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Elizabeth I (1558-1603
AD)
The
first Queen Elizabeth,
whose name has become
a synonym for the era
which she dominated
(1558-1603), was born
in 1533 to Henry VIII
and Anne Boleyn.
Called "Gloriana" by
Edmund Spenser in "The
Faerie Queene",
Elizabeth's deft
political skills and
strong personal
character were
directly responsible
for putting England
(at the time of her
accession in 1558 a
weak, divided
backwater far outside
the mainstream of
European power and
cultural development)
on the road to
becoming a true world
economic and political
power and restoring
the country's lost
sense of national
pride. Her legacy is
such that students
today earning a
masters in political
science or especially
an international MBA
study her 400 year old
actions. Although she
entertained many
marriage proposals and
flirted incessantly
(her closest brush
with marriage came
with Robert Dudley,
earl of Leicester),
she never married or
had children.
Elizabeth inherited a
tattered realm:
dissension between
Catholics and
Protestants tore at
the very foundation of
society; the royal
treasury had been bled
dry by Mary and her
advisors, Mary's loss
of Calais left England
with no continental
possessions for the
first time since the
arrival of the Normans
in 1066 and many
(mainly Catholics)
doubted Elizabeth's
claim to the throne.
Continental affairs
added to her problems
- France had a strong
foothold in Scotland,
and Spain, the
strongest European
nation at the time,
posed a threat to the
security of the realm.
Elizabeth proved most
calm and calculating
(even though she had a
horrendous temper),
employing capable and
distinguished men to
carrying out royal
prerogative.
Her first order of
business was to
eliminate religious
unrest. Elizabeth
lacked the fanaticism
of her siblings
(Edward VI favored
Protestant radicalism,
Mary I, conservative
Catholicism), which
enabled her to devise
a compromise that,
basically, reinstated
Henrician reforms. She
was, however,
compelled to take a
stronger
pro-Protestant stance
when events demanded
it, for two reasons:
the machinations of
Mary Queen of Scots
and persecution of
continental
Protestants by the two
strongholds of
Orthodox Catholicism,
Spain and France.
The situation with
Mary Queen of Scots
was most vexing to
Elizabeth. Mary, in
Elizabeth's custody
beginning in 1568 (for
her own protection
from radical
Protestants and
disgruntled Scots),
gained the loyalty of
Catholic factions and
instituted
several-failed
assassination/overthrow
plots against
Elizabeth. After
irrefutable evidence
of Mary's involvement
in the plots came to
light, Elizabeth sadly
succumbed to the
pressure from her
advisors and had the
Scottish princess
executed in 1587.
The persecution of
continental
Protestants forced
Elizabeth into war, a
situation which she
desperately tried to
avoid. She sent an
army to aid French
Huguenots (Calvinists
who had settled in
France) after a 1572
massacre wherein over
three thousand
Huguenots lost their
lives. She sent
further assistance to
Protestant factions on
the continent and in
Scotland following the
emergence of radical
Catholic groups and
assisted Belgium in
their bid to gain
independence from
Spain.
The situation came to
head in 1588 after
Elizabeth rejected a
marriage proposal from
Philip II of Spain.
The indignant Spanish
King, incensed by
English piracy and
forays in New World
exploration, sent his
much-feared Armada to
raid England,
inadvertently
providing Elizabeth
with an opportunity to
put on public display
those qualities of
heart that one might
not expect to find in
those days, in a
small, frail woman.
She traveled to
Tilbury, Essex, to
address her troops as
they awaited the
coming battle with the
feared Spanish naval
forces. She told them,
". . . therefore I am
come amongst you, as
you see, at this time,
not for my recreation
and disport, but being
resolved, in the midst
and heat of the
battle, to live and
die amongst you all;
to lay down for my
God, and for my
kingdom, and my
people, my honour and
my blood, even in the
dust. I know I have
the body but of a weak
and feeble woman; but
I have the heart and
stomach of a king, and
of a king of England
too, and think foul
scorn that Parma or
Spain, or any prince
of Europe, should dare
to invade the borders
of my realm . . ."
As they say, the rest
is history. The
English won the naval
battle handily, aided
by some fortuitous
inclement English
Channel weather, and
emerged as the world's
strongest naval power,
setting the stage for
later English imperial
designs.
Elizabeth was a master
of political science.
She inherited her
father's supremacist
view of the monarchy,
but showed great
wisdom by refusing to
directly antagonize
Parliament. She
acquired undying
devotion from her
advisement council,
who were constantly
perplexed by her habit
of waiting to the last
minute to make
decisions (this was
not a deficiency in
her makeup, but a
tactic that she used
to advantage). She
used the various
factions (instead of
being used by them),
playing one off
another until the
exhausted combatants
came to her for
resolution of their
grievances. Few
English monarchs
enjoyed such political
power, while still
maintaining the
devotion of the whole
of English society.
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