Elizabethan Era
Elizabethan Era
Elizabethan Era
• Educated at Oxford
and philosopher
His works:
Context:
Utopia:
Utopia is about:
● Two books
● First: introduction to the second book
● Mainly concerned with recording an informal conversation
● Second: depiction of the Utopian World
● Is a 'talk' improvised on the spur of the moment
Characters:
More :
● In service to King Henry VIII of England, he travels to Antwerp where he meets Peter
Giles and Raphael Hythloday.
● More is a fictional character sharing the same name as Utopia's author, Sir Thomas
More.
Peter Giles:
● Friend of More and acquaintance of Raphael Hythloday. Once again, Peter Giles is
an actual historical figure, a friend and intellectual companion of Sir Thomas More.
Peter Giles, in fact, helped More to get Utopia published. The fictional Giles shares
nearly all of his biographical history with the real Peter Giles, but like the fictional
More, should be understood to be a fictional character.
Hythlodaeus - Nonsenso
● Hythloday once spent a fictional evening discussing the societal problems of England
with Morton and an unnamed lawyer.
Lawyer:
● An unnamed man who once spent an evening with Hythloday and Cardinal Morton.
He is defensive of England and unwilling to find fault with anything in English society.
● He conquered the savages who once lived on the isthmus Utopia now occupies, and
then set his army and new subjects to work cutting the land away to make Utopia an
island. In his wisdom, Utopus set up the Utopian society that Hythloday finds so
immensely attractive.
Utopia emphasis on fantasy paradoxically combined with and emphasis on realism is not
presented to the reader as a blueprint for an ideal state. It is presented as fiction rather than
as a possibility.
• Slavery, Euthanasia, marriage. What value do the Utopians place on marriage? How
does the institution serve the people and the State?
• Work
• Education
• Personal liberty
How far does Thomas More stray from Humanism? Are there tensions evident in the
text between the humanist Utopia and the commentary in Book 1?
RELIGION
How does Raphael say he first represented Christian doctrine to the Utopians? What
effect did his presentation have?
What is the status of religion in Utopia? Is religion closely connected to the State, or
is it independent? How might Utopian customs imply criticism of European religious
practices?
Humanitas is a Latin noun meaning human nature, civilization, and kindness. It has uses
in the Enlightenment, which are discussed below.
Main features:
1. Science and Rationalism (Empiricism).
- Skepticism: agnosticism/atheism about the existence of God/s
- Secularism
- Freedom of thought and expression
- Free will - Moral education
- Rejection of dogmas
- Favoring individual moral autonomy
- Belief in the importance of moral values
what is humanism?
● An intellectual and cultural movement that contributed to the development of
disciplines such as biblical studies, political thought, arts, science, and all
branches of philosophy
● Renaissance (1400-1600) / Enlightenment
● Valuing what is human / importance of human values (humanity – humankind)
● Improvement of humanity
● Empathy
● Tolerance
● Emphasis on the dignity of man and the power of reason
● Humanists are not relativists; they accept objective values
● Humanists are not blind to man’s defects, nastiness and selfishness; they have
their eyes wide open
● Humanists accept evolutionary theory
● Humanists do not promote solely human welfare; other creatures and the
environment also matter
● Humanists do not want to ban religion; they approve of free thought and free
speech
● Humanists are not lacking in spirituality; they can be in awe of the world and its
splendor
Renaissance humanism
● New paradigm
Italy:
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)
Michelangelo (1475-1564)
France:
François Rabelais (1490-1533)
Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592)
Netherlands:
Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536)
England:
Thomas More (1478-1535)
William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
The origin
ERASMUS + Leonardo da Vinci + Comenius
DESIDERIUS ERASMUS
(1466-1536)
was:
❖ Cosmopolitanism/universalism (citizen of Europe)
❖ Humanism
❖ Pacifism
❖ Protestant Reformation and Catholic Counter-Reformation
❖ Belief in free will
❖ Rhetoric and skepticism
❖ Moral philosophy
❖ Studia humanitas
Questions:
OMain events:
OThe Reformation (1533-1536)
OCatholics / Protestants/ Puritans
OThe discovery of the New World
OThe Renaissance
OThe defeat of the Spanish Armada
OEngland became prosperous, a land of order and law.
OIt established a growing reputation for scholarship and literature
OIntroduction of Printing (William Caxton) to England
OHuge impact of the print culture
OGreat emphasis on education.
