present joye by Queen Elizabeth. The monarch of each text is losing support from their once loyal followers and subjects by intertwining public responsibility and personal desire. In this essay I will use these texts to demonstrate each monarch’s power struggles as a result of their subjects. I will also use secondary sources of criticism to confirm the points that are made in this essay. Firstly‚ the poem The dowbt of future foes exile my present joye by Queen Elizabeth will be analysed
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To what extent was finance the major problem facing Elizabeth I on her succession in 1558? Upon her succession in 1558‚ Elizabeth I faced financial problems as well as many other major problems. One such problem was Elizabeth’s gender. In 1558‚ England had only experience the rule of one female monarch‚ Mary I‚ who had fuelled England’s belief that females could not be sufficient rulers of countries. Mary had fuelled this belief by being £300‚000 in debt by the end of her reign‚ being in a war
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How important was the crown in maintaining the Political stability of Tudor England? Tudor England was time of rebellion and turmoil. The head of Tudor England ‚the monarch‚was responsible for keeping his or her country running well. The crown was the sublime leader he or she ran the government and parliament and therefore he or she were responsible for maintaining political stability during this period. Tudor society was the epicentre of Tudor politics. The power of your words within the
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Explain why there were fewer rebellions in England during Elizabeth’s reign than in the years between 1485 and 1558 Elizabeth I only saw three rebellions during her reign and one of those barely classed as a rebellion (Oxford)‚ this is surprising seeing as before her there was a high rise in rebellions this was when the Western‚ Ketts and Wyatt’s took place. There were many contributing factors as to why there were fewer rebellions during Elizabeth’s reign but the main underpinning cause would
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James I Religion and Foreign policy RT revision notes. -Religious dissension was the basis of an event that confirmed and fueled James’ paranoia: the Gunpowder Plot of November 5‚ 1605. Guy Fawkes and four other Catholic dissenters were caught attempting to blow up the House of Lords on a day in which the king was to open the session. The conspirators were executed‚ but a fresh wave of anti-Catholic sentiments washed across England. James also disliked the Puritans who became excessive in their
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THE CHARACTER OF JAMES VI & I King James VI of Scotland & I of England was handicapped from birth with weak limbs and therefore injured himself many times. This also caused him to have an unsteady walk. He later suffered crippling arthritis. To compensate for this King James VI & I often leaned on his most trusted councilors and friends which also happened to be members of his personal staff. As a result‚ he was claimed by some to be homosexual but the rumours have proved unfounded. These
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term ‘expensive failure’ – Foreign policy being an expensive failure would be defined as Elizabeth spending a lot of money on expeditions and war in foreign countries‚ which England couldn’t really afford. This would be a failure if all the money spent had equalled in very little positive outcome Define criteria of what an ‘expensive failure’ would entail – for foreign policy to be an expensive failure‚ Elizabeth would have had to spend high amounts of money on foreign affairs which had then equalled
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what extent was the government of England dysfunctional in the mid-Tudor period? During the Tudor Dynasty it is easily thought that the years between 1547 and 1558 were ones of crisis. With the succession of a child and the first woman within England‚ people have assumed that the years between Henry VIII and Elizabeth I were an unproductive interlude. The mid Tudor period is seen as negative years within the Tudor Dynasty. It is regarded that Henry VIII and Elizabeth I’s reputations were a factor in
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possible for one to analyze Shakespeare’s feminization of Henry in a way that makes it obvious that he is a surrogate for Elizabeth herself (Andrews‚ 377). In fact‚ Henry IV Part 1 “virtually demands that we associate the maternal‚ doubly gendered Henry with Elizabeth” (Andrews 381). Shakespeare presents Henry as physically feminine‚ as evident in the lines‚ “But be sure / I will from henceforth rather be myself‚ / Mighty‚ and be feared‚ than my condition / Which hath been smooth as oil‚ soft as
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THIS WAS LIMITED TO A 1-2 PAGE ESSAY ANSWER (TIMED) FOR A MIDTERM EXAM Question: Discuss the causes of the Dutch revolt against Spain. What were the consequences for the emerging power of England? Answer: Although the Low Countries possessed no other identity other than fragmented states that were "owned" (or controlled) by the dukes of Burgundy‚ and therein‚ when called upon to send delegates to an estates general‚ the seeds of collaboration were placed. As Phillip II entered the scene with
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