Elizabeth I (7 September 1533 – 24 March 1603) was
Queen of England and
Queen of Ireland from 17 November
1558 until her death. Sometimes called the
Virgin
Queen,
Gloriana, or
Good Queen
Bess, Elizabeth was the fifth and last monarch of the
Tudor dynasty. The daughter of
Henry VIII, she was born a
princess, but her mother,
Anne Boleyn,
was executed two and a half years after her birth, and Elizabeth
was declared illegitimate. Her brother,
Edward VI, bequeathed the crown to
Lady Jane Grey, cutting his sisters
out of the succession. His will was set aside, and in 1558
Elizabeth succeeded the Catholic
Mary
I, during whose reign she had been imprisoned for nearly a year
on suspicion of supporting
Protestant
rebels.
Elizabeth set out to rule by good counsel, and she depended heavily
on a group of trusted advisers led by
William Cecil, Baron
Burghley. One of her first moves as queen was to support the
establishment of an English Protestant church, of which she became
the
Supreme
Governor. This
Elizabethan Religious
Settlement held firm throughout her reign and later evolved
into today's
Church of England. It
was expected that Elizabeth would marry, but despite several
petitions from parliament and numerous courtships, she never did.
The reasons for this outcome have been much debated. As she grew
older, Elizabeth became famous for her virginity, and a cult grew
up around her which was celebrated in the portraits, pageants, and
literature of the day.
In government, Elizabeth was more moderate than her father and
siblings. One of her mottoes was "
video et taceo" ("I see,
and say nothing"). This strategy, viewed with impatience by her
counsellors, often saved her from political and marital
misalliances.
Though Elizabeth was cautious in foreign
affairs and only half-heartedly supported a number of ineffective,
poorly resourced military campaigns in the Netherlands
, France
and Ireland
, the defeat
of the Spanish armada in 1588
associated her name forever with what is popularly viewed as one of
the greatest victories in English
history. Within 20 years of her death, she was being
celebrated as the ruler of a golden age, an image that retains its
hold on the
English people.
Elizabeth's reign is known as the
Elizabethan era, famous above all for the
flourishing of
English
drama, led by playwrights such as
William Shakespeare and
Christopher Marlowe, and for the
seafaring prowess of English adventurers such as
Francis Drake.
Some historians are more reserved in their assessment. They depict
Elizabeth as a short-tempered, sometimes indecisive ruler, who
enjoyed more than her share of luck. Towards the end of her reign,
a series of economic and military problems weakened her popularity
to the point where many of her subjects were relieved at her death.
Elizabeth is acknowledged as a
charismatic
performer and a dogged survivor, in an age when government was
ramshackle and limited and when monarchs in neighbouring countries
faced internal problems that jeopardised their thrones. Such was
the case with Elizabeth's rival,
Mary
I, Queen of Scots, whom she imprisoned in 1568 and eventually
had executed in 1587. After the short reigns of Elizabeth's brother
and sister, her 44 years on the throne provided welcome stability
for the kingdom and helped forge a sense of national
identity.
Early life

Elizabeth was the only child of Henry
VIII and Anne Boleyn, who did not bear a male heir and was executed
less than three years after Elizabeth's birth.
Elizabeth
was born in Greenwich
Palace
in the Chamber of Virgins on 7 September 1533
between three and four o'clock in the afternoon and named after
both her paternal and maternal grandmothers, Elizabeth of York and Elizabeth
Howard. She was the second child of
Henry VIII of England to survive
infancy; her mother was Henry's second wife,
Anne Boleyn. At birth, Elizabeth was the
heiress presumptive to the
throne of England. Her older half-sister, Mary, had lost her
position as legitimate heir when Henry annulled his marriage to
Mary's mother,
Catherine of
Aragon, in order to marry Anne. King Henry VIII had desperately
wanted a legitimate son, to ensure the Tudor succession. Anne had
been crowned with
St. Edward's
crown, unlike any other
queen
consort, while carrying Elizabeth. Historian Alice Hunt has
suggested that this was done because Anne's pregnancy was visible
at the moment of coronation and she was carrying an heir who was
presumed to be male. Elizabeth was baptised on 10 September in a
ceremony held at Greenwich Palace.
Thomas
Cranmer, the Marquess of Exeter,
Elizabeth Howard, Duchess
of Norfolk, and
Margaret Wotton,
Marchioness of Dorset stood as her four
godparents. After Elizabeth's birth, Queen Anne
failed to provide a male heir. She suffered at least two
miscarriages, one in 1534 and another at the beginning of 1536. On
2 May 1536, she was arrested and imprisoned. Hastily convicted on
trumped-up charges, she was
beheaded on 19
May 1536.
Elizabeth, who was two years and eight months old at the time, was
declared illegitimate and deprived of the title of princess. Eleven
days after Anne Boleyn's death, Henry married
Jane Seymour, who died 12 days after the birth
of their son,
Prince Edward.
Elizabeth was placed in Edward's household and carried the
chrisom, or baptismal cloth, at his
christening.

Elizabeth Tudor, c.
1546, by an unknown artist
Elizabeth's first Lady Mistress, Lady
Margaret Bryan, wrote that she was “as toward
a child and as gentle of conditions as ever I knew any in my life”.
By the autumn of 1537, Elizabeth was in the care of Blanche
Herbert,
Lady Troy who remained her Lady
Mistress until her retirement in late 1545 or early 1546.
Catherine Champernowne, better known
by her later, married name of Catherine “Kat” Ashley, was appointed
as Elizabeth's governess in 1537, and she remained Elizabeth’s
friend until her death in 1565, when
Blanche Parry succeeded her as Chief
Gentlewoman of the Privy Chamber. She clearly made a good job of
Elizabeth’s early education: by the time William Grindal became her
tutor in 1544, Elizabeth could write
English,
Latin, and
Italian. Under Grindal, a talented
and skillful tutor, she also progressed in
French and
Greek. After Grindal died in 1548, Elizabeth
received her education under
Roger
Ascham, a sympathetic teacher who believed that learning should
be fun. By the time her formal education ended in 1550, she was the
best educated woman of her generation.
Thomas Seymour
Henry VIII died in 1547, when Elizabeth was 13 years old, and was
succeeded by her half brother,
Edward VI.
Catherine Parr, Henry's last wife, soon
married
Thomas Seymour of
Sudeley, Edward VI's uncle and the brother of the Lord
Protector,
Edward
Seymour, Duke of Somerset. The couple took Elizabeth into their
household at Chelsea. There Elizabeth experienced an emotional
crisis that some historians believe affected her for the rest of
her life. Seymour, approaching age 40 but having charm and "a
powerful sex appeal", engaged in romps and horseplay with the
14-year-old Elizabeth. These included entering her bedroom in his
nightgown, tickling her and slapping her on the buttocks. After
Catherine Parr discovered the pair in an embrace, she ended this
state of affairs. In May 1548, Elizabeth was sent away.
