WEEK ONE – SETTING THE SCENE
Life In Elizabethan England
Elizabethan Population and Entertainment
Life for the poor in Elizabethan England
does not seem like an easy one. This is because the poor did not share the
wealth or the luxurious lifestyles of the rich. This wasn’t made
any easier by the sudden increase in population, which doubled between the
reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I. Of that growing population only 10% lived
in towns. Therefore the lives of Elizabethans were very hard and so entertainment
was extremely popular whenever there was something to celebrate for example,
weddings, days of religious importance etc. The rich were able to regularly
enjoy court entertainment, which included feasts, jousts and banquets. However
the poor people enjoyed the entertainment of going to plays, dancing, and
animal sports (which included bear and bull baiting, and dog and cock
fighting).
Elizabeth Religion and Superstition
Catholicism and Protestantism were the two major religions
in Elizabethan England. Both of sets of believers held very strong views and
so they persecuted each other. The official religion of Elizabethan England
was Anglicanism and Elizabeth was the head of the church of England, she
however thought strongly that other religions shouldn’t be prosecuted against
as long as they didn’t interfere with the state or cause harm to others.
In Elizabethan times there was great ignorance and fear of
the unknown, the supernatural, the forces of nature and God. This resulted in
many different forms of superstition. Many superstitions were based on trust
in magic or chance. The Elizabethans often believed that an object, action,
or circumstance (which are not related to a course of events) can influence
the outcome.
Elizabethan Money and Wages
• A nobleman
- £1500 to £3000 per annum
• A
merchant - £100 per annum
• A parson
- £20 per annum
• A
carpenter - £13 per annum
• A
labourer - £1500 to £3000 per annum
• A
nobleman - £5 per annum
As can be seen from above. Wages were dependent on the job
that each person had. The lower class would only trade with pennies, as a
pound would have been a fortune to them. The Elizabethan pound is roughly the
same as 280 pounds nowadays.
Elizabethan Medicine and Illnesses
The cause of most illnesses in Elizabethan times was a
lack of sanitation. There were open sewers in the streets and the waste was
only occasionally thrown away into the nearest river. There was no running
water and instead water was obtained from water pumps, this was a main cause
of the spread of typhoid. Unlike today the medical knowledge of doctors was
extremely basic and so was the medicine that they used. Fleas, lice and rats
all flourished in this unsanitary environment. The Black Death was a disease
that was present during the Elizabethan era, it killed nearly one third of
the population.
Elizabethan Theatres
In the Elizabethan era, theatre was an increasingly
popular and exiting form of entertainment. There were many theatres that were
being built around London at this time. Many Elizabethan entrepreneurs and
actors were attracted by the money and fame provided by this growing
industry. Amongst some of the most famous theatres were; the Globe, the Rose
Theatre, the Swan Theatre, the Boars Head and the Bear Garden. The
Elizabethans were lucky to have such playwrights as Shakespeare and Marlow amongst
others.
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