo | | | 1564.Apr.11 | | Peace of Troyes between England and France; England renounces its claim to Calais on payment of 222,000 crowns by the French | | BAAAGBKY BAAAGCCR | 1564.Apr.23 | | Birth (reputed as little is known of his early life) of William Shakespeare | | | 1564.May.27 | | Death of John Calvin in Geneva | | BAAAGCBT | 1564.Jul.25 | | Death of Ferdinand I, succeeded as Holy Roman Emperor, King of Austria, Bohemia and Hungary by Maximilian II; the rest of the Hapsburg dominions pass to the Archduke Charles | | | 1565 | | Sir John Hawkins introduces Tobacco to England | | | 1565 | | Death of Kat Ashley, Elizabeth I\'s old governess | | | 1565.Jul | | First Chelmsford witch trials; first trial for witchcraft in an English secular court Elizabeth Frances, Agnes Waterhouse and her daughter Joan were accused at Chelmsford in Essex | | BAAAGCQN BAAAGCBT | 1565.Jul.29 | | Sudden marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots, to her first cousin and descendant of Henry VII, the Catholic Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley The marriage precipitated her half-brother and chief counsellor, the Earl of Moray, to join with other Protestant Lords in open rebellion | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT BAAAGBRG | 1565.Aug.28 | | The Spanish land in Florida to establish the first permanent European settlement in America They name their settlement after St Augustine | | | 1566 | | Netherlands revolt against Spain | | | 1566 | | Law for the Preservation of Grayne passed putting a bounty on vermin payable by the Churchwardens | | BAAAGCCC BAAAGBSM BAAAGBQN | 1566.Jan.07 | | Death of Pope Pius IV, succeeded by Pius V | | | 1566.Mar.09 | | Murder of David Rizzio, private secretary and friend of Mary, Queen of Scots, at the Palace of Holyroodhouse while in conference with the Queen by Darnley and the rebel Scottish nobles | | BAAAGEKT BAAAGEGA | 1566.Jun.19 | | Birth of the future James VI of Scotland (later James I of England) to Mary, Queen of Scots Shortly afterwards, Mary began a liaison with James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell | | BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1566.Nov.10 | | Birth of Robert Devereux, future Earl of Essex | | | 1567.Feb.10 | | Murder of Darnley at Kirk O Field, Scotland An explosion occurred in the house, Darnley found dead in the garden, apparently strangled. Bothwell, generally believed to be guilty of the act, subjected to a mock trial but acquitted | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEGA | 1567.Jun.02 | | Assassination of Shane O Neill, Earl of Tyrone | | | 1567.Jul.24 | | Deposition (abdication) of Mary, Queen of Scots in favour of her infant Protestant son who is proclaimed as James VI of Scotland at Stirling (later James I of England), Moray becomes regent | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEKT BAAAGCQN | 1567.Oct.06 | | Resignation of the regency of the Netherlands by Margaret of Parma; Duke of Alva takes complete command | | | 1568 | | Defeat at San
Juan de Ulua meant the end of the slaving voyages of Hawkins | | | 1568 | | Elizabeth I seizes the treasure of a Spanish fleet driven into Plymouth: Start of
the Anglo-Spanish maritime feud | | BAAAGDZE BAAAGCEI | 1568 | | First Eisteddfod for Welsh music and Literature is held at Caerwys | | | 1568 | | Foundation of the English Catholic College of Douai by William Allen | | BAAAGBJA | 1568.Mar.23 | | Treaty of Longjumean ends the second phase of French wars of religion | | | 1568.May.02 | | Escape of Mary, Queen of Scots, from Loch Leven Castle She managed to raise a small army again | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1568.May.16 | | Flight of Mary, Queen of Scots, to England | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1568.May.19 | | Mary, Queen of Scots, arrested by the English and held at Carlisle | | BAAAGEKT | 1568.May.23 | | William of Orange defeats a Spanish force at