Elizabethan England: Difference between revisions
(→Music) |
m (rv vandalism) |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
''Main article: [[Elizabethan music]]'' |
''Main article: [[Elizabethan music]]'' |
||
Due to restrictive print licensing, most of the printed music from the early part of Elizabeth's reign was written by [[William Byrd]]. The [[madrigal]] enjoyed an enormous level of popularity, as did the |
Due to restrictive print licensing, most of the printed music from the early part of Elizabeth's reign was written by [[William Byrd]]. The [[madrigal]] enjoyed an enormous level of popularity, as did the [[lute song]] towards the end of her reign. |
||
====Poetry==== |
====Poetry==== |
Revision as of 01:17, 28 August 2007
The Elizabethan period of England is equated with the reign of Elizabeth I from 1558-1603. It is considered a Golden Age of English history.
History
Elizabeth gradually distanced herself from Spain in foreign policy. Religion proved a sticking point between the Catholic Spain and the Protestant Elizabeth. The two counries were soon at war, but a decisive victory over the Spanish Armada meant Spain no longer posed a threat to England.
Language
Main article: Elizabethan English
Names
Main article: Elizabethan Names
Arts and Sciences
Entertainment
Music
Main article: Elizabethan music
Due to restrictive print licensing, most of the printed music from the early part of Elizabeth's reign was written by William Byrd. The madrigal enjoyed an enormous level of popularity, as did the lute song towards the end of her reign.
Poetry
Main article: Elizabethan Poetry
Dance
Dance in Elizabethan England seems to have been closely linked to that of France. Two important 16th century dance sources come from England. The Inns of Court Dances come from a series of manuscripts, and flesh out detail on the pavan and allemand style of dances. The Gresley Manuscript on the other hand, detail dances substantially different from those known from France.
Theatre
With the attention paid, subsequently, to the works of Master Shakespeare, the Elizabethan era now offers a relatively broad view of London and metropolitan theatre. The sites of the Rose and the Globe theatres are known (and a rough facsimile of the latter built on London's Bankside, and the sites of others (one on Curtain Road in the east of the City of London, another at Blackfriars) have been deduced. We have approximate names of companies and patrons, some Court records of payments made for performances, and even one or two contemporary reviews. We know of half a dozen playwrights (most of whom appear to have tottered in and out of favour like modern boy-bands) and we know that the London theatre was frequently closed due to plague, when the companies would go on the road, calling in at patrons' houses or other notable addresses to deliver their performances.
Fibre arts
Clothing
Main article: Elizabethan clothing