Golden Age Flashcards

1
Q

Renaissance influenced by

A

Humanism in Europe

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2
Q

Who did well?

A

Artists, builders, musicians, writers

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3
Q

Printing press

A

New ideas

Greater speed

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4
Q

School

A

New grammar schools and unis

Curriculum broadened

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5
Q

‘Chap books’

A

Affordable stories told by street peddlers

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6
Q

Musicians

A
  • Orlando Gibbons
  • Thomas Tallis
  • William Byrd
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7
Q

Nicholas Hilliard

A

Artist

Miniature portraits of leading personalities

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8
Q

John Dee

A

Mathematician

Astrologer

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9
Q

John Napier

A

Discovered logarithms

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10
Q

Historians

A

William Camden

Richard Hakluyt

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11
Q

Francis bacon

A

Experiments were needed to test scientific theories

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12
Q

William Gilbert

A

Blood circulation

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13
Q

William Gilbert

A

Queen’s doctor

Experimented with electricity

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14
Q

Gentry

A

Not manual labour
Not nobility
Wealthy

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15
Q

Suspicion of old nobility

A

Nobles were marginalised
Very few titles granted, government excluded from
Vacuum

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16
Q

Dissolution of the monasteries

A

Owned a quarter of all land

More land available to buy

17
Q

Increasing wealth

A

Growth in trade and exploration
Population growth
Rising prices
Enclosure

18
Q

Gentry sponsored

A

Architectural, artistic, intellectual and literary endeavours

19
Q

Fashion was

A

Imprwtnt stafus shboo

20
Q

Statutes of Apparel

A

Sumptuary laws
1574
Controlled clothes people were allowed to wear based on their social rank

21
Q

Male fashion

A
  • doublet (silk/satin)
  • woollen/silk stockings
  • trunk-hose
  • jerkin
  • ruff
  • shoes (leather with cork soles)
  • hat
  • cloak
  • sword
  • beard
22
Q

Female fashion

A
  • Farthingale
  • ruff (lace collar)
  • under gown (silk or satin)
  • gown (satin or velvet)
  • over gown
  • dyed hair with false hair piled on top heavy white make up (lead, poisonous)
  • blackened teeth
  • shoes
  • a small hat
23
Q

Great rebuilding

A

Architectural boom

24
Q

New buildings

A
  • extravagant country houses built to reflect wealth
  • built to impress and host Bess
  • no longer needed defensive features (moats, drawbridges)- decorative gardens planted
  • built of stone or brick
25
Q

Robert Smythson

A

Leading architect

Designed Longleat House in Wiltshire and Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire

26
Q

Design

A
  • not gothic
  • renaissance - Florence
  • focussed on symmetry and size
  • intricate chimney stacks
  • mullioned windows (with leaded glass)
  • wattle-and-daub (Speke Hall, Churche’s Mansion)
  • bedroom upstairs
  • great hall no longer popular
  • long gallery used on upper floor to entertain and display art collections
  • still no corridors, separate rooms had windows and fireplaces
  • decorative plasterwork ceilings, oak-panelled walls, fireplaces, tapestries and libraries
27
Q

Before her reign

A

No theatres
Mystery and miracle plays based on bible stories and lives of saints - performed on temporary platforms in market squares and inn yards

28
Q

Groups of actors

A

Toured the country
Disliked - especially by puritans because of their ancient roman influences. 1580- earthquake- gods anger
Threat to law and order
Not respectable - no more than beggars

29
Q

Cult of Elizabeth

A
  • as a result of visual and literary propaganda
  • the faerie queen by Edmund Spenser - allegorical epic poem (Gloriana) - she have him a £50 pension per year for life
  • queen on coins
  • 1570s courtiers flattered her with pics to advance their own careers
  • expensive clothing and jewels, allegorical symbols