A Trip to Elizabethan England

1309 Words3 Pages

Imagine living in a world without technology, cars, or many of the freedoms we take for granted today. Let’s travel back in time to 1559, a simpler age with ball gowns, royalty, theatre, war, and new discoveries. Queen Elizabeth I reigned during the “Golden Age,” from 1558 to 1603. The word “renaissance” means reawakening. During the Renaissance period, many things “re-awoke” and became popular again. Elizabethan England was a time of change, because of its developments, cultural traditions, entertainment, theatre, battlefield victories, and explorations of the New World. The first stop is the French Court, where forks were used for the first time in 1589. Many inventions like this were created in order to make life easier. Some of those developments include pencils in 1565, new illnesses and medication techniques, the printing press, the telescope in the year 1600, decimal fractions in 1576, a new kind of art—like Michelangelo’s work, the Kabuki theatre in 1586, Shakespeare’s plays starting in 1592—his first play was Henry VI, and the game of billiards in 1550. William W. Lace said that Queen Elizabeth I “cannot be given full credit for the accomplishments of Elizabethan England. She was careful, cautious, and conservative. Some achievements during her reign occurred despite her wishes, not because of them” (Lace). Elizabeth’s reign lasted from 1559 to 1603, during the “Golden Age” and the Renaissance. This time period consisted of these and many other inventions. Now that we have learned about the Renaissance’s developments, let’s go attend an Elizabethan style wedding. When you are at a wedding, you must be prepared to eat a feast fit for a king! The special dinner was planned carefully, full of exotic dishes and attractive a... ... middle of paper ... ... Works Cited Alchin, Linda. Elizabethan Era. Freeola Limited, 16 May 2012. Web. 9 March 2014. Alchin, Linda. Elizabethan War. Freeola, Limited, 2005. Web. 18 March 2014. Alchin, Linda. Elizabethan Wedding Customs. Freeola Limited, 2005. Web. 18 March 2014. Alchin, Linda. Globe Theatre Female Roles. Freeola Limited, 27 July 2013. Web. 9 March 2014. Coleman, Bill. The Lost Colony. The Venture Platform, 5 December 2013. Web. 9 March 2014. Columbus, Christopher. Columbus’s Ships Reach the New World. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 2002. Print. Lace, William W. World History Series: Elizabethan England. Farmington Hills: Lucent Books, 23 August 2005. Print. Marmor, Paulak. Renaissance: The Elizabethan Worlds. Dueling Modems, 16 March 2009. Web. 9 March 2014. Morison, Samuel Eliot. Columbus Sought the Gold and Spice of the Indies. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 2002. Print.

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