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Queen Elizabeth I
Elizabeth I (1533-1603) was queen
of England and Ireland from 1558 to 1603. She preserved
stability in a nation rent by political and religious dissension
and maintained the authority of the Crown against the growing
pressures of Parliament.
Born at Greenwich, on September 7, 1533, Elizabeth I was the
daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn. Because
of her father's continuing search for a male heir, Elizabeth's
early life was precarious. In May 1536 her mother was beheaded
to clear the way for Henry's third marriage, and on July 1,
Parliament declared that Elizabeth and her older sister, Mary,
the daughter of Henry's first queen, were illegitimate and that
the succession should pass to the issue of his third wife, Jane
Seymour. Jane did produce a male heir, Edward, but even though
Elizabeth had been declared illegitimate, she was brought up in
the royal household. She received an excellent education and was
reputed to be remarkably precocious, notably in languages (of
which she learned Latin, French, and Italian) and music.
Internal Decline
The latter years of Elizabeth also saw tensions emerge in
domestic politics. The long-term dominance of the house of
Cecil, perpetuated after Burghley's death by his son, Sir Robert
Cecil, was strongly contested by others, like the Earl of Essex,
who sought the Queen's patronage. The Parliament of 1601 saw
Elizabeth involved in a considerable fight over the granting of
monopolies. Elizabeth was able to head off the conflict by
promising that she herself would institute reforms. Her famous
"Golden Speech" delivered to this, her last Parliament,
indicated that even in old age she had the power to win her
people to her side: "Though God hath raised me high, yet this I
count the glory of my crown, that I have reigned with your
loves....
It is my desire to live nor reign
no longer than my life and reign shall be for your good. And
though you have had, and may have, many princes more mighty and
wise sitting in this seat, yet you never had, nor shall have,
any that will be more careful and loving."
The words concealed the reality of the end of Elizabeth's reign.
It is apparent, in retrospect, that severe tensions existed. The
finances of the Crown, exhausted by war since the 1580s, were in
sorry condition; the economic plight of the country was not much
better. The Parliament was already sensing its power to contest
issues with the monarchy, though they now held back, perhaps out
of respect for their elderly queen. Religious tensions were
hidden rather than removed. For all the greatness of her reign,
the reign that witnessed the naval feats of Sir Francis Drake
and Sir John Hawkins and the literary accomplishments of Sir
Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, and
Christopher Marlowe, it was a shaky inheritance that Elizabeth
would pass on to her successor, the son of her rival claimant,
Mary, Queen of Scots. On March 24, 1603, the Queen died; as one
contemporary noted, she "departed this life, mildly like a lamb,
easily like a ripe apple from the tree."
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