Seymour continued scheming to control the royal family. When
Catherine Parr died of
puerperal
fever after childbirth on 5 September 1548, he renewed his
attentions towards Elizabeth, intent on wedding her. The details of
his former behaviour towards Elizabeth emerged during an
interrogation of Catherine Ashley and
Thomas Parry,
Elizabeth’s
cofferer. For his brother and
the council, this was the last straw, and in January 1549, Seymour
was arrested on suspicion of plotting to marry Elizabeth and
overthrow his brother.
Elizabeth, living at Hatfield House
, would admit nothing. Her stubbornness
exasperated her interrogator, Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, who reported, "I
do see it in her face that she is guilty". Seymour was beheaded on
20 March 1549.
Mary I's reign
Edward VI died, probably of
tuberculosis, on 6 July 1553, aged 15.
His will swept aside the
Succession to the Crown Act
1543, excluded both Mary and Elizabeth from the succession, and
instead declared as his heir
Lady Jane
Grey, granddaughter of Henry VIII's sister
Mary, Duchess of
Suffolk. Lady Jane was proclaimed queen by the Privy Council,
but her support quickly crumbled, and she was
deposed after reigning nine days. Mary
rode triumphantly into London, with Elizabeth at her side.
The show of solidarity between the sisters did not last long. Mary,
the country's first queen regnant, was determined to crush the
Protestant faith in which Elizabeth had been educated, and she
ordered that everyone attend
Mass.
This included Elizabeth, who had to outwardly conform. Mary's
initial popularity ebbed away when it became known that she planned
to marry
Prince Philip of Spain,
the son of
Emperor Charles
V. Discontent spread rapidly through the country, and many
looked to Elizabeth as a focus for their opposition to Mary's
religious policies. In January and February 1554, uprisings broke
out (known as
Wyatt's rebellion)
in several parts of England and Wales, led by
Thomas Wyatt.
Upon the collapse of the uprising, Elizabeth was brought to court
and interrogated.
On 18 March, she was imprisoned in the
Tower of
London
, where Lady Jane Grey had been executed on 12
February to deter the rebels. The terrified Elizabeth
fervently protested her innocence. Though it is unlikely that she
had plotted with the rebels, some of them were known to have
approached her. Mary's closest confidant, Charles V's ambassador
Simon Renard, argued that her throne
would never be safe while Elizabeth lived; and the Chancellor,
Stephen Gardiner, worked to have
Elizabeth put on trial. Elizabeth's supporters in the government,
including
Lord Paget,
convinced Mary to spare her sister in the absence of hard evidence
against her.
Instead, on 22 May, Elizabeth was moved from
the Tower to Woodstock
, where she was to spend almost a year under house
arrest in the charge of Sir Henry
Bedingfield. Crowds cheered her all along the way.
On 17 April 1555, Elizabeth was recalled to court to be closely
attended during the final stages of Mary's apparent pregnancy. If
Mary and her child died, Elizabeth would become queen. If, on the
other hand, Mary gave birth to a healthy child, Elizabeth's chances
of becoming queen would recede sharply. When it became clear that
Mary was not pregnant, no one believed any longer that she could
have a child. Elizabeth's succession seemed assured. Even Philip,
who became King of Spain in 1556, acknowledged the new political
reality. From this time forward, he cultivated Elizabeth,
preferring her to the likely alternative,
Mary I, Queen of Scots, who had grown
up in France and was betrothed to the
Dauphin of France. When his wife fell
ill in 1558, Philip sent the Count of Feria to consult with
Elizabeth. By October, Elizabeth was making plans for her
government. On 6 November, Mary recognised Elizabeth as her heir.
Eleven
days later, Elizabeth succeeded to the throne when Mary died at
St. James's
Palace
on 17 November 1558.
Accession
Elizabeth became queen at the age of 25. As her
triumphal progress wound through the city on the
eve of the
coronation ceremony, she was
welcomed wholeheartedly by the citizens and greeted by orations and
pageants, most with a strong Protestant flavour. Elizabeth's open
and gracious responses endeared her to the spectators, who were
"wonderfully ravished".
The following day, 15 January 1559, Elizabeth
was crowned at Westminster
Abbey
and anointed by the Catholic bishop of
Carlisle. She was then presented for the people's
acceptance, amidst a deafening noise of organs, fifes, trumpets,
drums, and bells.
On 20 November 1558, Elizabeth declared her intentions to her
Council and other peers who had come to Hatfield to swear
allegiance. The speech contains the first record of her often-used
metaphor of the "two bodies": the body natural and the
body politic:
My lords, the law of nature moves me to sorrow for my
sister; the burden that is fallen upon me makes me amazed, and yet,
considering I am God's creature, ordained to obey His appointment,
I will thereto yield, desiring from the bottom of my heart that I
may have assistance of His grace to be the minister of His heavenly
will in this office now committed to me.
And as I am but one body naturally considered, though
by His permission a body politic to govern, so shall I desire you
all...to be assistant to me, that I with my ruling and you with
your service may make a good account to Almighty God and leave some
comfort to our posterity on earth.
I mean to direct all my actions by good advice and
counsel.
Religion
Unfortunately for historians, Elizabeth's personal religious
convictions will never be definitely known. Her religious policy
favoured pragmatism above all in dealing with three major concerns.
The first concern was that of her legitimacy. Although she was
technically illegitimate under both Protestant and Catholic law,
her retroactively declared illegitimacy under the English church
was not a serious bar compared to having never been legitimate as
the Catholics claimed she was. Perhaps most importantly, the break
with Rome made her legitimate in her own eyes. For this reason, it
was never in serious doubt that Elizabeth would embrace at least
nominal Protestantism.
Elizabeth and her advisors perceived the threat of a Catholic
crusade against heretical England. Elizabeth therefore sought a
Protestant solution that would not offend Catholics too greatly
while addressing the desires of English Protestants; she would not
tolerate the more radical
Puritans though,
who were pushing for far-reaching reforms. As a result, the
parliament of 1559 started to legislate for a church based on the
Protestant settlement
of Edward VI, with the monarch as its head, but with many
superficially Catholic elements, such as priestly vestments.
The
House of
Commons
backed the proposals strongly, but the bill of
supremacy met opposition in the House of Lords
, particularly from the bishops. Elizabeth
was fortunate that many bishoprics were vacant at the time,
including the
Archbishopric of
Canterbury.
