biography
| name: |
Elizabeth I
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known as the Virgin Queen and later Good Queen Bess
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| sex:
| female
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| lived:
| (1533–1603)
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| biography:
| Queen of England and Ireland (1558–1603), the daughter of Henry VIII by his second wife, Anne Boleyn, born in Greenwich, London, UK. On the death of Edward VI (1553) she sided with her half-sister Mary against Lady Jane Grey and the Duke of Northumberland, but her identification with Protestantism made Mary suspicious, and she was imprisoned for her alleged part in the rebellion of Wyatt (1554). Ascending the throne on Mary's death, she steered a skilful course in foreign affairs with the two leading Catholic powers of Spain and France, and presided over the judicious settlement of the Church of England (1559). She made peace with France and Scotland, and strengthened her position by secretly helping Protestants in these countries. From 1594 to 1603 her severe policies in Ireland led to a series of rebellions. She sent Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, to restore order, but he failed ignominiously. The countryside was devastated, and the eventual victory in 1603 of the English under Charles Blount, Lord Mountjoy, led to the extension of the Anglican Church's power over Ireland.
Following Mary, Queen of Scots' flight to England (1568) and imprisonment, Elizabeth became a target of successive conspiracies hatched by English Catholics. After the Babington plot was discovered (1586), she was reluctantly persuaded to approve Mary's execution (1587). In response to papal excommunication and Jesuit missions, she approved anti-Catholic legislation, while trying to control the Puritan wing of the Anglican Church. When Philip of Spain attempted an invasion of England, sending his ‘invincible armada’ (1588), her fleet under Howard of Effingham managed to repel the attack, and the weather completed its destruction. Elizabeth had a number of favourites, but she never married, and died childless. Of all her relationships, only that with Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, touched her deeply. A strong-willed, astute, yet capricious woman who faced growing parliamentary turbulence, she was nevertheless popular with her subjects. Her reign was crowned with the maritime exploits of Hawkyns, Drake, and Raleigh, the artistic genius of Shakespeare, Marlowe, and Spenser, and the musical works of Tallis and Byrd. Historians differ over her reign. Some say it anticipated the rise of the power of parliament that culminated in the Civil Wars of 1642–9, and that she had been forced by Parliament in 1559 to accept a more radical religious settlement than she would have preferred. Others emphasize the queen and her counsellors' relationship to policy-making, and the social dynamics of the political process. More recently, gender has been a factor - that she was able to capitalize on people's expectations of her behaviour as a woman and turn this to her own political advantage. |
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