The Elizabethans overview - OCR BReligion and daily lives
Elizabeth I is a colourful monarch. Her reign has been referred to by some as a 鈥榞olden age鈥 but more recently this has been challenged and Elizabeth鈥檚 control over her country has been questioned.
In the 16th century England was divided by religion. The country had been a Roman Catholic country for nearly a thousand years until Henry VIII鈥檚 reign where, over a 20 year period, the country鈥檚 religion had changed three times, causing tension and divisions.
When Elizabeth ascended the throne she had changed the official religion to Protestantism, but also outlined a religious settlement that allowed some Catholic traditions to be practiced. parliamentThe law-making body of a country. helped by passing the Act of SupremacyA law passed in 1559 that recognised Elizabeth I as the supreme governor of the Church of England. and the Act of UniformityA law passed in 1559 that reinstated the English book of common prayer and said all services were required to follow the order of prayer.. In 1581 a new law was passed against Catholics which strengthened the earlier Acts.
Elizabeth鈥檚 tolerant 鈥榤iddle-way鈥 had broad support, but she did face threats and plots from Catholics and PuritanStrict Protestants who wanted to get rid of ritual in church services and lead a plain and simple life., both from within and outside her kingdom, with Mary, Queen of Scots becoming a figure head for Catholic plots, such as the Babington Plot in 1586.
Daily lives
The Elizabethans believed that God had set out an order for everything, known as the Great Chain of Being. This also included the order of society and your place in it. The queen was at the top and controlled wealth and life chances, and inequalities further down the chain were accepted.
England remained a patriarchal societyA society in which men hold the power and control. even though it was ruled by a queen. More recently historians have found that women did have some freedom and earlier views on Elizabethan family life have been challenged.
Poverty was mostly considered to be your own fault in Elizabethan times, but during Elizabeth鈥檚 reign a shift in attitudes due to growing poverty and a fear of social unrest led to the Poor Laws. These were introduced as measurements to support the poor and unemployed, and were the first form of welfare.