This enabled supporters amongst peers to outvote the bishops and
conservative peers. Nevertheless, Elizabeth was forced to accept
the title of
Supreme Governor of
the Church of England rather than the more contentious title of
Supreme Head, which many thought
unacceptable for a woman to bear. The new
Act of Supremacy became law on 8 May
1559. All public officials were to swear an oath of loyalty to the
monarch as the supreme governor or risk disqualification from
office; the
heresy laws were repealed, to
avoid a repeat of the persecution of dissenters practised by Mary.
At the same time, a new
Act of
Uniformity was passed, which made attendance at church and the
use of an adapted version of the 1552
Book of Common Prayer compulsory,
though the penalties for recusancy, or failure to attend and
conform, were not extreme.
Marriage question
From the start of Elizabeth's reign, the question arose whom she
would marry. She never married, and the reasons for this are not
clear. Historians have speculated that Thomas Seymour had put her
off sexual relationships, or that she knew herself to be
infertile. Until bearing a child became
impossible, she considered several suitors. Her last courtship,
ending in 1581 when she was aged 48, was with
François, Duke of Anjou, 22
years her junior. Elizabeth had no need of a man's help to govern,
and marrying risked a loss of control or of foreign interference in
her affairs; as had happened to her sister Mary. On the other hand,
marriage offered the chance of an heir.
Lord Robert Dudley
Elizabeth often received offers of marriage, but she only seriously
considered three or four suitors for any length of time. Of these,
her childhood friend Lord
Robert Dudley probably
came closest. Early in 1559, Elizabeth's friendship with the
married Dudley turned to love. Their intimacy soon was talk in
court and country and abroad. It was also said that
Amy Robsart, his wife, was suffering from a
"malady in one of her breasts", and half a year later, that Lord
Robert and the Queen had a "secret understanding" to marry after
Amy would at last have been "sent into eternity". Yet this was not
a welcome idea: "There is not a man who does not cry out on him and
her with indignation...she will marry none but the favoured
Robert", the Spanish ambassador described the situation at the
beginning of 1560. Accordingly, when Dudley's wife died in
September of the same year from a fall from a flight of stairs, a
great scandal arose. For a time, Elizabeth seriously considered
marrying Dudley; but William Cecil,
Nicholas Throckmorton, and other
politicians were very alarmed and made their disapproval
unmistakably clear. The opposition was so overwhelming, that there
were even rumours that the nobility would rise if the marriage took
place.

The "Hampden" portrait, by Steven van
der Meulen, ca. 1563.
This is the earliest full-length portrait of the queen, made
before the emergence of symbolic portraits representing the
iconography of the "Virgin Queen".
Despite several other marriage projects, Dudley was regarded as a
serious candidate for nearly another decade. Elizabeth encouraged
him in his suit, remaining extremely jealous of his affections,
even in case she never meant to marry him herself. Finally, after
Dudley, whom she had created Earl of Leicester in 1564, had
remarried in 1578, the queen reacted with repeated scenes of
displeasure towards him for having done so. His wife had to cope
with the queen's lifelong hatred. Nevertheless, Dudley retained a
special place in her heart. After Elizabeth's death, a note from
him, who had died in 1588 shortly after the
Armada, was found among her most personal
belongings, marked "his last letter" in her handwriting.
Political aspects
Elizabeth kept the marriage question open but often only as a
diplomatic ploy. Parliament repeatedly petitioned her to marry, but
she always answered evasively. In 1563, she told an imperial envoy:
"If I follow the inclination of my nature, it is this: beggar-woman
and single, far rather than queen and married". In the same year,
following Elizabeth's illness with
smallpox, the succession question became a heated
issue. Parliament urged the queen to marry or nominate an heir, to
prevent a
civil war upon her death. She
refused to do either. In April, she
prorogued the Parliament, which did not
reconvene until she needed its support to raise taxes in 1566.
The
House of
Commons
threatened to withhold funds until she agreed to
provide for the succession. In 1566,
Sir Robert Bell boldly pursued the issue
despite Elizabeth's command to desist and became the target of her
anger, saying, "Mr. Bell with his complices must needs prefer their
speeches to the upper house to have you my lords, consent with
them, whereby you were seduced, and of simplicity did assent unto
it."In 1566, she confided to the Spanish ambassador that if she
could find a way to settle the succession without marrying, she
would do so. By 1570, senior figures in the government privately
accepted that Elizabeth would never marry or name a successor.
William Cecil was already seeking solutions to the succession
problem. For this stance, as for her failure to marry, she was
often accused of irresponsibility. Elizabeth's silence strengthened
her own political security: she knew that if she named an heir, her
throne would be vulnerable to a coup.
Elizabeth's unmarried status inspired a cult of
virginity. In poetry and portraiture, she was
depicted as a virgin or a goddess or both, not as a normal woman.
At first, only Elizabeth made a virtue of her virginity: in 1559,
she told the Commons, "And, in the end, this shall be for me
sufficient, that a marble stone shall declare that a queen, having
reigned such a time, lived and died a virgin". Later on,
particularly after 1578, poets and writers took up the theme and
turned it into an
iconography that
exalted Elizabeth. In an age of
metaphors
and
conceits, she was portrayed as married
to her kingdom and subjects, under divine protection. In 1599,
Elizabeth spoke of "all my husbands, my good people".
Foreign policy
Apart from the Dudley courtship, Elizabeth treated the marriage
issue as an aspect of foreign policy. Though she turned down
Philip II's own offer in 1559,
she negotiated for several years to marry his cousin
Archduke Charles of Austria. Relations
with the Habsburgs deteriorated by 1568. Elizabeth then considered
marriage to two French
Valois
princes in turn, first
Henri, Duke
of Anjou, and later, from 1572 to 1581, his brother
François, Duke of Anjou. This
last proposal was tied to a planned alliance against Spanish
control of the
Southern
Netherlands. Elizabeth seems to have taken the courtship
seriously for a time, and wore a frog-shaped earring that Anjou had
sent her.
Elizabeth's foreign policy was largely defensive.
The exception was the
disastrous occupation of Le
Havre
from October 1562 to June 1563, when Elizabeth's
Huguenot allies joined with the Catholics
to retake the port. Elizabeth had intended to exchange Le Havre
for Calais
, retaken by
France in January 1558. She sent troops into Scotland in
1560 to prevent the French using it as a base. In 1585, she signed
the
Treaty of Nonsuch with the
Dutch to block the Spanish threat to England. Only through the
activities of her fleets did Elizabeth pursue an aggressive policy.
This paid off in the war against Spain, 80% of which was fought at
sea. She knighted
Francis Drake after
his
circumnavigation of the globe
from 1577 to 1580, and he won fame for his raids on Spanish ports
and fleets. An element of
piracy and
self-enrichment drove Elizabethan seafarers, over which the queen
had little control. Her reign also saw the first
colonisation or "planting"
of new land in
North America; the
colony of Virginia was named by
her when she modified the name of a
Native American regional
"king" named "Wingina" that had been recorded in 1584 by the
Sir Walter Raleigh expedition,
noting her status as the "Virgin Queen".