Heiligerlee marking the beginning of the Revolt of the Netherlands | | | 1568.Sep.30 | | Deposition of Eric XIV of Sweden as he has shown signs of mental illness; succeeded by his brother John III | | | 1568.Oct | | Start of the enquiry (-Jan) ordered by Elizabeth I into the part of Mary, Queen of Scots\' part in the death of Darnley at York Elizabeth I did not wish to convict Mary of murder | | BAAAGEKT BAAAGEGA | 1569.Jan | | End of the enquiry (Oct-) ordered by Elizabeth I into the part of Mary, Queen of Scots\' part in the death of Darnley at York finds nothing proven It was largely based on the 8 Casket Letters | | BAAAGEKT | 1569.Nov.09 | | Start of the revolt of the Catholic Northern Earls against Elizabeth I | | | 1570 | | Potato is introduced to Europe from Spanish America | | | 1570 | | Elizabeth persuaded by the French into promise to help Mary, Queen of Scots, regain her throne but she insisted Mary ratify the Treaty of Edinburgh (July 1560)which , something Mary refused to do William Cecil continued negotiations with Mary on behalf of Elizabeth | | BAAAGEKT BAAAGBKY BAAAGEKU | 1570 | | Francis Walsingham chosen by William Cecil to succeed Sir Henry Norris as ambassador to France | | BAAAGEKV | 1570.Jan.23 | | Assassination of James Stewart, Earl of Moray, half-brother of Mary Queen of Scots\' and Regent in Scotland for her son, James VI | | BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1570.Feb.20 | | Rebellion of the Northern Catholic Earls crushed | | | 1570.Feb.25 | | Elizabeth I anathematised (excommunicated) by Papal Bull of Pope Pius V An outcast of the Catholic Church, it became the duty of all Catholics to bring down her reign thus making religious toleration impossible | | BAAAGDLY BAAAGCBT | 1570.Aug.08 | | Peace of Germain-en-Laye ends the third period of the French wars of religion | | | 1571 | | The Ridolfi plot to assassinate Elizabeth I | | BAAAGEKT | 1571.Jan.23 | | Sir Thomas Gresham\\\'s Royal Exchange opened by Queen Elizabeth I | | | 1571.Oct.07 | | Battle of Lepanto:
Spectacular defeat of Turkish Ottoman sea-power (the Ottomans had threatening east Christendom for a century) by Don John of Austria | | BAAAGEFP | 1572 | | Dutch Sea Beggars take Brill | | | 1572 | | Parliament licenses theatrical troupes (The promotion of secular drama and an advance toward the professionalism of theatrical activity) | | BAAAGBXJ | 1572 | | Passing of the Poor Law to deal with rising pauperism | | BAAAGBJC | 1572 | | Parliament introduces a bill barring Mary, Queen of Scots, from the throne Elizabeth unexpectedly refused to give the bill the royal assent | | BAAAGEKT | 1572.May.01 | | Death of Pope Pius V, succeeded by Gregory XIII | | | 1572.Aug.24 | | St Bartholomew\'s Day Massacre: King Charles IX orders the massacre of French Protestants by Catholics 70,000 people are killed, leaving France virtually devoid of intellectual, educational and financial resources | | BAAAGBKY BAAAGCBT | 1574 | | Queen Elizabeth I visits Bristol | | BAAAGEDZ | 1575 | | Elizabeth I grants Thomas Tallis and William Byrd the monopoly of publishing music
| | | 1576 | | First theatre in England built | | | 1576 | | Frobisher searches for the Northwest Passage | | | 1577 | | Sir Francis Drake leaves to circumnavigate the
Earth He returns in 1580 | | | 1577.Nov.29 | | Martyrdom of the Roman Catholic priest Cuthbert Mayne for high treason at Launceston | | BAAAGBEW BAAAGCEK BAAAGBFR BAAAGEAF | 1578 | | Parma
re-establish Spanish rule in the Southern Netherlands | | | 1579 | | The Union of
Utrecht; seven northern provinces of the Netherlands form what later became
the Dutch Republic | | | 1579 | | Outbreak of the plague at Dorchester | | BAAAGBYS BAAAGBUC BAAAGBKS BAAAGDFZ | 1580 | | Philip II of Spain seizes the crown of Portugal on the death of King Henrique | | | 1580.Sep.26 | | Sir Francis Drake sails into Plymouth on the Golden Hinde ending its three-year voyage circumnavigating the Earth He set off in 1577 | | BAAAGBAV BAAAGDZE | 1582.Oct.15 | | Gregorian calendar adopted by Catholic countries | | BAAAGCBT BAAAGCCS | 1583 | | First English
