Top Banner
Shakespeare
37

Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Dec 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Ashley Carter
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Shakespeare

Page 2: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Life in Elizabethan Times

Page 3: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Filling the timeThere is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman.

These are some of the ways a courtier at Court might fill his or her time.

• Gossip.• Attend the Theatre.• Have players in.• Take lessons.• Embroider.• Play board or card games.• Sing.• Prepare a presentation.• Visit Tailor.• Sit for a portrait.• Visit Bear pit.• Practice riding and other Tourney sports.

Page 4: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Form of address for non-nobles

• Gentry• Gentles• Yeoman• Tradesmen• Craftsmen• Peasants• Knights

Page 5: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Patronage

• Young men go to Court to find a Patron

Patron

Young Man

Page 6: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Woman• A noble lady has waiting

woman.• Helps unmarried girls find

suitable husbands.• Take care of the household

and children with the help of gentlewomen.

Page 7: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

RanksThe ordinary ranking of the English Court, disregarding various offices, parents, patents, or orders of knighthood is as follows:

Men WomenDuke DuchessMarquis (MAR-kwis) Marchioness

(MAR- shon-ess)

Earl CountessViscount (vEYE-count) Viscountess

(vEYE- count-ess)

Baron BaronessKnight Knight's lady

Page 8: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Honour and Duelling

Tempers were short and weapons easy to hand. The basic characteristics of the nobility, like those of the poor, were ferocity and childishness and lack of self control.

-Lawrence Stone in “Crisis ofThe Aristocracy.”

Page 9: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

In homes

Names Marriage and Family

• Boys may marry at 14, and girls at 12.

• A brides parents must give her husband a dowry.

• Englishmen do not have a middle name.

• The most common for girls are those of Henry VIII's wives and daughters: Katherine, Anne, Jane, Mary, and Elizabeth.

• Rather than waste a name when a child dies, the next child may be given the same one

Page 10: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

In general• Children are the property of their

parents.• Wives are the property of their

husbands.• Widows can own and run their own

businesses.• Divorce is very difficult as a Protestant.• Male primogeniture is the rule.• A bastard is a child born out of wedlock

and is deemed illegitimate.

Page 11: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Ingatestone Hall – latter 1500’s

Page 12: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.
Page 13: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

England

Page 14: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

London• The river Thames ran through

the city and had only one bridge across it.

• Criminals were chained to the banks of the river.

• Houses were crammed together and the streets were slimy with the contents of chamber pots that were thrown out windows.

• The city was full of loud noises.• No one drank water. Ale was

the standard drink and the better sort drank wine.

Page 15: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Food• In general people ate 2 meals a day;

• Dinner around midday• Supper in the evening

• Those who woke early would eat in the morning as well.

• Wine was sweet and heavy and would have to be strained before being drunk. Beer was made without hops and was usually flat.

Page 16: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Religion• The official religion was the Church of

England.• Being Roman Catholic was not a crime,

but there was a fine for not attending Protestant services.

• It was illegal to be a Catholic Priest in England.

Page 17: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Schooling• Only boys went to school.• Girls education was at home.• Richer families hired private tutors.

Time Activity

6:00am School Starts

9:00am Breakfast

9:15am Back to work

11:00am Dinner

1:00pm Afternoon session

5:00pm School Ends

Page 18: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

MonarchyMost of Shakespeare's career unfolded during the monarchy of Elizabeth I, the Great Virgin Queen from whom the historical period of the Bard's life takes its name as the Elizabethan Age.

Page 19: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

The man himself

William Shakespeare

Page 20: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Born: 23rd April 1564

Died: 23rd April 1616

Place: Stratford-on-Avon

Page 21: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

England in the 16th Century

• Was mainly rural.

• Pop: 3 million• Economy was

mainly agricultural

• Time of fear and upheaval

Page 22: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Parents

Mother:Mary Arden –

daughter of a local gentry.

Father:John

Shakespeare – a glover and tenant farmer of yeoman class.

Page 23: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Shakespeare's eventual fame and success spilled over to his parents in the form of both money and title. On the eve of John Shakespeare’s death in 1601, Queen Elizabeth granted the Bard's father a "gentleman's" family coat-of-arms.

