Queen
Elizabeth I
1533-1603
English queen
Despite the
dark events of war and religious murders,
Elizabeth's
reign is best remembered for extraordinary achievements.
Introduction
Many historians agree
that Elizabeth I was
the most successful monarch ever to sit on the English throne. Her reign,
known in English history as the Elizabethan
period, was an era of great accomplishment
in England. It was a heroic age of exploration. Francis Drake sailed around
the world, Martin Frobisher voyaged to the Arctic regions, and Walter Raleigh
helped colonize America. Poets and dramatists like William Shakespeare
and Edmund Spenser helped create the "Golden Age" of English literature.
But it was Elizabeth herself
who vastly changed England's standing among European nations. When she
came to the throne England was a poor, remote island that was likely to
become the next possession of the growing empire of Spain. By the
time she died England had become a power in Europe, and its navy ruled
the seas.
Receives
complete education
Elizabeth was
born in 1533 in Greenwich Palace on the Thames River. Her father was the
legendary king Henry VIII and her mother was Anne Boleyn, Henry's second
wife. The king (who eventually married six times) was obsessed with producing
a son and heir. When Anne Boleyn couldn't give him one, he had her beheaded.
Elizabeth, who
was two years old at the time of her mother's death, was raised by four
stepmothers. She received her education under the famous scholar and humanist
Roger Ascham. Under his guidance, Elizabeth
studied Greek and Roman classics, read history and theology, and learned
both classical and modern languages. Extremely intelligent, she reportedly
spoke six languages better than English during her youth.
When Henry VIII
died in 1547, Elizabeth's
half-brother became King Edward VI. But he died only six
years later,
and Elizabeth's
older half-sister Mary Tudor (daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon)
came to the throne. Mary, who was Catholic, earned the nickname "Bloody
Mary" for burning many Protestants at the stake. When rebels wanted to
place the Protestant Elizabeth
on the throne, Mary had her arrested and sent to the Tower of London. She
remained imprisoned for five years until Mary, near death, named Elizabeth
her successor. On March 17, 1558, Elizabeth
took the throne.
Queen
Elizabeth I
Catholics
plot against Elizabeth
Elizabeth
initially did not want to face the heated conflict between Catholics and
Protestants in England. But Mary Stuart forced her to do so. The
Catholic Mary, queen of
Scotland, was the grandniece of Henry VII and next in line to the throne.
Accused of murdering her second husband, Henry Stewart Darnley, Mary fled
to England to escape a rebellion in Scotland. Many European and English
Catholics plotted to put her on the English throne. To protect her crown,
Elizabeth had
her cousin Mary placed under house arrest in 1567.
Meanwhile,
Elizabeth's throne
was threatened from outside forces. Philip II, who became ruler of Spain
and its empire in 1556, sought to control the world. England and many other
European countries were jealous of Spain's riches, especially in the New
World. Elizabeth
allowed her seamen to raid Spanish ships on the high seas. Between 1577
and 1580, Francis Drake sailed around the world, becoming the first man
after Ferdinand Magellan to do so. On his trip, he ravaged Spanish settlements
in South America, returning to England with £1,000,000 in treasure.
Elizabeth knighted
him aboard his ship, the Golden Hind, worsening already tense relations
between Protestant England and Catholic Spain.
During the 1580s,
Elizabeth began
to harshly persecute Catholics in England. She sent hundreds to their deaths.
Many felt the horrors of the wrack, the manacles, and the Scavenger's Daughter.
This last device was an iron hoop that brought a victim's hands, head,
and feet together into a tight ball until he or she was crushed. Part of
the reason for this persecution was a series of Catholic plots to murder
Elizabeth and
replace her with Mary, Queen of Scots. Finally, in 1586, Mary's part in
these plots was proven. She was beheaded the following February.
England
battles Spanish Armada
Mary's death was
the final blow to English-Spanish relations. Philip II declared war. In
July 1588, a huge navy fleet — the Spanish Armada — set sail for England.
The English navy, led by Francis Drake and Martin Frobisher, rose to meet
the armada in a nine-day battle. The smaller, quicker English ships easily
outmaneuvered the Spanish galleons, but could not come close enough to
attack. The Spaniards, however, made the mistake one night of anchoring
their entire fleet, and the English sent a squadron of flaming ships into
the anchored vessels. Frightened, the armada cut its lines and fled into
open water. Chased by the English, the Spaniards tried to sail north
around the British Isles. But storm after storm pounded the armada and
nearly half the fleet was lost. The war continued for 15 years, but the
Spaniards could not overcome the English. When Elizabeth
died in 1603, Philip's dream of making England into a Catholic province
ended.
Despite the dark
events of war and religious murders, Elizabeth's
reign is best remembered for
extraordinary
achievements. She believed it was her divine mission to lead England, and
under her
direction, the
country became strong and unified. Commerce and industry prospered. The
queen herself
was an expert musician and her court was the cultural center of its day.
Some of the great writers in English literature — Edmund Spenser, Philip
Sidney, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare — appeared during her
reign. Spenser's masterpiece, The Fairie Queen, is even dedicated to her.
The Tudor
family line of rulers, begun in 1485 with Henry VII, ended with Elizabeth's
death. Her crown was taken by James I, son of Mary Stuart.
Return
to Womyn
Who Ruled
This
site is authored by FELICITAS
All
copyright laws apply.
1999
|