OPublic schools: St.Paul’s, Repton, Rugby and Harrow. Began in Tudor times.
OThomas Wolsey founded Christ Church at Oxford University.
OHenry VIII created Trinity College, Cambridge
OPoor Relief:
O1495 Act Against Vagabond and Beggars
O1598 The relief of poverty was made responsibility of the individual Parish
OThe Poor Relief Act (1662)
ORepressive Poor Laws
OEconomic pressure -» widespread malnutrition; some starvation among the poor
ORise in Crime
OReasons:
OThe wealthy
OAristocrats and gentry built prestigious houses (stately houses)
OSought to adopt a code of aristocratic conduct
OVery interested in education
OLandscaping in gardens and parks strengthened and reflected ideas of order and
hierarchy
OPublic playhouses
OThe Theatre
OThe Globe
-Martin Luther
- ‘Attacked the beliefs and hierarchies of the orthodox faith.’
- The Pope in Rome was the Antichrist
-The Church was not needed. Grace and faith enough for salvation
- Luther’s 95 theses – nailed to the the door of the castle church in Wittenberg.
- Against the Catholic practice of indulgences
- Crucial period in the formation of the national character (Englishness)
- The greatest revolution in English History
- Henry VIII / Supremacy Act (1534)
The Preamble of the Reformation Statutes we find the first presentation of the official
version of English History:
39 articles
- essential beliefs of the Anglican church codified
- Established by a convocation of the Church in 1563.
- are the historically defining statements of doctrines and practices of the Church of
England with respect to the controversies of the English Reformation.
The reformation
-English as nationalist, erastian and self-sufficient, independent and exceptional in
character, vitally different from the rest of Europe.
-Erastianism = supremacy of the state over the Church
-The Reformation represented the return to a golden past of English Protestantism and
freedom.
-This official version was repeated by chroniclers, historians and by all the official
agencies of the state.
-Thomas Cromwell: minister of propaganda for the State; Henry VIII’s principal secretary.
-Thomas More (opposition to Protestantism)
- Reformation set religion and faith at the centre of the English national feeling.
- Idea of national election, blessed by God
-Consolidation of the first national pre-modern identities in Europe -Religion and politics
contributed to the English national unity -Anti-popery feelings
-Aversion to the Roman Catholic Church
-The other Catholic nations (e.g. Spain and France) represented the enemy in Tudor
England.
How did the people of England react to the break with Rome?
2. Martin Luther believed that people should be able to ‘buy off’ sins f
3. Martin Luther believed that priests should be subject to the law of the land t
8. The Act of Supremacy made the Pope head of the Church of England
• The story of the Reformation was not only one of a sudden and sharp schism that split
Rome and England, but of a gradual imposition of power, superiority and difference by a
King who, more than religious reformation, initiated a whole new cultural and political
enterprise.
• Reformation in England was not only about religion. Its implications went beyond the
domain of religion as they were spread through all areas of human existence.
• Reformation was “an ‘Act of State’, simply imposed upon the nation by its successive
governments” (Marshall, 2017, n.p.)
• Continuity of Catholicism
• First printed version of the English New Testament (1526) (revised in 1534 and 1535)
(Printing press: a propagandistic weapon)
• Tyndale believed the Bible should be read by everyone (believers) – “main reason why
everyone needs a translation in his or her own language” (Bray, 1994, p. 33)
—- Tyndale’s preface to the New Testament (1526, 1534) • “03. (…) Moreover, because the
kingdom of heaven, which is the Scripture and word of God, may be so locked up, that he
which readeth or heareth it cannot understand it;
—--Thefefore (…) I thought it my duty (most dear reader) to warn thee before, and to show
thee the right way in, and to give thee the true key to open it withal, and to arm thee
against false prophets and malicious hypocrites,
• “Coverdale was the first to introduce such phrases as ‘loving kindness’ and ‘tender mercy’. A
tract of the time declared that Englishmen have now in hand, in every church and place, the Holy
Bible in their mother tongue’. It was said that the Voice of God was English”.
• Lay control of the Church – Supremacy of the king over the clergy
Pardon of the Clergy 2nd Session of Reformation Parliament 16 January
1531 to 31 March 1531 No 15 An Act concerning the pardon granted to
the King’s Spiritual Subjects of the Province of Canterbury for the
Praemunire
``The King our Sovereign Lord, calling to his blessed and most gracious remembrance
that his good and loving subjects``
``Of his mere motion, benignity, and liberality, by authority of this his Parliament, hath
given and granted his liberal and free pardon to his said good and loving spiritual
subjects a``
Conclusion
-Religion was woven inextricably into the fabric of politics and political language.
