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Shakespeare and His Time

Shakespeare and His Time. Introduction to the Life of the Bard, William Shakespeare. Outline. The Tudor Monarchy Shakespeare’s Life and Writing Elizabethan and Jacobean Theatre. The Tudor Monarchy. Characteristics of the Tudor Reign. Dominated by Religious Turmoil Protestant vs. Catholic

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Shakespeare and His Time

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  1. Shakespeare and His Time Introduction to the Life of the Bard, William Shakespeare

  2. Outline • The Tudor Monarchy • Shakespeare’s Life and Writing • Elizabethan and Jacobean Theatre

  3. The Tudor Monarchy

  4. Characteristics of the Tudor Reign • Dominated by Religious Turmoil • Protestant vs. Catholic • Many political and sexual scandals • Rise of the Middle Class • Wars with France, Spain, and Scotland • Vast growth in the Arts and Sciences

  5. A Thing About Royalty… • Monarchs believe they are placed on the throne by God (The Divine Right of Kings) • Throne is passed to the first born male • England has no written Constitution to this day

  6. The Elvis of Kings—Henry VIII

  7. The Elvis of Kings—Henry VIII

  8. King Henry VIII • Crowned at age 17 after brother’s death • Marries Katherine of Aragon • Given title of “Defender of the Faith” by Pope • Defended Catholicism against Martin Luther • Reign is littered with scandal and corruption • The Protestant Reformation and…

  9. … His Six Wives!

  10. 1. Catherine of Aragon • Spanish • Daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella • Very Strong Catholic • Bears four children—only one survives • Mary Tudor • There’s no male heir

  11. 1. Catherine of Aragon • Henry wants to annul marriage when she can no longer bear children • Pope says no (divorce is an abomination) • Establishes the Church of England, making the monarch is in charge of Religion • Catholicism with a different name • Pope charges excommunication • Henry grants himself a divorce • Catherine goes into seclusion for the rest of her life

  12. 2. Anne Boleyn • English and a Protestant • Married and crowned Queen one week after divorce • Bears a child (Elizabeth) • Tried for treason, adultery, and incest • Beheaded by French Swordsman • Buried at Tower of London at site of execution

  13. 3. Jane Seymour • English and Catholic • Married Henry the day after Anne’s execution • Bears a child—a male heir is established • Edward Tudor • Dies of childbed fever (bacterial infection)

  14. 4. Anne of Cleves • German and Protestant • Henry agrees to marry her without ever seeing her • “Not to my taste…” • Agrees to marry to avoid conflict with Germany • Annuls the marriage after 6 months • Referred to as “The King’s Beloved Sister”

  15. 5. Catherine Howard • English and Catholic • Princess Mary hated her • Catherine 5 years younger than Mary • Bigamist—married to King Henry and another man at the same time • Henry didn’t know this • Caught cheating with one of the King’s servants • Beheaded for adultery

  16. 6. Catherine Parr • English and Protestant • Reconciled Princesses Mary and Elizabeth to the line of heirs • Mary disliked her for being Protestant • Henry VIII dies during this marriage • Buried next to Jane Seymour at Windsor Castle

  17. King Edward VI • Crowned at age 9 • Edward Seymour (uncle) named Regent • Makes England Protestant • Invasion of Scotland • Edward betrothed to Mary, Queen of Scots • Scots recant betrothal (Mary of Guise) • Military victory for England • Edward VI dies at age 15 • Dies of Tuberculosis

  18. Queen Mary I • First female Monarch in England • Restores Catholicism to England • 300 Protestants burnt at the stake in three years • Earns her the nickname “Bloody Mary” • Marries the King Phillip of Spain • Needs to establish a Catholic heir • Mistakes uterine cancer for a pregnancy • Dies without an heir

  19. Queen Elizabeth I • Extremely intelligent • Spoke 6 languages fluently • Poet and artist • Known as The Virgin Queen • Pressured by council to marry; refuses • Marrying foreigner forces other nation’s politics on England • Marrying Englishman—what religion? • Married to England