Scotland
Elizabeth's first policy toward Scotland was to oppose the French
presence there. She feared that the French planned to invade
England and put
Mary, Queen of
Scots, who was considered by many to be the heir to the English
crown, on the throne. Elizabeth was persuaded to send a force into
Scotland to aid the Protestant rebels, and though the campaign was
inept, the resulting
Treaty of
Edinburgh of July 1560 removed the French threat in the north.
When Mary returned to Scotland in 1561 to take up the reins of
power, the country had an established Protestant church and was run
by a council of Protestant nobles supported by Elizabeth. Mary
refused to ratify the treaty.
Elizabeth offended Mary by proposing her own suitor, Robert Dudley,
as a husband. Instead, in 1565 Mary married
Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, who
carried his own claim to the English throne. The marriage was the
first of a series of errors of judgement by Mary that handed the
victory to the Scottish Protestants and to Elizabeth. Darnley
quickly became unpopular in Scotland and then infamous for
presiding over the murder of Mary's Italian secretary
David Rizzio. In February 1567, Darnley was
murdered by conspirators almost certainly led by
James Hepburn, Earl of
Bothwell. Shortly afterwards, on 15 May 1567, Mary married
Bothwell, arousing suspicions that she had been party to the murder
of her husband. Elizabeth wrote to her:
How could a worse choice be made for your honour than
in such haste to marry such a subject, who besides other and
notorious lacks, public fame has charged with the murder of your
late husband, besides the touching of yourself also in some part,
though we trust in that behalf falsely.
These
events led rapidly to Mary's defeat and imprisonment in Loch Leven
Castle
. The Scottish lords forced her to abdicate
in favour of her son
James, who
had been born in June 1566.
James was taken to Stirling
Castle
to be raised as a Protestant. Mary escaped from
Loch
Leven
in 1568 but after another defeat fled across the
border into England, where she had once been assured of support
from Elizabeth. Elizabeth's first instinct was to restore
her fellow monarch; but she and her council instead chose to play
safe. Rather than risk returning Mary to Scotland with an English
army or sending her to France and the Catholic enemies of England,
they detained her in England. She was imprisoned there for the next
nineteen years.

Signature of Elizabeth I of
England
Mary was soon the focus for rebellion. In 1569, plotters in the
Rising of the North talked of
freeing her, and a scheme arose to marry her to
Thomas Howard, Duke of
Norfolk. Elizabeth reacted by sending Howard to
the block.
Pope Pius
V issued a
papal bull in 1570, called
Regnans in Excelsis, declaring
"Elizabeth, the pretended Queen of England and the servant of
crime" to be a heretic and releasing all her subjects from any
allegiance. English Catholics thus had an additional incentive to
look to Mary Stuart as the true sovereign of England. Mary may not
have been told of every Catholic plot to put her on the English
throne, but from the
Ridolfi Plot of
1571 to the
Babington Plot of 1586,
Elizabeth's spymaster Sir
Francis
Walsingham and the royal council keenly assembled a case
against her. At first, Elizabeth resisted calls for Mary's death.
By late 1586 she had been persuaded to sanction her trial and
execution on the evidence of letters written during the Babington
Plot. Elizabeth's proclamation of the sentence announced that "the
said Mary, pretending title to the same Crown, had compassed and
imagined within the same realm divers things tending to the hurt,
death and destruction of our royal person."
On 8 February 1587,
Mary was beheaded at Fotheringhay Castle
, Northamptonshire. She was 44 years
old.
Spain
After the
disastrous occupation and loss of Le Havre
in 1562–1563, Elizabeth avoided military
expeditions on the continent until 1585, when she sent an English
army to aid the Protestant Dutch rebels
against Philip II. This followed the deaths in 1584 of the
allies
William the Silent, Prince
of Orange, and
François,
Duke of Anjou, and the surrender of a series of Dutch towns to
Alexander Farnese, Duke
of Parma, Philip's governor of the
Spanish Netherlands. In December 1584,
an alliance between Philip II and the French
Catholic League at
Joinville undermined the ability of
Anjou's brother,
Henry III of
France, to counter
Spanish
domination of the Netherlands.
It also extended Spanish influence along the
channel
coast of France, where the Catholic League was
strong, and exposed England to invasion. The siege of Antwerp
in the summer of 1585 by the Duke of Parma
necessitated some reaction on the part of the English and the
Dutch. The outcome was the
Treaty of Nonsuch of August 1585, in which
Elizabeth promised military support to the Dutch. The treaty marked
the beginning of the
Anglo-Spanish War, which
lasted until the
Treaty of
London in 1604.
The expedition was led by her former suitor, Robert Dudley, Earl of
Leicester. Elizabeth from the start did not really back this course
of action. Her strategy, to support the Dutch on the surface with
an English army, while beginning secret peace talks with Spain
within days of Leicester's arrival in Holland, had necessarily to
be at odds with Leicester's, who wanted and was expected by the
Dutch to fight an active campaign. Elizabeth on the other hand,
wanted him "to avoid at all costs any decisive action with the
enemy". He enraged Elizabeth by accepting the post of
Governor-General from the Dutch
States-General. Elizabeth
saw this as a Dutch ploy to force her to accept sovereignty over
the Netherlands, which so far she had always declined. She wrote to
Leicester:
We could never have imagined (had we not seen it fall
out in experience) that a man raised up by ourself and
extraordinarily favoured by us, above any other subject of this
land, would have in so contemptible a sort broken our commandment
in a cause that so greatly touches us in honour....And therefore
our express pleasure and commandment is that, all delays and
excuses laid apart, you do presently upon the duty of your
allegiance obey and fulfill whatsoever the bearer hereof shall
direct you to do in our name.
Whereof fail you not, as you will answer the contrary
at your utmost peril.
Elizabeth's "commandment" was that her emissary read out her
letters of disapproval publicly before the Dutch Council of State,
Leicester having to stand nearby. This public humiliation of her
"Lieutenant-General" combined with her continued talks for a
separate peace with Spain, undermined his standing among the Dutch
irreversibly. The military campaign was severely hampered by
Elizabeth's repeated refusals to send promised funds for her
starving soldiers. Her unwillingness to commit herself to the
cause, Leicester's own shortcomings as a political and military
leader and the faction-ridden and chaotic situation of Dutch
politics were reasons for the campaign's failure. Leicester finally
resigned his command in December 1587.