overseas colonies established | | | 1584 | | Elizabeth II introduces the Bond of Association aimed at preventing any would-be successor from profiting from her murder Mot leagally binding, it was signed by thousands, including Mary, Queen of Scots | | BAAAGEKT BAAAGEGA | 1585 | | English intervention in the war between Spain and
the Netherlands | | | 1585 | | Printing was restricted to London, Oxford and Cambridge
The Archbishop of canterbury, the Bishop of London and the Stationers Company exercised supervision over printers and publishers
| | BAAAGDKN BAAAGDJK | 1586 | | William Camdens
Britannia published in Latin | | | 1586.Oct.14 | | Trial of Mary, Queen of Scots for conspiracy against Queen Elizabeth I starts | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1586.Dec | | Introduction of the potato into England from Columbia by Sir Thomas Herriot | | | 1587 | | Sir Christopher Hatton becomes Lord Chancellor | | BAAAGBZR | 1587.Aug.18 | | Virginia Dare is the first child of English parents to be born on American soil
(on what is now Roanoke Island, North Carolina) | | | 1587.Dec.08 | | Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, at Fotheringay Castle after 20 years of imprisonment following the Babington Plot ]]or Feb 28th[[ Elizabeth I had signed her death warrant a week previously, after Mary refused to disavow her claim to the English throne. It is reported it took 3 blows of the axe to sever her head. She was interred at Peterborough Cathedral (-1612) | | BAAAGEKC BAAAGEKT | 1588.May.28 | | Spanish Armada sails from Portugal under the command of the Duke of Medina Sedonia | | | 1588.Jul.20+ | | The Spanish Armada is defeated Fleet of 130 ships assembled by Philip II of Spain to overthrow Elizabeth I. The victory ends Spanish commercial supremacy and domination of the Atlantic and encourages English interests in the New World
| | | 1588.Jul.23 | | Queen Elizabeth I meets the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, Common-Council and Lieutenancie of London at Westminster | | BAAAGDKN BAAAGEFR | 1588.Jul.28 | | The English use fire-ships to scatter the Spanish Armada anchored at Calais | | BAAAGCCR | 1588.Jul.29 | | Battle of Gravelines: many ships of the Spanish Armada lost or damaged in the eight-hour battle | | BAAAGEFP BAAAGEFQ | 1590 | | Death of Francis Walsingham (1530-), Elizabethan diplomat, most famous as spymaster to Elizabeth I, leaving considerable debts | | BAAAGEKV | 1590 | | Bath created a city Baths popularity as a spa revived during the Elizabethan period | | BAAAGCQI BAAAGEII | 1592 | | Remains of Pompeii discovered | | | 1592 | | Outbreak of the plague in London | | BAAAGBKS BAAAGDFZ BAAAGDKN | 1592.Jan | | Election of Pope Clement VIII | | BAAAGDLY | 1595 | | Spanish raid on Penzance, Cornwall | | BAAAGCEK BAAAGBHZ BAAAGDZK | 1595 | | Outbreak of the plague at Dorchester | | BAAAGBYS BAAAGBUC BAAAGBKS BAAAGDFZ | 1595 | | Privy Council decrees that bows are not to be issued as weapons of war | | BAAAGCCJ BAAAGDDK | 1598 | | French Protestants guaranteed liberty of worship
by the Edict of Nantes | | BAAAGBKY | 1598 | | Death of Philip II of Spain at the Escorial near Madrid | | | 1598 | | Death of William Cecil (1520-), 1st Baron Burghley, long-standing chief advisor to Elizabeth I His function was taken up by his inept son Robert | | BAAAGEKU | 1598.Feb.25 | | Solar eclipse visible from Cornwall | | BAAAGCEK BAAAGBHZ | 1599 | | William Shakespeare\\\'s Globe Theatre opens | | | 1599 | | Francis Carew creates a method of producing out of season fruit | | | 1600 | | Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, tried for misdemeanours after his return from Ireland and loses his offices at court | | | 1600 | | Foundation of the English East India Company | | | 1600. | | London\'s theatrical scene is dominated by two rival troupes: the Lord Admiral\'s Men, managed by Philip Henslowe, led by playwright Christopher Marlowe and actor Edward Alleyne; and the Chamberlain\'s Men, co-owned by Richard Burbage and William Shakespeare | | BAAAGDKN | 1600.Aug.05 | | Gowrie Conspiracy in Scotland; James VI seized by Lord Gowrie The king was later rescued | | | 1600.Dec.31 | | English East India Company