Page 24: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Family Tree

Page 25: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Shakespeare’s Birthplace

Page 26: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Education• Probably attended Stratford Grammar

School where he would have learnt:• Greek and Latin Literature• Rhetoric• Christian ethics

• Left school in 1579 at the age of 15.• Did not attend university and was not

considered to be a truly learned man.

Page 27: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

After school• In 1582 (18yrs) he married Anne Hathaway who

was 8yrs his senior.• 6 months later their daughter Susanna was born.

2yrs after that, twins Hamnet and Judith arrived.• Speculation has that Shakespeare was not happy

in his marriage.• There is a period of 7 years (1585- 1592) from

which there is no primary source materials about Shakespeare.

• During this time he travelled back and forth between London and Stratford, and by the time sources can be found again he was living almost full-time in London.

Page 28: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Life in London• Before he took up a career as a

playwright Shakespeare had many and varied other jobs.

• He most probably worked with his father in commercial trade, as a law clerk and served as a soldier or sailor as England was threatened by Spain.

Page 29: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

His plays• Between the early 1590’s and 1620’s

Shakespeare composed the most extraordinary body of works in the history of world drama.

• He moved roughly from comedies to histories to tragedies.

• His farewell to the stage was The Tempest.

Page 30: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Title Date Written Date Range First Published

The Comedy of Errors 1590 ? - 1594 1623

Titus Andronicus 1590 ? - 1594 1594

The Taming of the Shrew 1591 ? - 1594 1623

2 Henry VI 1591 ? - 1592 1594

3 Henry VI 1591 ? - 1592 1595

1 Henry VI 1592 ? - 1592 1623

Richard III 1592 1592 - 1597 1597

Love's Labor's Lost 1593 ? - 1597 1598

Two Gentlemen of Verona 1593 ? - 1598 1623

A Midsummer Night's Dream 1594 1594 - 1598 1600

Romeo and Juliet 1595 ? - 1597 1597

Richard II 1595 1595 - 1597 1597

King John 1596 ? - 1598 1623

The Merchant of Venice 1596 1594 - 1598 1600

Henry IV Part 1 1597 1595 - 1598 1598

The Merry Wives of Windsor 1597 1597 - 1602 1602

Henry IV Part 2 1598 1596 - 1598 1600

As You Like It 1598 1598 - 1600 1623

Henry V 1599 1599 1600

Page 31: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Much Ado About Nothing 1599 1598 - 1600 1600

Julius Caesar 1599 1598 - 1599 1623

Twelfth Night 1600 1600 - 1602 1623

Hamlet 1601 1599 - 1601 1603

Troilus and Cressida 1602 1601 - 1603 1609

All's Well That Ends Well 1603 1598 - ? 1623

Measure For Measure 1604 1598 - 1604 1623

Othello 1604 1598 - 1604 1622

King Lear 1605 1598 - 1606 1608

Macbeth 1605 1603 - 1611 1623

Antony and Cleopatra 1606 1598 - 1608 1623

Timon of Athens 1606 1598 - ? 1623

Pericles Prince of Tyre 1607 1598 - 1608 1609

Coriolanus 1608 1598 - ? 1623

Cymbeline 1609 1598 - 1611 1623

A Winter's Tale 1610 1598 - 1611 1623

The Tempest 1611 1610 - 1611 1623

Henry VIII 1613 1612 - 1613 1623

Page 32: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.
Page 33: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

Personal Tragedy• As Shakespeare’s success and

popularity were on the rise, his son Hamnet died in 1596 from drowning.

Page 34: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.

The Globe Theatre• The Globe Theatre was built in 1599 by

Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613. A second Globe Theatre was built on the same site by June 1614 and closed in 1642.

• A modern reconstruction of the Globe, named "Shakespeare's Globe", opened in 1997 approximately 230 metres from the site of the original theatre.

Page 35: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.
Page 36: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.
Page 37: Shakespeare. Life in Elizabethan Times Filling the time There is nothing as dangerous as a bored nobleman. These are some of the ways a courtier at Court.