• Henry VIII was not a confessed Protestant but, very shrewdly, chose rather a more
moderate way (middle way between Catholicism and Lutheranism)
• Thomas Cromwell, despite being a convert Lutheran, died in the old faith.
• As a result of the claim for Royal supremacy the alignment between religion and politics
became unavoidable – “all religious questions became political; and dissent a direct
challenge to the Crown” (Black, 2003)
• “The voice of God was English” – Access to the Bible – vernacular language –
construction and consolidation of a national identity and of a stronger, united, elected
nation different from the fragmented nations in Europe.
● Royal Minority
● Death of Henry VIII (1547)
● Edward was 9
● ‘Minority and female rule were topics that provoked irrational fears and
stereotyped impulses in the sixteenth century.’
● By his will, Henry VIII had appointed a regency council of 16 members who were to
govern the realm and exercise the royal supremacy until Edward was 18 years old
Edward VI
1547-53 altura que foi rei
● England open and under the influence of continental Protestantism
● Edward strongly influenced by Protestantism
● Allied with Archbishop Cranmer, the Duke of Somerset introduced Protestant
worship by the Book of Common Prayer (1549)
● Uniformity Act (the Prayer Book alone was to be used for church services)
Protestant Reformation
● Hertford – appointed Protector and Governor’s of Edward’s Person
● Hertford made him Duke of Somerset
● He ‘courted’ popularity
● Executive agent of the Regency councillors
● Took arbitrary and ill-informed decisions about warfare in Scotland and France;
about domestic order and security in England and Ireland; about the advance of
the Protestant Reform
Protestant Reform
● Major problems
● Social riot and commotion
● War expenditure
● Inflation
● Somerset’s threat to Scotland
● Mary Stuart, queen of Scots
- Earl of Warwick – became Lord President of the Council; created himself the title
of Duke of Northumberland
- Domestic peace was restored
- England’s finances were recovering
- Somerset (Lord Protector) – leader of a Protestant faction
- Educated Edward VI as a Protestant too The Reformation transformed into a
Protestant phenomenon
- Dissolution of the chantries to finance his Scottish campaigns.
- Stripping of images from parish churches
- All remaining shrines and their jewels seized by the Crown
- Statues and paintings smashed or covered with whitewash
- Somerset ensured that the art, sculpture, metalwork and embroidery associated
with Catholic liturgy and ritual were wiped out
- Edward VI died of tuberculosis at the age of 16 (1553). Reigned only 6 years.
- Problem of succession: Mary I claimed the legal right to the throne (Lawful
successor)
- BUT
- Northumberland’s coup d’etat (takeover)
- Lady Jane Grey (daughter of the Duchess of Suffolk (Henry VIII’S niece) married to
his eldest son.
- Residuary legatee of the Crown, under Henry VIII’s will
- Edward had drafted a documentary ‘device’ desinheriting his sisters and
bequeathed his throne to Jane and her heirs.
- Jane was proclaimed queen four days after Edward VI’s death
- Jane Grey ruled for 9 days
- Mary and her supporters managed to overthrow Northumberland and Jane from
their intents
Mary I
- Many Protestants (Cranmer) were burnt at the stake
- Others fled to the Continent
- ‘Bloody Mary’
- Mary’s true goal: reconciliation with Rome
- Opposition to the marriage of Mary
- Brought and unsuccessful and expensive war with France (1558 – fall of Calais)
- Blow to national prestige paralysed the regime, and Philip’s last supporters
suddenly disappeared
- Mary died after long periods of dropsy; no child
Elizabeth I (1558-1603)
1558-1603
- Longest-reigning English monarch since Edward III
- Her longevity and personality played a major role in determining the political and
religious character of Tudor England
- Became the most experienced politician in her kingdom
- Shrewd and manipulative
William Shakespeare
● The most acclaimed and prestigious playwright and poet of sixteenth century
England
● Who was he?
● CONTEXT (When was he and what did he do?)
● “There was a man called William Shakespeare
● He married Ana Hathaway. They had three children together
● He is buried in Stratford-upon-Avon
● A number of really quite wonderful plays have been written under his name