Queen Elizabeth
I is declared Britain 's
greatest-ever monarch after a unique opinion poll organized to mark the
reigning monarch's Golden Jubilee. She narrowly beat the current Queen.
Elizabeth I - the last Tudor
monarch - was born at Greenwich
on 7 September 1533, the daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne
Boleyn. Her early life was full of uncertainties, and her chances of succeeding
to the throne seemed very slight once her half-brother Edward was born in 1537.
She was then third in line behind her Roman Catholic half-sister, Princess
Mary. Roman Catholics, indeed, always considered her illegitimate and she only
narrowly escaped execution in the wake of a failed rebellion against Queen Mary
in 1554.
Although autocratic and
capricious, Elizabeth
had astute political judgment and chose her ministers well; these included
Burghley (Secretary of State), Hatton (Lord Chancellor) and Walsingham (in
charge of intelligence and also a Secretary of State). Overall, Elizabeth 's
administration consisted of some 600 officials administering the great offices
of state, and a similar number dealing with the Crown lands (which funded the
administrative costs). Social and economic regulation and law and order
remained in the hands of the sheriffs at local level, supported by unpaid
justices of the peace.
The arts flourished during Elizabeth 's reign.
Country houses such as Longleat and Hardwick Hall were built, miniature
painting reached its high point, theatres thrived - the Queen attended the
first performance of Shakespeare's ‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’. Literature bloomed through the works of Spenser, Marlowe
and Shakespeare. Elizabeth 's
religious compromise laid many fears to rest. Fashion and education came to the
fore because of Elizabeth 's
penchant for knowledge, courtly behavior and extravagant dress.
However, Elizabeth 's
reign was one of considerable danger and difficulty for many, with threats of
invasion from Spain through Ireland , and from France
through Scotland .
Much of northern England
was in rebellion in 1569-70. A papal bull of 1570 specifically released Elizabeth 's subjects from
their allegiance, and she passed harsh laws against Roman Catholics after plots
against her life were discovered. One such plot involved Mary, Queen of Scots,
who had fled to England
in 1568 after her second husband's murder and her subsequent marriage to a man
believed to have been involved in his murder. As a likely successor to Elizabeth , Mary spent 19 years as Elizabeth 's prisoner because Mary was the
focus for rebellion and possible assassination plots, such as the Babington
Plot of 1586. Mary was also a temptation for potential invaders such as Philip
II. Despite Elizabeth 's
reluctance to take drastic action, on the insistence of Parliament and her
advisers, Mary was tried, found guilty and executed in 1587.
In 1588, aided by bad weather,
the English navy scored a great victory over the Spanish invasion fleet of
around 130 ships - the 'Armada'. The Armada was intended to overthrow the Queen
and re-establish Roman Catholicism by conquest, as Philip II believed he had a
claim to the English throne through his marriage to Mary.
During Elizabeth 's long reign, the nation also
suffered from high prices and severe economic depression, especially in the
countryside, during the 1590s. The war against Spain was not very successful after
the Armada had been beaten and, together with other campaigns, it was very
costly. Though she kept a tight rein on government expenditure, Elizabeth left large
debts to her successor. Although Elizabeth
freely used her power to veto legislation, she avoided confrontation and did
not attempt to define Parliament's constitutional position and rights.
Overall, Elizabeth 's always shrewd and decisive
leadership brought successes during a period of great danger both at home and
abroad. Elizabeth , the last of the Tudors, died
at seventy years of age at Richmond
Palace on 24 March 1603,
having become a legend in her lifetime. The date of her accession was a
national holiday for two hundred years.
The image of Elizabeth 's reign is one of triumph and
success. Investing in expensive clothes and jewellery (to look the part, like
all contemporary sovereigns), she cultivated this image by touring the country
in regional visits known as 'progresses', often riding on horseback rather than
by carriage. Elizabeth
made at least 25 progresses during her reign. Good
Queen Bess maintained a regal air until the day she died; a quote, from a
letter by Paul Hentzen, reveals the aging queen's regal nature: "Next came
the Queen in the sixty-fifth year of her age, as we were told, very majestic;
her face oblong, fair, but wrinkled; her eyes small yet black and pleasant; her
nose a little hooked; her lips narrow... she had in her ear two pearls, with
very rich drops... her air was stately; her manner of speaking mild and
obliging." This regal figure surely had her faults, but the last Tudor
excelled at rising to challenges and emerging victorious.
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