PPT-By: Elizabeth Brittain
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By: Elizabeth Brittain: Transcript
Use A safe place for students and teachers to communicate about classroom assignments and topics Teachers can control posts Students can httpswwwgagglenetoverview Cost Have to apply for funding . Gabriel Glickman. Elizabeth I (1533-1603). Catholic uprisings and plots. 1569 – rising of the Northern Earls. 1569-73 –first Desmond rebellion. 1571 – . Ridolfi. Plot. 1579-83 – 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.. 7 September 1533- 1603. Reign 1558-1603. Mary QUEEN OF . sCOTS. succession. Male heirs (e.g. Elizabeth’s brother Edward) were first in line.. If the male heirs died without children, the oldest female child would inherit the throne. 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 . Lived: November 12, 1815 – October 26, 1902. Co-founder and President of the National Woman Suffrage Association. Works. The . Revolution . (weekly paper). The Woman’s Bible. The History of Woman Suffrage, vol. 1-3. (1806 – 1861). Robert Browning. (1812-1889). Both were famous poets before they ever met each other.. Elizabeth came from a very strict family – father forbade all five children of every marrying.. Study Questions. p. 54. How did Elizabeth I handle the internal religious struggle and what does the expression “middle way” mean?. Elizabeth underwent a sort of religious compromise managing to steer the Church of England a middle way between Catholicism and Protestantism. Practically, she chose to stay in the middle without supporting either Catholicism or Puritanism ( an extremist sect that had developed from Protestantism).. What role did she play in the trials?. Elizabeth was accused for trying to have her grandmother sign the devil’s book. Also accused for witchcraft.. Elizabeth’s status:. Elizabeth was married to John Proctor who had been married twice before. . What is a monarchy?. A country with a King or Queen.. Modern monarchies where the King has power. Saudi Arabia. Brunei. Swaziland. Qatar. Modern monarchies with ceremonial Monarchs. Spain. Denmark. The Netherlands. Mariam . Majeed. #95. Mrs. . Timm. English 12A. Jannuary. 19, 2014. Introduction. “You were made perfectly to be loved and surely I have loved you in the idea of you my whole life long. ” . Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Director of Composition. Associate Chair for Writing Outreach Programs. Dept of Writing and Rhetoric. University of Central Florida. ewardle@ucf.edu. Re-Imagining Composition Courses In Light of Best Research-Based Practices. 2. Who. was Elizabeth’s mother?. 3. What. was the scheme that gave workers in Nazi Germany cheap theatre and cinema tickets, organised trips, sports events and cruises?. 4. Describe. Elizabeth’s character. 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. . 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.
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