founded by a charter granted by Queen Elizabeth I | | | 1601 | | The Poor Law forced each parish to make provision (parish relief) for its own poor | | BAAAGBKB BAAAGBWS paris | 1601 | | 3,000-strong Spanish force lands in Ireland to aide the Irish rebellion | | | 1601.Jan.07 | | Rebellion of the Earl of Essex | | | 1601.Feb.19 | | Essex tried for treason | | BAAAGBQN | 1601.Feb.25 | | Execution of Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex | | | 1601.Nov.20 | | Queen Elizabeth I delivers her Golden Speech | | | 1602 | | Heresy ceased to be punishable by burning at the stake | | BAAAGCBT | 1602 | | English Fleet capture Portuguese treasure ship | | BAAAGCDL | 1603.Mar.23 | | Dying Queen Elizabeth I makes a sign to her assembled councilors assembled when Cecil mentions James VI of Scotland regarding the succession | | BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEKC | 1603.Mar.24 | | Death of
Queen Elizabeth I (1533-) of England and Ireland in the early hours - succeeded
to the crown by James VI of Scotland as James I | | 00000000 BAAAGBKD BAAAGCLJ BAAAGCBT BAAAGEKC BAAAGCQN | 1603.Mar.27 | | James I receives news of his accession from Robert Carey at Edinburgh The ambitious Carey road to Edinburgh at a speed only matched in 1832 | | BAAAGCLJ | 1603.Apr.28 | | Funeral procession of Elizabeth I She was interred at Westminster Abbey | | BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEFJ | 1612 | | James I orders the remains of his mother, Mary, Queen of Scots, to be removed from Peterborough Cathedral to Westminster Abbey Her remains lie 30 feet from those of her cousin Elizabeth I whom she never met | | BAAAGCLJ BAAAGEKT BAAAGEFJ | 1652 | | 3rd session of the Council of Trent | | BAAAGCAB BAAAGCBT |
|
| | | Links to Other Pages on This Site
|
| |
| | |
HOUSE OF TUDOR:
Henry VII
Henry VIII
Mary I
Elizabeth I
HOUSE OF STUART:
James I
Charles I
Charles II
|
| | | Links to Other Sites
|
| |
| | |
The Word of a Prince A Life of Queen Elizabeth from Contemporary Documents by Maria Perry, publisher Boydell Press, Rochester, NY, 1990
Elizabeth I The Shrewdness of Virtue by Jasper Ridley, publisher Viking, New York, 1987
The England of Elizabeth by AL Rowse, publisher MacMillan, 1951
Tudor Royal Proclamations , ed. Paul L Hughes + James F Larkin, publisher Yale University Press, 1964-1969 3 volumes
Recommend a Book for this Page
Hits on this page since December 6thJan | | | | Feb | | | | Mar | | | | Apr | | | | May | | | | Jun | | | | Jul | | | | Aug | | | | Sep | | | | Oct | | | | Nov | | | | Dec | | | |
current year: | | previous year: |
No messages posted on this page Only Members of the Site can post messages in this section. Signing in is easy from our Home Page. DISCLAIMER: Whilst we endeavour to ensure the content of this site is correct, we cannot undertake that information you find here, is, or will remain accurate and complete. We do not warrant that any information contained on this site is fit for any purpose. If you wish to place reliance on any such information you must check its accuracy by some other means before doing so. MEMBERS get aditional features on our pages and will soon be able to interact with the site and add their views and informastion. Sign up, from the Home-Page, is simple and involves typing in your email address and a password of your choice. If you are in any way connected with any location or interested in the subject mentioned on this page and have an hour or two a month to spare, we would welcome you as a local moderator - please email the webmaster by CLICKING HERE. Privacy Policy
|
|