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British History (Part III) By Han Linye The School of English Studies Chapter Outline • • • • • • • III. Transition to the Modern Period Henry VIII and the English Reformation Elizabeth I and English Renaissance James I Charles I and The Civil Wars Oliver Cromwell The Glorious Revolution Monarchy ['mɔnəki] The Tudor Monarchy • Henry VII (House of Tudor) ascended the throne after the ending of the Wars of Roses. • Five Tudor monarchs (Henry VII, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth I) ruled England and Wales from 1485 to 1603. House of Tudor Henry VII Henry VIII Edward VI Mary I Elizabeth I Tudor Monarchy (1485 – 1603) A transitional stage from feudalism to capitalism in English history: • Big feudal households destroyed as a result of the Wars of the Roses; • New-born bourgeoisie began to rise; • Trade and industry developed tremendously: the clothing industry & the foreign trade • Witnessed a series of significant historical events—the English Reformation, the English Renaissance, Enclosure Movement, discovery of America 1) Henry VII (1485-1509) • Forbidding the nobles to keep excessive power • Keeping peace at home and abroad by marriage alliances • Building up England’s navy and foreign trade Marriage Alliances by Henry VII • Married Elizabeth of York so as to unite England • Betrothed the Prince of Wales—Arthur to Catherine of Aragon, a Spanish princess • Betrothed his younger son—Henry to Catherine of Aragon again, after Arthur’s death • Married his two daughters to king of Scotland and king of France Lancaster Red Rose Tudor Rose York White Rose Henry VII • Challenges: —conflicts among English lords; —conflicts between England &France • Spent money on education: brought in scholars from France, Italy etc. • Renaissance began to spread to England • Sponsored overseas exploration: John Cabot—sailed to Canada and the U.S. eastern coast 2)Henry VIII (1509-1547) • The reign of Henry VIII was marked by his break with the Roman Catholic Church for not granting him a divorce from his first wife, Catherine of Aragón. Henry declared himself Supreme Head of the Church of England, initiating the Reformation in England. Henry VIII • Frivolous image (six wives) • Strengthened control over borders and local governments • Appointed Justices of the Peace with full power over law and administration in the rural areas • Be friendly with two superpowers: France and Spain • Started the reform of the Church of England English Reformation • Cause: King Henry VIII applied to Pope for a permission to divorce Catherine (aunt of Spanish King) to marry Anne Boleyn, but was rejected. • Purpose: cut England’s religious connection with the Pope and make an independent Church of England—the Anglican Church (the new Church of England). • Measures: declared the independence of Church of England; took the title Supreme Head of the Church of England; took away the property of the monks and sacked all the monasteries— “Dissolution” 3) Edward VI (1547-1553) Protestant ['prɔtistənt] Edward VI • Became King at 9; died at 15; • Parliamentary acts during his reign changed England’s religious practices and sent England on its way to becoming a Protestant nation. • English replaced Latin in church. • The Anglican prayer book, Book of Common Prayer, became required in public worship. 4) Mary I (1553-1558) Bloody Mary • Mary I, Edward’s half sister; a devout Catholic • Mary restored Catholic practices and papal authority to the Church of England. • Mary married her Spanish cousin, Phillip II, making England a part of the powerful Spanish state. (During this period of nationalism, many found her acts unpatriotic.) • Mary also persecuted Protestants: she ordered the execution of 300 Protestants during her reign, strengthening anti-Catholic sentiment in England. 5) Elizabeth I (1558-1603) Elizabeth I • After Mary’s five year reign, her half-sister, Elizabeth came to the throne. • Elizabeth was the last of the Tudors, dying unmarried and childless. • Her reign—a time of great prosperity and achievement is known as the Elizabethan Age. • Elizabeth received a Renaissance education, became a patron of the arts, and Elizabethan came to describe the English Renaissance at its height. Elizabeth I • Well-educated by famous scholars; received training in rhetoric and public speaking; • A good command of Greek, Latin, French, Italian, and Spanish; • Broad intellectual interests: history, science philosophy, art, literature, music, and dancing; • Under her rule, England experienced a true cultural reawakening or renaissance: greatest writers found encouragement and financial aid; Oxford and Cambridge Unis were reorganized and chartered; Challenges for Elizabeth I • Faced with challenges and threats, militarily, religiously and personally, Queen Elizabeth I proved to be a strong leader and an astute politician, who successfully solved one problem after another. • Now let’s suppose if you were her, what would you have done?...try a game here Religious Policy • Her religious reform was a compromise of views; instituted a policy of religious moderation; ended religious turmoil; • Reestablished the monarch’s supremacy in the Church of England; repudiated the Papal Supremacy by declaring herself as “defender of the faith” in England; • Restored the independence of the Church of England; • Kept to Catholic doctrines and practices; • Restored