Meanwhile, Sir
Francis Drake had undertaken a major voyage against Spanish
ports and ships to the Caribbean
in 1585 and 1586, and in 1587 had made a successful
raid on Cadiz
, destroying
the Spanish fleet of war ships intended for the Enterprise of
England: Philip II had decided to take the war to England at
last.
On 12 July 1588, the
Spanish Armada,
a great fleet of ships, set sail for the channel, planning to ferry
a Spanish invasion force under the Duke of Parma to the coast of
southeast England from the Netherlands.
A combination of
miscalculation, misfortune, and an attack of English fire ships on 29 July off Gravelines
which dispersed the Spanish ships to the northeast defeated the
Armada. The Armada straggled home to Spain in
shattered remnants, after disastrous losses on the coast of Ireland
(after some ships had tried to struggle back to Spain via the North Sea
, and then back south past the west coast of
Ireland). Unaware of the Armada's fate, English militias
mustered to defend the country under the Earl of Leicester's
command.
He invited Elizabeth to inspect her troops
at Tilbury
in Essex on 8 August.
Wearing a silver breastplate over a white velvet dress, she
addressed them in
one of
her most famous speeches:
My loving people, we have been persuaded by some that
are careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit ourself to
armed multitudes for fear of treachery; but I assure you, I do not
desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving people....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.Somerset, 591.
• Neale, 297–98.
When no invasion came, the nation rejoiced.
Elizabeth's
procession to a thanksgiving service at St Paul's
Cathedral
rivalled that of her coronation as a
spectacle. The defeat of the armada was a potent propaganda
victory, both for Elizabeth and for Protestant England. The English
took their delivery as a symbol of God's favour and of the nation's
inviolability under a virgin queen. However, the victory was not a
turning point in the war, which continued and often favoured Spain.
The Spanish still controlled the Netherlands, and the threat of
invasion remained. Sir
Walter Raleigh
claimed after her death that Elizabeth's caution had impeded the
war against Spain:
If the late queen would have believed her men of war as
she did her scribes, we had in her time beaten that great empire in
pieces and made their kings of figs and oranges as in old
times.
But her Majesty did all by halves, and by petty
invasions taught the Spaniard how to defend himself, and to see his
own weakness.
Though some historians have criticised Elizabeth on similar
grounds, Raleigh's verdict has more often been judged unfair.
Elizabeth had good reason not to place too much trust in her
commanders, who once in action tended, as she put it herself, "to
be transported with an haviour of vainglory".
France
When the Protestant
Henry IV
inherited the French throne in 1589, Elizabeth sent him military
support. It was her first venture into France since the retreat
from Le Havre in 1563. Henry's succession was strongly contested by
the
Catholic League and by
Philip II, and Elizabeth feared a Spanish takeover of the channel
ports. The subsequent English campaigns in France, however, were
disorganised and ineffective.
Lord
Willoughby, largely ignoring Elizabeth's orders, roamed
northern France to little effect, with an army of 4,000 men. He
withdrew in disarray in December 1589, having lost half his troops.
In 1591, the campaign of
John Norreys,
who led 3,000 men to
Brittany, was even
more of a disaster. As for all such expeditions, Elizabeth was
unwilling to invest in the supplies and reinforcements requested by
the commanders. Norreys left for London to plead in person for more
support. In his absence, a Catholic League army almost destroyed
the remains of his army at Craon, north-west France, in May 1591.
In July,
Elizabeth sent out another force under Robert Devereux, Earl of
Essex, to help Henry IV in besieging Rouen
. The
result was just as dismal. Essex accomplished nothing and returned
home in January 1592. Henry abandoned the siege in April. As usual,
Elizabeth lacked control over her commanders once they were abroad.
"Where he is, or what he doth, or what he is to do," she wrote of
Essex, "we are ignorant".
Ireland
Although Ireland was one of her two kingdoms, Elizabeth faced a
hostile—and in places virtually autonomous—Catholic population that
was willing to plot with her enemies. Her policy there was to grant
land to her courtiers and prevent the rebels from giving Spain a
base from which to attack England. In response to a series of
uprisings, the English forces pursued
scorched-earth tactics, burning the land and
slaughtering man, woman and child. During a revolt in
Munster led by
Gerald FitzGerald, Earl
of Desmond, in 1582, an estimated 30,000 Irish people starved
to death. The poet
Edmund Spenser
wrote that the victims "were brought to such wretchedness as that
any stony heart would have rued the same". Elizabeth advised her
commanders that the Irish, "that rude and barbarous nation", be
well treated; but she showed no remorse when force and bloodshed
were deemed necessary.
Between 1594 and 1603, Elizabeth faced her most severe test in
Ireland, with the revolt known as Tyrone's Rebellion, or the
Nine Years War. Its
leader,
Hugh O'Neill,
Earl of Tyrone, was backed by Spain. In spring 1599, Elizabeth
sent
Robert Devereux,
2nd Earl of Essex, to put the revolt down. To her frustration,
he made little progress and returned to England without permission.
He was replaced by
Charles Blount, Lord
Mountjoy, who took three years to defeat the rebels. O'Neill
finally surrendered in 1603, a few days after Elizabeth's
death.
Russia
Elizabeth
continued to maintain the diplomatic relations with the Tsardom of
Russia
originally established by her deceased
brother. She often wrote to its then ruler tsar
Ivan Grozny on amicable terms, though the tsar
was often annoyed by her focus on commerce rather than on the
possibility of a militairy alliance. The tsar even proposed to her
once, and during his later reign, asked for a guarantee to be
granted asylum in England should his rule be jeopardised.Upon
Ivan's death, he was succeeded by his simple-minded son
Feodor. Unlike his father, Feodor had no
enthusiasm in maintaining exclusive trading rights with England.
Feodor declared his kingdom open to all foreigners, and dismissed
the English ambassador
Sir Jerome
Bowes, whose pomposity had been tolerated by Feodor's father.
Elizabeth sent a new ambassador, Dr. Giles Fletcher, to demand the
regent
Boris Godunov to convince the
tsar to reconsider. The negotiations failed, due to Fletcher
addressing Feodor with two of his titles omitted. Elizabeth
continued to appeal to Feodor in half appealing, half reproachful
letters. She proposed an alliance, something which she had refused
to do when offered one by Feodor's father, but was turned
down.
Barbary states, Ottoman Empire, Japan
Trade and diplomatic relations developed between England and the
Barbary states during the rule of
Elizabeth.
England established a trading relationship
with Morocco
in opposition to Spain, selling armour, ammunition,
timber, and metal in exchange for Moroccan sugar, in spite of a
Papal ban. In 1600, Abd el-Ouahed ben Messaoud, the
principal secretary to the Moroccan ruler Mulai Ahmad al-Mansur, visited England as an
ambassador to the court of queen Elizabeth I, in order to negotiate
an Anglo-Moroccan alliance
against Spain
.