  20. Queen Elizabeth I • Instability at times • Severe Economic Depression left by Mary I • Papal order releasing English people from Elizabeth’s rule • Assassination attempts (Babington Plot) • Threats of invasion/claims to throne (Mary, Queen of Scots and Spanish Armada)

  21. Queen Elizabeth I • Reign was known as “The Golden Age” for advancement in the Arts and Sciences • Voyages of Discovery (the first American colony) • Sculpture and Painting • Architecture • Music • Writers, Poets, and Playwrights • William Shakespeare • Christopher Marlow • Dies in 1603 after a 45-year reign; last Tudor Monarch

  22. The Life and Writings of William Shakespeare

  23. Early Life • Born April 23, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon • Married Anne Hathaway • 3 months pregnant at time • Three children • Susanna, and twins Hamnetand Judith • Moves to London to begin his acting/writing career

  24. London • 1592—The plague runs ramped in London; theatres are ordered closed • 1593—Christopher Marlow found dead • 1594—First play, The Comedy of Errors, published and performed at Gray’s Inn • 1597—Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet, dies; writes the play Hamlet • 1603—Queen Elizabeth I dies; James I inherits the throne; James I names Shakespeare’s theatre company “The King’s Men”

  25. London • 1610—Shakespeare retires to Stratford-upon-Avon • 1613—The Globe Theatre burns to the ground during a performance of Henry VIII when a prop cannon misfires and ignites the thatched roof • Shakespeare dies April 23, 1616 at age 52

  26. Epitaph Good friend for Jesus sake forbear To dig the dust encloséd here! Blest be the man that spares these stones, And curst be he that moves my bones.

  27. Writing Topics • Wrote about what he knew, experienced, or felt • Politics • Social Problems • Personal Struggle • 3 types of plays: • Comedies • Histories • Tragedies

  28. Iambic Pentameter • Majority of works written in Iambic Pentameter • Iambic Pentameter—a 10 syllable line consisting of 5 sets of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable • Unstressed syllables denoted (ں) • Stressed syllables denoted ( / ) • Lines vary occasionally

  29. Language • Emphasis on choosing his words carefully • Affected tone and audience interpretation • You’re stupid. • You’re silly. • You’re wrong. • You’re mistaken. • Employed symbolism, imagery, and metaphor • Pun—play on words • Sexual Innuendo—the suggestion of something sexual in nature

  30. Affects on Modern Language • Changed nouns to verbs • Hint eyeball • Changed verbs to adjectives • Accuse = accused • Combined two words into one • Courtship, birthplace, outbreak, worthless • Added prefixes and suffixes • Impartial fashionable • Developed his own words and phrases • Assassination • Method in the madness • One fell swoop

  31. Elizabethan and Jacobean Theatre

  32. Theater’s Beginnings • No theatres—traveling companies • 5—8 actors per troupe • Prepubescent boys played female roles • Performed in taverns, town squares, halls, farms, etc.

  33. Theatre is Immoral • Laws passed to control vagrancy • Actors became criminals • Creation of Theatres • Once theatres open, Puritans want to close them down • Prostitution • Pit-pocketing • Promote Homosexuality

  34. Theatre is Immoral • Close for a brief time because of the plague • Elizabeth loved theatre, and opens them back open • Average Londoner saw 2-3 plays/week; theatre open 6 days/week

  35. Theatre Design • Based on bear baiting yards • Physical Makeup • Entirely wood • Polygonal in shape • 3 levels of seating • rich to get a seat • Pit • standing room only for 1 penny • Open skies above—rained on a lot

  36. Theatre Design • Performance Space • Thrust stage • Trap door on stage—used for ascension/dissention to hell • Columns on both sides of stage • Ceiling under roof—the heavens • Balcony—for musicians and acting • Tiring House—back stage area

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