the Book of Common Prayer (the English selection of the Bible). Foreign Affairs • France and Spain, England’s two greatest rivals, often worked with Catholic factions in England. • Both nations fought to dominate England. • Elizabeth and her counselors played one side against the other, using offers of marriage as bait. • This cleverness allowed England a period of peace and allowed commercial and maritime interests to prosper. England vs. Spain • Avoided open hostility with Spain but encouraged English Seadogs to raid Spanish colonies and ships; granted charters to the charted companies (e.g.East India Company) • Spain rejected English claims in America and resented the fact that English privateers had been attacking and plundering Spanish ships. • Privateers like John Hawkins and Francis Drake operated “on their own,” but were really under the authority of Queen Elizabeth. Mary, Queen of Scots • Elizabeth’s Catholic cousin, Mary Stuart; queen of Scotland by birth and next in line to the British throne (granddaughter of Henry VII) • Catholics did not recognize Henry VIII’s marriage to Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth’s mother, and considered Mary Stuart the queen. Henry VII Arthur Henry VIII Mary I Elizabeth I Margret Edward VI James V King of Scotland Mary Margret Mary Queen of Scots Henry Stuart Lord Darnley • Mary was a prisoner of England for 19 years and the center of numerous plots on Elizabeth’s life. • Eventually Mary was convicted of plotting to murder Elizabeth and beheaded in 1587, a Catholic martyr. • “In my end is my beginning”—Mary’s death led Catholic Spain to declare war on England. The Spanish Armada • After Mary’s execution, King Phillip II prepared a Spanish armada of 130 warships to attack England. • In 1588, English sailors defeated the Armada in the English Channel. • This event marked the decline of Spain and the rise of England as a great sea power. Destruction of the Armada • The Spanish King Philip dispatched the Armada (the Invincible Fleet) (a fleet of 130 vessels) to England. • The English battleships fought back with fire ships. • Only half of the vessels struggled back to Spain and never to invade England again. Destruction of the Armada • Weakened one of England’s major rivals • Established England as a major sea power and paved the way for its foreign expansion • Elizabeth I: regarded as the foundationlayer of the British Empire Renaissance: • The Renaissance began in Italy in the early 14th century, with Leonardo Da Vinci as its representative figure. • In England, the Renaissance began with the accession of the House of Tudor to the throne in 1485. The date was close to that of the introduction of printing into England by William Caxton. The English Renaissance • Architects designed beautiful mansions; • Composers wrote new hymns for Anglican service and popularized the English madrigal; • Renaissance painters and sculptors moved to England (Hans Holbein the Younger was court painter to Henry VIII); • Opened public schools (like private secondary schools today); • Improvements at Oxford and Cambridge. Elizabethan Drama • Christopher Marlowe: was the first major Elizabethan dramatist. • Marlowe may have rivaled Shakespeare as England’s greatest playwright had he lived past thirty. • William Shakespeare: “He was not of an age but for all time.” Christopher Marlowe William Shakespeare • Shakespeare began his involvement with the theater as an actor. • By 1592, he was a popular playwright whose works had been performed at Elizabeth’s court. • Shakespeare wrote thirty-seven plays: nine tragedies, several comedies, ten histories, and a number of play classified as tragic comedies. Characteristics of the English Renaissance • 1)English culture was revitalized more directly by contemporary Europeans under the influence of the classics; • 2)Britain followed a different course on social and political fronts. • 3)The native literature experience a period of prosperity. Such literature was artistic rather than philosophical. • 4)The Renaissance coincided with the Reformation in England. From Tudors to Stuarts • Elizabeth’s death marked the end of the Tudor dynasty. • To avoid civil strife, Elizabeth named King James VI of Scotland her successor (son of Queen Mary of Scots and Lord Darnley). • James was a Protestant. • The reign of James I (1603-1625) is now known as the Jacobean Era. James I (1603-1625) • His rule united both nations under a single monarchy, which eventually resulted in the creation of the United Kingdom. House of Stuart James VI &I Charles I Charles II Elizabeth James II Henry Sophia Mary II William III Anne George I Religious conflicts • The reign of James I was full of religious controversy: — conflicts between Protestants and Catholics — conflicts between Anglicans and Puritans • Persecuted Puritans (House of Commons)— James’s persecution prompted a group of Puritans to establish Plymouth colony in 1621 • Harsh on Catholics: drove Catholic priests away from England Gunpowder Plot of 1605 • One of the major Catholic conspiracies against James I; • Radical Catholics placed barrels of gunpowder in a cellar of the Parliament House. Guy Fawkes was chosen to detonate the explosive on November 5. The plot was betrayed and Guy Fawkes was arrested. Gunpowder Plot of 1605 • Immediate effect: the execution of Fawkes and the imposition of severe anti-Catholic laws. • Long-term result: an annual