Elizabeth "agreed to sell munitions supplies to Morocco, and she
and Mulai Ahmad al-Mansur talked on and off about mounting a joint
operation against the Spanish". Discussions however remained
inconclusive, and both rulers died within two years of the
embassy.
Diplomatic relations were also established with the
Ottoman Empire during with the chartering of
the
Levant Company and the dispatch
of the first English ambassador to the
Porte,
William Harborne, in 1578. For the
first time, a Treaty of Commerce was signed in 1580. Numerous
envoys were dispatched in both directions and epistolar exchanges
occurred between Elizabeth and Sultan
Murad
III. In one correspondence, Murad entertained the notion that
Islam and Protestantism had
"much more in common than either did with
Roman Catholicism, as both rejected the
worship of idols", and argued for an alliance between England and
the Ottoman Empire. To the dismay of Catholic Europe, England
exported tin and lead (for cannon-casting) and ammunitions to the
Ottoman Empire, and Elizabeth seriously discussed joint military
operations with Murad III during the outbreak of war with Spain in
1585, as
Francis Walsingham was
lobbying for a direct Ottoman military involvement against the
common Spanish enemy.
The first Englishman to reach Japan,
William Adams, was a former employee
of the
Barbary Company, which had
been established in 1585. He set foot in Japan in August 1600, as a
pilot for the
Dutch East India
Company. He would play a key role as a counselor to the
Japanese
Shogun, and helped establish the
first diplomatic contacts and commercial treaties between England
and Japan.
Later years
As Elizabeth aged and marriage became unlikely, her image gradually
changed. She was portrayed as
Belphoebe or
Astraea, and after the Armada,
as
Gloriana, the eternally youthful
Faerie Queene of
Edmund Spenser's poem. Her painted portraits
became less realistic and more a set of enigmatic
icons that made her look much younger than she
was. In fact, her skin had been scarred by
smallpox in 1562, leaving her half bald and
dependent on wigs and cosmetics. Sir Walter Raleigh called her "a
lady whom time had surprised". However, the more Elizabeth's beauty
faded, the more her courtiers praised it.
Elizabeth was happy to play the part, but it is possible that in
the last decade of her life she began to believe her own
performance. She became fond and indulgent of the charming but
petulant young Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, who took liberties
with her for which she forgave him. She repeatedly appointed him to
military posts despite his growing record of irresponsibility.
After Essex's desertion of his command in Ireland in 1599,
Elizabeth had him placed under house arrest and the following year
deprived him of his
monopolies. In
February 1601, the earl tried to raise a rebellion in London. He
intended to seize the queen but few rallied to his support, and he
was beheaded on 25 February. Elizabeth knew that her own
misjudgements were partly to blame for this turn of events. An
observer reported in 1602 that "Her delight is to sit in the dark,
and sometimes with shedding tears to bewail Essex".
The monopolies Elizabeth reclaimed from Essex were her typical
reward to a courtier during the last years of her reign. She had
come to rely on this cost-free system of patronage rather than ask
Parliament for more subsidies in a time of war. The practice soon
led to
price-fixing, the enrichment of
courtiers at the public's expense, and widespread resentment. This
culminated in agitation in the House of Commons during the
parliament of 1601. In her famous "
Golden
Speech" of 30 November 1601, Elizabeth professed ignorance of
the abuses and won the members over with promises and her usual
appeal to the emotions:
Who keeps their sovereign from the lapse of error, in
which, by ignorance and not by intent they might have fallen, what
thank they deserve, we know, though you may guess.
And as nothing is more dear to us than the loving
conservation of our subjects' hearts, what an undeserved doubt
might we have incurred if the abusers of our liberality, the
thrallers of our people, the wringers of the poor, had not been
told us!
The period after the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 brought
new difficulties for Elizabeth that lasted the fifteen years until
the end of her reign. The conflicts with Spain and in Ireland
dragged on, the tax burden grew heavier, and the economy was hit by
poor harvests and the cost of war. Prices rose and the standard of
living fell. During this time, repression of Catholics intensified,
and Elizabeth authorised commissions in 1591 to interrogate and
monitor Catholic householders. To maintain the illusion of peace
and prosperity, she increasingly relied on internal spies and
propaganda. In her last years, mounting criticism reflected a
decline in the public's affection for her.
One of the causes for this "second reign" of Elizabeth, as it is
now frequently called, was the different character of Elizabeth's
governing body, the
privy council in
the 1590s. A new generation was in power. With the exception of
Lord Burghley, the most important politicians had died around 1590:
The Earl of Leicester in 1588, Sir Francis Walsingham in 1590, Sir
Christopher Hatton in 1591.
Factional strife in the government, which had not existed in a
noteworthy form before the 1590s, now became its hallmark. A bitter
rivalry between the Earl of Essex and
Robert Cecil, son of
Lord Burghley, and their respective adherents, for the most
powerful positions in the state marred politics. The queen's
personal authority was lessening, as is shown in the affair of Dr.
Lopez, her trusted physician. When he was wrongly accused by the
Earl of Essex of treason out of personal pique, she could not
prevent his execution, although she had been angry about his arrest
and seems not to have believed in his guilt (1594).
This same period of economic and political uncertainty, however,
produced an unsurpassed literary flowering in England. The first
signs of a new literary movement had appeared at the end of the
second decade of Elizabeth's reign, with
John
Lyly's
Euphues and
Edmund
Spenser's
The
Shepheardes Calender in 1578. During the 1590s, some of
the great names of
English
literature entered their maturity, including
William Shakespeare and
Christopher Marlowe. During this period
and into the
Jacobean era that
followed, the English theatre reached its highest peaks. The notion
of a great
Elizabethan age depends
largely on the builders, dramatists, poets, and musicians who were
active during Elizabeth's reign. They owed little directly to the
queen, who was never a major patron of the arts.
Death
Elizabeth's most trusted advisor,
Burghley, died on 4 August
1598. His political mantle passed to his son, Robert Cecil, who
soon became the leader of the government. One task he addressed was
to prepare the way for a smooth succession. Since Elizabeth would
never name her successor, Cecil was obliged to proceed in secret.
He therefore entered into a coded negotiation with
James VI of Scotland, who had a strong
but unrecognised claim. Cecil coached the impatient James to humour
Elizabeth and "secure the heart of the highest, to whose sex and
quality nothing is so improper as either needless expostulations or
over much curiosity in her own actions". The advice worked. James's
tone delighted Elizabeth, who responded: "So trust I that you will
not doubt but that your last letters are so acceptably taken as my
thanks cannot be lacking for the same, but yield them to you in
grateful sort". In historian J. E. Neale's view, Elizabeth may not
have declared her wishes openly to James, but she made them known
with "unmistakable if veiled phrases".
