PPT-Elizabeth, Mary and the politics of religion in the British

Author : jane-oiler | Published Date : 2015-11-20

Gabriel Glickman Elizabeth I 15331603 Catholic uprisings and plots 1569 rising of the Northern Earls 156973 first Desmond rebellion 1571 Ridolfi Plot 157983

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Elizabeth, Mary and the politics of religion in the British: Transcript


Gabriel Glickman Elizabeth I 15331603 Catholic uprisings and plots 1569 rising of the Northern Earls 156973 first Desmond rebellion 1571 Ridolfi Plot 157983 second Desmond rebellion. . II. Queen Elizabeth’s full name is Elizabeth Alexandra Mary. As a child she called herself “. Lilibet. ’, a name that members of her family still use.. The Queen’s surname is Windsor. The British royal family changed their last name – Saxe-Coburg-Gotha during the First World War because it sounded too ‘German’. Anti-German feeling in the county was so strong that King George V dropped all his German titles and changed the family name to Windsor – after his castle of the same name.. L/O – To identify the changes Elizabeth made to religion in England. Mary dies. On . 17. th. November 1558. , Mary I died after only 5 years as Queen. She had no children.. Her half-sister Elizabeth was appointed the next Queen and when she heard about her sisters death, she fell to her knees and said, ‘. author: Matthew Groblewski (II TI). ELIZABETH II. Elizabeth II . (Elizabeth Alexandra Mary; born 21 April 1926) is the queen of 16 of the 53 member states in the . Coomonwealth. of Nations. , she is . and the . Governing Classes. Political stability…. A consistent priority of Elizabeth and Burghley. I. t depended on rural aristocrats to help. There had to be peace between the Crown and the governing classes. 1. PURPOSe of the series. What . we won’t be doing. …. 1. PURPOSe of the series. What we will be doing. …. 2. A few ground rules. 3. My Motivation . 3. My Motivation . A . pastoral. motivation. Approaches to Intellectual Thought. Case Study: . Ali . Shariati. and Revolutionary Modern Iran. Reading Revolution. Mona Rahmani . Appeals to the past are among the most common of strategies in interpretations of the present. What . Focus 1 . The situation on Elizabeth’s accession . Elizabethan England in 1558: society and government. . The Virgin Queen: the problem of her legitimacy, gender, marriage. . Her character and strengths. . 1558?. Learning objective . – to be able to assess the . extent of foreign threats . Elizabeth I faced . in 1558.. I can . describe. the key . foreign threats faced . by Elizabeth I. Grade 3. I can . 1. There was much religious change. under the Tudors and Elizabeth had to find a way of dealing with these issues. Many people objected to Elizabeth’s coronation in 1558 and she faced questions over her legitimacy, with many preferring Mary Queen of Scots, and whether a woman could rule effectively. . Nobility/Peerage . (Duke, Marquis, Earl, Viscount, Baron); . Gentry . (baronets, knights, esquires); . 2 ½ - 3 ½) . Merchants and professionals; . 3. ) . . Yeoman . (farmed over 100 acres. ); . The Tudor kings. The “Tudors” were a family of kings in the post-Renaissance England – a dynasty. They ruled from 1485-1603. The first one, Henry Tudor “took” the throne from his cousin, Richard III, who became known as “Rich the Bad”. Elaine Graham. Grosvenor Research Professor of Practical Theology. University of Chester. ‘Is the world we inhabit more, or . less, . religious than it used to be? Do we witness a . decline, redeployment or renaissance . What problems did Elizabeth I face when she became Queen in 1558? Learning objective – to be able to explain the different problems Elizabeth I faced in 1558. I can describe the different problems Elizabeth I faced in 1558. Admission Open at St. Mary\'s Sr. Sec. School for Session 2021-22, Get admission forms online. Access Key Information about St. Mary\'s Sr. Sec. School and apply online.

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