celebration on Nov. 5 as a night bonfire festival (the Guy Fawkes Day) on which Guy Fawkes was burnt in effigy. James I • Clung to the doctrine of “Divine Rights of King” and had contempt for Parliament (power struggle) • Defender of the Church of England: A new translation of the Bible published in 1611 the King James Version/Authorized Version • Sponsored the establishment of the first English colony in America—Jamestown • Strong supporter of the arts: Shakespeare’s patron • Wrote a number of books on varied subjects— the wisest fool in Europe (foolish in terms of politics) Essay of King James I • A Counterblast to Tobacco: Smoking is … “loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain, and dangerous to the lungs.” Charles I (1625-1649) Charles I • Charles believed in the divine right of kings and did not feel accountable to Parliament. • His behavior provoked the English Revolution, which was fought between the armies of the king and those of Parliament. • Defeated and convicted of treason by Parliament, Charles was beheaded in January 1649. Charles I • Disastrous relations with the Parliament; • Followed a pro-Catholicism policy; • In 1628, Charles I was forced to accept the Petition of Rights, which was regarded as the second Magna Carta. It did not allow the king to receive money and collect taxes without consent of Parliament. Short Parliament To raise the money for the sudden war with the Scottish rebels, Charles I summoned Parliament in April 1640. The Parliament made use of the money problem to start fierce criticism of the King’s policy. Charles I dissolved the Parliament which had been in existence for only two weeks. Long Parliament • In Nov.1640, Charles I summoned another Parliament and this Parliament continued to exist for 20 years without being dissolved and it introduced a series of measures to limit the authority of the King. The English Civil War • Arose from the conflicts between the Parliament and the King; • Charles I strong belief in “the Divine right of the Kings”; acted against the Petition of Right; • The struggle for control of the military force; • The contradiction between Catholicism and Puritanism; • The Parliament resorted to war to establish its supremacy over the Crown. English Civil War • fought between feudal England and bourgeois England • fought between Catholics and Puritans • fought between Cavaliers and Roundheads Oliver Cromwell • A member of England’s Parliament and a dedicated Puritan, Oliver Cromwell led his forces to victory against King Charles’s army and succeeded the civil war in 1646. • Even though he had no military experience, Cromwell turned out to be a brilliant cavalry leader. • Charles I was deposed and beheaded in 1649. • The defeat and subsequent execution of the king in 1649 left Cromwell as virtual dictator over England. Commonwealth Britain (1649-1658) • After Charles I was beheaded, the House of Commons proclaimed England to be thereafter a Commonwealth (a republic) without the king and House of Lords and Cromwell was made Lord Protector. Charles II • After the death of Cromwell, his son found himself unable to carry on government and abdicated. • Political power was left in the hands of soldiers and these soldiers could not control the situation and a new parliament was assembled. • The new parliament negotiated with the son of Charles I and he mounted the throne and became Charles II, putting an end to the Republic. Charles II & Restoration (1660-1685) • A man of shrewdness; cooperated with the Parliament; • Favored toleration instead of persecution; • Cavaliers—Tories (conservatives) ; Roundheads—Whigs (bourgeoisie) James II (1685-1688) • Charles II was succeeded by his brother James II. • Inclined to revive Catholicism in England; • His readiness to re-establish Catholicism alienated him from his subjects, esp. the bourgeoisie. • A group of bourgeoisie decided to dethrone James II and invited his protestant daughter and son-in-law William (head of United Netherlands) to replace him. James II • James II converted to Roman Catholicism in Protestant England and fought several bloody power struggles to hold onto his throne. His daughter Mary and sonin-law, William of Orange, finally overthrew him. The Glorious Revolution 1688 • William of Orange and Mary Stuart were invited to take the English throne. • The new sovereigns took over the power without any bloodshed (the White Revolution) and received the crown from the Parliament. • James II fled to France. The Glorious Revolution • It marked the transition from feudalism towards capitalism. • It settled the religious and political problem by confirming the principle of parliamentary supremacy. • It ushered in the age of constitutional monarchy. Queen Anne (1702-1707) • Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland, based much of her administration on the advice of her ministers. Queen Anne • William III and Mary were childless. • Anne, Mary’s sister, succeeded to the throne in 1702. Anne had no children, and her ministers, fearful that Scotland might ally with the French following her death, pressured the Scottish Parliament into agreeing to merge the two nations into a single kingdom. • Anne’s ministers threatened the Scottish Parliament that they would stop all trade with Scotland and capture Scottish ships traded with France. These threats led the Scots accept the Act of Union of 1707. Thus Great Britain was born.