The Queen's health remained fair until the autumn of 1602, when a
series of deaths among her friends plunged her into a severe
depression. In February 1603, the death of
Catherine Howard,
Countess of Nottingham, the niece of her cousin and close
friend
Catherine, Lady
Knollys, came as a particular blow. In March, Elizabeth fell
sick and remained in a "settled and unremovable melancholy".
She died
on 24 March 1603 at Richmond Palace
, between two and three in the morning. A few
hours later, Cecil and the council set their plans in motion and
proclaimed
James VI of Scotland
as king of England.
Elizabeth's coffin was carried downriver at
night to Whitehall
, on a barge lit with torches. At her funeral on 28
April, the coffin was taken to Westminster Abbey
on a hearse drawn by four
horses hung with black velvet. In the words of the
chronicler
John Stow:
Westminster was surcharged with multitudes of all sorts
of people in their streets, houses, windows, leads and gutters,
that came out to see the obsequy, and when they beheld her statue
lying upon the coffin, there was such a general sighing, groaning
and weeping as the like hath not been seen or known in the memory
of man.
Despite the presence of several other claimants to the throne, the
transition of power went smoothly. James's succession set aside
Henry VIII's
Third Succession
Act and will in favour of the line of Henry's younger sister,
Mary Tudor. To rectify
this, James had Parliament pass the
Succession to the Crown Act
1603. The question whether or not Parliament could control the
succession to the crown by statute was controversial throughout the
17th century.
Legacy
Elizabeth was lamented, but many people were relieved at her death.
Expectations of King James were high, and at first they were met,
with the ending of the war against Spain in 1604 and lower taxes.
Until the death of Robert Cecil in 1612, the government ran along
much the same lines as before. James's rule, however, became
unpopular when he turned state affairs over to court favourites,
and in the 1620s there was a nostalgic revival of the cult of
Elizabeth. Elizabeth was praised as a heroine of the Protestant
cause and the ruler of a golden age. James was depicted as a
Catholic sympathiser, presiding over a corrupt court. The
triumphalist image that Elizabeth had cultivated towards the end of
her reign, against a background of factionalism and military and
economic difficulties, was taken at face value and her reputation
inflated.
Godfrey Goodman, Bishop of
Gloucester, recalled: "When we had experience of a Scottish
government, the Queen did seem to revive. Then was her memory much
magnified." Elizabeth's reign became idealised as a time when
crown, church and parliament had worked in constitutional
balance.
The picture of Elizabeth painted by her Protestant admirers of the
early 17th century has proved lasting and influential. Her memory
was also revived during the
Napoleonic
Wars, when the nation again found itself on the brink of
invasion. In the
Victorian era, the
Elizabethan legend was adapted to the imperial ideology of the day,
and in the mid-20th century, Elizabeth was a romantic symbol of the
national resistance to foreign threat. Historians of that period,
such as
J. E.
Neale (1934) and
A. L. Rowse (1950), interpreted Elizabeth's reign as a
golden age of progress. Neale and Rowse also idealized the Queen
personally, she always did everything right; her more unpleasant
traits were ignored or explained as signs of stress.
Recent historians, however, have taken a more complicated view of
Elizabeth. Her reign is famous for the defeat of the Armada, and
for successful raids against the Spanish, such as those on Cádiz in
1587 and 1596, but some historians point to military failures on
land and at sea. Elizabeth's problems in Ireland also stain her
record. Rather than as a brave defender of the Protestant nations
against Spain and the Habsburgs, she is more often regarded as
cautious in her foreign policies. She offered minimal aid to
foreign Protestants and failed to provide her commanders with the
funds to make a difference abroad.
Elizabeth established an English church that helped shape a
national identity and remains in place today. Those who praised her
later as a Protestant heroine overlooked her refusal to drop all
Catholic practices. Historians note that in her day, strict
Protestants regarded the
Acts of Settlement and
Uniformity of 1559 as a compromise. In fact, Elizabeth believed
that faith was personal and did not wish, as
Francis Bacon put it, to "make windows into
men's hearts and secret thoughts".
Despite Elizabeth's largely defensive foreign policy, her reign
raised England's status abroad. "She is only a woman, only mistress
of half an island," marvelled Pope
Sixtus
V, "and yet she makes herself feared by Spain, by France, by
the Empire, by all". Under
Elizabeth, the nation gained a new self-confidence and sense of
sovereignty, as
Christendom fragmented.
Elizabeth was the first Tudor to recognise that a monarch ruled by
popular consent. She therefore always worked with parliament and
advisers she could trust to tell her the truth—a style of
government that her Stuart successors failed to follow. Some
historians have called her lucky; she believed that God was
protecting her. Priding herself on being "mere English", Elizabeth
trusted in God, honest advice, and the love of her subjects for the
success of her rule. In a prayer, she offered thanks to God
that:
[At a time] when wars and seditions with grievous
persecutions have vexed almost all kings and countries round about
me, my reign hath been peacable, and my realm a receptacle to thy
afflicted Church.
The love of my people hath appeared firm, and the
devices of my enemies frustrate.
First Biography

Frontispiece and titlepage from a 1675
edition of William Camden's biography of Queen Elzabeth I.
When
William Cecil,
1st Baron Burghley, aka Lord Burghley, was nearing death in
1597, he suggested to
William Camden,
author of Britannia (1596), to write a biography of Elizabeth's
reign. Legend has it that Burghley gave Camden access to all his
personal and state records concerning the queen. Camden published
the first edition of his biography in Latin, "Annales Rerum
Gestarum Angliae et Hiberniae Regnate Elizabetha", the first part
appearing in 1615 and the second part in 1617. The complete work in
English was published in 1625. It went through several subsequent
editions throughout the 17th century. Although the work is heavily
biased against the perceived threat of "Papists", those loyal to
the
Roman Catholic Church,
Camden's biography upholds as one of the great primary sources of
Elizabeth's reign.
Ancestry
See also
Notes
References
- Adams, Simon: Leicester and the Court: Essays in
Elizabethan Politics Manchester: Manchester University Press
2002 ISBN 0719053250
- Black, J. B. The Reign of Elizabeth: 1558–1603.
Oxford: Clarendon, (1936) 1945. OCLC 5077207
- Chamberlin, Frederick: Elizabeth and Leycester Dodd,
Mead & Co. 1939
- Collinson, Patrick. "The
Mongrel Religion of Elizabethan England." Elizabeth: The
Exhibition at the National Maritime Museum. Susan Doran (ed.).
London: Chatto and Windus, 2003. ISBN 0701174765.
- Croft, Pauline. King James. Basingstoke and New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 0333613953.
- Davenport, Cyril. English Embroidered Bookbindings.
Alfred Pollard (ed.). London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner and Co.,
1899. OCLC 705685.
- Dobson, Michael; and Nicola Watson. "Elizabeth's Legacy".
Elizabeth: The Exhibition at the National Maritime Museum.
Susan Doran (ed.). London: Chatto and Windus, 2003. ISBN
0701174765.
- Doran, Susan: Monarchy and
Matrimony: The Courtships of Elizabeth I Routledge 1996 ISBN
0415119693
- Doran, Susan. "The Queen's Suitors and the Problem of the
Succession." Elizabeth: The Exhibition at the National Maritime
Museum. Susan Doran (ed.). London: Chatto and Windus, 2003.
ISBN 0701174765.
- Edwards, Philip. The Making of the Modern English State:
1460–1660. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
ISBN 031223614X.
- Flynn, Sian; and David Spence. "Elizabeth's Adventurers".
Elizabeth: The Exhibition at the National Maritime Museum.
Susan Doran (ed.). London: Chatto and Windus, 2003. ISBN
0701174765.
- Frieda, Leonie. Catherine de
Medici. London: Phoenix, 2005. ISBN 0173820390.
- Goldsworthy, J.D.: The Sovereignty of Parliament
Oxford UP 1999 ISBN 0198268939
- Gristwood, Sarah: Elizabeth and Leicester Bantam Books
2008 ISBN 9780553817867
- Guy, John. My Heart is
My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots. London and New York:
Fourth Estate, 2004. ISBN 184115752X.
- Haigh, Christopher. Elizabeth I. Harlow (UK): Longman
Pearson, (1988) 1998 edition. ISBN 0582437547.
- Hammer, P.E.J.: The Polarisation of Elizabethan Politics:
The Political Career of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex,
1585-1597 Cambridge UP 1999 ISBN 0521019419
- Hasler. P. W (ed). History of Parliament. House of
Commons 1558–1603 (3 vols). London: Published for the History
of Parliament Trust by H.M.S.O., 1981. ISBN
0118875019.
- Haynes, Alan: The White Bear: The Elizabethan Earl of
Leicester London: Peter Owen 1987 ISBN 0720606721
- Hogge, Alice. God's Secret Agents: Queen Elizabeth's
Forbidden Priests and the Hatching of the Gunpowder Plot.
London: HarperCollins, 2005. ISBN 0007156375.
- Hume, Martin: The
Courtships of Queen Elizabeth London: Eveleigh Nash &
Grayson 1904 [1212]
- Hunt, Alice: The Drama of Coronation: Medieval Ceremony in
Early Modern England, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2008
- Jenkins, Elizabeth: Elizabeth and Leicester The
Phoenix Press 2002 ISBN 1842125605
- Kenyon, John: The
History Men: The Historical Profession in England since the
Renaissance London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1983 ISBN
0297782541
- Lacey, Robert: Robert Earl of Essex: An Elizabethan
Icarus London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1971 ISBN
0297003208
- Loades, David. Elizabeth I: The Golden Reign of
Gloriana. London: The National Archives
, 2003. ISBN 1903365430.
- Lockyer, Roger. Tudor and
Stuart Britain 1471-1714. Third Edition, 2004. London:
Pearson.
- McGrath, Patrick: Papists and Puritans under Elizabeth
I London: Blandford Press, 1967.
- Neale, J.E.: Queen Elizabeth I:
A Biography. London: Jonathan Cape, (1934) 1954 reprint.
OCLC 220518.
- Parker, Geoffrey:
The Grand Strategy of Philip II Yale University Press 2000
ISBN 0300082738
- Richardson, Ruth Elizabeth: Mistress Blanche: Queen
Elizabeth I's Confidante, Logaston Press 2007
- Rowse, A. L. The England of Elizabeth. London:
Macmillan, 1950. OCLC 181656553.
- Sams, Conway: The Conquest of Virginia: the Forest
Primeval. An Account Based on Original Documents New
York and London: G.P. Putnam's Sons 1916
- Somerset, Anne. Elizabeth I. London: Phoenix, (1991)
1997 edition. ISBN 0385721579.
- Starkey, David. "Elizabeth: Woman,
Monarch, Mission." Elizabeth: The Exhibition at the National
Maritime Museum. Susan Doran (ed.). London: Chatto and Windus,
2003. ISBN 0701174765.
- Stewart, George: Names on the Land: A Historical Account of
Place-Naming in the United States New York: Random House
1945
- Strong, Roy. Gloriana: The
Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I. London: Pimlico, (1987) 2003.
ISBN 071260944X.
- Strong, R.G.; van Dorsten, J.A.: Leicester's Triumph
Oxford University Press 1964
- Weir, Alison.
Elizabeth the Queen. London: Pimlico, (1998) 1999 edition.
ISBN 0712673121.
- Williams, Neville. The Life and Times of Elizabeth I.
London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1972. ISBN 0297831682.
- Willson, David Harris. King James VI & I. London:
Jonathan Cape, (1956) 1963. ISBN 0224605720.
- Wilson, Derek: Sweet Robin: A Biography of Robert Dudley
Earl of Leicester 1533-1588 London: Hamish Hamilton 1981 ISBN
0241101492
Further reading
- Camden, William. History of
the Most Renowned and Victorious Princess Elizabeth. Wallace
T. MacCaffrey (ed). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, selected
chapters, 1970 edition. OCLC 59210072.
- Clapham, John. Elizabeth of England. E. P. Read and
Conyers Read (eds). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
1951. OCLC 1350639.
- Elizabeth I: The Collected Works Leah S. Marcus, Mary
Beth Rose & Janel Mueller (eds.). Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2002. ISBN 0226504654.
- Elizabeth: The Exhibition at the National Maritime
Museum. Susan Doran (ed.). London: Chatto and Windus, 2003.
ISBN 0701174765.
- Ridley, Jasper. Elizabeth I:
The Shrewdness of Virtue. New York : Fromm International,
1989. ISBN 088064110X.
External links
- William Camden. Annales Rerum Gestarum Angliae et Hiberniae Regnante
Elizabetha. (1615 and 1625.) Hypertext edition, with
English translation. Dana F. Sutton (ed.), 2000. Retrieved 7
December 2007.
- Tudor and Elizabeth Portraits. Tudor and Elizabethan
portraits and other works of art, provided for research and
education. Retrieved 15 December 2007.
- Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion,
and Other Various Occurrences in the Church of England, During
Queen Elizabeth's Happy Reign by John Strype (1824 ed.):
Vol. I, Pt. I, Vol. I, Pt. II, Vol. II, Pt. I, Vol. II., Pt. II, Vol. III, Pt. I, Vol. III, Pt. II, Vol. IV
- Elizabeth I with rare pictures from the British
Museum
and British Library